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Reactive Storage

Wrapper around IndexedDB and localStorage.

Allows to create databases and tables in both of them using a simple API.

Modifications of the data can be observed using RxJS Observables or Angular Signals.

Important

While observing a specific key, you will receive notifications about changes made not only in the current instance of the application but also in other tabs or windows. It opens a lot of interesting opportunities for data synchronization across tabs and windows.

Observables and signals will be created only upon demand, ensuring that no resources are wasted for keys that are not being observed.

Uses

✳️ Angular v19+ (Signals) ✳️ TypeScript 5.6+ ✳️ RxJS v7+ (Observables)
✳️ localForage (IndexedDB)

Installation

npm:

npm i ngx-reactive-storage

Yarn:

yarn add ngx-reactive-storage

Usage

import { RxStorage } from "ngx-reactive-storage";

const storage = new RxStorage();

storage.set('hello', 'world!');

API

export type ReactiveStorage = {
  /**
   * Returns value by the key
   */
  get<T = string>(key: string): Promise<T | null | undefined>;

  /**
   * Returns a hot observable (replay:1) and pushes the current value for this key.
   * Future modifications will be pushed to the returned observable.
   *
   * If localStorage is being used as the storage, the value will be pushed synchronously
   * (to allow you to read it synchronously or asynchronously).
   */
  getObservable<T>(key: string): Observable<T | undefined>;

  /**
   * Returns a signal with the current value for this key.
   * The key becomes "observed" and future modifications will be
   * written to the returned signal.
   *
   * If localStorage is being used as the storage, the value will be pushed synchronously.
   */
  getSignal<T>(key: string, options?: SignalOptions): Signal<T | undefined>;


  /**
   * Returns a signal with the current value for this key.
   * The key becomes "observed" and future modifications will be
   * written to the returned signal.
   *
   * The usage of the `set()` and `update()` methods of this signal will also update the storage key.
   *
   * If localStorage is being used as the storage, the value will be pushed synchronously.
   */
  getWritableSignal<T>(key: string, options?: SignalOptions): WritableSignal<T | undefined>;

  /**
   * Set a key-value pair
   */
  set(key: string, value: unknown): Promise<void>;

  /**
   * Removes a key
   */
  remove(key: string): Promise<void>;

  /**
   * Returns keys of the current table (located in the current database).
   */
  getKeys(): Promise<string[]>;

  /**
   * Removes all keys of the current table (located in the current database).
   */
  clear(): Promise<void>;

  /**
   * Removes links to observables and signals; removes event listeners.
   */
  dispose(): void;
}
demo-q.mov

What storage to use

The recommended storage is IndexedDB, because it:

  1. Is supported by every browser alive;
  2. Gives you gigabytes of space (60% of the disk in Chrome, 10 Gb in Firefox, etc.);
  3. Has native separation by databases and tables.

localStorage is limited to just 5 Mb of space, but sometimes you need to read some data synchronously before you render something.

Using this library, you can use all the nice additions, one API for both types of storages, and still read from localStorage synchronously when needed, using observables or signals.

Example:

import { RxLocalStorage } from "ngx-reactive-storage";

const storage = new RxLocalStorage('settings', 'db1');

const colorScheme = storage.getSignal('color-scheme')();

Supported browsers

  • Chrome: v54+
  • Edge: v79+
  • Firefox: v38+
  • Safari: v15.4+
  • Opera: v41+
  • Chrome for Android: v115+
  • Firefox for Android: v115+
  • Safari iOS: v15.4+