jfrancos / crancos

CRA a la Francos

Home Page:https://www.npmjs.com/package/@jfrancos/crancos

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Reactive[1], offline-first per-user documents out of the box with Fauna and Magic

Have a demo up and running in under five minutes

This is a CRA-style template you can use to create reactive[1] offline-first per-user-document-based apps. To achieve this, I've integrated:

const [collection, [query-result1, query-result2, ...]] = useCollection(
  collection-name,
  [mongo-style-query1, mongo-style-query2, ...],
  [index1, index2, ...]
)

Also out-of-the-box:

  • Snowpack (frontend build)
  • React (user interface)
  • Tailwind (utility-first CSS)
  • Stripe (accept and update subscription payments)
  • Bonus! A demo TODO app

[1]: Reactive as in, updates to user documents in one browser will be immediately reflected in all other browsers where the same user is logged in, via Fauna's streaming

[2]: Reactive as in, changes to the state of the local RxDB database will be reflected in the hook variable and cause a rerender

Try it out

(If you get an error about accessing uv_cwd with the npm run scripts below, please see this)

  1. You have accounts at fauna.com, magic.link, and stripe.com
  2. npx @jfrancos/crancos [your-project]
    • You can do steps (2), (3), and (4) while (1) is running
  3. Get public and private keys from Magic
    • "All Apps" -> "New App"
    • Choose a name
    • Save
  4. Get a private key from Fauna
    • "CREATE DATABASE"
      • Choose a name
      • Any Region Group is fine, "Classic" is a good default
      • CREATE
    • Security -> NEW KEY -> SAVE (use defaults)
  5. Get a private key from Stripe
    • Top-left: New account
    • Bottom-right: Secret key
  6. Put your public magic key into snowpack.config.mjs:
    ...
    config.env = { MAGIC_PUBLISHABLE_KEY: 'pk_live_...' };`
    ...
    
  7. Put your private Magic, Fauna and Stripe keys into .env:
    MAGIC_SECRET=sk_live_...
    FAUNA_SECRET=fn...
    STRIPE_SECRET=sk_test_...
    
  8. npm run provision-fauna
  9. npm run provision-stripe
  10. npm run dev
  11. (in a second terminal) npm run ngrok (auto-tunnel for your stripe endpoint)

(continued after video)

Chrome on the left, Brave on the right:

demo.mp4
  1. Replace the contents of Controller.jsx with your own very special time-managmentment app, video game, or other user-document-based app.

useCollection usage

import { useCollection } from './lib/ReplicatedCollection';

const [collection, [query-result1, query-result2, ...]] = useCollection(
  collection-name,
  [mongo-style-query1, mongo-style-query2, ...],
  [index1, index2, ...]
)
  • collection is an RxDB Collection with which you can e.g. insert and remove documents.

  • query-results are the results of mongo-style-queries that are kept up-to-date as the collection and its documents are updated.

  • collection-name will become the name of the underlying RxDB/pouchdb collection. You can use multiple collections and have them replicated, if you give them different names.

  • mongo-style-queries follow the structure defined here, i.e. these are objects with a mandatory selector and optional limit, skip, sort etc. See Controller.jsx for a couple examples.

  • indices: It's good to create an index for any data you're searching or sorting over. Data stored using useCollection is schemaless from our point of view, with all data stored in the document's data object, thus you should prefix indices accordingly e.g. "data.title". RxDB will not always complain when you search for something that doesn't have an index, so if you want to be sure, uncomment the following two lines in the _create function of src/lib/Collection.jsx and look for pouchdb:find query plan in your browsers' js console:

    // addPouchPlugin(pouchdbDebug);
    // PouchDB.debug.enable('pouchdb:find');
    

Schema(less)

The underlying RxDB collections have a schema, but from the useCollection user's point of view, this setup is schemaless - just make sure all your data is stored inside the data object e.g.:

collection.insert({
  data: {
    completed: false,
    title: inputValue,
  }
});

Kinds of offline-first

  • User data is offline-first via RxDB. This works automatically in both dev and build (npm run build) modes.
  • The static site itself is offline-first via workbox. This doesn't work in dev mode. But with npm run build, you can kill the server, and the page will still reload. To then update the site, you'll have to remove the cached site via Developer Tools -> Application -> Storage -> Clear site data

Conflict resolution

When the same user is logged into two different browsers and they both go offline, "conflicts" arise when the same document (e.g. a todo item) is updated in both browsers in different ways. When they reconnect, they'll both let the server (Fauna) know about these updates, and only one of these versions can "win". Should the final state of the document be determined by:

  • The browser that came online most recently? or
  • The browser with the most recent document update?

There's no automatic answer, but I think the latter is the better default, and that's how I've setup the replication logic. In addition, deletion is a quality of a document (this is per RxDB's replication spec). Thus documents removed are never actually deleted from the server, they just get a deleted: true property (this is necessary to properly sync deleted documents when offline devices come online).

Stripe plans

To update your stripe plans, see add-stripe.mjs

This is a "proof of concept", not a release

There is still a lot to do here. Priorities at the moment:

  • Storing one-off user-data in the main user document (in Fauna), accessible also via RxDB
  • Include manifest to make a full PWA out of the box
  • There are a lot of parts to this project, and maybe e.g. RxDB/Collection.jsx etc. should be its own package
  • Arbitrary document ordering, perhaps with mudderjs?
  • Convert to TypeScript
  • Testing
  • Schemaless. Right now Fauna/GraphQL needs to know about a schema, as well as RxDB, and this seems unnecessary, especially since you're not directly using GraphQL to retrieve or manipulate data.
  • Adapt RxDB's CouchDB replication plugin to FQL and tell RxDB we're using any old object ✅ (using RxDB's recent primitives replication)
  • Add some kind of automated Stripe setup

Some other things I think about include:

  • I'm curious about gun.js and automerge, and how they might integrate with Fauna
  • Will local RxDB updates be too slow in some settings, and if so would react-query or swr be helpful
  • If there were a "log out all other sessions" button, would it make sense for that to also purge deleted documents?
  • How can the npx command complete more quickly?

Misc:

./src/index.css has


div {
  display: flex;
}

(a personal preference that should probably be extracted into a separate package)

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CRA a la Francos

https://www.npmjs.com/package/@jfrancos/crancos


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