A feature-oriented programming and code-splitting framework for Redux (rewrite of redux-plugins-immutable
).
Asynchronously and atomically load features containing Redux reducers and middleware, React Components, react-router
routes, etc. using Webpack code splitting. Supports server-side rendering.
When a web app gets big enough, initial page load will be too slow unless you split your code into bundles and avoid loading various features until they're needed. For instance, in a React/Redux app, you may have a UserProfileView
and userProfileReducer
that you don't want to load until the user visits your /user/profile
route.
Webpack provides a foundation for this; you can System.import
those modules when needed and Webpack will put them in a separate code bundle. And react-router
versions 2 and 3 support getComponent
hooks on routes in which you can System.import
the component to render.
But these are bare-bones tools: they don't automatically show any kind of spinner and tell the user what's happening while a bundle is loading, and more importantly, they don't automatically show the user an error if it fails to load. Also, if you want to load reducers or redux middleware from a separate bundle, you need some way to install them in your redux store once they've loaded. None of these are incredibly difficult problems, and you may have basic solutions to them, but you may not have time to design a systematic, well-organized, DRY solution.
This is where redux-features
comes in! It allows you to define features, each of which may contain a reducer, middleware, React components, or anything else you want. All you have to do is dispatch a loadFeature
action, and it takes care of loading them and hooking in your reducer and middleware when it's finished. It stores their loading status and load errors (if any) in Redux state, which you can then connect into a component and display to the user. Together with react-redux-features
, you can create a component with just a few lines of code that automatically starts loading a feature when it mounts, displays its loading or error status to the user, and renders a React component from the feature once it's loaded.
redux-features
is also a great plugin framework for your app. A third-party developer can write a feature, following the contract of this package, and by simply adding the feature definition via redux-features
, it can extend or modify your app's behavior.
react-redux-features
: creates declarative feature loaders that proxy to feature components.redux-features-hot-loader
: webpack hot reloader for features.
Each feature is an object you put into Redux state that groups together everything needed for a feature to function.
Typically this will include one ore more React components, a reducer
, and maybe even middleware
. By grouping these
together and atomically adding them to the redux state, you can atomically activate entire parts of your application.
When you combine this with Webpack code splitting, you get a nice, clean way to dynamically load application features when they are needed, for instance when the user visits a certain route.
This can also be a great foundation for people to develop plugins for your app.
People have good reasons for advocating this, primarily because you can't serialize functions or React components and send them over the wire. But that doesn't mean you can't send everything else, and reconstruct the features from it.
For awhile, I thought I should store the functions, React components, etc. for features outside of Redux state, but I came to the conclusion that it's best to keep them in the Redux state. Here's why:
- The alternative would be a separate store and provider of some sort to pass down features' functions and components through React context, which would be very similar to the Redux store and provider in form.
- All of the non-serializable feature functions and components are organized in a single subtree of your state that is easy to strip out before serializing.
- The client can reconstruct the same state as the server by adding all of the same features, then loading all of the features marked as loaded in the serialized state from the server.
redux-features
keeps track of the state of each feature in a separate subtree from the features themselves. Here is
what the feature lifecycle looks like:
- You dispatch
addFeature(...)
- The feature's state is set to
NOT_LOADED
.redux-features
middleware calls itsinit
method, if it has one. - You dispatch
loadFeature(...)
- The feature's state is set to
LOADING
.redux-features
middleware calls itsload
method, if it has one. - The promise returned by
load
resolves to the full feature, whichredux-features
middleware dispatches in aninstallFeature(...)
action. - The feature's state is set to
LOADED
. - Or the promise returned by
load
rejects, in which caseredux-features
middleware dispatches asetFeatureStatus(...)
action with the rejection reason. - The feature's state is set to the rejection reason.
If you add a feature with a reducer
, its reducer
will be active, even if its state is NOT_LOADED
-- whatever
is in the redux state is active. Indeed, you may sometimes want to add a feature without a load
method at all.
You only need to load a feature if you want to fetch code for it asynchronously or perform some other long-running
initialization in the background.
The following optional properties on features are handled by redux-features
. However, you may add any other
properties you want.
reducer: (state, action) => state
: a reducer to apply to the top-level redux state for each actionmiddleware: store => next => action => any
: middleware to apply for each actioninit: (store) => any
: called when the feature is added by dispatching anaddFeature
actionload: (store) => Promise<Feature>
: called when you dispatch aloadFeature
action for the feature. It should return a promise that will resolve to the full feature after loading. The full feature will replace the current feature in the redux state, so initial properties of the feature will be blown away unless you merge them into the full feature yourself.dependencies: Array<string>
: an array of feature ids to load when this feature is loaded. All dependencies will be loaded in parallel with this feature, so they may not be available during theload
method. Circular feature dependencies are not supported, and the behavior is undefined. As an alternative todependencies
, you can load other features (by dispatchingloadFeature
actions) in your feature'sload
method, in which case it's easy to wait for those features to load and do something with them before resolving your feature'sload
promise.
import {createStore, applyMiddleware, combineReducers} from 'redux'
import {
featureStatesReducer,
featuresReducer,
featureReducersReducer,
loadFeatureMiddleware,
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware,
composeReducers,
addFeature,
loadFeature,
} from 'redux-features'
const reducer = composeReducers(
combineReducers({
featureStates: featureStatesReducer(),
features: featuresReducer(),
...
// your own app reducers here
}),
featureReducersReducer(),
)
const store = createStore(reducer, applyMiddleware(
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware(),
loadFeatureMiddleware(),
// more middleware you want here
))
const counter = {
load(store) {
return System.import('./counter/reducer').then(reducer => ({...this, reducer})
}
}
store.dispatch(addFeature('counter', counter))
// state now looks like this:
/*
* {
* featureStates: {
* counter: 'NOT_LOADED'
* }
* features: {
* counter: {
* load: load(store)
* }
* }
* }
*/
Now let's say ./counter/reducer.js
contains this:
export default function counterReducer(state, action) {
switch (action.type) {
case 'COUNTER.INCREMENT':
return { ...state, counter: (state.counter || 0) + 1 }
case 'COUNTER.DECREMENT':
return { ...state, counter: (state.counter || 0) - 1 }
default:
return state
}
}
Once the 'counter'
feature is loaded, featureReducersReducer
will call counterReducer
:
store.dispatch({ type: 'COUNTER.INCREMENT' }) // does nothing yet
store.dispatch(loadFeature('counter')).then(() => {
// state now looks like this:
/*
* {
* featureStates: {
* counter: 'LOADED'
* }
* features: {
* counter: {
* load: load(store),
* reducer: counterReducer(state, action)
* }
* }
* }
*/
store.dispatch({ type: 'COUNTER.INCREMENT' })
// state.counter is now 1
})
You may be setting up your reducer and middleware in a different way than in the examples above; you may be using a
different type for your state, like an Immutable.js Map; or you may want to mount the features and feature states at
non-default locations. To support that, redux-features
exports a modular collection of reducers and middleware
you can hook into your app however you need:
featuresReducer
- puts the features into the statefeatureStatesReducer
- controls state specifying whether features are loaded or notfeatureReducersReducer
- calls features' reducersloadFeatureMiddleware
- handlesloadFeature
actions by calling a feature'sload
method and dispatchinginstallFeature
when it resolves (orsetFeatureStatus
with anerror
if it rejects).featureMiddlewaresMiddleware
- calls features' middleware
Technically you could use only featuresReducer
if all you want to do is add features that provide React components
to your app at startup, and not do any dynamic loading.
If you want to dynamically load features, you'll need to use featureStatesReducer
and loadFeatureMiddleware
.
And if you want to support reducers or middleware in features, you'll need to use featureReducersReducer
and
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware
, respectively.
If you're using combineReducers
, you can hook featuresReducer
and featureStatesReducer
into it with any keys you
want:
import {combineReducers} from 'redux'
import {featureStatesReducer, featuresReducer} from 'redux-features'
const appReducer = combineReducers({
...
myFeatureStates: featureStatesReducer(),
myFeatures: featuresReducer(),
})
Which would make your state look like
{
...
myFeatureStates: {
feature1: 'NOT_LOADED',
feature2: 'LOADING',
},
myFeatures: {
feature1: {...},
feature2: {...},
},
}
However, you can hook in featuresReducer
and featureStatesReducer
however you want, so long as you call them with
the features subtree and feature states subtree, respectively.
If you mount the features and their states anywhere other than state.features
and state.featureStates
, you have to
tell loadFeatureMiddleware
how to get them out of the state, like this:
import { createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux'
import { loadFeatureMiddleware } from 'redux-features'
import reducer from './reducer'
import initialState from './initalState'
const store = createStore(
reducer,
initialState,
applyMiddleware(
loadFeatureMiddleware({
getFeatureStates: (state) => state.myFeatureStates,
getFeatures: (state) => state.myFeatures,
})
)
)
If any feature has a reducer
property, then featureReducersReducer
will call it for each action
dispatched to the store. It must be composed with your top-level reducer so that it can pass the top-level state to
the feature reducers. You may use the composeReducers
function from redux-features
to do this. Again, if you
mount the features anywhere other than state.features
, you have to tell featureReducersReducer
where to find them:
import {combineReducers} from 'redux'
import {featureStatesReducer, featuresReducer, featureReducersReducer, composeReducers} from 'redux-features'
const baseReducer = combineReducers({
...
myFeatureStates: featureStatesReducer(),
myFeatures: featuresReducer(),
})
const appReducer = composeReducers(
baseReducer,
featureReducersReducer({getFeatures: state => state.myFeatures})
)
Just like featureReducersReducer
, if any feature has a middleware
property, then featureMiddlewaresMiddleware
will
call it for each action dispatched to the store. If you mount the features anywhere other than state.features
, you
have to tell featureMiddlewaresMiddleware
where to find them:
import {createStore, applyMiddleware, combineReducers} from 'redux'
import {
featureStatesReducer,
featuresReducer,
loadFeatureMiddleware,
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware,
} from 'redux-features'
const reducer = combineReducers({
myFeatureStates: featureStatesReducer(),
myFeatures: featuresReducer(),
...
// your own app reducers here
})
const store = createStore(reducer, applyMiddleware(
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware({
getFeatures: state => state.myFeatures,
}),
loadFeatureMiddleware({
getFeatureStates: state => state.myFeatureStates,
getFeatures: state => state.myFeatures,
}),
// more middleware you want here
))
You can pass in your own implementations of createReducer
, composeReducers
, createMiddleware
, and
composeMiddleware
. For instance, you can use the implementations from mindfront-redux-utils
, which can compose
reducers from its createReducer
and middleware from its createMiddleware
more efficiently than a naive
implementation, for high-action-throughput apps:
import {createStore, applyMiddleware, combineReducers} from 'redux'
import {
featureStatesReducer,
featuresReducer,
featureReducersReducer,
loadFeatureMiddleware,
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware,
addFeature,
loadFeature,
} from 'redux-features'
import {createReducer, composeReducers, createMiddleware, composeMiddleware} from 'mindfront-redux-utils'
const reducer = composeReducers(
combineReducers({
featureStates: featureStatesReducer({createReducer}),
features: featuresReducer({createReducer}),
...
// your own app reducers here
}),
featureReducersReducer({composeReducers}),
)
const store = createStore(reducer, applyMiddleware(
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware({composeMiddleware}),
loadFeatureMiddleware({createMiddleware}),
// more middleware you want here
))
Loading features during SSR, and then again on the client, when bootstrapping, takes a bit of extra effort. There are various options:
- One-pass rendering:
- Manually dispatch
loadFeature
actions applicable to the requested route. - Dispatch
loadFeature
actions inreact-router
v2/v3 hooks likegetComponent
,getIndexRoute
, etc.
- Manually dispatch
- Two-pass rendering:
- Create the store with a middleware that keeps track of
loadFeature
promises - Render the app in your first pass with components that dispatch the applicable
loadFeature
events (e.g.featureLoader
s fromreact-redux-features
- Wait for the
loadFeature
promises to resolve - Render again, which will now include the loaded feature components, and send it to the client
- Create the store with a middleware that keeps track of
On the client, after you create your store from the initial server-side redux state, dispatch the loadInitialFeatures
action, which will load all the features that were loaded on the server side. Once it resolves, you are ready to
mount your app.
TODO
(using Webpack 1x)
import {
composeReducers,
featuresReducer,
featureStatesReducer,
featureReducersReducer,
} from 'redux-features'
export default composeReducers(
combineReducers({
features: featuresReducer(),
featureStates: featureStatesReducer(),
}),
featureReducersReducer()
)
export default {
load: (store) =>
new Promise((resolve) =>
require.ensure(
['./counterFeatureImpl'],
(require) => require('./counterFeatureImpl').default
)
),
}
// polyfill require.ensure for the server side
if (__SERVER__) require.ensure = (modules, callback) => callback(require)
export default {
reducer: (state, action) =>
action.type === 'INCREMENT'
? { ...state, count: (state.count || 0) + 1 }
: state,
Counter: connect(({ count }) => ({ count }))(({ count }) => (
<div>{`Counter: ${count || 0}`}</div>
)),
}
import React from 'react'
import { featureLoader } from 'react-redux-features'
const Counter = featureLoader({
featureId: 'counter',
render({ featureState, feature, props }) {
const Comp = feature && feature.Counter
if (featureState instanceof Error) {
return (
<div className="alert alert-danger">
Failed to load counter: {featureState.message}
</div>
)
} else if (!Comp) {
return <div className="alert alert-info">Loading counter...</div>
}
return <Comp {...props} />
},
})
import React from 'react'
import { renderToString } from 'react-dom/server'
import { combineReducers, createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux'
import { connect, Provider } from 'react-redux'
import {
loadFeatureMiddleware,
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware,
addFeature,
LOAD_FEATURE,
} from 'redux-features'
import reducer from './reducer'
import counterFeature from './counterFeature'
import Counter from './Counter'
async function serverSideRender(request, response) {
const featurePromises = []
const store = createStore(
reducer,
applyMiddleware(
(store) => (next) => (action) => {
const result = next(action)
if (action.type === LOAD_FEATURE) featurePromises.push(result)
return result
},
loadFeatureMiddleware(),
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware()
)
)
store.dispatch(addFeature('counter', counterFeature))
const app = (
<Provider store={store}>
<Counter />
</Provider>
)
renderToString(app)
try {
await Promise.all(featurePromises)
} catch (error) {
response.status(500).send(error.stack)
}
const body = renderToString(app)
// get all state except features
const { features, ...initialState } = store.getState()
response.status(200).send(`<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.__INITIAL_STATE__ = ${JSON.stringify(initialState)}
</script>
<script src="/client.js">
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">${body}</div>
</body>
</html>`)
}
import React from 'react'
import { render } from 'react-dom'
import { createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux'
import { Provider } from 'react-redux'
import reducer from './reducer'
import Counter from './Counter'
import counterFeature from './counterFeature'
import {
loadFeatureMiddleware,
featureMiddlewaresMiddleware,
addFeature,
loadInitialFeatures,
} from 'redux-features'
const store = createStore(
reducer,
window.__INITIAL_STATE__,
applyMiddleware(loadFeatureMiddleware(), featureMiddlewaresMiddleware())
)
store.dispatch(addFeature(counterFeature))
store
.dispatch(loadInitialFeatures())
.then(() =>
render(
<Provider store={store}>
<Counter />
</Provider>,
document.getElementById('root')
)
)
.catch((error) =>
render(
<div className="alert alert-danger">
Failed to load some features: {error.message}
</div>,
document.getElementById('root')
)
)