This is set of utilities for interacting with "persisters" which save your queryClient for later use. Different persisters can be used to store your client and cache to many different storage layers.
IMPORTANT - for persist to work properly, you probably want to pass QueryClient
a gcTime
value to override the default during hydration (as shown above).
If it is not set when creating the QueryClient
instance, it will default to 300000
(5 minutes) for hydration, and the stored cache will be discarded after 5 minutes of inactivity. This is the default garbage collection behavior.
It should be set as the same value or higher than persistQueryClient's maxAge
option. E.g. if maxAge
is 24 hours (the default) then gcTime
should be 24 hours or higher. If lower than maxAge
, garbage collection will kick in and discard the stored cache earlier than expected.
You can also pass it Infinity
to disable garbage collection behavior entirely.
Due to a Javascript limitation, the maximum allowed gcTime
is about 24 days (see more).
const queryClient = new QueryClient({ defaultOptions: { queries: { gcTime: 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24, // 24 hours }, },})
Sometimes you may make changes to your application or data that immediately invalidate any and all cached data. If and when this happens, you can pass a buster
string option. If the cache that is found does not also have that buster string, it will be discarded. The following several functions accept this option:
persistQueryClient({ queryClient, persister, buster: buildHash })persistQueryClientSave({ queryClient, persister, buster: buildHash })persistQueryClientRestore({ queryClient, persister, buster: buildHash })
If data is found to be any of the following:
maxAge
)buster
)throws ...
)undefined
)the persister removeClient()
is called and the cache is immediately discarded.
persistQueryClientSave
dehydrated
and stored by the persister you provided.createSyncStoragePersister
and createAsyncStoragePersister
throttle this action to happen at most every 1 second to save on potentially expensive writes. Review their documentation to see how to customize their throttle timing.You can use this to explicitly persist the cache at the moment(s) you choose.
persistQueryClientSave({ queryClient, persister, buster = '', dehydrateOptions = undefined,})
persistQueryClientSubscribe
Runs persistQueryClientSave
whenever the cache changes for your queryClient
. For example: you might initiate the subscribe
when a user logs-in and checks "Remember me".
unsubscribe
function which you can use to discontinue the monitor; ending the updates to the persisted cache.unsubscribe
, you can send a new buster
to persistQueryClientRestore
which will trigger the persister's removeClient
function and discard the persisted cache.persistQueryClientSubscribe({ queryClient, persister, buster = '', dehydrateOptions = undefined,})
persistQueryClientRestore
hydrate
a previously persisted dehydrated query/mutation cache from the persister back into the query cache of the passed query client.maxAge
(which by default is 24 hours), it will be discarded. This timing can be customized as you see fit.You can use this to restore the cache at moment(s) you choose.
persistQueryClientRestore({ queryClient, persister, maxAge = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24, // 24 hours buster = '', hydrateOptions = undefined,})
persistQueryClient
Takes the following actions:
persistQueryClientRestore
)unsubscribe
function (see persistQueryClientSubscribe
).This functionality is preserved from version 3.x.
persistQueryClient({ queryClient, persister, maxAge = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24, // 24 hours buster = '', hydrateOptions = undefined, dehydrateOptions = undefined,})
Options
All options available are as follows:
interface PersistQueryClientOptions { /** The QueryClient to persist */ queryClient: QueryClient /** The Persister interface for storing and restoring the cache * to/from a persisted location */ persister: Persister /** The max-allowed age of the cache in milliseconds. * If a persisted cache is found that is older than this * time, it will be **silently** discarded * (defaults to 24 hours) */ maxAge?: number /** A unique string that can be used to forcefully * invalidate existing caches if they do not share the same buster string */ buster?: string /** The options passed to the hydrate function * Not used on `persistQueryClientSave` or `persistQueryClientSubscribe` */ hydrateOptions?: HydrateOptions /** The options passed to the dehydrate function * Not used on `persistQueryClientRestore` */ dehydrateOptions?: DehydrateOptions}
There are actually three interfaces available:
PersistedQueryClientSaveOptions
is used for persistQueryClientSave
and persistQueryClientSubscribe
(doesn't use hydrateOptions
).PersistedQueryClientRestoreOptions
is used for persistQueryClientRestore
(doesn't use dehydrateOptions
).PersistQueryClientOptions
is used for persistQueryClient
persistQueryClient will try to restore the cache and automatically subscribes to further changes, thus syncing your client to the provided storage.
However, restoring is asynchronous, because all persisters are async by nature, which means that if you render your App while you are restoring, you might get into race conditions if a query mounts and fetches at the same time.
Further, if you subscribe to changes outside of the React component lifecycle, you have no way of unsubscribing:
// 🚨 never unsubscribes from syncingpersistQueryClient({ queryClient, persister: localStoragePersister,})
// 🚨 happens at the same time as restoringReactDOM.createRoot(rootElement).render(<App />)
For this use-case, you can use the PersistQueryClientProvider
. It will make sure to subscribe / unsubscribe correctly according to the React component lifecycle, and it will also make sure that queries will not start fetching while we are still restoring. Queries will still render though, they will just be put into fetchingState: 'idle'
until data has been restored. Then, they will refetch unless the restored data is fresh enough, and initialData will also be respected. It can be used instead of the normal QueryClientProvider:
import { PersistQueryClientProvider } from '@tanstack/react-query-persist-client'import { createSyncStoragePersister } from '@tanstack/query-sync-storage-persister'
const queryClient = new QueryClient({ defaultOptions: { queries: { gcTime: 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24, // 24 hours }, },})
const persister = createSyncStoragePersister({ storage: window.localStorage,})
ReactDOM.createRoot(rootElement).render( <PersistQueryClientProvider client={queryClient} persistOptions={{ persister }} > <App /> </PersistQueryClientProvider>,)
PersistQueryClientProvider
takes the same props as QueryClientProvider, and additionally:
persistOptions: PersistQueryClientOptions
onSuccess?: () => Promise<unknown> | unknown
If you are using the PersistQueryClientProvider
, you can also use the useIsRestoring
hook alongside it to check if a restore is currently in progress. useQuery
and friends also check this internally to avoid race conditions between the restore and mounting queries.
Persisters have the following interfaces:
export interface Persister { persistClient(persistClient: PersistedClient): Promisable<void> restoreClient(): Promisable<PersistedClient | undefined> removeClient(): Promisable<void>}
Persisted Client entries have the following interface:
export interface PersistedClient { timestamp: number buster: string cacheState: any}
You can import these (to build a persister):
import { PersistedClient, Persister,} from '@tanstack/react-query-persist-client'
You can persist however you like. Here is an example of how to build an Indexed DB persister. Compared to Web Storage API
, Indexed DB is faster, stores more than 5MB, and doesn't require serialization. That means it can readily store Javascript native types, such as Date
and File
.
import { get, set, del } from 'idb-keyval'import { PersistedClient, Persister,} from '@tanstack/react-query-persist-client'
/** * Creates an Indexed DB persister * @see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/IndexedDB_API */export function createIDBPersister(idbValidKey: IDBValidKey = 'reactQuery') { return { persistClient: async (client: PersistedClient) => { await set(idbValidKey, client) }, restoreClient: async () => { return await get<PersistedClient>(idbValidKey) }, removeClient: async () => { await del(idbValidKey) }, } as Persister}
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