0.3.0 • Published 1 month ago

cloudinary-react-native v0.3.0

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 month ago

Cloudinary React Native SDK

Build Status

About

The Cloudinary React Native SDK allows you to quickly and easily integrate your application with Cloudinary. Effortlessly optimize and transform your cloud's assets.

Note

This Readme provides basic installation and usage information.

Table of Contents

Key Features

Transform and optimize assets. Visit our documentation to learn more about media optimization and transformations.

Version Support

SDK VersionReact Native Version
0.3.0> 0.6

Installation

Install using your favorite package manager (yarn, npm)

npm install cloudinary-react-native

Or

yarn add cloudinary-react-native --save

Usage

Setup

The Cloudinary class is the main entry point for using the library. Your cloud_name is required to create an instance of this class. Your api_key and api_secret are also needed to perform secure API calls to Cloudinary (e.g., image and video uploads). Setting the configuration parameters can be done either programmatically using an appropriate constructor of the Cloudinary class or globally using an environment variable. You can find your account-specific configuration parameters in the Dashboard page of your account console.

Here's an example of setting configuration parameters in your React Native application:

import { AdvancedImage } from 'cloudinary-react-native';
import { Cloudinary } from '@cloudinary/url-gen';

Transform and Optimize Assets

import { AdvancedImage } from 'cloudinary-react-native';
import {Cloudinary} from '@cloudinary/url-gen';

const myCld = new Cloudinary({
  cloud: {
    cloudName: "demo",
  },
});

let img = myCld.image('sample');

export default function App() {
  return (
    <View style={styles.container}>
      <AdvancedImage cldImg={img} style={{width:300, height:200}}/>
    </View>
  );
};

Uploading Assets

The following example performs an unsigned upload of a string using the default settings, a request upload callback, and an upload preset (required for unsigned uploads):

  const cld = new Cloudinary({
    cloud: {
      cloudName: '<your_cloud_name>'
    },
    url: {
      secure: true
    }
  });

  const options: UploadApiOptions = {
    upload_preset: 'sample_preset',
    unsigned: true,
  }

    await upload(cld, {file: filePath , options: options, callback: (error: any, response: any) => {
        //.. handle response
    }})

The uploaded image is assigned a randomly generated public ID, which is returned as part of the response object. The image is immediately available for download through a CDN:

cloudinary.image().generate("generatedPublicId")

http://res.cloudinary.com/<your cloud>/image/upload/generatedPublicId.jpg

You can also specify your own public ID:

const options: UploadApiOptions = {
  upload_preset: 'sample_preset',
  publicId: "sample_remote",
}

await upload(cld, {file: filePath , options: options, callback: (error: any, response: any) => {
    //.. handle response
  }})

For security reasons, mobile applications cannot contain the full account credentials, and so they cannot freely upload resources to the cloud. Cloudinary provides two different mechanisms to enable end-users to upload resources without providing full credentials.

1. Unsigned uploads using Upload Presets.

You can create an upload preset in your Cloudinary account console, defining rules that limit the formats, transformations, dimensions and more. Once the preset is defined, it's name is supplied when calling upload. An upload call will only succeed if the preset name is used and the resource is within the preset's pre-defined limits.

The following example uploads a local resource, available as a Uri, assuming a preset named 'sample_preset' already exists in the account:

  const options: UploadApiOptions = {
  upload_preset: 'sample_preset',
  unsigned: true,
}

await upload(cld, {file: uri , options: options, callback: (error: any, response: any) => {
    //.. handle response
  }})
2. Signed uploads with server-generated signature

Another way to upload without including credentials is using signed uploads. You should generate the upload authentication signature on the server side, where it's safe to store the api_secret. For more information on how to sign upload you can visit our documentation.

The Cloudinary React Native SDK allows you to provide a server-generated signature and any additional parameters that were generated on the server side (instead of signing using api_secret locally).

Your server can use any Cloudinary libraries (Ruby on Rails, PHP, Python & Django, Java, Perl, .Net, etc.) for generating the signature. The following JSON in an example of a response of an upload authorization request to your server, For more information you can visit our documentation:

	{
	  "signature": "sgjfdoigfjdgfdogidf9g87df98gfdb8f7d6gfdg7gfd8",
	  "public_id": "abdbasdasda76asd7sa789",
	  "timestamp": 1346925631,
	  "api_key": "123456789012345"
	}

Use the signature field to put the signature you got from your server, when using signature api key is required as well as part of the Cloudinary initialization.

  const options: UploadApiOptions = {
    upload_preset: 'ios_sample',
    signature: "<your_signature>",
  }
  await upload(cld, {file: filePath , options: options, callback: (error: any, response: any) => {
    //.. handle response
  }})

Contributions

See contributing guidelines.

Get Help

If you run into an issue or have a question, you can either:

About Cloudinary

Cloudinary is a powerful media API for websites and mobile apps alike, Cloudinary enables developers to efficiently manage, transform, optimize, and deliver images and videos through multiple CDNs. Ultimately, viewers enjoy responsive and personalized visual-media experiences—irrespective of the viewing device.

Additional Resources

Licence

Released under the MIT license.