1.0.3 • Published 1 year ago

react-launcher v1.0.3

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

react-launcher

English | 简体中文

A lightweight extensible launcher based on React-Router.

Install

npm install react-launcher

Introduction

Launcher is a React-Router-based launcher that takes an array of static routes and wraps a set of plugin mechanisms on top of it

Get Started

import Launcher from 'react-launcher';

const Home = () => {
    return <div>home</div>;
};
const About = () => {
    return <div>home</div>;
};

const RouterConfig = [
    {
        path: '/',
        component: Home,
    },
    {
        path: '/about',
        component: About,
    },
];

const app = new Launcher({
    routes: RouterConfig,
});

app.start();

options

NameTyperequired or DefaultDescription
hashbooleanfalseWhether to use hashRouter. The default is BrowserRouter
rootNodestring#rootReact Mounted DOM node
strictModebooleanfalseWhether to turn on React strict mode
routesArray\<RouteItemUnionType>requiredRouting configuration, see the following types for details
basenamestringundefinedreference

types

type ConstructorOptionsType = {
    hash?: boolean;
    rootNode?: string;
    strictMode?: boolean;
    routes: Array<RouteItemUnionType>;
    basename?: string;
};

type RouteItemUnionType =
    | LauncherPathRouteProps
    | LauncherLayoutRouteProps
    | LauncherIndexRouteProps
    | LauncherRedirectRouteProps;

type LauncherPathRouteProps = {
    title?: string;
    lazy?: boolean;
    component?: LauncherComponentType;
    loading?: ComponentType<LoadingComponentProps>;
    children?: Array<RouteItemUnionType>;
} & OmitChildrenElement<PathRouteProps>;

type LauncherLayoutRouteProps = {
    lazy?: boolean;
    component?: LauncherComponentType;
    loading?: ComponentType<LoadingComponentProps>;
    children?: Array<RouteItemUnionType>;
} & OmitChildrenElement<LayoutRouteProps>;

type LauncherIndexRouteProps = {
    lazy?: boolean;
    component?: LauncherComponentType;
    loading?: ComponentType<LoadingComponentProps>;
} & OmitChildrenElement<IndexRouteProps>;

type LauncherRedirectRouteProps = {
    path?: string;
    redirect?: string;
};

type DynamicImportType = Promise<{ default: ComponentType }>;

type LauncherComponentType = ComponentType | (() => DynamicImportType);
type OmitChildrenElement<T, K extends keyof T = never> = Omit<T, 'children' | 'element' | K>;

Extended LauncherRedirectRouteProps routing and title, lazy routing capabilities on top of React-Router

plugin

The plugin function is the most powerful feature of the Launcher, It's based on router development, and a plugin looks like this

export interface PluginType {
    name: string;
    outer?: PluginOuterRenderType;
    inner?: PluginInnerRenderType;
}

The simplest scenario is when the login request is successful and you want to show your application and pass on the user information

import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
import Launcher from 'react-launcher';
const LoginProviderContext = React.createContext(null);

const LoginProvider = ({ children }) => {
    const [isLogin, setLogin] = useState(false);
    const [userInfo, setUserInfo] = useState({});

    useEffect(() => {
        loginApi()
            .then(res => {
                setLogin(true);
                setUserInfo(res.data);
            })
            .catch(error => {
                redirect('/login');
            });
    }, []);

    return isLogin ? (
        <LoginProviderContext.Provider value={userInfo}>{children}</LoginProviderContext.Provider>
    ) : null;
};

const loginPlugin = {
    name: 'login',
    // The first argument is the inner component, and the second argument is the argument passed in during use
    outer: (children, opt) => {
        return <LoginProvider opt={opt}>{children}</LoginProvider>;
    },
};
const app = new Launcher({...});
// Pass the plugin a parameter via the second argument
app.use(loginPlugin, opt)
app.start()

Of course you can have multiple plugins, just be aware of the plugin call hierarchy, the ones called later will be wrapped in the outer

outer

The outer example is shown above, where it should be noted that the outer is wrapped around the router, so you can interpret it as a globally unique

inner

A common example of inner is per-route control, as it is wrapped around the outer layer of each route, such as the need to authenticate each rout e

import React, { useEffect, useState, useContext } from 'react';
import Launcher, { useLocation } from 'react-launcher';

const AuthContext = React.createContext();

const AuthProvider = ({ children }) => {
    const [authData, setAuthData] = useState();
    useEffect(() => {
        authApi().then(res => {
            setAuthData(res.data);
        });
    }, []);
    return authData ? (
        <AuthContext.Provider value={authData}>{children}</AuthContext.Provider>
    ) : null;
};

const AuthRouteComponent = ({ children, route }) => {
    const { hasAuth } = route;
    const { pathname } = useLocation();
    const authInfo = useContext(AuthContext);

    if (hasAuth && !authInfo.has(pathname)) {
        return 'No permission';
    }
    return children;
};

const plugin = {
    name: 'auth',
    outer: (children, opt) => {
        return <AuthProvider opt={opt}>{children}</AuthProvider>;
    },
    inner: (children, route, opt) => {
        return (
            <AuthRouteComponent route={route} opt={opt}>
                {children}
            </AuthRouteComponent>
        );
    },
};

const Home = () => <div>home</div>;
const About = () => <div>about</div>;

const app = new Launcher({
    routes: [
        {
            path: '/',
            component: Home,
        },
        {
            path: '/about',
            component: Home,
            // /about authentication is required
            hasAuth: true,
        },
    ],
});
app.use(plugin, opt);
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