Skip to content

In-memory GROQ store. Streams all available documents from Sanity into an in-memory database for local querying.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

sanity-io/groq-store

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

@sanity/groq-store

npm stat npm version gzip size size

In-memory GROQ store. Streams all available documents from Sanity into an in-memory database and allows you to query them there.

Targets

  • Node.js >= 14
  • Modern browsers (Edge >= 14, Chrome, Safari, Firefox etc)

Caveats

  • Streams entire dataset to memory, so generally not recommended for large datasets
  • Needs custom event source to work with tokens in browser

Installation

npm i @sanity/groq-store

Usage

import {groqStore, groq} from '@sanity/groq-store'
// import SanityEventSource from '@sanity/eventsource'

const store = groqStore({
  projectId: 'abc123',
  dataset: 'blog',

  // Keep dataset up to date with remote changes. Default: false
  listen: true,

  // "Replaces" published documents with drafts, if available.
  // Note that document IDs will not reflect draft status, currently
  overlayDrafts: true,

  // Optional token, if you want to receive drafts, or read data from private datasets
  // NOTE: Needs custom EventSource to work in browsers
  token: 'someAuthToken',

  // Optional limit on number of documents, to prevent using too much memory unexpectedly
  // Throws on the first operation (query, retrieval, subscription) if reaching this limit.
  documentLimit: 10000,

  // Optional EventSource. Necessary to authorize using token in the browser, since
  // the native window.EventSource does not accept headers.
  // EventSource: SanityEventSource,

  // Optional allow list filter for document types. You can use this to limit the amount of documents by declaring the types you want to sync. Note that since you're fetching a subset of your dataset, queries that works against your Content Lake might not work against the local groq-store.
  // You can quickly list all your types using this query: `array::unique(*[]._type)`
  includeTypes: ['post', 'page', 'product', 'sanity.imageAsset'],
})

store.query(groq`*[_type == "author"]`).then((docs) => {
  console.log(docs)
})

store.getDocument('grrm').then((grrm) => {
  console.log(grrm)
})

store.getDocuments(['grrm', 'jrrt']).then(([grrm, jrrt]) => {
  console.log(grrm, jrrt)
})

const sub = store.subscribe(
  groq`*[_type == $type][] {name}`, // Query
  {type: 'author'}, // Params
  (err, result) => {
    if (err) {
      console.error('Oh no, an error:', err)
      return
    }

    console.log('Result:', result)
  },
)

// Later, to close subscription:
sub.unsubscribe()

// Later, to close listener:
store.close()

License

MIT © Sanity.io

Release new version

Run "CI & Release" workflow. Make sure to select the main branch and check "Release new version".

Version will be automatically bumped based on conventional commits since the last release.

Semantic release will only release on configured branches, so it is safe to run release on any branch.

Note: commits with chore: will be ignored. If you want updated dependencies to trigger a new version, use fix(deps): instead.

About

In-memory GROQ store. Streams all available documents from Sanity into an in-memory database for local querying.

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Security policy

Stars

Watchers

Forks