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Releases: reduxjs/redux-toolkit

v1.6.2

05 Oct 02:15
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This release fixes several small issues with RTK Query, as well as a regression in the createAsyncThunk types and an issue with sourcemap URLs.

Changelog

RTK Query Fixes

The isLoading flag should only ever be true on the first run of a hook, but would sometimes briefly flip to true on later calls. That should now stay the correct value.

fetchBaseQuery should now work properly when used in conjunction with node-fetch.

The BaseQueryApi object now correctly includes the extra argument that was provided when configuring the thunk middleware, if any.

Other Fixes

Sourcemap URLs should now be correct, especially for the CommonJS build artifacts.

createAsyncThunk's types have been updated to correctly infer return values when working with enums.

Lots of assorted docs tweaks and updates!

What's Changed

Full Changelog: v1.6.1...v1.6.2

v1.6.1

17 Jul 23:47
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This release improves several edge cases in RTK Query behavior and implementation, deprecates a lesser-used API, and reverts an internal compatability change from 1.6.

Changelog

RTK Query Tweaks

We've made several small tweaks to the RTK Query implementation:

  • fetchBaseQuery now provides a more meaningful error if the response can't be parsed successfully
  • fetchBaseQuery has been tweaked to always read fetch from the global scope, rather than closing over it at creation time. This improves usage with test tools that mock or override fetch at the system level, such as Mirage.
  • The skipToken symbol is now created using Symbol.for(), to get a consistent reference
  • API slices now warn if you try to add more than one reducer with the same reducerPath name
  • An internal hook usage was tweaked to avoid the "don't call useLayoutEffect on the server" warning being printed in SSR

Also, mutations no longer track the originalArgs value in the store. That value is needed to re-run queries, but since mutations are not re-run, it wasn't needed. This change resolves cases where users were passing a non-serializable value as the mutation argument and then seeing warnings about it being put into the store.

Technically, this is a breaking change (removes a store property what would have been returned by a selector), but it is a necessary bugfix, and it does not appear anyone was actively using that property. So, we're keeping this as a patch release.

Generally, the information removed is still available as:

  • a property on the promise returned by dispatch
  • part of the thunk action meta
  • return value of the useMutation hook

Other Changes

The typings for createAction and createAsyncThunk have been tweaked to avoid lint warnings about "unbound methods".

The exported version of getDefaultMiddleware is now marked as deprecated, and will be removed in a future 2.0 release. Use the function passed as the middleware callback instead, which has the correct store types anyway.

In 1.6, we moved the Immer enableES5 plugin init call from index.ts to be inside of createReducer instead, in an effort to maybe save a few bytes for some users. This has caused some issues for users who still support IE11, possibly due to build config issues. Realistically, we expect that everyone who uses RTK will be calling createReducer, createSlice, or createApi at some point, so there's no real situations where this wouldn't be called anyway. So, we've moved the enableES5 call back to index.ts for consistency. In a future 2.0 release, we will remove that call entirely, and users that still support IE11 will need to call that themselves.

Changes

v1.6.0 : RTK Query!

07 Jun 13:52
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This release adds the new RTK Query data fetching APIs to Redux Toolkit. It also adds multiple new options to createAsyncThunk for including meta fields and working with results, updates dependencies to Redux 4.1 and Immer 9, and includes a complete rewrite of our build toolchain with additional "modern" build artifacts in the package.

While this is a minor release in terms of semver, this is a huge update in terms of functionality, scope, and effort. We're excited about how these new APIs will help our users build better applications with less code and better behavior!

Installation:

npm i @reduxjs/toolkit@latest

yarn add @reduxjs/toolkit@latest

Upgrade Note: During the alphas, we received some reports of users seeing incorrect types after installing the RTK 1.6 previews. The problems appeared to be caused by multiple versions of the redux package ending up in a project's node_modules folder. If you see this issue, you may need to uninstall and reinstall react-redux with the latest version, to help ensure no redux duplicates are in the package tree.

Changelog

RTK Query Data Caching API

RTK Query is a powerful data fetching and caching tool. It is designed to simplify common cases for loading data in a web application, eliminating the need to hand-write data fetching & caching logic yourself.

RTK Query is an optional addon included in the Redux Toolkit package, and its functionality is built on top of the other APIs in Redux Toolkit.

See the RTK Query usage guides and API reference docs for complete information on how to use RTK Query:

https://redux-toolkit.js.org/rtk-query/overview

Motivation

Web applications normally need to fetch data from a server in order to display it. They also usually need to make updates to that data, send those updates to the server, and keep the cached data on the client in sync with the data on the server. This is made more complicated by the need to implement other behaviors used in today's applications:

  • Tracking loading state in order to show UI spinners
  • Avoiding duplicate requests for the same data
  • Optimistic updates to make the UI feel faster
  • Managing cache lifetimes as the user interacts with the UI

The Redux core has always been very minimal - it's up to developers to write all the actual logic. That means that Redux has never included anything built in to help solve these use cases. The Redux docs have taught some common patterns for dispatching actions around the request lifecycle to track loading state and request results, and Redux Toolkit's createAsyncThunk API was designed to abstract that typical pattern. However, users still have to write significant amounts of reducer logic to manage the loading state and the cached data.

Over the last couple years, the React community has come to realize that "data fetching and caching" is really a different set of concerns than "state management". While you can use a state management library like Redux to cache data, the use cases are different enough that it's worth using tools that are purpose-built for the data fetching use case.

RTK Query takes inspiration from other tools that have pioneered solutions for data fetching, like Apollo Client, React Query, Urql, and SWR, but adds a unique approach to its API design:

  • The data fetching and caching logic is built on top of Redux Toolkit's createSlice and createAsyncThunk APIs
  • Because Redux Toolkit is UI-agnostic, RTK Query's functionality can be used with any UI layer
  • API endpoints are defined ahead of time, including how to generate query parameters from arguments and transform responses for caching
  • RTK Query can also generate React hooks that encapsulate the entire data fetching process, provide data and isLoading fields to components, and manage the lifetime of cached data as components mount and unmount
  • RTK Query provides "cache entry lifecycle" options that enable use cases like streaming cache updates via websocket messages after fetching the initial data
  • We have early working examples of code generation of API slices from OpenAPI and GraphQL schemas
  • Finally, RTK Query is completely written in TypeScript, and is designed to provide an excellent TS usage experience

Basic Usage

RTK Query is included within the installation of the core Redux Toolkit package. It is available via either of the two entry points below:

import { createApi } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'

/* React-specific entry point that automatically generates
   hooks corresponding to the defined endpoints */
import { createApi } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query/react'

For typical usage with React, start by importing createApi and defining an "API slice" that lists the server's base URL and which endpoints we want to interact with:

import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query/react'
import { Pokemon } from './types'

// Define a service using a base URL and expected endpoints
export const pokemonApi = createApi({
  reducerPath: 'pokemonApi',
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: 'https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/' }),
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    getPokemonByName: builder.query<Pokemon, string>({
      query: (name) => `pokemon/${name}`,
    }),
  }),
})

// Export hooks for usage in functional components, which are
// auto-generated based on the defined endpoints
export const { useGetPokemonByNameQuery } = pokemonApi

The "API slice" also contains an auto-generated Redux slice reducer and a custom middleware that manages suscription lifetimes. Both of those need to be added to the Redux store:

import { configureStore } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
// Or from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query/react'
import { setupListeners } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
import { pokemonApi } from './services/pokemon'

export const store = configureStore({
  reducer: {
    // Add the generated reducer as a specific top-level slice
    [pokemonApi.reducerPath]: pokemonApi.reducer,
  },
  // Adding the api middleware enables caching, invalidation, polling,
  // and other useful features of `rtk-query`.
  middleware: (getDefaultMiddleware) =>
    getDefaultMiddleware().concat(pokemonApi.middleware),
})

// optional, but required for refetchOnFocus/refetchOnReconnect behaviors
// see `setupListeners` docs - takes an optional callback as the 2nd arg for customization
setupListeners(store.dispatch)

Finally, import the auto-generated React hooks from the API slice into your component file, and call the hooks in your component with any needed parameters. RTK Query will automatically fetch data on mount, re-fetch when parameters change, provide {data, isFetching} values in the result, and re-render the component as those values change:

import * as React from 'react'
import { useGetPokemonByNameQuery } from './services/pokemon'

export default function App() {
  // Using a query hook automatically fetches data and returns query values
  const { data, error, isLoading } = useGetPokemonByNameQuery('bulbasaur')
  
  // render UI based on data and loading state
}

Bundle Size

RTK Query adds a fixed one-time amount to your app's bundle size. Since RTK Query builds on top of Redux Toolkit and React-Redux, the added size varies depending on whether you are already using those in your app. The estimated min+gzip bundle sizes are:

  • If you are using RTK already: ~9kb for RTK Query and ~2kb for the hooks.
  • If you are not using RTK already:
    • Without React: 17 kB for RTK+dependencies+RTK Query
    • With React: 19kB + React-Redux, which is a peer dependency

Adding additional endpoint definitions should only increase size based on the actual code inside the endpoints definitions, which will typically be just a few bytes.

The functionality included in RTK Query quickly pays for the added bundle size, and the elimination of hand-written data fetching logic should be a net improvement in size for most meaningful applications.

Build Tooling Improvements

We've completely replaced our previous TSDX-based build tooling pipeline with a custom build pipeline based on ESBuild and TypeScript. This should have no visible changes behavior-wise for end users - we've kept the same build artifact names and ES syntax levels. However, it does speed up our own build process, which is important now that we're generating many more output files.

The published package now also includes a set of "modern" ESM build artifacts that target ES2017 syntax instead of ES5. These files should be smaller than the current "ESM" artifact, which is uses the ES module format but with ES5-level syntax for backwards compatibility.

Most bundlers should currently pick up the ESM artifact as the default, such as in Create-React-App projects. If you are planning to drop IE11 compatibility, you should be able to modify your bundler config to import the modern artifact instead. Since the modern artifact includes the usual process.env.NODE_ENV checks for build tools to use, we also have pre-compiled versions for "modern dev" and "modern prod" that are suitable for use in browsers or ESM-centric build tools.

We've also done an optimization pass on both the RTK core and the RTK Query sections to improve tree shaking.

See this table for details on the generated artifacts, which are available for each of the entry points:

Redux Toolkit Build Artifacts

| Filename | Module | Syntax | process.env | Purpose |
|----------------------------------------|--------|-------...

Read more

v1.6.0-rc.1

03 Jun 22:54
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v1.6.0-rc.1 Pre-release
Pre-release

This release candidate finalizes the upcoming RTK Query APIs. It adds new options to createAsyncThunk for adding meta fields to thunk-dispatched actions, updates the createApi lifecycle handlers to pass through those meta fields, and removes fields that were deprecated during the alpha process. We've also fleshed out the RTKQ preview docs with significant new content.

This should be the final preview before the RTK 1.6 final release, barring any unforeseen last-minute bugs. (Note: This is the same content as rc.0, but we found a bug in our build process that had wrong output in that release. Hopefully no more issues!)

The preview docs are located at https://deploy-preview-1016--redux-starter-kit-docs.netlify.app .

Installation:

npm i @reduxjs/toolkit@next

yarn add @reduxjs/toolkit@next

Changelog

Async Thunk meta Support

createAsyncThunk automatically generates action creators and action types, and then automatically dispatches those actions during execution. This simplifies the process of creating and using thunks, but like all abstractions, also limits flexibility.

One limitation has been that there was no way to customize the meta field to the actions generated by createAsyncThunk, and some users needed to add additional metadata to actions for use by other middleware.

We've updated createAsyncThunk to allow adding additional contents to meta. The approach varies based on the action type:

  • pending: there is a new getPendingMeta({arg, requestId}) callback that can be passed as part of the createAsyncThunk options object. This is necessary because the pending action is dispatched before the payload creator is even called.
  • fulfilled: there is a new fulfillWithMeta utility in the payload creator's thunkApi object, which can be used instead of returning the payload directly: return fulfillWithMeta(actualPayload, meta)
  • rejected: the existing rejectWithValue utility now also accepts a meta argument: return rejectWithValue(failedPayload, meta)

API Lifecycle meta Support

The createApi cache lifecycle callbacks like onCacheEntryAdded now make the meta field available as part of the promise result, such as cacheDataLoaded.

Code Cleanup and Types Tweaks

The fields such as onStart and onSuccess that were deprecated in earlier alphas have been removed.

The now-unused ApiWithInjectedEndpoints type was removed.

Various APIs that accept arrays were updated to mark those array parameters as readonly, to help indicate that they shouldn't be mutated, and to ensure that arrays marked as const can be accepted.

The ApiModules type was modified to prevent a inferred type of this node exceeds the maximum length the compiler will serialize TS error.

Docs Updates

We've updated to Docusaurus 2.0-beta.0, which includes Webpack 5. No visible change for you, but faster CI builds for us thanks to build artifact caching! (Our docs builds dropped from around 7 minutes each build down to around 25 seconds, thanks to only changed files being rebuilt.)

We've also completed filling out the RTK Query API docs.

Changes

Code

Docs

  • Wayyyy too many docs PRs to even try to list here :) (@Shrugsy)
  • Wayyyy too many examples moved from sandboxes to even try to list here :) (@msutkowski)
  • Match redux config for docusaurus webpack v5 (#1086 - @msutkowski)
  • Some assorted content tweaks (@markerikson)

v1.6.0-beta.0...v1.6.0-rc.1

v1.6.0-rc.0

03 Jun 13:53
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v1.6.0-rc.0 Pre-release
Pre-release

This release is broken due to a build misconfiguration - please see rc.1 instead:

https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases/tag/v1.6.0-rc.1

v1.6.0-beta.0

22 May 18:09
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v1.6.0-beta.0 Pre-release
Pre-release

This beta release improves the in-progress RTK Query APIs. It adds a new onCacheEntryAdded lifecycle callback to enable streaming cache updates, adds per-endpoint cache timeout overrides and additional options for skipping queries, and fixes issues with query arg serialization and build output, We've also fleshed out the RTKQ preview docs with significant new content.

We are hopeful that this will be the final pre-release with any meaningful API changes, and that the remaining work should just be final polish of the documentation before this goes live.

The preview docs are located at https://deploy-preview-1016--redux-starter-kit-docs.netlify.app .

Installation:

npm i @reduxjs/toolkit@next

yarn add @reduxjs/toolkit@next

Changelog

Cache Entry Lifecycle

RTK Query is built around standard HTTP endpoint request/response-style API calls. However, today's applications often use a hybrid approach, where initial data is fetched via a request, but then further updates are streamed via a websocket or other persistent connection.

Endpoint definitions now support an onCacheEntryAdded lifeycle callback. This callback will be executed whenever a new endpoint subscription entry is added to the cache (ie, when a component requests a specific endpoint+params combination that is not currently being loaded).

The onCacheEntryAdded callback allows you to run additional logic after the initial fetch completes and after the entry is removed from the cache, and provides tools to update the existing cache for this query as needed. The intended use case is to open a websocket-type connection, and update the cached data over time as messages are received. A typical usage might look like:

export const api = createApi({
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: "/" }),
  endpoints: (build) => ({
    getMessages: build.query({
      query: (channel) => `messages/${channel}`,
      async onCacheEntryAdded(
        arg,
        { updateCachedData, cacheDataLoaded, cacheEntryRemoved }
      ) {
        // wait for the initial query to resolve before proceeding
        await cacheDataLoaded;
        // Update our query result when messages are received
        const unsubscribe = ChatAPI.subscribeToChannel(
          arg.channelId,
          (message) => {
            // Dispatches an update action with the diff
            updateCachedData((draft) => {
              draft.push(message);
            });
          }
        );

        // Clean up when cache subscription is removed
        await cacheEntryRemoved;
        unsubscribe();
      },
    }),
  }),
});

This adds significant additional flexibility in interacting with cached data.

Additional API Polish

createApi supports a keepUnusedDataFor option to modify the default cache expiration time, but that can now be overridden on a per-endpoint basis as well.

The selectFromResult option has been reworked so that it receives the standard hook result structure as its input, and you can extract and return whatever pieces of that data are actually needed by this component.

RTKQ now exports a skipToken value that can be passed to queries as an indicator that the query should be skipped for now, in addition to the existing skip flag option. This is primarily useful for working around some TS inference issues with hook return types.

The copyWithStructuralSharing util is now exported.

The updateQueryResult and pathQueryResult util methods have been renamed to updateQueryData and patchQueryData.

Optimistic updates can now be reverted by calling .undo(), which automatically dispatches the appropriate inverse patch update action.

Fixes

The MiddlewareArray type has been tweaked to produce correct behavior when transpiled.

The default query arg serialization logic now handles nested values correctly.

Docs Updates

We've significantly improved the preview RTK Query documentation. We've added pages on "Streaming Updates", "Cached Data", "Customizing Queries", and "Migrating to RTK Query". We've also fleshed out the API references for the generated React hooks, added more details to descriptions of queries and endpoints, and filled out info on how cache lifetime behavior works. Thanks to @Shrugsy for writing most of the docs updates!

Changes

Code

Docs

  • Docs - add 'Cached data' concept page (#1036 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - RTKQ - Convert codeblocks to TS & enable codeblock transpilation (#1042 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - add Streaming Updates page (#1049 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - add "Customizing Queries" page (#1057 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - Add "Migrating to RTK Query" page (#1060 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - add RTK Query content to "Getting Started" page (#1066 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - expand explanation of cache lifetime and subscription behavior (#1071 - @Shrugsy)
  • Docs - extend detail for Queries and Endpoints (#1074 - @Shrugsy)

v1.6.0-alpha.2...v1.6.0-beta.0

v1.6.0-alpha.2

26 Apr 01:58
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v1.6.0-alpha.2 Pre-release
Pre-release

This release fixes a bug with RTK Query cache invalidation, and exposes the useLazyQuerySubscription hook.

Installation:

npm i @reduxjs/toolkit@next

yarn add @reduxjs/toolkit@next

Changelog

Invalidation Bugfix

We saw that RTK Query cache invalidation was actually broken in alpha.1. After investigation, it looks like TypeScript was outputting incorrect code for looping over a set.values() iterator. We've tweaked the logic to work around that.

Please upgrade to this release ASAP, as invalidation is a key part of RTK Query's functionality.

useLazyQuerySubscription

The useLazyQuerySubscription hook was documented, but wasn't actually being included in the output. We've fixed that.

Additional Build Tweaks

We're still fiddling with the combination of ESBuild and TypeScript for our recently updated build chain, and have flipped a couple more switches in the process. Should be no user-visible difference.

Changes

  • Expose useLazyQuerySubscription for endpoints ( #1017 - @Shrugsy)
  • Fix bad transpilation of set iteration breaking invalidation (#1020 - @markerikson)

v1.6.0-alpha.1...v1.6.0-alpha.2

v1.6.0-alpha.1

24 Apr 22:53
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v1.6.0-alpha.1 Pre-release
Pre-release

This pre-1.6 alpha release integrates the RTK Query source code into the Redux Toolkit repo, publishes the RTK Query APIs as nested endpoints in the @reduxjs/toolkit package, and publishes a docs preview containing the RTK Query API and usage guide docs integrated into the RTK docs site. We've also bumped our Redux dependency to 4.1.0.

This release also contains the changes from 1.6.0-alpha.0, including Immer 9.x and the improvements to createAsyncThunk and createEntityAdapter.

Note: we have published additional bugfixes since alpha.1. Please see the releases list for details and be sure to update to @reduxjs/toolkit@next.

Installation:

npm i @reduxjs/toolkit@next

yarn add @reduxjs/toolkit@next

Changelog

RTK Query Integration

RTK Query is a data fetching and caching library built for Redux. It's most similar to React Query, Apollo, Urql, and SWR. The idea is that you just say "here's my URL endpoint and some query params", and it handles the entire process of:

  • Starting to fetch the data when needed
  • Managing loading state
  • Caching the data
  • Re-rendering your component when the loading state changes or the data is available
  • Clearing the cache when the last component that needs the data is unmounted
  • Enabling automatic polling of the data if desired

So, instead of having to write a bunch of thunks, action creators, reducers, useEffects, and dispatching yourself, you just do:

// src/services/pokemon.ts
import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query/react'

// Define a service using a base URL and expected endpoints
export const pokemonApi = createApi({
  reducerPath: 'pokemonApi',
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: 'https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/' }),
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
	getPokemonByName: builder.query({
	  query: (name: string) => `pokemon/${name}`,
	}),
  }),
})

// Export hooks for usage in functional components, which are
// auto-generated based on the defined endpoints
export const { useGetPokemonByNameQuery } = pokemonApi


// src/App.tsx
import { useGetPokemonByNameQuery } from './services/pokemon'

export default function App() {
  // Using a query hook automatically fetches data and returns query values
  const { data, error, isLoading } = useGetPokemonByNameQuery('bulbasaur')
  
  // render logic here
}

We originally developed RTK Query as a standalone package at https://github.com/rtk-incubator/rtk-query in order to enable faster iteration during the alpha process.

Now that the RTK Query APIs have stabilized, we've merged all of the RTK Query source code and docs content back into the main RTK repo. From there, we've updated our build tooling and package publishing to include the RTK Query code inside the @reduxjs/toolkit package, but as separate nested entry points.

// Existing RTK APIs
import { createSlice } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
// RTK Query APIs, with UI-agnostic logic
import { createApi } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
// Same RTK Query APIs, but with React-specific functionality built in
import { createApi } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query/react'

If you've been using RTK Query in its standalone alpha package, you should be able to migrate by installing this RTK alpha, and just switching your imports to match the examples above.

Since these are separate entry points from the root package, you won't pay any bundle size cost unless you specifically import the RTK Query APIs.

We have not yet done extensive testing of the merged package - that's why this is an alpha! That said, we've successfully been able to locally publish a preview version of the package and use it in a standalone version of the RTKQ "kitchen sink with React" demo app, which is a standard CRA project. We've also verified that the app builds correctly with both TS 4.1 (including named hooks exports using string literal syntax) and TS 4.0 (with just the per-endpoint hook subfields).

For visualization purposes, here's what the bundle size analysis for that app looks like:

image

In general, we believe that this alpha should run correctly in varying environments, but we specifically request that users try this out and let us know if you run into any problems.

We also expect some additional final tweaks to the RTKQ APIs before 1.6 is released, but do not expect any large breaking changes.

RTK Query Docs

We've also merged the RTK Query docs content and added it to a preview version of the RTK docs site. We'll leave this preview up during the RTK 1.6 pre-release process. Here's the links to the primary new docs pages:

Note that we still need to fill out additional docs content for the RTK APIs and update some of the examples! We'll be working to finish that before the final release.

Redux 4.1.0

Since we just released Redux 4.1.0, this release also bumps our Redux dependency to match that. This will shave about 1K off your existing min+gz bundle sizes.

Changes

https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/compare/v1.6.0-alpha.0..v1.6.0-alpha.1

v1.6.0-alpha.0

04 Apr 02:13
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v1.6.0-alpha.0 Pre-release
Pre-release

This initial pre-1.6 alpha release reworks our build tooling to enable upcoming changes, updates dependencies, adds new entity adapter CRUD methods, and tweaks async thunk options.

We have several major improvements planned for later pre-1.6 alphas, including merging the "RTK Query" APIs back into RTK itself and making those available as subpackages.

Changelog

Build Tooling Updates

We've replaced our existing TSDX build setup with a new custom setup based on ESBuild + TypeScript (thanks to @hardfist for doing all the work on that!). In theory, we should have all of the same build artifacts we had before, targeting the same browser and ES spec levels. We did add a new set of "modern" build artifacts that target ES2017, with builds for bundlers and browwsers. However, we can't officially list those in package.json yet, as apparently defining an exports key can break Node and is considered a breaking change. We'll look at flipping that on in a future 2.0 release.

Please let us know if you see any bugs that may be related to the build tooling and bundling changes!

Dependency Updates

We've updated Immer to 9.0.x. Also, we've updated Redux to the hot-off-the-presses 4.1.0-alpha.0, which shrinks bundle size by extracted error messages in production. Again, please report any problems you run into.

New Entity Adapter Replace Methods

createEntityAdapter already had methods to add, upsert, and update items. We've added setOne and setMany, which let you add or entirely replace existing items.

Async Thunk Improvements

createAsyncThunk promises now have a .unwrap() method that returns a promise for the actual result payload, or throws an error if the promise was rejected. This simplifies the use case of working with the thunk result in components.

createAsyncThunk also now accepts an idGenerator option to let you swap out the default nanoid() ID generation utility for your own, such as uuid4.

Other Updates

We've done a bit of internal cleanup in a few functions to simplify and shorten implementations.

configureStore now checks for accidentally returning undefined for a middleware array, or undefined entries in the array.

The PreloadedState type should now work better with TS 4.3+.

Changes

v1.5.1...v1.6.0-alpha.0

v1.5.1

26 Mar 03:25
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This release updates createReducer/createSlice to ensure initial state gets frozen, optimizes the performance of the immutability and serializability dev check middleware, and re-exports the original and isDraft APIs from Immer.

Changes

Freezing Initial State

Immer has always frozen its result states in development, and as of Immer 8, does so in production as well. Since both createReducer and createSlice use Immer, all their result states get frozen.

However, the initial state was never being run through Immer, and thus was never being frozen. That meant it was actually possible to mutate initial state values.

We now run the initial state through an Immer no-op reducer, just to ensure that it's properly frozen at all times.

Dev Check Middleware Optimizations

The immutability and serializability dev check middleware act as safety rails to catch common mistakes. However, both of them do so by running deep recursive checks on all of your Redux state, after every dispatched action. Those deep checks are often very expensive, especially as your state grows larger, and the performance can add noticeable lag in dev. RTK offers options for turning them off or ignoring specific slices of state, and warns if they're taking too long, but those are escape hatches we would rather people not use because they lose the safety benefits.

In this release, we've optimized both middleware to run significantly faster.

The immutability middleware now considers frozen objects to be immutable by default, and will stop recursing when it sees a frozen value. This means that in most cases, the runtime of the immutability middleware is effectively 0ms, as it only has to do a few quick checks on your root state slice values without going any deeper. We've also optimized the nested keypath calculation logic, which cuts down on runtime significantly if it does actually have to recurse.

We've also applied the keypath optimizations to the serializability middleware as well. While this middleware can't benefit from the frozen checks, the keypath optimizations have cut its runtime down by about 70% in benchmarks.

Additional Immer Re-Exports

We now export the original and isDraft APIs from Immer for completeness.

This release also updates the Immer dependency to 8.0.1+ to address a vulnerability in Immer. Our dependency was already 8.0.0+, so strictly speaking no update was necessary - users just needed to update their own local dependencies to get the newer Immer version.

Docs Updates

We've made several updates to the RTK docs:

  • The existing tutorials in the RTK docs site have been removed, and we now point to the "Redux Essentials" and the "Redux Fundamentals" tutorials in the Redux core docs so that there's only one place to have to read through tutorials
  • We've added a couple "quick start" tutorial pages that show the bare basics of setting up RTK and using it with TypeScript

Changelog

v1.5.0...v1.5.1