TypeScript client
The TypeScript client is a higher-level client interface that wraps the HTTP API to make it easy to sync Shapes in the web browser and other JavaScript environments.
Defined in packages/typescript-client, it provides a ShapeStream primitive to subscribe to a change stream and a Shape primitive to get the whole shape whenever it changes.
Install
The client is published on NPM as @electric-sql/client:
npm i @electric-sql/clientHow to use
The client exports:
- a
ShapeStreamclass for consuming a Shape Log; and - a
Shapeclass for materialising the log stream into a shape object
These compose together, e.g.:
import { ShapeStream } from '@electric-sql/client'
const stream = new ShapeStream({
url: `http://localhost:3000/v1/shape`,
table: 'items'
})
const shape = new Shape(stream)
// The callback runs every time the Shape data changes.
shape.subscribe(data => console.log(data))ShapeStream
The ShapeStream is a low-level primitive for consuming a Shape Log.
Construct with a shape definition and options and then either subscribe to the shape log messages directly or pass into a Shape to materialise the stream into an object.
import { ShapeStream } from '@electric-sql/client'
// Passes subscribers rows as they're inserted, updated, or deleted
const stream = new ShapeStream({
url: `http://localhost:3000/v1/shape`,
table: `foo`,
})
stream.subscribe(messages => {
// messages is an array with one or more row updates
// and the stream will wait for all subscribers to process them
// before proceeding
})Options
The ShapeStream constructor takes the following options:
/**
* Options for constructing a ShapeStream.
*/
export interface ShapeStreamOptions<T = never> {
/**
* The full URL to where the Shape is hosted. This can either be the Electric
* server directly or a proxy. E.g. for a local Electric instance, you might
* set `http://localhost:3000/v1/shape`
*/
url: string
/**
* Which database to use.
* This is optional unless Electric is used with multiple databases.
*/
databaseId?: string
/**
* The root table for the shape.
*/
table: string
/**
* The where clauses for the shape.
*/
where?: string
/**
* The columns to include in the shape.
* Must include primary keys, and can only inlude valid columns.
*/
columns?: string[]
/**
* The "offset" on the shape log. This is typically not set as the ShapeStream
* will handle this automatically. A common scenario where you might pass an offset
* is if you're maintaining a local cache of the log. If you've gone offline
* and are re-starting a ShapeStream to catch-up to the latest state of the Shape,
* you'd pass in the last offset and shapeId you'd seen from the Electric server
* so it knows at what point in the shape to catch you up from.
*/
offset?: Offset
/**
* Similar to `offset`, this isn't typically used unless you're maintaining
* a cache of the shape log.
*/
shapeId?: string
/**
* HTTP headers to attach to requests made by the client.
* Can be used for adding authentication headers.
*/
headers?: Record<string, string>
/**
* Alternatively you can override the fetch function.
*/
fetchClient?: typeof fetch
/**
* Automatically fetch updates to the Shape. If you just want to sync the current
* shape and stop, pass false.
*/
subscribe?: boolean
backoffOptions?: BackoffOptions
parser?: Parser<T>
signal?: AbortSignal
}Messages
A ShapeStream consumes and emits a stream of messages. These messages can either be a ChangeMessage representing a change to the shape data:
export type ChangeMessage<T extends Row<unknown> = Row> = {
key: string
value: T
headers: Header & { operation: `insert` | `update` | `delete` }
offset: Offset
}Or a ControlMessage, representing an instruction to the client, as documented here.
Parsing
By default, when constructing a ChangeMessage.value, ShapeStream parses the following Postgres types into native JavaScript values:
int2,int4,float4, andfloat8are parsed into JavaScriptNumberint8is parsed into a JavaScriptBigIntboolis parsed into a JavaScriptBooleanjsonandjsonbare parsed into JavaScript values/arrays/objects usingJSON.parse- Postgres Arrays are parsed into JavaScript arrays, e.g.
"{{1,2},{3,4}}"is parsed into[[1,2],[3,4]]
All other types aren't parsed and are left in the string format as they were served by the HTTP endpoint.
Custom parsing
You can extend this behaviour by configuring a custom parser. This is an object mapping Postgres types to parsing functions for those types. For example, we can extend the default parser to parse booleans into 1 or 0 instead of true or false:
const stream = new ShapeStream({
url: `http://localhost:3000/v1/shape`,
table: `foo`,
parser: {
bool: (value: string) => value === `true` ? 1 : 0
}
})Replica full
By default Electric sends the modified columns in an update message, not the complete row. To be specific:
- an
insertoperation contains the full row - an
updateoperation contains the primary key column(s) and the changed columns - a
deleteoperation contains just the primary key column(s)
If you'd like to recieve the full row value for updates and deletes, you can set the replica option of your ShapeStream to full:
import { ShapeStream } from "@electric-sql/client"
const stream = new ShapeStream({
url: `http://localhost:3000/v1/shape`,
table: `foo`,
replica: `full`,
})This is less efficient and will use more bandwidth for the same shape (especially for tables with large static column values). Note also that shapes with different replica settings are distinct, even for the same table and where clause combination.
Shape
The Shape is the main primitive for working with synced data.
It takes a ShapeStream, consumes the stream, materialises it into a Shape object and notifies you when this changes.
import { ShapeStream, Shape } from '@electric-sql/client'
const stream = new ShapeStream({
url: `http://localhost:3000/v1/shape`,
table: `foo`,
})
const shape = new Shape(stream)
// Returns promise that resolves with the latest shape data once it's fully loaded
await shape.rows
// passes subscribers shape data when the shape updates
shape.subscribe(({ rows }) => {
// rows is an array of the latest value of each row in a shape.
})See the Examples and integrations for more usage examples.