Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
345 lines (270 loc) · 12.3 KB

fetchBaseQuery.mdx

File metadata and controls

345 lines (270 loc) · 12.3 KB
id title sidebar_label hide_title hide_table_of_contents description
fetchBaseQuery
fetchBaseQuery
fetchBaseQuery
true
false
RTK Query > API: fetchBaseQuery reference

 

fetchBaseQuery

This is a very small wrapper around fetch that aims to simplify HTTP requests. It is not a full-blown replacement for axios, superagent, or any other more heavyweight library, but it will cover the vast majority of your HTTP request needs.

fetchBaseQuery is a factory function that generates a data fetching method compatible with RTK Query's baseQuery confiugration option. It takes all standard options from fetch's RequestInit interface, as well as baseUrl, a prepareHeaders function, an optional fetch function, a paramsSerializer function, and a timeout.

Basic Usage

To use it, import it when you are creating an API service definition, call it as fetchBaseQuery(options), and pass the result as the baseQuery field in createApi:

// Or from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query/react'
import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'

export const pokemonApi = createApi({
  // Set the baseUrl for every endpoint below
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: 'https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/' }),
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    getPokemonByName: builder.query({
      // Will make a request like https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/pokemon/bulbasaur
      query: (name: string) => `pokemon/${name}`,
    }),
    updatePokemon: builder.mutation({
      query: ({ name, patch }) => ({
        url: `pokemon/${name}`,
        // When performing a mutation, you typically use a method of
        // PATCH/PUT/POST/DELETE for REST endpoints
        method: 'PATCH',
        // fetchBaseQuery automatically adds `content-type: application/json` to
        // the Headers and calls `JSON.stringify(patch)`
        body: patch,
      }),
    }),
  }),
})

Signature

type FetchBaseQuery = (
  args: FetchBaseQueryArgs
) => (
  args: string | FetchArgs,
  api: BaseQueryApi,
  extraOptions: ExtraOptions
) => FetchBaseQueryResult

type FetchBaseQueryArgs = {
  baseUrl?: string
  prepareHeaders?: (
    headers: Headers,
    api: Pick<
      BaseQueryApi,
      'getState' | 'extra' | 'endpoint' | 'type' | 'forced'
    >
  ) => MaybePromise<Headers | void>
  fetchFn?: (
    input: RequestInfo,
    init?: RequestInit | undefined
  ) => Promise<Response>
  paramsSerializer?: (params: Record<string, any>) => string
  isJsonContentType?: (headers: Headers) => boolean
  jsonContentType?: string
  timeout?: number
} & RequestInit

type FetchBaseQueryResult = Promise<
  | {
      data: any
      error?: undefined
      meta?: { request: Request; response: Response }
    }
  | {
      error: {
        status: number
        data: any
      }
      data?: undefined
      meta?: { request: Request; response: Response }
    }
>

Parameters

baseUrl

(required)

Typically a string like https://api.your-really-great-app.com/v1/. If you don't provide a baseUrl, it defaults to a relative path from where the request is being made. You should most likely always specify this.

prepareHeaders

(optional)

Allows you to inject headers on every request. You can specify headers at the endpoint level, but you'll typically want to set common headers like authorization here. As a convenience mechanism, the second argument allows you to use getState to access your redux store in the event you store information you'll need there such as an auth token. Additionally, it provides access to extra, endpoint, type, and forced to unlock more granular conditional behaviors.

You can mutate the headers argument directly, and returning it is optional.

type prepareHeaders = (
  headers: Headers,
  api: {
    getState: () => unknown
    extra: unknown
    endpoint: string
    type: 'query' | 'mutation'
    forced: boolean | undefined
  }
) => Headers | void

paramsSerializer

(optional)

A function that can be used to apply custom transformations to the data passed into params. If you don't provide this, params will be given directly to new URLSearchParms(). With some API integrations, you may need to leverage this to use something like the query-string library to support different array types.

fetchFn

(optional)

A fetch function that overrides the default on the window. Can be useful in SSR environments where you may need to leverage isomorphic-fetch or cross-fetch.

timeout

(optional)

A number in milliseconds that represents the maximum time a request can take before timing out.

isJsonContentType

(optional)

A callback that receives a Headers object and determines the body field of the FetchArgs argument should be stringified via JSON.stringify().

The default implementation inspects the content-type header, and will match values like "application/json" and "application/vnd.api+json".

jsonContentType

(optional)

Used when automatically setting the content-type header for a request with a jsonifiable body that does not have an explicit content-type header. Defaults to "application/json".

Common Usage Patterns

Setting default headers on requests

The most common use case for prepareHeaders would be to automatically include authorization headers for your API requests.

// file: store.ts noEmit
export type RootState = { auth: { token: string } }

// file: baseQuery.ts
import { fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
import type { RootState } from './store'

const baseQuery = fetchBaseQuery({
  baseUrl: '/',
  prepareHeaders: (headers, { getState }) => {
    const token = (getState() as RootState).auth.token

    // If we have a token set in state, let's assume that we should be passing it.
    if (token) {
      headers.set('authorization', `Bearer ${token}`)
    }

    return headers
  },
})

Individual query options

There is more behavior that you can define on a per-request basis. The query field may return an object containing any of the default fetch options available to the RequestInit interface, as well as these additional options:

interface FetchArgs extends RequestInit {
  url: string
  params?: Record<string, any>
  body?: any
  responseHandler?:
    | 'json'
    | 'text'
    | `content-type`
    | ((response: Response) => Promise<any>)
  validateStatus?: (response: Response, body: any) => boolean
  timeout?: number
}

const defaultValidateStatus = (response: Response) =>
  response.status >= 200 && response.status <= 299

Setting the body

By default, fetchBaseQuery assumes that every request you make will be json, so in those cases all you have to do is set the url and pass a body object when appropriate. For other implementations, you can manually set the Headers to specify the content type.

json

 // omitted
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    updateUser: builder.query({
      query: (user: Record<string, string>) => ({
        url: `users`,
        method: 'PUT',
        body: user // Body is automatically converted to json with the correct headers
      }),
    }),

text

 // omitted
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    updateUser: builder.query({
      query: (user: Record<string, string>) => ({
        url: `users`,
        method: 'PUT',
        headers: {
            'content-type': 'text/plain',
        },
        body: user
      }),
    }),

Setting the query string

fetchBaseQuery provides a simple mechanism that converts an object to a serialized query string by passing the object to new URLSearchParms(). If this doesn't suit your needs, you have two options:

  1. Pass the paramsSerializer option to fetchBaseQuery to apply custom transformations
  2. Build your own querystring and set it in the url
 // omitted
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    updateUser: builder.query({
      query: (user: Record<string, string>) => ({
        url: `users`,
        // Assuming no `paramsSerializer` is specified, the user object is automatically converted
        // and produces a url like /api/users?first_name=test&last_name=example
        params: user
      }),
    }),

Parsing a Response

By default, fetchBaseQuery assumes that every Response you get will be parsed as json. In the event that you don't want that to happen, you can customize the behavior by specifying an alternative response handler like text, or take complete control and use a custom function that accepts the raw Response object — allowing you to use any Response method.

The responseHandler field can be either:

type ResponseHandler =
  | 'content-type'
  | 'json'
  | 'text'
  | ((response: Response) => Promise<any>)

The "json" and "text" values instruct fetchBaseQuery to the corresponding fetch response methods for reading the body. content-type will check the header field to first determine if this appears to be JSON, and then use one of those two methods. The callback allows you to process the body yourself.

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

export const customApi = createApi({
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: '/api/' }),
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    getUsers: builder.query({
      query: () => ({
        url: `users`,
        // This is the same as passing 'text'
        responseHandler: (response) => response.text(),
      }),
    }),
  }),
})

:::note Note about responses that return an undefined body If you make a json request to an API that only returns a 200 with an undefined body, fetchBaseQuery will pass that through as undefined and will not try to parse it as json. This can be common with some APIs, especially on delete requests. :::

Handling non-standard Response status codes

By default, fetchBaseQuery will reject any Response that does not have a status code of 2xx and set it to error. This is the same behavior you've most likely experienced with axios and other popular libraries. In the event that you have a non-standard API you're dealing with, you can use the validateStatus option to customize this behavior.

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

export const customApi = createApi({
  // Set the baseUrl for every endpoint below
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: '/api/' }),
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    getUsers: builder.query({
      query: () => ({
        url: `users`,
        // Example: we have a backend API always returns a 200,
        // but sets an `isError` property when there is an error.
        validateStatus: (response, result) =>
          response.status === 200 && !result.isError,
      }),
    }),
  }),
})

Adding a custom timeout to requests

By default, fetchBaseQuery has no default timeout value set, meaning your requests will stay pending until your api resolves the request(s) or it reaches the browser's default timeout (normally 5 minutes). Most of the time, this isn't what you'll want. When using fetchBaseQuery, you have the ability to set a timeout on the baseQuery or on individual endpoints. When specifying both options, the endpoint value will take priority.

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

export const api = createApi({
  // Set a default timeout of 10 seconds
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: '/api/', timeout: 10000 }),
  endpoints: (builder) => ({
    getUsers: builder.query({
      query: () => ({
        url: `users`,
        // Example: we know the users endpoint is _really fast_ because it's always cached.
        // We can assume if its over > 1000ms, something is wrong and we should abort the request.
        timeout: 1000,
      }),
    }),
  }),
})