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Showing content from https://github.com/robinvdvleuten/vuex-persistedstate below:

robinvdvleuten/vuex-persistedstate: 💾 Persist and rehydrate your Vuex state between page reloads.

Persist and rehydrate your Vuex state between page reloads.

🚨 Not maintained anymore! As I don't use Vue in my day to day work, it becomes very hard to stay up to date with any changes with things like Vuex, Nuxt.js and other tools used by the community. That's why I decided to stop spending my spare time to this repository. Feel free to reach out if you would like to take over ownership of the package on NPM. Thank you for any contribution any of you had made to this project 🙏.

npm install --save vuex-persistedstate

The UMD build is also available on unpkg:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/vuex-persistedstate/dist/vuex-persistedstate.umd.js"></script>

You can find the library on window.createPersistedState.

import { createStore } from "vuex";
import createPersistedState from "vuex-persistedstate";

const store = createStore({
  // ...
  plugins: [createPersistedState()],
});

For usage with for Vuex 3 and Vue 2, please see 3.x.x branch.

Check out a basic example on CodeSandbox.

Or configured to use with js-cookie.

Or configured to use with secure-ls

Example with Vuex modules

New plugin instances can be created in separate files, but must be imported and added to plugins object in the main Vuex file.

/* module.js */
export const dataStore = {
  state: {
    data: []
  }
}

/* store.js */
import { dataStore } from './module'

const dataState = createPersistedState({
  paths: ['data']
})

export new Vuex.Store({
  modules: {
    dataStore
  },
  plugins: [dataState]
})

It is possible to use vuex-persistedstate with Nuxt.js. It must be included as a NuxtJS plugin:

With local storage (client-side only)
// nuxt.config.js

...
/*
 * Naming your plugin 'xxx.client.js' will make it execute only on the client-side.
 * https://nuxtjs.org/guide/plugins/#name-conventional-plugin
 */
plugins: [{ src: '~/plugins/persistedState.client.js' }]
...
// ~/plugins/persistedState.client.js

import createPersistedState from 'vuex-persistedstate'

export default ({store}) => {
  createPersistedState({
    key: 'yourkey',
    paths: [...]
    ...
  })(store)
}
Using cookies (universal client + server-side)

Add cookie and js-cookie:

npm install --save cookie js-cookie or yarn add cookie js-cookie

// nuxt.config.js
...
plugins: [{ src: '~/plugins/persistedState.js'}]
...
// ~/plugins/persistedState.js

import createPersistedState from 'vuex-persistedstate';
import * as Cookies from 'js-cookie';
import cookie from 'cookie';

export default ({ store, req }) => {
    createPersistedState({
        paths: [...],
        storage: {
            getItem: (key) => {
                // See https://nuxtjs.org/guide/plugins/#using-process-flags
                if (process.server) {
                    const parsedCookies = cookie.parse(req.headers.cookie);
                    return parsedCookies[key];
                } else {
                    return Cookies.get(key);
                }
            },
            // Please see https://github.com/js-cookie/js-cookie#json, on how to handle JSON.
            setItem: (key, value) =>
                Cookies.set(key, value, { expires: 365, secure: false }),
            removeItem: key => Cookies.remove(key)
        }
    })(store);
};
createPersistedState([options])

Creates a new instance of the plugin with the given options. The following options can be provided to configure the plugin for your specific needs:

If it's not ideal to have the state of the Vuex store inside localstorage. One can easily implement the functionality to use cookies for that (or any other you can think of);

import { Store } from "vuex";
import createPersistedState from "vuex-persistedstate";
import * as Cookies from "js-cookie";

const store = new Store({
  // ...
  plugins: [
    createPersistedState({
      storage: {
        getItem: (key) => Cookies.get(key),
        // Please see https://github.com/js-cookie/js-cookie#json, on how to handle JSON.
        setItem: (key, value) =>
          Cookies.set(key, value, { expires: 3, secure: true }),
        removeItem: (key) => Cookies.remove(key),
      },
    }),
  ],
});

In fact, any object following the Storage protocol (getItem, setItem, removeItem, etc) could be passed:

createPersistedState({ storage: window.sessionStorage });

This is especially useful when you are using this plugin in combination with server-side rendering, where one could pass an instance of dom-storage.

🔐Obfuscate Local Storage

If you need to use Local Storage (or you want to) but want to prevent attackers from easily inspecting the stored data, you can obfuscate it.

Important ⚠️ Obfuscating the Vuex store means to prevent attackers from easily gaining access to the data. This is not a secure way of storing sensitive data (like passwords, personal information, etc.), and always needs to be used in conjunction with some other authentication method of keeping the data (such as Firebase or your own server).

import { Store } from "vuex";
import createPersistedState from "vuex-persistedstate";
import SecureLS from "secure-ls";
var ls = new SecureLS({ isCompression: false });

// https://github.com/softvar/secure-ls

const store = new Store({
  // ...
  plugins: [
    createPersistedState({
      storage: {
        getItem: (key) => ls.get(key),
        setItem: (key, value) => ls.set(key, value),
        removeItem: (key) => ls.remove(key),
      },
    }),
  ],
});

As it maybe seems at first sight, it's not possible to pass a LocalForage instance as storage property. This is due the fact that all getters and setters must be synchronous and LocalForage's methods are asynchronous.

Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.


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