Store your ember application data in localStorage.
Compatible with Ember Data 1.13
NOTE: New versions of the localStorage
adapter are no longer compatible
with older versions of Ember Data. For older versions, checkout the pre-beta
branch.
Include localstorage_adapter.js
in your app and then like all adapters:
App.ApplicationSerializer = DS.LSSerializer.extend();
App.ApplicationAdapter = DS.LSAdapter.extend({
namespace: 'yournamespace'
});
If you are using Ember Localstorage Adapter within an Ember CLI project you can install it as an addon with the following command:
ember install:bower ember-localstorage-adapter
All of your application data lives on a single localStorage
key, it defaults to DS.LSAdapter
but if you supply a namespace
option it will store it there:
DS.LSAdapter.create({
namespace: 'my app'
});
Whenever the adapter returns a record, it'll also return all
relationships, so do not use {async: true}
in your model definitions.
If your model definition has a url
property, the adapter will store the data on that namespace. URL is a weird term in this context, but it makes swapping out adapters simpler by not requiring additional properties on your models.
var List = DS.Model.extend({
// ...
});
List.reopen({
url: '/some/url'
});
Browser's localStorage
has limited space, if you try to commit application data and the browser is out of space, then the adapter will trigger the QUOTA_EXCEEDED_ERR
event.
App.store.adapter.on('QUOTA_EXCEEDED_ERR', function(records){
// do stuff
});
App.store.commit();
When localStorage
is not available (typically because the user has explicitly disabled it), the adapter will keep records in memory. When the adapter first discovers that this is the case, it will trigger a persistenceUnavailable
event, which the application may use to take any necessary actions.
adapter.on('persistenceUnavailable', function() {
// Maybe notify the user that their data won't live past the end of the current session
});
- Make the repo nicer to work with long-term (do something more intelligent with dependencies found in
vendor
, etc.)
If you don't have bower, install it with
npm install bower -g
Then install the dependencies with
bower install
Open test/index.html
in a browser. If you have phantomjs
installed,
run
npm test
Copyright (c) 2012 Ryan Florence MIT Style license. http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT