This is a super-simple promise-based keyval store implemented with IndexedDB, originally based on async-storage by Mozilla.
It's small and tree-shakeable. If you only use get/set, the library is ~250 bytes (brotli'd), if you use all methods it's ~450 bytes.
localForage offers similar functionality, but supports older browsers with broken/absent IDB implementations. Because of that, it's orders of magnitude bigger (~7k).
This is only a keyval store. If you need to do more complex things like iteration & indexing, check out IDB on NPM (a little heavier at 1k). The first example in its README is how to create a keyval store.
npm install idb-keyval
Now you can require/import idb-keyval
:
import { get, set } from 'idb-keyval';
If you're targeting IE10/11, use the compat version, and import a Promise
polyfill.
// Import a Promise polyfill
import 'es6-promise/auto';
import { get, set } from 'idb-keyval/dist/esm-compat';
dist/cjs/index.js
CommonJS module.dist/cjs-compat/index.js
CommonJS module, transpiled for older browsers.dist/esm/index.js
EcmaScript module.dist/esm-compat/index.js
EcmaScript module, transpiled for older browsers.dist/iife/index.js
Minified plain JS, which creates anidbKeyval
global containing all methods.dist/iife-compat/index.js
As above, but transpiled for older browsers.
These built versions are also available on jsDelivr, e.g.:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/idb-keyval@5/dist/iife/index.js"></script>
<!-- Or in modern browsers: -->
<script type="module">
import {
get,
set,
} from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/idb-keyval@5/dist/esm/index.js';
</script>
import { set } from 'idb-keyval';
set('hello', 'world');
Since this is IDB-backed, you can store anything structured-clonable (numbers, arrays, objects, dates, blobs etc), although old Edge doesn't support null
. Keys can be numbers, strings, Date
s, (IDB also allows arrays of those values, but IE doesn't support it).
All methods return promises:
import { set } from 'idb-keyval';
set('hello', 'world')
.then(() => console.log('It worked!'))
.catch((err) => console.log('It failed!', err));
import { get } from 'idb-keyval';
// logs: "world"
get('hello').then((val) => console.log(val));
If there is no 'hello' key, then val
will be undefined
.
Set many keyval pairs at once. This is faster than calling set
multiple times.
import { set, setMany } from 'idb-keyval';
// Instead of:
Promise.all([set(123, 456), set('hello', 'world')])
.then(() => console.log('It worked!'))
.catch((err) => console.log('It failed!', err));
// It's faster to do:
setMany([
[123, 456],
['hello', 'world'],
])
.then(() => console.log('It worked!'))
.catch((err) => console.log('It failed!', err));
This operation is also atomic – if one of the pairs can't be added, none will be added.
Get many keys at once. This is faster than calling get
multiple times. Resolves with an array of values.
import { get, getMany } from 'idb-keyval';
// Instead of:
Promise.all([get(123), get('hello')]).then(([firstVal, secondVal]) =>
console.log(firstVal, secondVal),
);
// It's faster to do:
getMany([123, 'hello']).then(([firstVal, secondVal]) =>
console.log(firstVal, secondVal),
);
Transforming a value (eg incrementing a number) using get
and set
is risky, as both get
and set
are async and non-atomic:
// Don't do this:
import { get, set } from 'idb-keyval';
get('counter').then((val) =>
set('counter', (val || 0) + 1);
);
get('counter').then((val) =>
set('counter', (val || 0) + 1);
);
With the above, both get
operations will complete first, each returning undefined
, then each set operation will be setting 1
. You could fix the above by queuing the second get
on the first set
, but that isn't always each across multiple pieces of code. Instead:
// Instead:
import { update } from 'idb-keyval';
update('counter', (val) => (val || 0) + 1);
update('counter', (val) => (val || 0) + 1);
This will queue the updates automatically, so the first update
set the counter
to 1
, and the second update
sets it to 2
.
Delete a particular key from the store.
import { del } from 'idb-keyval';
del('hello');
Clear all values in the store.
import { clear } from 'idb-keyval';
clear();
Get all entries in the store. Each entry is an array of [key, value]
.
import { entries } from 'idb-keyval';
// logs: [[123, 456], ['hello', 'world']]
entries().then((entries) => console.log(entries));
Get all keys in the store.
import { keys } from 'idb-keyval';
// logs: [123, 'hello']
keys().then((keys) => console.log(keys));
Get all values in the store.
import { values } from 'idb-keyval';
// logs: [456, 'world']
values().then((values) => console.log(values));
By default, the methods above use an IndexedDB database named keyval-store
and an object store named keyval
. If you want to use something different, see custom stores.
The changes between 3.x and 5.x related to custom stores.
(4.x was abandoned due to a Safari bug)
Old way:
// This no longer works in 4.x
import { Store, set } from 'idb-keyval';
const customStore = new Store('custom-db-name', 'custom-store-name');
set('foo', 'bar', customStore);
New way:
import { createStore, set } from 'idb-keyval';
const customStore = createStore('custom-db-name', 'custom-store-name');
set('foo', 'bar', customStore);
For more details, see custom stores.
2.x exported an object with methods:
// This no longer works in 3.x
import idbKeyval from 'idb-keyval';
idbKeyval.set('foo', 'bar');
Whereas in 3.x you import the methods directly:
import { set } from 'idb-keyval';
set('foo', 'bar');
This is better for minification, and allows tree shaking.