A Storage done right for AngularJS.
- Uses
localStorage
by default but if it's not available, it usesngCookies
. - Lets you save JS Objects
- If you save a
Number
, you get aNumber
, not a String - Uses a caching system so that if you already have a value, it won't get it from the store again.
You have several options:
bower install a0-angular-storage
npm install angular-storage
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://cdn.rawgit.com/auth0/angular-storage/master/dist/angular-storage.js"></script>
angular.module('app', ['angular-storage'])
.controller('Controller', function(store) {
var myObj = {
name: 'mgonto'
};
store.set('obj', myObj);
var myNewObject = store.get('obj');
angular.equals(myNewObject, myObj); // return true
store.remove('obj');
store.set('number', 2);
typeof(store.get('number')) === 'number'
});
You can also create namespaced storages if you want
angular.module('app', ['angular-storage'])
.factory('Auth0Store', function(store) {
return store.getNamespacedStore('auth0');
})
.controller('Controller', function(Auth0Store) {
var myObj = {
name: 'mgonto'
};
// This will be saved in localStorage as auth0.obj
Auth0Store.set('obj', myObj);
// This will look for auth0.obj
var myNewObject = Auth0Store.get('obj');
angular.equals(myNewObject, myObj); // return true
});
Sets a new value
to the storage with the key name
. It can be any object.
Returns the saved value
with they key name
. If you saved an object, you get an object.
Deletes the saved value
with the key name
Returns a new store
service that will use the namespace
and delimiter
when saving and getting values like the following namespace[delimiter]key
. For example auth0.object
considering auth0
as namespace
and .
as a delimiter
This library is used in auth0-angular
Just clone the repo, run npm install
, bower install
and then gulp
to work :).
If you have found a bug or if you have a feature request, please report them at this repository issues section. Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public GitHub issue tracker. The Responsible Disclosure Program details the procedure for disclosing security issues.
MIT
Auth0 helps you to:
- Add authentication with multiple authentication sources, either social like Google, Facebook, Microsoft Account, LinkedIn, GitHub, Twitter, Box, Salesforce, amont others, or enterprise identity systems like Windows Azure AD, Google Apps, Active Directory, ADFS or any SAML Identity Provider.
- Add authentication through more traditional username/password databases.
- Add support for linking different user accounts with the same user.
- Support for generating signed Json Web Tokens to call your APIs and flow the user identity securely.
- Analytics of how, when and where users are logging in.
- Pull data from other sources and add it to the user profile, through JavaScript rules.
- Go to Auth0 and click Sign Up.
- Use Google, GitHub or Microsoft Account to login.