React 0.14 support is coming in the
next
branch.
Helps us test it to get it sooner.
A live-editing time travel environment for Redux.
See Dan's React Europe talk demoing it!
- Lets you inspect every state and action payload
- Lets you go back in time by “cancelling” actions
- If you change the reducer code, each “staged” action will be re-evaluated
- If the reducers throw, you will see during which action this happened, and what the error was
- With
persistState()
store enhancer, you can persist debug sessions across page reloads - To monitor a part of the state, you can set a
select
prop on the DevTools component:<DevTools select={state => state.todos} store={store} monitor={LogMonitor} />
- Toggle visibility with Ctrl+H
- To hide the devtools on load, set
visibleOnLoad
to false, e.g.:<DevTools store={store} monitor={LogMonitor} visibleOnLoad={false} />
npm install --save-dev redux-devtools
DevTools is a store enhancer.
To install, firstly import devTools
into your root React component:
// Redux utility functions
import { compose, createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux';
// Redux DevTools store enhancers
import { devTools, persistState } from 'redux-devtools';
// React components for Redux DevTools
import { DevTools, DebugPanel, LogMonitor } from 'redux-devtools/lib/react';
Then, add devTools
to your store enhancers, and create your store:
const finalCreateStore = compose(
// Enables your middleware:
applyMiddleware(m1, m2, m3), // any Redux middleware, e.g. redux-thunk
// Provides support for DevTools:
devTools(),
// Lets you write ?debug_session=<name> in address bar to persist debug sessions
persistState(window.location.href.match(/[?&]debug_session=([^&]+)\b/))
)(createStore);
const store = finalCreateStore(reducer);
Finally, include the DevTools
in your page. You may pass either LogMonitor
(the default one) or any of the custom monitors described below. For convenience, you can use DebugPanel
to dock DevTools
to some part of the screen, but you can put it also somewhere else in the component tree.
export default class Root extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<Provider store={store}>
{() => <CounterApp />}
</Provider>
<DebugPanel top right bottom>
<DevTools store={store} monitor={LogMonitor} />
</DebugPanel>
</div>
);
}
}
-
Your reducers have to be pure and free of side effects to work correctly with DevTools. For example, even generating a random ID in reducer makes it impure and non-deterministic. Instead, do this in action creators.
-
Make sure to only apply
devTools()
in development! In production, this will be terribly slow because actions just accumulate forever. (We'll need to implement a rolling window for dev too.) For example, in Webpack, you can useDefinePlugin
to turn magic constants like__DEV__
intotrue
orfalse
depending on the environment, and import and renderredux-devtools
conditionally behindif (__DEV__)
. Then, if you have an Uglify step before production, Uglify will eliminate deadif (false)
branches withredux-devtools
imports. Here is an example that adds Redux DevTools handling the production case correctly. -
It is important that
devTools()
store enhancer should be added to your middleware stack afterapplyMiddleware
in thecompose
d functions, asapplyMiddleware
is potentially asynchronous. Otherwise, DevTools won’t see the raw actions emitted by asynchronous middleware such as redux-promise or redux-thunk.
You can do this:
git clone https://github.com/gaearon/redux-devtools.git
cd redux-devtools
npm install
cd examples/counter
npm install
npm start
open http://localhost:3000
Try clicking on actions in the log, or changing some code inside examples/counter/reducers/counter
.
For fun, you can also open http://localhost:3000/?debug_session=123
, click around, and then refresh.
Oh, and you can do the same with the TodoMVC example as well.
You can build a completely custom UI for it because <DevTools>
accepts a monitor
React component prop. The included LogMonitor
is just an example.
I challenge you to build a custom monitor for Redux DevTools!
Some crazy ideas for custom monitors:
- A slider that lets you jump between computed states just by dragging it
- An in-app layer that shows the last N states right in the app (e.g. for animation)
- A time machine like interface where the last N states of your app reside on different Z layers
- Feel free to come up with and implement your own! Check
LogMonitor
propTypes to see what you can do.
In fact some of these are implemented already:
Create a PR to add your custom monitor.
MIT