@/application-shell
React component that ties together all the main functionalities of the Custom Applications.
Installation
yarn add @commercetools-frontend/application-shell# ornpm --save install @commercetools-frontend/application-shell
Additionally install the peer dependencies (if not present)
yarn add @apollo/client react react-dom react-intl react-redux react-router-dom redux @testing-library/react @testing-library/react-hooks# ornpm --save install @apollo/client react react-dom react-intl react-redux react-router-dom redux @testing-library/react @testing-library/react-hooks
Components
ApplicationShell
This is the main component that contains all the general logic to render a Custom Application.
The ApplicationShell
component is expected to be rendered as the top-level component of your application.
Usage
We recommend to render the application content as children
of <ApplicationShell>
instead of the render
prop.
This allows the <ApplicationShell>
to pre-configure the application entry point routes. In addition to that, the entry point route is protected by the basic View
permission check. This means that a user without permissions of your Custom Application won't be able to access the Custom Application route.
import { ApplicationShell } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';const loadMessages = async (locale) => {// ...}const AsyncApplicationRoutes = React.lazy(() => import('../../routes' /* webpackChunkName: "avengers" */));const EntryPoint = () => (<ApplicationShellenvironment={window.app}applicationMessages={loadMessages}><AsyncApplicationRoutes /></ApplicationShell>);export default EntryPoint;
Properties
applicationMessages
object or func
This is either an object containing all the translated messages, grouped by locale{ en: { Welcome: "Welcome" }, de: { Welcome: "Wilkommen" } }
or a function that returns a Promise that resolves to such an object.
The function is called with a locale
parameter. See Importing translations.
environment
object
The application runtime environment, which is exposed in window.app
. See Runtime configuration. |
children
node
Instead of using the render
prop, render your application component as children of <ApplicationShell>
.
By doing so, the <ApplicationShell>
pre-configures the main application routes according to the entryPointUriPath
defined in the custom-application-config.json
.
This is an opt-int behavior as a replacement of the render
prop, to simplify the entry point setup.
render
func (optional)
The render function is called when the <ApplicationShell>
is ready to render the actual application. This is the case when the required data (user, project) has been fetched and the application context has been initialized.
It's recommended to use the children
prop to benefit from a simpler setup.
apolloClient
ApolloClient (optional)
An optional instance of ApolloClient to be used instead of the default one. This is usually the case when you need to configure the Apollo cache. See createApolloClient
.
ApplicationPageTitle
This feature is available from version 21.15.0
onwards.
Use this component to overwrite the document's default <title>
.
Usage
We recommend using this component on pages with a human-readable resource identifier, for example, a Product name on the product details page.
import { ApplicationPageTitle } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';<ApplicationPageTitle additionalParts={['Red shoes']} />;// Red shoes - Products - my-shop - Merchant Center
When the <ApplicationPageTitle>
component is used multiple times, the last one rendered will overwrite the previous ones.
Please refer to the Mapping guidelines to understand when to overwrite the title and when not.
Properties
additionalParts
string[]
A list of parts to be prepended to the default page title, separated by -
.
Hooks
useMcQuery
A React hook that wraps the useQuery hook of Apollo Client. The only difference is that useMcQuery
properly types the context
object, which is always used to define the GraphQL target
. See Data Fetching.
useMcLazyQuery
A React hook that wraps the useLazyQuery hook of Apollo Client. The only difference is that useMcLazyQuery
properly types the context
object, which is always used to define the GraphQL target
. See Data Fetching.
useMcMutation
A React hook that wraps the useMutation hook of Apollo Client. The only difference is that useMcMutation
properly types the context
object, which is always used to define the GraphQL target
. See Data Fetching.
Utilities
setupGlobalErrorListener
Configures global event listeners to catch unexpected errors and report them to Sentry. Make sure to render this in the entry-point
file.
import {setupGlobalErrorListener,ApplicationShell,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';setupGlobalErrorListener();const EntryPoint = () => {return (<ApplicationShellapolloClient={apolloClient}// ...other props/>);};
createApolloClient
Creates a new instance of the Apollo Client. Use this to extend certain functionalities of the preconfigured Apollo Client.
import { createApolloClient } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';createApolloClient({// ...})
Available options are:
cache
(optional): Configuration of the Apollo cache in relation to the data requirements of your Custom Application.restLink
(optional): Instance of the Apollo REST link.This feature is available from version
21.10.0
onwards.The
apollo-link-rest
and its related dependencies are not included in the@commercetools-frontend/application-shell
package and must be installed separately.When configuring the REST link, we recommend setting the
uri
using the getMcApiUrl() utility function.
To allow reusing the custom Apollo Client instance in different places, we recommend creating a separate file, for example src/apollo-client.js
, and define the configuration there.
import { createApolloClient } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';const configureApollo = () =>createApolloClient({cache: {// ...}})export default configureApollo
The new Apollo Client instance must be explicitly passed to the <ApplicationShell>
.
import {ApplicationShell,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';import configureApolloClient from '../../apollo-client';const apolloClient = configureApolloClient();const EntryPoint = () => {return (<ApplicationShellapolloClient={apolloClient}// ...other props/>);};
Furthermore, in your tests you also need to create a new instance of your custom Apollo Client and pass it to the test utils.
import { renderAppWithRedux } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell/test-utils';import configureApolloClient from '../../apollo-client';renderAppWithRedux({apolloClient: configureApolloClient(),// ...});
createApolloContextForProxyForwardTo
Creates the Apollo context
object with all the required options for using the /forward-to
endpoint. See Integrate with your own API.
import {createApolloContextForProxyForwardTo,useMcQuery,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';import { useApplicationContext } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell-connectors';const useExternalApiFetcher = () => {// Assuming that the `custom-application-config.json` contains the custom value:// `{ additionalEnv: { externalApiUrl: 'https://my-custom-app.com/graphql'} }`const externalApiUrl = useApplicationContext(context => context.environment.externalApiUrl);const { loading, data, error } = useMcQuery(MyQuery, {context: createApolloContextForProxyForwardTo({// The URL to your external APIuri: externalApiUrl,// Provide custom HTTP headers (optional)headers: {'x-foo': 'bar',},// Set `"X-Forward-To-Audience-Policy"` header in the request with provided value (optional)audiencePolicy: 'forward-url-full-path',// Set `"X-Forward-To-Claims": "permissions"` header in the request (optional)includeUserPermissions: true}),});return {loading,data,error,}};
Available options are:
uri
(required): The URL of the external API to forward the request to.headers
(optional): Additional HTTP headers to be included in the request to the external API.audiencePolicy
(optional): See configuring the audience policy.includeUserPermissions
(optional): See configuring custom claims.version
(optional): See versioning.
executeHttpClientRequest
This feature is available from version 21.10.0
onwards.
This function should be used for configuring custom HTTP clients to provide all the recommended functionalities such as:
- Defining the required/recommended HTTP headers for the Merchant Center API.
- Automatically renewing the token to access a particular API.
import {executeHttpClientRequest,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';
The function accepts a callback function THttpClientFetcher
to execute the request and an optional object THttpClientConfig
for the HTTP request configuration.
The callback function THttpClientFetcher
is passed one argument with the configured request options THttpClientOptions
that you would use to configure the HTTP request for your HTTP client.
type THttpClientOptions = {credentials: 'include';/*** The HTTP headers included by default are:* - Accept* - Authorization (only in development)* - X-Application-Id* - X-Correlation-Id* - X-Project-Key* - X-User-Agent*/headers: THeaders;};type TFetcherResponse<Data> = {/*** The parsed response from the server.*/data: Data;/*** The HTTP status code from the server response.*/statusCode: number;/*** Implement a function to access the HTTP headers from the server response.*/getHeader: (headerName: string) => string | null;}type THttpClientFetcher<Data> = (options: THttpClientOptions) => Promise<THttpClientFetcherResponse<Data>>;async function executeHttpClientRequest<Data>(fetcher: THttpClientFetcher<Data>,config?: THttpClientConfig): Promise<Data>;
The THttpClientConfig
object accepts the following options:
userAgent
(optional): A custom user agent to identify the HTTP client.
We recommend to use the@commercetools/http-user-agent
package.import createHttpUserAgent from '@commercetools/http-user-agent';const userAgent = createHttpUserAgent({name: 'fetch-client',version: '2.6.0',libraryName: window.app.applicationName,contactEmail: 'support@my-company.com',});headers
(optional): Additional HTTP headers to be included in the request. The provided recommended headers won't be overwritten.forwardToConfig
(optional): Configuration for using the/proxy/forward-to
endpoint to connect to an external API.uri
(required): The URL of the external API to forward the request to.headers
(optional): Additional HTTP headers to be included in the request to the external API.audiencePolicy
(optional): See configuring the audience policy.includeUserPermissions
(optional): See configuring custom claims.version
(recommended): See versioning.
You can see some examples of integrating this with different HTTP clients:
getMcApiUrl
Returns the URL of the Merchant Center API. This is useful to configure HTTP clients that should connect to that API.
import {getMcApiUrl,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';const mcApiUrl = getMcApiUrl();// https://mc-api.<region>.commercetools.com
buildApiUrl
Returns a URL of the Merchant Center API for the given URI path. This is useful to configure the request URL without having to get the URL of the Merchant Center API.
import {buildApiUrl,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell';const apiEndpoint = buildApiUrl('/proxy/ctp/channels');// https://mc-api.<region>.commercetools.com/proxy/ctp/channels
Test utils
The package provides a separate entry point with utilities for testing Custom Applications.
import { /**/ } from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell/test-utils';
Most of the utility functions related to React Testing Library, as the recommended testing approach. See Testing for more information.
In general the test-utils
simulate the components-under-test as if it was rendered by the <ApplicationShell>
and provide the necessary setup to fully test a Custom Application. This includes things like Apollo, React Intl, React Router, etc.
renderApp
A wrapper around the render
method of React Testing Library. All the basic setup for testing is included here.
Usage
import {renderApp,screen,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell/test-utils';describe('rendering', () => {it('should render the authenticated users first name', async () => {renderApp(<FirstName />, {user: {firstName: 'Leonard',},});await screen.findByText('First name: Leonard');});});
Options
locale
string
Determines the UI language and number format. Is used to configure <IntlProvider>
. Only core messages will be available during tests, no matter the locale
. The locale can be a full IETF language tag, although the Merchant Center is currently only available in a limited set of languages.
dataLocale
string
Sets the locale which is used to display LocalizedString
s.
mocks
mock[]
Allows mocking requests made with Apollo. mocks
is forwarded as the mocks
argument to MockedProvider
. If mocks
is not provided or is an empty array, the Apollo MockedProvider
is not used. This is an opt-in functionality, as the default behavior is to mock requests using Mock Service Worker.
apolloClient
ApolloClient
Pass a custom instance of Apollo client, useful when your Custom Application has some custom cache policies. You can use the exported function createApolloClient
of @commercetools-frontend/application-shell
.
route
string
The route the user is on, like /test-project/products
. Defaults to /
.
disableAutomaticEntryPointRoutes
boolean
Pass true
if you are using the render
prop for the <ApplicationShell>
instead of the children
prop.
history
object
By default a memory-history is generated which has the provided route
set as its initial history entry. It's possible to pass a custom history as well. In that case, we recommend using the factory function createEnhancedHistory
from the @commercetools-frontend/browser-history
package, as it contains the enhanced location
with the parsed query
object.
adapter
object
The FlopFlip adapter to use when configuring flopflip
. Defaults to memoryAdapter
.
flags
object
An object whose keys are feature-toggle keys and whose values are their toggle state. Use this to test your component with different feature toggle combinations. Example: { betaUserProfile: true }
.
environment
object
Allows to set the applicationContext.environment
. The passed object gets merged with the tests default environment. Pass null
to completely remove the environment
, which renders the ui
as if no environment
was given.
user
object
Allows to set the applicationContext.user
. The passed object gets merged with the test's default user. Pass null
to completely remove the user
, which renders the ui
as if no user was authenticated.
project
object
Allows to set the applicationContext.project
. The passed object gets merged with the tests default project. Pass null
to completely remove the project
which renders the ui
outside of a project context.
Return values
Calling renderApp
returns the same Result object of React Testing Library, with the addition of the following properties:
history
object
The history created by renderApp
which is passed to the router. It can be used to simulate location changes and so on.
user
object
The user
object used to configure <ApplicationContextProvider>
, so the result of merging the default user with options.user
. Note that this is not the same as applicationContext.user
. Can be undefined
when no user is authenticated (when options.user
was null
).
project
object
The project
object used to configure <ApplicationContextProvider>
, so the result of merging the default project with options.project
. Note that this is not the same as applicationContext.project
. Can be undefined
when no project was set (when options.project
was null
).
environment
object
The environment
object used to configure <ApplicationContextProvider>
, so the result of merging the default environment with options.environment
. Note that this is not the same as applicationContext.environment
. Can be undefined
when no environment was set (when options.environment
was null
).
renderAppWithRedux
A wrapper around the renderApp
method with the additional support of Redux. This is only useful if your components-under-test relies on Redux, for example when dispatching notifications.
Usage
import {renderAppWithRedux,screen,} from '@commercetools-frontend/application-shell/test-utils';describe('rendering', () => {it('should render the authenticated users first name', async () => {renderAppWithRedux(<FirstName />, {user: {firstName: 'Leonard',},});await screen.findByText('First name: Leonard');});});
Options
In addition to the following options, the method accepts all options from renderApp
.
Please note that it is not possible to pass either storeState
or sdkMocks
together with store
.
store
object
A custom redux store.
storeState
object
Pass an initial state to the default Redux store.
sdkMocks
mock[]
Allows mocking requests made with @commercetools-frontend/sdk
(Redux). The sdkMocks
is forwarded as mocks
to the SDK test-utils
.
mapNotificationToComponent
func
Pass a function to map a notification to a custom component.
mapResourceAccessToAppliedPermissions
Helper function to map user permissions to applied resource permissions. This is useful in testing when defining user permissions. See Testing user permissions for more information.
{project: {allAppliedPermissions: mapResourceAccessToAppliedPermissions([PERMISSIONS.ViewAvengers,]),},}
denormalizePermissions
Helper function to map user permissions defined as objects to a list of applied resource permissions.
{project: {allAppliedPermissions: denormalizePermissions({canViewAvengers: true,}),},}