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A Vue.js plugin shipping the Kuzzle Javascript SDK in your components

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kuzzleio/vue-plugin-kuzzle

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Vue.js Kuzzle Plugin

This plugin simply exposes the Kuzzle SDK in your Vuejs components.

Compatibility matrix

Kuzzle Version Vue.js Kuzzle Plugin Version
1.x.x 1.x.x
2.x.x 2.x.x and higher

Getting started

Install the plugin via

npm install vue-plugin-kuzzle

Then, in your Vuejs application, you need to register the plugin in your Vue class.

import { VueKuzzle } from 'vue-plugin-kuzzle';

Vue.use(VueKuzzle, options);

Where options may contain the following options.

options.backends

An object of available backends to connect to. Backends are POJOs of the following form (the example shows the default config):

options.backends = {
  local: {
    host: 'localhost',
    protocol: 'websocket',
    options: {
      port: 7512,
      sslConnection: false
    }
  }
};

The plugin will instantiate the Kuzzle SDK with the Websocket protocol, choosing among the available backends based on the process.env.VUE_APP_BACKEND environment variable. If this variable is not specified, the local backend is choosen as fallback.

Warning Don't forget to connect() your instance before performing any actions.

options.sdkOptions

An object that contains the SDK options. You can find the available options list here

Specify the backend via environment variables

Aside from the backends option, you can define the backend to connect to entirely via environment variables.

  • VUE_APP_BACKEND_HOST contains the hostname (e.g. kuzzle.mydomain.com),
  • VUE_APP_BACKEND_PORT contains the port (e.g. 443),
  • VUE_APP_BACKEND_SSL can be set to true if the connection supports the SSL layer (do not set this variable if SSL is not supported).
  • VUE_APP_BACKEND_PROTO can be set to either http or websocket. If left blank, Websocket protocol is used by default.

For example, you can build your up to connect the Websocket to wss://kuzzle.mydomain.com:443 like the following

VUE_APP_BACKEND_HOST=kuzzle.mydomain.com VUE_APP_BACKEND_PORT=443 VUE_APP_BACKEND_SSL=true npm run build

Specify the backend via a global variable

You can also specify the backend config as a JSON-stringified POJO living in a global variable called kuzzleBackend. This variable must be available before the Vue app is started, specifically before the instantiateKuzzleSDK public function is called. Here is an example of how to declare it

const kuzzleBackend = JSON.stringify({
  host: 'myhost.mydomain.com',
  options: {
    port: 443,
    ssl: true
  }
})

Specify the backend via localStorage

Purely for debug purposes, you can override all the backend configuration by setting your backend as stringified JSON in the kuzzle-backend Local Storage item, e.g.

{ "host": "myinstance.mydomain.io",  "options": { "port": 443, "ssl": true } }

Beware that Local Storage is persistent and it is fairly easy to forget you set this item. Use it consciously and keep in mind it is a good practice to unset it as soon as your debug session is over.

Backend declaration precedence order

The plugin makes a choice of the available backend declaration by setting a preference order.

  • Local storage (kuzzle-backend)
  • Global variable (kuzzleBackend)
  • Environment variables
  • Options passed to Vue.use

Accessing the Kuzzle SDK instance within the app

You'll be able to access the Kuzzle SDK instance from the components as

this.$kuzzle;

And from anywhere in your app where the Vue class is available, as

Vue.prototype.$kuzzle;

Composition API (Vue 2.7 & 3)

In components with composition API you can use the composable to access the Kuzzle SDK instance

import { useKuzzle } from 'vue-plugin-kuzzle';

const $kuzzle = useKuzzle();