Manual Cache Updates
Overview
For most cases, in order to receive up to date data after a triggering a change in the backend,
you can take advantage of cache tag invalidation to perform
automated re-fetching, which will cause a query to re-fetch its data
when it has been told that a mutation has occurred which would cause its data to become out of date.
In most cases, we recommend using automated re-fetching as a preference over manual cache updates,
unless you encounter the need to do so.
However, in some cases, you may want to update the cache manually. When you wish to update cache
data that already exists for query endpoints, you can do so using the
updateQueryData thunk action
available on the util object of your created API.
Anywhere you have access to the dispatch method for the store instance, you can dispatch the
result of calling updateQueryData in order to update the cache data for a query endpoint,
if the corresponding cache entry exists.
Use cases for manual cache updates include:
- Providing immediate feedback to the user when a mutation is attempted
- After a mutation, updating a single item in a large list of items that is already cached, rather than re-fetching the whole list
- Debouncing a large number of mutations with immediate feedback as though they are being applied, followed by a single request sent to the server to update the debounced attempts
note
updateQueryData is strictly intended to perform updates to existing cache entries,
not create new entries. If an updateQueryData thunk action is dispatched that corresponds to
no existing cache entry for the provided endpointName + args combination, the provided recipe
will not be called, and no patches or inversePatches will be returned.
Recipes
Optimistic Updates
When you wish to perform an update to cache data immediately after a mutation is
triggered, you can apply an optimistic update. This can be a useful pattern for when you want to
give the user the impression that their changes are immediate, even while the mutation request is
still in flight.
The core concepts for an optimistic update are:
- when you start a query or mutation,
onQueryStartedwill be executed - you manually update the cached data by dispatching
api.util.updateQueryDatawithinonQueryStarted - then, in the case that
queryFulfilledrejects:- you roll it back via the
.undoproperty of the object you got back from the earlier dispatch,
OR - you invalidate the cache data via
api.util.invalidateTagsto trigger a full re-fetch of the data
- you roll it back via the
tip
Where many mutations are potentially triggered in short succession causing overlapping requests,
you may encounter race conditions if attempting to roll back patches using the .undo property
on failures. For these scenarios, it is often simplest and safest to invalidate the tags on error
instead, and re-fetch truly up-to-date data from the server.
- TypeScript
- JavaScript
import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
import type { Post } from './types'
const api = createApi({
baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({
baseUrl: '/',
}),
tagTypes: ['Post'],
endpoints: (build) => ({
getPost: build.query<Post, number>({
query: (id) => `post/${id}`,
providesTags: ['Post'],
}),
updatePost: build.mutation<void, Pick<Post, 'id'> & Partial<Post>>({
query: ({ id, ...patch }) => ({
url: `post/${id}`,
method: 'PATCH',
body: patch,
}),
async onQueryStarted({ id, ...patch }, { dispatch, queryFulfilled }) {
const patchResult = dispatch(
api.util.updateQueryData('getPost', id, (draft) => {
Object.assign(draft, patch)
})
)
try {
await queryFulfilled
} catch {
patchResult.undo()
/**
* Alternatively, on failure you can invalidate the corresponding cache tags
* to trigger a re-fetch:
* dispatch(api.util.invalidateTags(['Post']))
*/
}
},
}),
}),
})
import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
const api = createApi({
baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({
baseUrl: '/',
}),
tagTypes: ['Post'],
endpoints: (build) => ({
getPost: build.query({
query: (id) => `post/${id}`,
providesTags: ['Post'],
}),
updatePost: build.mutation({
query: ({ id, ...patch }) => ({
url: `post/${id}`,
method: 'PATCH',
body: patch,
}),
async onQueryStarted({ id, ...patch }, { dispatch, queryFulfilled }) {
const patchResult = dispatch(
api.util.updateQueryData('getPost', id, (draft) => {
Object.assign(draft, patch)
})
)
try {
await queryFulfilled
} catch {
patchResult.undo()
/**
* Alternatively, on failure you can invalidate the corresponding cache tags
* to trigger a re-fetch:
* dispatch(api.util.invalidateTags(['Post']))
*/
}
},
}),
}),
})
or, if you prefer the slightly shorter version with .catch
- async onQueryStarted({ id, ...patch }, { dispatch, queryFulfilled }) {
+ onQueryStarted({ id, ...patch }, { dispatch, queryFulfilled }) {
const patchResult = dispatch(
api.util.updateQueryData('getPost', id, (draft) => {
Object.assign(draft, patch)
})
)
- try {
- await queryFulfilled
- } catch {
- patchResult.undo()
- }
+ queryFulfilled.catch(patchResult.undo)
}
Example
Pessimistic Updates
When you wish to perform an update to cache data based on the response received from the server
after a mutation is triggered, you can apply a pessimistic update.
The distinction between a pessimistic update and an optimistic update is that the
pessimistic update will instead wait for the response from the server prior to updating
the cached data.
The core concepts for a pessimistic update are:
- when you start a query or mutation,
onQueryStartedwill be executed - you await
queryFulfilledto resolve to an object containing the transformed response from the server in thedataproperty - you manually update the cached data by dispatching
api.util.updateQueryDatawithinonQueryStarted, using the data in the response from the server for your draft updates
- TypeScript
- JavaScript
import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
import type { Post } from './types'
const api = createApi({
baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({
baseUrl: '/',
}),
tagTypes: ['Post'],
endpoints: (build) => ({
getPost: build.query<Post, number>({
query: (id) => `post/${id}`,
providesTags: ['Post'],
}),
updatePost: build.mutation<Post, Pick<Post, 'id'> & Partial<Post>>({
query: ({ id, ...patch }) => ({
url: `post/${id}`,
method: 'PATCH',
body: patch,
}),
async onQueryStarted({ id, ...patch }, { dispatch, queryFulfilled }) {
try {
const { data: updatedPost } = await queryFulfilled
const patchResult = dispatch(
api.util.updateQueryData('getPost', id, (draft) => {
Object.assign(draft, updatedPost)
})
)
} catch {}
},
}),
}),
})
import { createApi, fetchBaseQuery } from '@reduxjs/toolkit/query'
const api = createApi({
baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({
baseUrl: '/',
}),
tagTypes: ['Post'],
endpoints: (build) => ({
getPost: build.query({
query: (id) => `post/${id}`,
providesTags: ['Post'],
}),
updatePost: build.mutation({
query: ({ id, ...patch }) => ({
url: `post/${id}`,
method: 'PATCH',
body: patch,
}),
async onQueryStarted({ id, ...patch }, { dispatch, queryFulfilled }) {
try {
const { data: updatedPost } = await queryFulfilled
const patchResult = dispatch(
api.util.updateQueryData('getPost', id, (draft) => {
Object.assign(draft, updatedPost)
})
)
} catch {}
},
}),
}),
})
General Updates
If you find yourself wanting to update cache data elsewhere in your application, you can do so
anywhere you have access to the store.dispatch method, including within React components via
the useDispatch hook (or a typed version such
as useAppDispatch
for typescript users).
info
You should generally avoid manually updating the cache outside of the onQueryStarted
callback for a mutation without a good reason, as RTK Query is intended to be used by considering
your cached data as a reflection of the server-side state.
import { api } from './api'
import { useAppDispatch } from './store/hooks'
function App() {
const dispatch = useAppDispatch()
function handleClick() {
/**
* This will update the cache data for the query corresponding to the `getPosts` endpoint,
* when that endpoint is used with no argument (undefined).
*/
const patchCollection = dispatch(
api.util.updateQueryData('getPosts', undefined, (draftPosts) => {
draftPosts.push({ id: 1, name: 'Teddy' })
})
)
}
return <button onClick={handleClick}>Add post to cache</button>
}