An Apollo Link that performs renew expired JWT (access tokens)
npm install apollo-link-token-refresh --save
Token Refresh Link is non-terminating
link, which means that this link shouldn't be the last link in the composed chain.
If you need the Apollo v2 support, please use release 0.2.x
import { TokenRefreshLink } from "apollo-link-token-refresh";
const link = new TokenRefreshLink({
accessTokenField: 'accessToken',
isTokenValidOrUndefined: () => boolean,
fetchAccessToken: () => Promise<Response>,
handleFetch: (accessToken: string) => void,
handleResponse?: (operation, accessTokenField) => response => any,
handleError?: (err: Error) => void,
});
Token Refresh Link takes an object with four options on it to customize the behavior of the link
name | value | explanation |
---|---|---|
accessTokenField? | string |
Default: access_token . This is a name of access token field in response. In some scenarios we want to pass additional payload with access token, i.e. new refresh token, so this field could be the object's name |
isTokenValidOrUndefined | (...args: any[]) => boolean |
Indicates the current state of access token expiration. If token not yet expired or user doesn't have a token (guest) true should be returned |
fetchAccessToken | (...args: any[]) => Promise<Response> |
Function covers fetch call with request fresh access token |
handleFetch | (accessToken: string) => void |
Callback which receives a fresh token from Response. From here we can save token to the storage |
handleResponse? | (operation, accessTokenField) => response => any |
This is optional. It could be used to override internal function to manually parse and extract your token from server response |
handleError? | (err: Error) => void |
Token fetch error callback. Allows to run additional actions like logout. Don't forget to handle Error if you are using this option |
import { TokenRefreshLink } from 'apollo-link-token-refresh';
link: ApolloLink.from([
new TokenRefreshLink({
isTokenValidOrUndefined: () => !isTokenExpired() || typeof getAccessToken() !== 'string',
fetchAccessToken: () => {
return fetch(getEndpoint('getAccessTokenPath'), {
method: 'GET',
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${getAccessToken()}`,
'refresh-token': getRefreshToken()
}
});
},
handleFetch: accessToken => {
const accessTokenDecrypted = jwtDecode(accessToken);
setAccessToken(accessToken);
setExpiresIn(parseExp(accessTokenDecrypted.exp).toString());
},
handleResponse: (operation, accessTokenField) => response => {
// here you can parse response, handle errors, prepare returned token to
// further operations
// returned object should be like this:
// {
// access_token: 'token string here'
// }
},
handleError: err => {
// full control over handling token fetch Error
console.warn('Your refresh token is invalid. Try to relogin');
console.error(err);
// your custom action here
user.logout();
}
}),
errorLink,
requestLink,
...
])
In a scenario where you're using Typescript and your the return of your refresh token is a custom object rather then a single string you can construct the link using a generic type, i.e. :
new TokenRefreshLink<{token, refreshToken}>({
// rest omitted for brevity
handleFetch: newTokens => {
const {token, refreshToken} = newTokens;
const accessTokenDecrypted = jwtDecode(token);
setAccessToken(token);
setRefreshToken(refreshToken);
setExpiresIn(parseExp(accessTokenDecrypted.exp).toString());
},
})
The Token Refresh Link does not use the context for anything