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
Redux DevTools is a development time package that provides power-ups for your Redux development workflow. Be careful to strip its code in production (see walkthrough for instructions)! To use Redux DevTools, you need to choose a “monitor”—a React component that will serve as a UI for the DevTools. Different tasks and workflows require different UIs, so Redux DevTools is built to be flexible in this regard. We recommend using LogMonitor
for inspecting the state and time travel, and wrap it in a DockMonitor
to quickly move it across the screen. That said, when you’re comfortable rolling up your own setup, feel free to do this, and share it with us.
If you don’t want to bother with installing Redux DevTools and integrating it into your project, consider using Redux DevTools Chrome Extension. It provides access to the most popular monitors, is easy to configure to filter actions, and doesn’t require installing any packages.
Read the installation walkthrough for integration instructions and usage examples (<DevTools>
component, DevTools.instrument()
, exclude from production builds, gotchas).
Clone the project:
git clone https://github.com/gaearon/redux-devtools.git
cd redux-devtools
Run npm install
in the root folder:
npm install
Now you can open an example folder and run npm install
there:
cd examples/counter # or examples/todomvc
npm install
Finally, run the development server and open the page:
npm start
open http://localhost:3000
Try clicking on actions in the log, or changing some code inside the reducers. You should see the action log re-evaluate the state on every code change.
Also try opening http://localhost:3000/?debug_session=123
, click around, and then refresh. You should see that all actions have been restored from the local storage.
DevTools accepts monitor components so you can build a completely custom UI. LogMonitor
and DockMonitor
are just examples of what is possible.
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:
(Does not have a UI but can wrap any other monitor)
Create a PR to add your custom monitor.
MIT