Class Store
publicA Store coordinates interaction between your application, a Cache, and sources of data (such as your API or a local persistence layer) accessed via a RequestManager.
import Store from '@ember-data/store';
export default class extends Store {}
Most Applications will only have a single Store
configured as a Service
in this manner. However, setting up multiple stores is possible, including using
each as a unique service or within a specific context.
adapterFor (modelName) public
Defined in ../packages/legacy-compat/src/index.ts:41
- modelName
- String
- returns
Adapter
Returns an instance of the adapter for a given type. For
example, adapterFor('person')
will return an instance of
the adapter located at app/adapters/person.js
If no person
adapter is found, this method will look
for an application
adapter (the default adapter for
your entire application).
createCache (hook) (storeWrapper) Cache public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:2312
- storeWrapper
- returns
- Cache
Instantiation hook allowing applications or addons to configure the store to utilize a custom Cache implementation.
This hook should not be called directly by consuming applications or libraries.
Use Store.cache
to access the Cache instance.
createRecord (type, inputProperties) Model public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:847
- type
- String
the name of the resource
- inputProperties
- Object
a hash of properties to set on the newly created record.
- returns
- Model
record
Create a new record in the current store. The properties passed to this method are set on the newly created record.
To create a new instance of a Post
:
store.createRecord('post', {
title: 'Ember is awesome!'
});
To create a new instance of a Post
that has a relationship with a User
record:
let user = this.store.peekRecord('user', '1');
store.createRecord('post', {
title: 'Ember is awesome!',
user: user
});
deleteRecord (record) public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:939
- record
- Unknown
For symmetry, a record can be deleted via the store.
Example
let post = store.createRecord('post', {
title: 'Ember is awesome!'
});
store.deleteRecord(post);
findAll (type, options) Promise public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:1760
Available since v1.13.0
- type
- String
the name of the resource
- options
- Object
- returns
- Promise
promise
findAll
asks the adapter's findAll
method to find the records for the
given type, and returns a promise which will resolve with all records of
this type present in the store, even if the adapter only returns a subset
of them.
export default class AuthorsRoute extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findAll('author');
}
}
When the returned promise resolves depends on the reload behavior,
configured via the passed options
hash and the result of the adapter's
shouldReloadAll
method.
Reloading
If { reload: true }
is passed or adapter.shouldReloadAll
evaluates to
true
, then the returned promise resolves once the adapter returns data,
regardless if there are already records in the store:
store.push({
data: {
id: 'first',
type: 'author'
}
});
// adapter#findAll resolves with
// [
// {
// id: 'second',
// type: 'author'
// }
// ]
store.findAll('author', { reload: true }).then(function(authors) {
authors.getEach('id'); // ['first', 'second']
});
If no reload is indicated via the above mentioned ways, then the promise immediately resolves with all the records currently loaded in the store.
Background Reloading
Optionally, if adapter.shouldBackgroundReloadAll
evaluates to true
,
then a background reload is started. Once this resolves, the array with
which the promise resolves, is updated automatically so it contains all the
records in the store:
import Adapter from '@ember-data/adapter';
export default class ApplicationAdapter extends Adapter {
shouldReloadAll(store, snapshotsArray) {
return false;
},
shouldBackgroundReloadAll(store, snapshotsArray) {
return true;
}
});
// ...
store.push({
data: {
id: 'first',
type: 'author'
}
});
let allAuthors;
store.findAll('author').then(function(authors) {
authors.getEach('id'); // ['first']
allAuthors = authors;
});
// later, once adapter#findAll resolved with
// [
// {
// id: 'second',
// type: 'author'
// }
// ]
allAuthors.getEach('id'); // ['first', 'second']
If you would like to force or prevent background reloading, you can set a
boolean value for backgroundReload
in the options object for
findAll
.
export default class PostEditRoute extends Route {
model() {
return this.store.findAll('post', { backgroundReload: false });
}
}
If you pass an object on the adapterOptions
property of the options
argument it will be passed to you adapter via the snapshotRecordArray
export default class PostsRoute extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findAll('post', {
adapterOptions: { subscribe: false }
});
}
}
import MyCustomAdapter from './custom-adapter';
export default class UserAdapter extends MyCustomAdapter {
findAll(store, type, sinceToken, snapshotRecordArray) {
if (snapshotRecordArray.adapterOptions.subscribe) {
// ...
}
// ...
}
}
See peekAll to get an array of current records in the store, without waiting until a reload is finished.
Retrieving Related Model Records
If you use an adapter such as Ember's default
JSONAPIAdapter
that supports the JSON API specification and if your server
endpoint supports the use of an
'include' query parameter,
you can use findAll()
to automatically retrieve additional records related to
those requested by supplying an include
parameter in the options
object.
For example, given a post
model that has a hasMany
relationship with a comment
model, when we retrieve all of the post records we can have the server also return
all of the posts' comments in the same request:
export default class PostsRoute extends Route {
model() {
return this.store.findAll('post', { include: 'comments' });
}
}
Multiple relationships can be requested using an include
parameter consisting of a
comma-separated list (without white-space) while nested relationships can be specified
using a dot-separated sequence of relationship names. So to request both the posts'
comments and the authors of those comments the request would look like this:
export default class PostsRoute extends Route {
model() {
return this.store.findAll('post', { include: 'comments,comments.author' });
}
}
See query to only get a subset of records from the server.
findRecord (type, id, options) Promise public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:999
Available since v1.13.0
- type
- String|object
- either a string representing the name of the resource or a ResourceIdentifier object containing both the type (a string) and the id (a string) for the record or an lid (a string) of an existing record
- id
- (String|Integer|Object)
- optional object with options for the request only if the first param is a ResourceIdentifier, else the string id of the record to be retrieved
- options
- Object
- if the first param is a string this will be the optional options for the request. See examples for available options.
- returns
- Promise
promise
This method returns a record for a given identifier or type and id combination.
The findRecord
method will always resolve its promise with the same
object for a given identifier or type and id
.
The findRecord
method will always return a promise that will be
resolved with the record.
Example 1
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model({ post_id }) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', post_id);
}
}
Example 2
findRecord
can be called with a single identifier argument instead of the combination
of type
(modelName) and id
as separate arguments. You may recognize this combo as
the typical pairing from JSON:API
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model({ post_id: id }) {
return this.store.findRecord({ type: 'post', id });
}
}
Example 3
If you have previously received an lid via an Identifier for this record, and the record has already been assigned an id, you can find the record again using just the lid.
store.findRecord({ lid });
If the record is not yet available, the store will ask the adapter's findRecord
method to retrieve and supply the necessary data. If the record is already present
in the store, it depends on the reload behavior when the returned promise
resolves.
Preloading
You can optionally preload
specific attributes and relationships that you know of
by passing them via the passed options
.
For example, if your Ember route looks like /posts/1/comments/2
and your API route
for the comment also looks like /posts/1/comments/2
if you want to fetch the comment
without also fetching the post you can pass in the post to the findRecord
call:
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model({ post_id, comment_id: id }) {
return this.store.findRecord({ type: 'comment', id, { preload: { post: post_id }} });
}
}
In your adapter you can then access this id without triggering a network request via the snapshot:
export default class Adapter {
findRecord(store, schema, id, snapshot) {
let type = schema.modelName;
if (type === 'comment')
let postId = snapshot.belongsTo('post', { id: true });
return fetch(`./posts/${postId}/comments/${id}`)
.then(response => response.json())
}
}
static create() {
return new this();
}
}
This could also be achieved by supplying the post id to the adapter via the adapterOptions property on the options hash.
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model({ post_id, comment_id: id }) {
return this.store.findRecord({ type: 'comment', id, { adapterOptions: { post: post_id }} });
}
}
export default class Adapter {
findRecord(store, schema, id, snapshot) {
let type = schema.modelName;
if (type === 'comment')
let postId = snapshot.adapterOptions.post;
return fetch(`./posts/${postId}/comments/${id}`)
.then(response => response.json())
}
}
static create() {
return new this();
}
}
If you have access to the post model you can also pass the model itself to preload:
let post = await store.findRecord('post', '1');
let comment = await store.findRecord('comment', '2', { post: myPostModel });
Reloading
The reload behavior is configured either via the passed options
hash or
the result of the adapter's shouldReloadRecord
.
If { reload: true }
is passed or adapter.shouldReloadRecord
evaluates
to true
, then the returned promise resolves once the adapter returns
data, regardless if the requested record is already in the store:
store.push({
data: {
id: 1,
type: 'post',
revision: 1
}
});
// adapter#findRecord resolves with
// [
// {
// id: 1,
// type: 'post',
// revision: 2
// }
// ]
store.findRecord('post', '1', { reload: true }).then(function(post) {
post.revision; // 2
});
If no reload is indicated via the above mentioned ways, then the promise immediately resolves with the cached version in the store.
Background Reloading
Optionally, if adapter.shouldBackgroundReloadRecord
evaluates to true
,
then a background reload is started, which updates the records' data, once
it is available:
// app/adapters/post.js
import ApplicationAdapter from "./application";
export default class PostAdapter extends ApplicationAdapter {
shouldReloadRecord(store, snapshot) {
return false;
},
shouldBackgroundReloadRecord(store, snapshot) {
return true;
}
});
// ...
store.push({
data: {
id: 1,
type: 'post',
revision: 1
}
});
let blogPost = store.findRecord('post', '1').then(function(post) {
post.revision; // 1
});
// later, once adapter#findRecord resolved with
// [
// {
// id: 1,
// type: 'post',
// revision: 2
// }
// ]
blogPost.revision; // 2
If you would like to force or prevent background reloading, you can set a
boolean value for backgroundReload
in the options object for
findRecord
.
export default class PostEditRoute extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id, { backgroundReload: false });
}
}
If you pass an object on the adapterOptions
property of the options
argument it will be passed to your adapter via the snapshot
export default class PostEditRoute extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id, {
adapterOptions: { subscribe: false }
});
}
}
import MyCustomAdapter from './custom-adapter';
export default class PostAdapter extends MyCustomAdapter {
findRecord(store, type, id, snapshot) {
if (snapshot.adapterOptions.subscribe) {
// ...
}
// ...
}
}
See peekRecord to get the cached version of a record.
Retrieving Related Model Records
If you use an adapter such as Ember's default
JSONAPIAdapter
that supports the JSON API specification and if your server
endpoint supports the use of an
'include' query parameter,
you can use findRecord()
or findAll()
to automatically retrieve additional records related to
the one you request by supplying an include
parameter in the options
object.
For example, given a post
model that has a hasMany
relationship with a comment
model, when we retrieve a specific post we can have the server also return that post's
comments in the same request:
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id, { include: 'comments' });
}
}
export default class Adapter {
findRecord(store, schema, id, snapshot) {
let type = schema.modelName;
if (type === 'post')
let includes = snapshot.adapterOptions.include;
return fetch(`./posts/${postId}?include=${includes}`)
.then(response => response.json())
}
}
static create() {
return new this();
}
}
In this case, the post's comments would then be available in your template as
model.comments
.
Multiple relationships can be requested using an include
parameter consisting of a
comma-separated list (without white-space) while nested relationships can be specified
using a dot-separated sequence of relationship names. So to request both the post's
comments and the authors of those comments the request would look like this:
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id, { include: 'comments,comments.author' });
}
}
Retrieving Specific Fields by Type
If your server endpoint supports the use of a 'fields' query parameter, you can use pass those fields through to your server. At this point in time, this requires a few manual steps on your part.
- Implement
buildQuery
in your adapter.
buildQuery(snapshot) {
let query = super.buildQuery(...arguments);
let { fields } = snapshot.adapterOptions;
if (fields) {
query.fields = fields;
}
return query;
}
- Then pass through the applicable fields to your
findRecord
request.
Given a post
model with attributes body, title, publishDate and meta, you can retrieve a filtered list of attributes.
export default class extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id, { adapterOptions: { fields: { post: 'body,title' } });
}
}
Moreover, you can filter attributes on related models as well. If a post
has a belongsTo
relationship to a user,
just include the relationship key and attributes.
export default class extends Route {
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id, { adapterOptions: { fields: { post: 'body,title', user: 'name,email' } });
}
}
getReference (resource, id) RecordReference public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:1410
Available since v2.5.0
- resource
- String|object
- modelName (string) or Identifier (object)
- id
- String|Integer
- returns
- RecordReference
Get the reference for the specified record.
Example
let userRef = store.getReference('user', '1');
// check if the user is loaded
let isLoaded = userRef.value() !== null;
// get the record of the reference (null if not yet available)
let user = userRef.value();
// get the identifier of the reference
if (userRef.remoteType() === 'id') {
let id = userRef.id();
}
// load user (via store.find)
userRef.load().then(...)
// or trigger a reload
userRef.reload().then(...)
// provide data for reference
userRef.push({ id: 1, username: '@user' }).then(function(user) {
userRef.value() === user;
});
getRequestStateService RequestStateService public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:632
- returns
- RequestStateService
Retrieve the RequestStateService instance associated with this Store.
This can be used to query the status of requests that have been initiated for a given identifier.
instantiateRecord (hook) (identifier, createRecordArgs, recordDataFor, notificationManager) public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:781
- identifier
- createRecordArgs
- recordDataFor
deprecated use this.cache
- notificationManager
deprecated use this.notifications
- returns
A record instance
A hook which an app or addon may implement. Called when the Store is attempting to create a Record Instance for a resource.
This hook can be used to select or instantiate any desired mechanism of presenting cache data to the ui for access mutation, and interaction.
normalize (modelName, payload) Object public
Defined in ../packages/legacy-compat/src/index.ts:161
- modelName
- String
The name of the model type for this payload
- payload
- Object
- returns
- Object
The normalized payload
normalize
converts a json payload into the normalized form that
push expects.
Example
socket.on('message', function(message) {
let modelName = message.model;
let data = message.data;
store.push(store.normalize(modelName, data));
});
peekAll (type) RecordArray public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:1962
Available since v1.13.0
- type
- String
the name of the resource
- returns
- RecordArray
This method returns a filtered array that contains all of the known records for a given type in the store.
Note that because it's just a filter, the result will contain any locally created records of the type, however, it will not make a request to the backend to retrieve additional records. If you would like to request all the records from the backend please use store.findAll.
Also note that multiple calls to peekAll
for a given type will always
return the same RecordArray
.
Example
let localPosts = store.peekAll('post');
peekRecord (modelName, id) Model|null public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:1473
Available since v1.13.0
- modelName
- String|object
- either a string representing the modelName or a ResourceIdentifier object containing both the type (a string) and the id (a string) for the record or an lid (a string) of an existing record
- id
- String|Integer
- optional only if the first param is a ResourceIdentifier, else the string id of the record to be retrieved.
- returns
- Model|null
record
Get a record by a given type and ID without triggering a fetch.
This method will synchronously return the record if it is available in the store,
otherwise it will return null
. A record is available if it has been fetched earlier, or
pushed manually into the store.
See findRecord if you would like to request this record from the backend.
Note: This is a synchronous method and does not return a promise.
Example 1
let post = store.peekRecord('post', '1');
post.id; // '1'
peekRecord
can be called with a single identifier argument instead of the combination
of type
(modelName) and id
as separate arguments. You may recognize this combo as
the typical pairing from JSON:API
Example 2
let post = store.peekRecord({ type: 'post', id });
post.id; // '1'
If you have previously received an lid from an Identifier for this record, you can lookup the record again using just the lid.
Example 3
let post = store.peekRecord({ lid });
post.id; // '1'
push (data) public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:2043
- data
- Object
- returns
the record(s) that was created or updated.
Push some data for a given type into the store.
This method expects normalized JSON API document. This means you have to follow JSON API specification with few minor adjustments:
- record's
type
should always be in singular, dasherized form - members (properties) should be camelCased
Your primary data should be wrapped inside data
property:
store.push({
data: {
// primary data for single record of type `Person`
id: '1',
type: 'person',
attributes: {
firstName: 'Daniel',
lastName: 'Kmak'
}
}
});
data
property can also hold an array (of records):
store.push({
data: [
// an array of records
{
id: '1',
type: 'person',
attributes: {
firstName: 'Daniel',
lastName: 'Kmak'
}
},
{
id: '2',
type: 'person',
attributes: {
firstName: 'Tom',
lastName: 'Dale'
}
}
]
});
There are some typical properties for JSONAPI
payload:
id
- mandatory, unique record's keytype
- mandatory string which matchesmodel
's dasherized name in singular formattributes
- object which holds data for record attributes -attr
's declared in modelrelationships
- object which must contain any of the following properties under each relationships' respective key (example path isrelationships.achievements.data
):links
data
- place for primary datameta
- object which contains meta-information about relationship
For this model:
import Model, { attr, hasMany } from '@ember-data/model';
export default class PersonRoute extends Route {
@attr('string') firstName;
@attr('string') lastName;
@hasMany('person') children;
}
To represent the children as IDs:
{
data: {
id: '1',
type: 'person',
attributes: {
firstName: 'Tom',
lastName: 'Dale'
},
relationships: {
children: {
data: [
{
id: '2',
type: 'person'
},
{
id: '3',
type: 'person'
},
{
id: '4',
type: 'person'
}
]
}
}
}
}
To represent the children relationship as a URL:
{
data: {
id: '1',
type: 'person',
attributes: {
firstName: 'Tom',
lastName: 'Dale'
},
relationships: {
children: {
links: {
related: '/people/1/children'
}
}
}
}
}
If you're streaming data or implementing an adapter, make sure that you have converted the incoming data into this form. The store's normalize method is a convenience helper for converting a json payload into the form Ember Data expects.
store.push(store.normalize('person', data));
This method can be used both to push in brand new records, as well as to update existing records.
pushPayload (modelName, inputPayload) public
Defined in ../packages/legacy-compat/src/index.ts:203
- modelName
- String
Optionally, a model type used to determine which serializer will be used
- inputPayload
- Object
Push some raw data into the store.
This method can be used both to push in brand new records, as well as to update existing records. You can push in more than one type of object at once. All objects should be in the format expected by the serializer.
import RESTSerializer from '@ember-data/serializer/rest';
export default class ApplicationSerializer extends RESTSerializer;
let pushData = {
posts: [
{ id: 1, postTitle: "Great post", commentIds: [2] }
],
comments: [
{ id: 2, commentBody: "Insightful comment" }
]
}
store.pushPayload(pushData);
By default, the data will be deserialized using a default serializer (the application serializer if it exists).
Alternatively, pushPayload
will accept a model type which
will determine which serializer will process the payload.
import RESTSerializer from '@ember-data/serializer/rest';
export default class ApplicationSerializer extends RESTSerializer;
import JSONSerializer from '@ember-data/serializer/json';
export default JSONSerializer;
store.pushPayload(pushData); // Will use the application serializer
store.pushPayload('post', pushData); // Will use the post serializer
query (type, query, options) Promise public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:1555
Available since v1.13.0
- type
- String
the name of the resource
- query
- Object
a query to be used by the adapter
- options
- Object
optional, may include
adapterOptions
hash which will be passed to adapter.query- returns
- Promise
promise
This method delegates a query to the adapter. This is the one place where adapter-level semantics are exposed to the application.
Each time this method is called a new request is made through the adapter.
Exposing queries this way seems preferable to creating an abstract query language for all server-side queries, and then require all adapters to implement them.
If you do something like this:
store.query('person', { page: 1 });
The request made to the server will look something like this:
GET "/api/v1/person?page=1"
If you do something like this:
store.query('person', { ids: ['1', '2', '3'] });
The request made to the server will look something like this:
GET "/api/v1/person?ids%5B%5D=1&ids%5B%5D=2&ids%5B%5D=3"
decoded: "/api/v1/person?ids[]=1&ids[]=2&ids[]=3"
This method returns a promise, which is resolved with a
Collection
once the server returns.
queryRecord (type, query, options) Promise public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:1632
Available since v1.13.0
- type
- String
- query
- Object
an opaque query to be used by the adapter
- options
- Object
optional, may include
adapterOptions
hash which will be passed to adapter.queryRecord- returns
- Promise
promise which resolves with the found record or
null
This method makes a request for one record, where the id
is not known
beforehand (if the id
is known, use findRecord
instead).
This method can be used when it is certain that the server will return a single object for the primary data.
Each time this method is called a new request is made through the adapter.
Let's assume our API provides an endpoint for the currently logged in user via:
// GET /api/current_user
{
user: {
id: 1234,
username: 'admin'
}
}
Since the specific id
of the user
is not known beforehand, we can use
queryRecord
to get the user:
store.queryRecord('user', {}).then(function(user) {
let username = user.username;
// do thing
});
The request is made through the adapters' queryRecord
:
import Adapter from '@ember-data/adapter';
import $ from 'jquery';
export default class UserAdapter extends Adapter {
queryRecord(modelName, query) {
return $.getJSON('/api/current_user');
}
}
Note: the primary use case for store.queryRecord
is when a single record
is queried and the id
is not known beforehand. In all other cases
store.query
and using the first item of the array is likely the preferred
way:
// GET /users?username=unique
{
data: [{
id: 1234,
type: 'user',
attributes: {
username: "unique"
}
}]
}
store.query('user', { username: 'unique' }).then(function(users) {
return users.firstObject;
}).then(function(user) {
let id = user.id;
});
This method returns a promise, which resolves with the found record.
If the adapter returns no data for the primary data of the payload, then
queryRecord
resolves with null
:
// GET /users?username=unique
{
data: null
}
store.queryRecord('user', { username: 'unique' }).then(function(user) {
// user is null
});
request (requestConfig) Future public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:664
- requestConfig
- StoreRequestInput
- returns
- Future
Issue a request via the configured RequestManager, inserting the response into the cache and handing back a Future which resolves to a ResponseDocument
Cache Keys
Only GET requests with a url or requests with an explicit
cache key (cacheOptions.key
) will have the request result
and document cached.
The cache key used is requestConfig.cacheOptions.key
if present, falling back to requestConfig.url
.
Params are not serialized as part of the cache-key, so
either ensure they are already in the url or utilize
requestConfig.cacheOptions.key
. For queries issued
via the POST
method requestConfig.cacheOptions.key
MUST be supplied for the document to be cached.
Requesting Without a Cache Key
Resource data within the request is always updated in the cache, regardless of whether a cache key is present for the request.
Fulfilling From Cache
When a cache-key is determined, the request may fulfill from cache provided the cache is not stale.
Cache staleness is determined by the configured CachePolicy
with priority given to the cacheOptions.reload
and
cacheOptions.backgroundReload
on the request if present.
If the cache data has soft expired or the request asks for a background reload, the request will fulfill from cache if possible and make a non-blocking request in the background to update the cache.
If the cache data has hard expired or the request asks for a reload, the request will not fulfill from cache and will make a blocking request to update the cache.
The Response
The primary difference between requestManager.request
and store.request
is that store.request
will attempt to hydrate the response content into
a response Document containing RecordInstances.
saveRecord (record, options) Promise<record> public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:2256
- record
- Unknown
- options
- returns
- Promise<record>
Trigger a save for a Record.
Returns a promise resolving with the same record when the save is complete.
serializerFor (modelName) Serializer public
Defined in ../packages/legacy-compat/src/index.ts:102
- modelName
- String
the record to serialize
- returns
- Serializer
Returns an instance of the serializer for a given type. For
example, serializerFor('person')
will return an instance of
App.PersonSerializer
.
If no App.PersonSerializer
is found, this method will look
for an App.ApplicationSerializer
(the default serializer for
your entire application).
If a serializer cannot be found on the adapter, it will fall back
to an instance of JSONSerializer
.
teardownRecord (hook) (record) public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:799
- record
A hook which an app or addon may implement. Called when
the Store is destroying a Record Instance. This hook should
be used to teardown any custom record instances instantiated
with instantiateRecord
.
unloadAll (type) public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:2002
- type
- String
the name of the resource
This method unloads all records in the store. It schedules unloading to happen during the next run loop.
Optionally you can pass a type which unload all records for a given type.
store.unloadAll();
store.unloadAll('post');
unloadRecord (record) public
Defined in ../packages/store/src/-private/store-service.ts:973
- record
- Model
For symmetry, a record can be unloaded via the store. This will cause the record to be destroyed and freed up for garbage collection.
Example
store.findRecord('post', '1').then(function(post) {
store.unloadRecord(post);
});