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Version: 3.x

Settings Manager

Settings managers are used to persist configuration data like API keys, preferences, etc.

SettingsValue interface​

Entries in the manager are stored using the structure:

  key: string;
value: string;
domain?: string;

DeleteMetadataArg interface​

The argument that can be used to remove metadata via manager.delete() method

It contains the key and domain:

type DeleteMetadataArg = {
key: string;
domain: string;
};

For values that should not be migrated during environment cloning (as private keys to payment provider), the developer should use the domain field to bind it to a particular store instance.

Available methods​

  • get: (key: string, domain?: string) => Promise<string | undefined>
  • set: (settings: SettingsValue[] | SettingsValue) => Promise<void>
  • delete: (args: string | string[] | DeleteMetadataArg | DeleteMetadataArg[]) => Promise<void>
warning

delete method can throw if the instance of SettingsManager was not configured with a proper mutation in the constructor.

MetadataManager

Default manager used by the App Template. Uses the app metadata as storage. Since the app developer can use any GraphQL client, the constructor must be parametrized with fetch and mutate functions:

import { MetadataEntry } from "@saleor/app-sdk/settings-manager";
import { Client } from "urql";

import {
FetchAppDetailsDocument,
FetchAppDetailsQuery,
UpdateAppMetadataDocument,
DeleteMetadataDocument,
} from "../generated/graphql";

export async function fetchAllMetadata(
client: Client
): Promise<MetadataEntry[]> {
const { error, data } = await client
.query<FetchAppDetailsQuery>(FetchAppDetailsDocument, {})
.toPromise();

return (
data?.app?.privateMetadata.map((md) => ({
key: md.key,
value: md.value,
})) || []
);
}

export async function mutateMetadata(
client: Client,
metadata: MetadataEntry[]
) {
const { error: mutationError, data: mutationData } = await client
.mutation(UpdateAppMetadataDocument, {
id: appId,
input: metadata,
})
.toPromise();

return (
mutationData?.updatePrivateMetadata?.item?.privateMetadata.map((md) => ({
key: md.key,
value: md.value,
})) || []
);
}

export async function deleteMetadata(client: Client, keys: string[]) {
return client.mutation(DeleteMetadataDocument, { keys }).toPromise();
}
Expand â–¼

And create MetadataManager instance:

const settings = new MetadataManager({
fetchMetadata: () => fetchAllMetadata(client),
mutateMetadata: (md) => mutateMetadata(client, md),
deleteMetadata: (keys) => deleteMetadata(client, keys),
});

EncryptedMetadataManager

This manager adds a layer of encryption for all the stored data. To operate correctly, the encryption key needs to be passed to the constructor:

new EncryptedMetadataManager({
encryptionKey: process.env.SECRET_KEY, // secrets should be saved in the environment variables, never in the source code
fetchMetadata: () => fetchAllMetadata(client),
mutateMetadata: (metadata) => mutateMetadata(client, metadata),
deleteMetadata: (keys) => deleteMetadata(client, keys),
});
warning

If the encryption key won't be passed, the application will exit.


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