This library tracks the way your app is actually using the data in your Redux store. By setting up the monitor in devtools you can see a live view of when different parts of your store are accessed:
To find out exactly when a certain value is being accessed, you can set a breakpoint to explore the call stack when the app touches that particular value.
You can also use redux-usage-report
as a performance tool to find unnecessarily fetched data in your app.
Try it out on the TodoMVC app here.
yarn add redux-usage-report redux-devtools redux-devtools-dock-monitor
Create a file called DevTools.js
(or whatever you'd like to call it) and paste the following code in:
import React from "react";
import { createDevTools } from "redux-devtools";
import DockMonitor from "redux-devtools-dock-monitor";
import { UsageMonitor } from "redux-usage-report";
export default createDevTools(
<DockMonitor
toggleVisibilityKey="ctrl-h"
changePositionKey="ctrl-q"
changeMonitorKey="ctrl-m"
>
<UsageMonitor />
</DockMonitor>
);
Make sure to put the DevTools.instrument()
call last in the order of composed functions.
Your code might look something like this:
configureStore.js
import { createStore, applyMiddleware, compose } from "redux"
import thunk from 'redux-thunk'
import generateReduxReport from "redux-usage-report"
import rootReducer from "./reducers"
import DevTools from './DevTools';
const enhancer = compose(
applyMiddleware(thunk),
generateReduxReport(),
// DevTools.instrument() must go last
DevTools.instrument()
)
const store = createStore(rootReducer, initialState, enhancer)
The easiest way to do this is just render the <DevTools/>
component in your App component.
Read more about setting up redux devtools in the official documentation.
Please make sure to only include the devtools for your development build!
For the in-app Redux Devtools
monitor to work, your Redux DevTools
browser extension must be disabled (otherwise there are 2 copies trying to run at the same time).
The json view of your store will show the parts that have been not accessed at reduced opacity, as well as an estimate of the total percentage of your store that has been used so far by your app. (The percentage is calculated by comparing the string length of the json
comprising the used portion of the store, with the json
string containing the entire store.)
You can set a breakpoint by doing shift + click
on any key in the json view. The next time the key is accessed, the debugger will stop execution. Feel free to reload the page, the breakpoint will persist until you remove it by holding shift
and clicking it again.
Note: This works best in Chrome.
Load the monitor in the app as described above, and visit all pages you want to test. Make sure to perform any required UI interactions to trigger data fetching or data usage. Then, open your browser console and type
copy(reduxReport.generate().unused)
You can now paste that JSON
object into a file to see which parts of your redux store have remained completely untouched. You might be able to get rid of some data fetching entirely, or simply be more thoughtful about when data is fetched, in order to speed up your app.
The generateReduxReport
enhancer wraps the store in a proxy, so that each object access can be tracked.
It tries to be smart about ignoring object accesses that come from outside your app's code. For instance, if you're also using the persistStore
Devtools plugin, even though that plugin accesses every key in your store, you shouldn't see that reflected in the Usage Report monitor. The monitor attempts to filter out object access that originates in any module located in the node_modules
folder or from a browser extension. This filtering logic only works in Chrome, or failing that, if you are using something like the eval option or some other lightweight type of source map that preserves file pathnames in stacktraces.
If you are curious as to why a value is marked "accessed", you can always shift + click
the relevant key in the monitor to set a breakpoint.
If you notice any performance issues, (you probably will in an app with a larger redux store) you can speed things up by turning off the most expensive check (whether to ignore object access that originates from node_modules
) by typing in the console:
reduxReport.__skipAccessOriginCheck = true