This package allows to integrate @casl/ability
with React application. It provides Can
component that allow to hide or show UI elements based on user ability to see them.
@casl/react
perfectly works with React Native
npm install @casl/react @casl/ability
# or
yarn add @casl/react @casl/ability
# or
pnpm add @casl/react @casl/ability
It accepts children and 6 properties:
-
do
- name of the action (e.g.,read
,update
). Has an aliasI
-
on
- checked subject. Hasa
,an
,this
aliases -
field
- checked fieldexport default ({ post }) => <Can I="read" this={post} field="title"> Yes, you can do this! ;) </Can>
-
not
- inverts ability check and show UI if user cannot do some action:export default () => <Can not I="create" a="Post"> You are not allowed to create a post </Can>
-
passThrough
- renders children in spite of whatability.can
returns. This is useful for creating custom components based onCan
. For example, if you need to disable button based on user permissions:export default () => ( <Can I="create" a="Post" passThrough> {allowed => <button disabled={!allowed}>Save</button>} </Can> )
-
ability
- an instance ofAbility
which will be used to check permissions -
children
- elements to hide or render. May be either a render function:export default () => <Can I="create" a="Post" ability={ability}> {() => <button onClick={this.createPost}>Create Post</button>} </Can>
or React elements:
export default () => <Can I="create" a="Post" ability={ability}> <button onClick={this.createPost}>Create Post</button> </Can>
it's better to pass children as a render function because it will not create additional React elements if user doesn't have ability to do some action (in the case above
create Post
)
Don't be scared by the amount of properties component takes, we will talk about how to bind some of them.
It'd be inconvenient to pass ability
in every Can
component. That's why there are 2 function which allow to bind Can
to use a particular instance of Ability
:
-
createCanBoundTo
This function was created to support version of React < 16.4.0, those versions doesn't have Context API. Can be used like this:import { createCanBoundTo } from '@casl/react'; import ability from './ability'; export const Can = createCanBoundTo(ability);
-
createContextualCan
This function is created to support React's Context API and can be used like this:import { createContext } from 'react'; import { createContextualCan } from '@casl/react'; export const AbilityContext = createContext(); export const Can = createContextualCan(AbilityContext.Consumer);
The 2 methods are almost the same, the 2nd one is slightly better because it will allow you to provide different Ability
instances to different parts of your app and inject ability using contextType
static property. Choose your way based on the version of React you use.
In this guide, we will use
createContextualCan
as it covers more cases in modern React development.
To finalize things, we need to provide an instance of Ability
via AbilityContext.Provider
:
import { AbilityContext } from './Can'
import ability from './ability'
export default function App({ props }) {
return (
<AbilityContext.Provider value={ability}>
<TodoApp />
</AbilityContext.Provider>
)
}
See CASL guide to learn how to define
Ability
instance.
and use our Can
component:
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import { Can } from './Can'
export class TodoApp extends Component {
createTodo = () => {
// implement logic to show new todo form
};
render() {
return (
<Can I="create" a="Todo">
<button onClick={this.createTodo}>Create Todo</button>
</Can>
)
}
}
Sometimes the logic in a component may be a bit complicated, so you can't use <Can>
component. In such cases, you can use React's contextType
component property:
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import { AbilityContext } from './Can'
export class TodoApp extends Component {
createTodo = () => {
// logic to show new todo form
};
render() {
return (
<div>
{this.context.can('create', 'Todo') &&
<button onClick={this.createTodo}>Create Todo</button>}
</div>
);
}
}
TodoApp.contextType = AbilityContext;
or useContext
hook:
import React, { useContext } from 'react';
import { AbilityContext } from './Can'
export default () => {
const createTodo = () => { /* logic to show new todo form */ };
const ability = useContext(AbilityContext);
return (
<div>
{ability.can('create', 'Todo') &&
<button onClick={createTodo}>Create Todo</button>}
</div>
);
}
In that case, you need to create a new Ability
instance when you want to update user permissions (don't use update
method, it won't trigger re-rendering in this case) or you need to force re-render the whole app.
To make things easier, @casl/react
provides useAbility
hook that accepts React.Context
as the only argument (the same as useContext
), but triggers re-render in the component where you use this hook when you update Ability
rules. The example above can be rewritten to:
import { useAbility } from '@casl/react';
import { AbilityContext } from './Can'
export default () => {
const createTodo = () => { /* logic to show new todo form */ };
const ability = useAbility(AbilityContext);
return (
<div>
{ability.can('create', 'Todo') &&
<button onClick={createTodo}>Create Todo</button>}
</div>
);
}
If you use TypeScript and React < 16.4 make sure to add @casl/react/contextAPIPatch.d.ts
file in your tscofig.json
, otherwise your app won't compile:
{
// other configuration options
"include": [
"src/**/*",
"@casl/react/contextAPIPatch.d.ts" // <-- add this line
]
}
As you can see from the code above, component name and its property names and values create an English sentence, actually a question. For example, the code below reads as Can I create a Post
:
export default () => <Can I="create" a="Post">
<button onClick={...}>Create Post</button>
</Can>
There are several other property aliases which allow to construct a readable question:
-
use
a
(oran
) alias when you check by Typeexport default () => <Can I="read" a="Post">...</Can>
-
use
this
alias instead ofa
when you check action on a particular instance. So, the question can be read as "Can I read this particular post?"// `this.props.post` is an instance of `Post` class (i.e., model instance) export default () => <Can I="read" this={this.props.post}>...</Can>
-
use
do
andon
if you are bored and don't want to make your code more readable ;)// `this.props.post` is an instance of `Post` class (i.e., model instance) export default () => <Can do="read" on={this.props.post}>...</Can> // or per field check export default () => <Can do="read" on={this.props.post} field="title">...</Can>
The package is written in TypeScript, so don't worry that you need to keep all the properties and aliases in mind. If you use TypeScript, your IDE will suggest you the correct usage and TypeScript will warn you if you make a mistake.
Majority of applications that need permission checking support have something like AuthService
or LoginService
or Session
service (name it as you wish) which is responsible for user login/logout functionality. Whenever user login (and logout), we need to update Ability
instance with new rules. Usually you will do this in your LoginComponent
.
Let's imagine that server returns user with a role on login:
import { AbilityBuilder, Ability } from '@casl/ability';
import React, { useState, useContext } from 'react';
import { AbilityContext } from './Can';
function updateAbility(ability, user) {
const { can, rules } = new AbilityBuilder(Ability);
if (user.role === 'admin') {
can('manage', 'all');
} else {
can('read', 'all');
}
ability.update(rules);
}
export default () => {
const [username, setUsername] = useState('');
const [password, setPassword] = useState('');
const ability = useContext(AbilityContext);
const login = () => {
const params = {
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify({ username, password })
};
return fetch('path/to/api/login', params)
.then(response => response.json())
.then(({ user }) => updateAbility(ability, user));
};
return (
<form>
{/* input fields */}
<button onClick={login}>Login</button>
</form>
);
};
See Define rules to get more information of how to define
Ability
Want to file a bug, contribute some code, or improve documentation? Excellent! Read up on guidelines for contributing.
If you'd like to help us sustain our community and project, consider to become a financial contributor on Open Collective
See Support CASL for details