Official JavaScript SDK (browser and node) for interacting with the PocketBase API.
<script src="/path/to/dist/pocketbase.umd.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
const pb = new PocketBase("https://example.com")
...
</script>
OR if you are using ES modules:
<script type="module">
import PocketBase from '/path/to/dist/pocketbase.es.mjs'
const pb = new PocketBase("https://example.com")
...
</script>
npm install pocketbase --save
// Using ES modules (default)
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase'
// OR if you are using CommonJS modules
const PocketBase = require('pocketbase/cjs')
π§ For Node < 17 you'll need to load a
fetch()
polyfill. I recommend lquixada/cross-fetch:// npm install cross-fetch --save import 'cross-fetch/polyfill';
π§ Node doesn't have native
EventSource
implementation, so in order to use the realtime subscriptions you'll need to load aEventSource
polyfill.// for server: npm install eventsource --save import eventsource from 'eventsource'; // for React Native: npm install react-native-sse --save import eventsource from "react-native-sse"; global.EventSource = eventsource;
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090');
...
// authenticate as auth collection record
const userData = await pb.collection('users').authWithPassword('test@example.com', '123456');
// list and filter "example" collection records
const result = await pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20, {
filter: 'status = true && created > "2022-08-01 10:00:00"'
});
// and much more...
More detailed API docs and copy-paste examples could be found in the API documentation for each service.
The SDK comes with a helper pb.filter(expr, params)
method to generate a filter string with placeholder parameters ({:paramName}
) populated from an object.
This method is also recommended when using the SDK in Node/Deno/Bun server-side list queries and accepting untrusted user input as filter
string arguments, because it will take care to properly escape the generated string expression, avoiding eventual string injection attacks (on the client-side this is not much of an issue).
const records = await pb.collection("example").getList(1, 20, {
// the same as: "title ~ 'te\\'st' && (totalA = 123 || totalB = 123)"
filter: pb.filter("title ~ {:title} && (totalA = {:num} || totalB = {:num})", { title: "te'st", num: 123 })
})
The supported placeholder parameter values are:
string
(single quotes are autoescaped)number
boolean
Date
object (will be stringified into the format expected by PocketBase)null
- everything else is converted to a string using
JSON.stringify()
PocketBase Web API supports file upload via multipart/form-data
requests,
which means that to upload a file it is enough to provide either a FormData
instance OR plain object with File
/Blob
prop values.
-
Using plain object as body (this is the same as above and it will be converted to
FormData
behind the scenes):const data = { 'title': 'lorem ipsum...', 'document': new File(...), }; await pb.collection('example').create(data);
-
Using
FormData
as body:// the standard way to create multipart/form-data body const data = new FormData(); data.set('title', 'lorem ipsum...') data.set('document', new File(...)) await pb.collection('example').create(data);
All services return a standard Promise-based response, so the error handling is straightforward:
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 50).then((result) => {
// success...
console.log('Result:', result);
}).catch((error) => {
// error...
console.log('Error:', error);
});
// OR if you are using the async/await syntax:
try {
const result = await pb.collection('example').getList(1, 50);
console.log('Result:', result);
} catch (error) {
console.log('Error:', error);
}
The response error is normalized and always returned as ClientResponseError
object with the following public fields that you could use:
ClientResponseError {
url: string, // requested url
status: number, // response status code
response: { ... }, // the API JSON error response
isAbort: boolean, // is abort/cancellation error
originalError: Error|null, // the original non-normalized error
}
The SDK keeps track of the authenticated token and auth model for you via the pb.authStore
instance.
The default LocalAuthStore
uses the browser's LocalStorage
if available, otherwise - will fallback to runtime/memory (aka. on page refresh or service restart you'll have to authenticate again).
Conveniently, the default store also takes care to automatically sync the auth store state between multiple tabs.
NB! Deno also supports
LocalStorage
but keep in mind that, unlike in browsers where the client is the only user, by default DenoLocalStorage
will be shared by all clients making requests to your server!
The SDK comes also with a helper AsyncAuthStore
that you can use to integrate with any 3rd party async storage implementation (usually this is needed when working with React Native):
import AsyncStorage from '@react-native-async-storage/async-storage';
import PocketBase, { AsyncAuthStore } from 'pocketbase';
const store = new AsyncAuthStore({
save: async (serialized) => AsyncStorage.setItem('pb_auth', serialized),
initial: AsyncStorage.getItem('pb_auth'),
});
const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090', store)
In some situations it could be easier to create your own custom auth store. For this you can extend BaseAuthStore
and pass the new custom instance as constructor argument to the client:
import PocketBase, { BaseAuthStore } from 'pocketbase';
class CustomAuthStore extends BaseAuthStore {
save(token, model) {
super.save(token, model);
// your custom business logic...
}
}
const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090', new CustomAuthStore());
The default pb.authStore
extends BaseAuthStore
and has the following public members that you can use:
BaseAuthStore {
// base fields
record: RecordModel|null // the authenticated auth record
token: string // the authenticated token
isValid: boolean // checks if the store has existing and unexpired token
isSuperuser: boolean // checks if the store state is for superuser
// main methods
clear() // "logout" the authenticated record
save(token, record) // update the store with the new auth data
onChange(callback, fireImmediately = false) // register a callback that will be called on store change
// cookie parse and serialize helpers
loadFromCookie(cookieHeader, key = 'pb_auth')
exportToCookie(options = {}, key = 'pb_auth')
}
To "logout" the authenticated record you can call pb.authStore.clear()
.
To "listen" for changes in the auth store, you can register a new listener via pb.authStore.onChange
, eg:
// triggered everytime on store change
const removeListener1 = pb.authStore.onChange((token, record) => {
console.log('New store data 1:', token, record)
});
// triggered once right after registration and everytime on store change
const removeListener2 = pb.authStore.onChange((token, record) => {
console.log('New store data 2:', token, record)
}, true);
// (optional) removes the attached listeners
removeListener1();
removeListener2();
The SDK client will auto cancel duplicated pending requests for you.
For example, if you have the following 3 duplicated endpoint calls, only the last one will be executed, while the first 2 will be cancelled with ClientResponseError
error:
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20) // cancelled
pb.collection('example').getList(2, 20) // cancelled
pb.collection('example').getList(3, 20) // executed
To change this behavior per request basis, you can adjust the requestKey: null|string
special query parameter.
Set it to null
to unset the default request identifier and to disable auto cancellation for the specific request.
Or set it to a unique string that will be used as request identifier and based on which pending requests will be matched (default to HTTP_METHOD + path
, eg. "GET /api/users")
Example:
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20); // cancelled
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20); // executed
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20, { requestKey: "test" }) // cancelled
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20, { requestKey: "test" }) // executed
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20, { requestKey: null }) // executed
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20, { requestKey: null }) // executed
// globally disable auto cancellation
pb.autoCancellation(false);
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20); // executed
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20); // executed
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20); // executed
If you want to globally disable the auto cancellation behavior, you could set pb.autoCancellation(false)
.
To manually cancel pending requests, you could use pb.cancelAllRequests()
or pb.cancelRequest(requestKey)
.
You could specify custom TypeScript definitions for your Record models using generics:
interface Task {
// type the collection fields you want to use...
id: string;
name: string;
}
pb.collection('tasks').getList<Task>(1, 20) // -> results in Promise<ListResult<Task>>
pb.collection('tasks').getOne<Task>("RECORD_ID") // -> results in Promise<Task>
Alternatively, if you don't want to type the generic argument every time you can define a global PocketBase type using type assertion:
interface Task {
id: string;
name: string;
}
interface Post {
id: string;
title: string;
active: boolean;
}
interface TypedPocketBase extends PocketBase {
collection(idOrName: string): RecordService // default fallback for any other collection
collection(idOrName: 'tasks'): RecordService<Task>
collection(idOrName: 'posts'): RecordService<Post>
}
...
const pb = new PocketBase("http://127.0.0.1:8090") as TypedPocketBase;
pb.collection('tasks').getOne("RECORD_ID") // -> results in Promise<Task>
pb.collection('posts').getOne("RECORD_ID") // -> results in Promise<Post>
All API services accept an optional options
argument (usually the last one and of type SendOptions
), that can be used to provide:
- custom headers for a single request
- custom fetch options
- or even your own
fetch
implementation
For example:
pb.collection('example').getList(1, 20, {
expand: 'someRel',
otherQueryParam: '123',
// custom headers
headers: {
'X-Custom-Header': 'example',
},
// custom fetch options
keepalive: false,
cache: 'no-store',
// or custom fetch implementation
fetch: async (url, config) => { ... },
})
Note that for backward compatability and to minimize the verbosity, any "unknown" top-level field will be treated as query parameter.
Sometimes you may want to modify the request data globally or to customize the response.
To accomplish this, the SDK provides 2 function hooks:
-
beforeSend
- triggered right before sending thefetch
request, allowing you to inspect/modify the request config.const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090'); pb.beforeSend = function (url, options) { // For list of the possible request options properties check // https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/fetch#options options.headers = Object.assign({}, options.headers, { 'X-Custom-Header': 'example', }); return { url, options }; };
-
afterSend
- triggered after successfully sending thefetch
request, allowing you to inspect/modify the response object and its parsed data.const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090'); pb.afterSend = function (response, data) { // do something with the response state console.log(response.status); return Object.assign(data, { // extend the data... "additionalField": 123, }); };
Unfortunately, there is no "one size fits all" solution because each framework handle SSR differently (and even in a single framework there is more than one way of doing things).
But in general, the idea is to use a cookie based flow:
- Create a new
PocketBase
instance for each server-side request - "Load/Feed" your
pb.authStore
with data from the request cookie - Perform your application server-side actions
- Before returning the response to the client, update the cookie with the latest
pb.authStore
state
All BaseAuthStore
instances have 2 helper methods that
should make working with cookies a little bit easier:
// update the store with the parsed data from the cookie string
pb.authStore.loadFromCookie('pb_auth=...');
// exports the store data as cookie, with option to extend the default SameSite, Secure, HttpOnly, Path and Expires attributes
pb.authStore.exportToCookie({ httpOnly: false }); // Output: 'pb_auth=...'
Below you could find several examples:
SvelteKit
One way to integrate with SvelteKit SSR could be to create the PocketBase client in a hook handle
and pass it to the other server-side actions using the event.locals
.
// src/hooks.server.js
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').Handle} */
export async function handle({ event, resolve }) {
event.locals.pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090');
// load the store data from the request cookie string
event.locals.pb.authStore.loadFromCookie(event.request.headers.get('cookie') || '');
try {
// get an up-to-date auth store state by verifying and refreshing the loaded auth model (if any)
event.locals.pb.authStore.isValid && await event.locals.pb.collection('users').authRefresh();
} catch (_) {
// clear the auth store on failed refresh
event.locals.pb.authStore.clear();
}
const response = await resolve(event);
// send back the default 'pb_auth' cookie to the client with the latest store state
response.headers.append('set-cookie', event.locals.pb.authStore.exportToCookie());
return response;
}
And then, in some of your server-side actions, you could directly access the previously created event.locals.pb
instance:
// src/routes/login/+server.js
/**
* Creates a `POST /login` server-side endpoint
*
* @type {import('./$types').RequestHandler}
*/
export async function POST({ request, locals }) {
const { email, password } = await request.json();
const { token, record } = await locals.pb.collection('users').authWithPassword(email, password);
return new Response('Success...');
}
For proper locals.pb
type detection, you can also add PocketBase
in your your global types definition:
// src/app.d.ts
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
declare global {
declare namespace App {
interface Locals {
pb: PocketBase
}
}
}
Astro
To integrate with Astro SSR, you could create the PocketBase client in the Middleware and pass it to the Astro components using the Astro.locals
.
// src/middleware/index.ts
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
import { defineMiddleware } from 'astro/middleware';
export const onRequest = defineMiddleware(async ({ locals, request }: any, next: () => any) => {
locals.pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090');
// load the store data from the request cookie string
locals.pb.authStore.loadFromCookie(request.headers.get('cookie') || '');
try {
// get an up-to-date auth store state by verifying and refreshing the loaded auth record (if any)
locals.pb.authStore.isValid && await locals.pb.collection('users').authRefresh();
} catch (_) {
// clear the auth store on failed refresh
locals.pb.authStore.clear();
}
const response = await next();
// send back the default 'pb_auth' cookie to the client with the latest store state
response.headers.append('set-cookie', locals.pb.authStore.exportToCookie());
return response;
});
And then, in your Astro file's component script, you could directly access the previously created locals.pb
instance:
// src/pages/index.astro
---
const locals = Astro.locals;
const userAuth = async () => {
const { token, record } = await locals.pb.collection('users').authWithPassword('test@example.com', '123456');
return new Response('Success...');
};
---
Although middleware functionality is available in both SSG
and SSR
projects, you would likely want to handle any sensitive data on the server side. Update your output
configuration to 'server'
:
// astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
export default defineConfig({
output: 'server'
});
Nuxt 3
One way to integrate with Nuxt 3 SSR could be to create the PocketBase client in a nuxt plugin
and provide it as a helper to the nuxtApp
instance:
// plugins/pocketbase.js
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
export default defineNuxtPlugin(async () => {
const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090');
const cookie = useCookie('pb_auth', {
path: '/',
secure: true,
sameSite: 'strict',
httpOnly: false, // change to "true" if you want only server-side access
maxAge: 604800,
})
// load the store data from the cookie value
pb.authStore.save(cookie.value?.token, cookie.value?.record);
// send back the default 'pb_auth' cookie to the client with the latest store state
pb.authStore.onChange(() => {
cookie.value = {
token: pb.authStore.token,
record: pb.authStore.record,
};
});
try {
// get an up-to-date auth store state by verifying and refreshing the loaded auth model (if any)
pb.authStore.isValid && await pb.collection('users').authRefresh();
} catch (_) {
// clear the auth store on failed refresh
pb.authStore.clear();
}
return {
provide: { pb }
}
});
And then in your component you could access it like this:
<template>
<div>
Show: {{ data }}
</div>
</template>
<script setup>
const { data } = await useAsyncData(async (nuxtApp) => {
// fetch and return all "example" records...
const records = await nuxtApp.$pb.collection('example').getFullList();
return structuredClone(records);
})
</script>
Nuxt 2
One way to integrate with Nuxt 2 SSR could be to create the PocketBase client in a nuxt plugin and provide it as a helper to the $root
context:
// plugins/pocketbase.js
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
export default async (ctx, inject) => {
const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090');
// load the store data from the request cookie string
pb.authStore.loadFromCookie(ctx.req?.headers?.cookie || '');
// send back the default 'pb_auth' cookie to the client with the latest store state
pb.authStore.onChange(() => {
ctx.res?.setHeader('set-cookie', pb.authStore.exportToCookie());
});
try {
// get an up-to-date auth store state by verifying and refreshing the loaded auth record (if any)
pb.authStore.isValid && await pb.collection('users').authRefresh();
} catch (_) {
// clear the auth store on failed refresh
pb.authStore.clear();
}
inject('pocketbase', pb);
};
And then in your component you could access it like this:
<template>
<div>
Show: {{ items }}
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
async asyncData({ $pocketbase }) {
// fetch and return all "example" records...
const items = await $pocketbase.collection('example').getFullList();
return { items }
}
}
</script>
Next.js
Next.js doesn't seem to have a central place where you can read/modify the server request and response.
There is support for middlewares,
but they are very limited and, at the time of writing, you can't pass data from a middleware to the getServerSideProps
functions (vercel/next.js#31792).
One way to integrate with Next.js SSR could be to create a custom PocketBase
instance in each of your getServerSideProps
:
import PocketBase from 'pocketbase';
// you can place this helper in a separate file so that it can be reused
async function initPocketBase(req, res) {
const pb = new PocketBase('http://127.0.0.1:8090');
// load the store data from the request cookie string
pb.authStore.loadFromCookie(req?.headers?.cookie || '');
// send back the default 'pb_auth' cookie to the client with the latest store state
pb.authStore.onChange(() => {
res?.setHeader('set-cookie', pb.authStore.exportToCookie());
});
try {
// get an up-to-date auth store state by verifying and refreshing the loaded auth record (if any)
pb.authStore.isValid && await pb.collection('users').authRefresh();
} catch (_) {
// clear the auth store on failed refresh
pb.authStore.clear();
}
return pb
}
export async function getServerSideProps({ req, res }) {
const pb = await initPocketBase(req, res)
// fetch example records...
const result = await pb.collection('example').getList(1, 30);
return {
props: {
// ...
},
}
}
export default function Home() {
return (
<div>Hello world!</div>
)
}
The most common frontend related vulnerability is XSS (and CSRF when dealing with cookies). Fortunately, modern browsers can detect and mitigate most of this type of attacks if Content Security Policy (CSP) is provided.
To prevent a malicious user or 3rd party script to steal your PocketBase auth token, it is recommended to configure a basic CSP for your application (either as meta
tag or HTTP header).
This is out of the scope of the SDK, but you could find more resources about CSP at:
Depending on how and where you use the JS SDK, it is also recommended to use the helper pb.filter(expr, params)
when constructing filter strings with untrusted user input to avoid eventual string injection attacks (see Binding filter parameters).
const pb = new PocketBase(baseURL = '/', authStore = LocalAuthStore);
Each instance method returns the
PocketBase
instance allowing chaining.
Method | Description |
---|---|
pb.send(path, sendOptions = {}) |
Sends an api http request. |
pb.autoCancellation(enable) |
Globally enable or disable auto cancellation for pending duplicated requests. |
pb.cancelAllRequests() |
Cancels all pending requests. |
pb.cancelRequest(cancelKey) |
Cancels single request by its cancellation token key. |
pb.buildURL(path) |
Builds a full client url by safely concatenating the provided path. |
Each service call returns a
Promise
object with the API response.
// Returns a paginated records list.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).getList(page = 1, perPage = 30, options = {});
// Returns a list with all records batch fetched at once
// (by default 200 items per request; to change it set the `batch` param).
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).getFullList(options = {});
// Returns the first found record matching the specified filter.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).getFirstListItem(filter, options = {});
// Returns a single record by its id.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).getOne(recordId, options = {});
// Creates (aka. register) a new record.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).create(bodyParams = {}, options = {});
// Updates an existing record by its id.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).update(recordId, bodyParams = {}, options = {});
// Deletes a single record by its id.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).delete(recordId, options = {});
// Subscribe to realtime changes to the specified topic ("*" or recordId).
//
// It is safe to subscribe multiple times to the same topic.
//
// You can use the returned UnsubscribeFunc to remove a single registered subscription.
// If you want to remove all subscriptions related to the topic use unsubscribe(topic).
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).subscribe(topic, callback, options = {});
// Unsubscribe from all registered subscriptions to the specified topic ("*" or recordId).
// If topic is not set, then it will remove all registered collection subscriptions.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).unsubscribe([topic]);
Available only for "auth" type collections.
// Returns all available application auth methods.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).listAuthMethods(options = {});
// Authenticates a record with their username/email and password.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).authWithPassword(usernameOrEmail, password, options = {});
// Authenticates a record with an OTP.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).authWithOTP(otpId, password, options = {});
// Authenticates a record with OAuth2 provider without custom redirects, deeplinks or even page reload.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).authWithOAuth2(authConfig);
// Authenticates a record with OAuth2 code.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).authWithOAuth2Code(provider, code, codeVerifier, redirectUrl, createData = {}, options = {});
// Refreshes the current authenticated record and auth token.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).authRefresh(options = {});
// Sends a record OTP email request.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).requestOTP(email, options = {});
// Sends a record password reset email.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).requestPasswordReset(email, options = {});
// Confirms a record password reset request.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).confirmPasswordReset(resetToken, newPassword, newPasswordConfirm, options = {});
// Sends a record verification email request.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).requestVerification(email, options = {});
// Confirms a record email verification request.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).confirmVerification(verificationToken, options = {});
// Sends a record email change request to the provider email.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).requestEmailChange(newEmail, options = {});
// Confirms record new email address.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).confirmEmailChange(emailChangeToken, userPassword, options = {});
// Lists all linked external auth providers for the specified record.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).listExternalAuths(recordId, options = {});
// Unlinks a single external auth provider relation from the specified record.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).unlinkExternalAuth(recordId, provider, options = {});
// Impersonate authenticates with the specified recordId and returns a new client with the received auth token in a memory store.
π pb.collection(collectionIdOrName).impersonate(recordId, duration, options = {});
// create a new batch instance
const batch = pb.createBatch();
// register create/update/delete/upsert requests to the created batch
batch.collection('example1').create({ ... });
batch.collection('example2').update('RECORD_ID', { ... });
batch.collection('example3').delete('RECORD_ID');
batch.collection('example4').upsert({ ... });
// send the batch request
const result = await batch.send()
// Builds and returns an absolute record file url for the provided filename.
π pb.files.getURL(record, filename, options = {});
// Requests a new private file access token for the current authenticated record.
π pb.files.getToken(options = {});
// Returns a paginated collections list.
π pb.collections.getList(page = 1, perPage = 30, options = {});
// Returns a list with all collections batch fetched at once
// (by default 200 items per request; to change it set the `batch` query param).
π pb.collections.getFullList(options = {});
// Returns the first found collection matching the specified filter.
π pb.collections.getFirstListItem(filter, options = {});
// Returns a single collection by its id or name.
π pb.collections.getOne(idOrName, options = {});
// Creates (aka. register) a new collection.
π pb.collections.create(bodyParams = {}, options = {});
// Updates an existing collection by its id or name.
π pb.collections.update(idOrName, bodyParams = {}, options = {});
// Deletes a single collection by its id or name.
π pb.collections.delete(idOrName, options = {});
// Deletes all records associated with the specified collection.
π pb.collections.truncate(idOrName, options = {});
// Imports the provided collections.
π pb.collections.import(collections, deleteMissing = false, options = {});
// Returns type indexed map with scaffolded collection models populated with their default field values.
π pb.collections.getScaffolds(options = {});
// Returns a paginated logs list.
π pb.logs.getList(page = 1, perPage = 30, options = {});
// Returns a single log by its id.
π pb.logs.getOne(id, options = {});
// Returns logs statistics.
π pb.logs.getStats(options = {});
// Returns a map with all available app settings.
π pb.settings.getAll(options = {});
// Bulk updates app settings.
π pb.settings.update(bodyParams = {}, options = {});
// Performs a S3 storage connection test.
π pb.settings.testS3(filesystem = "storage", options = {});
// Sends a test email (verification, password-reset, email-change).
π pb.settings.testEmail(collectionIdOrName, toEmail, template, options = {});
// Generates a new Apple OAuth2 client secret.
π pb.settings.generateAppleClientSecret(clientId, teamId, keyId, privateKey, duration, options = {});
This service is usually used with custom realtime actions. For records realtime subscriptions you can use the subscribe/unsubscribe methods available in the
pb.collection()
RecordService.
// Initialize the realtime connection (if not already) and register the subscription listener.
//
// You can subscribe to the `PB_CONNECT` event if you want to listen to the realtime connection connect/reconnect events.
π pb.realtime.subscribe(topic, callback, options = {});
// Unsubscribe from all subscription listeners with the specified topic.
π pb.realtime.unsubscribe(topic?);
// Unsubscribe from all subscription listeners starting with the specified topic prefix.
π pb.realtime.unsubscribeByPrefix(topicPrefix);
// Unsubscribe from all subscriptions matching the specified topic and listener function.
π pb.realtime.unsubscribeByTopicAndListener(topic, callback);
// Getter that checks whether the realtime connection has been established.
pb.realtime.isConnected
// An optional hook that is invoked when the realtime client disconnects
// either when unsubscribing from all subscriptions or when the connection
// was interrupted or closed by the server.
//
// Note that the realtime client autoreconnect on its own and this hook is
// useful only for the cases where you want to apply a special behavior on
// server error or after closing the realtime connection.
pb.realtime.onDisconnect = function(activeSubscriptions)
// Returns list with all available backup files.
π pb.backups.getFullList(options = {});
// Initializes a new backup.
π pb.backups.create(basename = "", options = {});
// Upload an existing app data backup.
π pb.backups.upload({ file: File/Blob }, options = {});
// Deletes a single backup by its name.
π pb.backups.delete(key, options = {});
// Initializes an app data restore from an existing backup.
π pb.backups.restore(key, options = {});
// Builds a download url for a single existing backup using a
// superuser file token and the backup file key.
π pb.backups.getDownloadURL(token, key);
// Checks the health status of the api.
π pb.health.check(options = {});
# run unit tests
npm test
# run prettier
npm run format
# build and minify for production
npm run build