Links Overview
Links enable you to customize the flow of data between the tRPC Client and Server. A link should do only one thing, which can be either a self-contained modification to a tRPC operation (query, mutation, or subscription) or a side-effect based on the operation (such as logging).
You can compose links together into an array that you can provide to the tRPC client configuration via the links
property, which represents a link chain. This means that the tRPC client will execute the links in the order they are added to the links
array when doing a request and will execute them again in reverse when it's handling a response. Here's a visual representation of the link chain:
The below examples are assuming you use Next.js, but the same as below can be added if you use the vanilla tRPC client
utils/trpc.tstsx
import { httpBatchLink, loggerLink } from '@trpc/client';import { createTRPCNext } from '@trpc/next';export default createTRPCNext<AppRouter>({config() {const url = `http://localhost:3000`;return {links: [loggerLink(),httpBatchLink({url,}),],};},});
utils/trpc.tstsx
import { httpBatchLink, loggerLink } from '@trpc/client';import { createTRPCNext } from '@trpc/next';export default createTRPCNext<AppRouter>({config() {const url = `http://localhost:3000`;return {links: [loggerLink(),httpBatchLink({url,}),],};},});
Creating a custom link​
A link is a function that follows the TRPCLink
type. Each link is composed of three parts:
- The link returns a function that has a parameter with the
TRPCClientRuntime
type. This argument is passed by tRPC and it is used when creating a terminating link. If you're not creating a terminating link, you can just create a function that has no parameters. - The function in step 1 returns another function that receives an object with two properties:
op
which is theOperation
that is being executed by the client, andnext
which is the function we use to call the next link down the chain. - The function in step 2 returns a final function that returns the
observable
function provided by@trpc/server
. Theobservable
accepts a function that receives anobserver
which helps our link notify the next link up the chain how they should handle the operation result. In this function, we can just returnnext(op)
and leave it as is, or we can subscribe tonext
, which enables our link to handle the operation result.
Example​
utils/customLink.tstsx
import { TRPCLink } from '@trpc/client';import { observable } from '@trpc/server/observable';import type { AppRouter } from 'server/routers/_app';export const customLink: TRPCLink<AppRouter> = () => {// here we just got initialized in the app - this happens once per app// useful for storing cache for instancereturn ({ next, op }) => {// this is when passing the result to the next link// each link needs to return an observable which propagates resultsreturn observable((observer) => {console.log('performing operation:', op);const unsubscribe = next(op).subscribe({next(value) {console.log('we received value', value);observer.next(value);},error(err) {console.log('we received error', err);observer.error(err);},complete() {observer.complete();},});return unsubscribe;});};};
utils/customLink.tstsx
import { TRPCLink } from '@trpc/client';import { observable } from '@trpc/server/observable';import type { AppRouter } from 'server/routers/_app';export const customLink: TRPCLink<AppRouter> = () => {// here we just got initialized in the app - this happens once per app// useful for storing cache for instancereturn ({ next, op }) => {// this is when passing the result to the next link// each link needs to return an observable which propagates resultsreturn observable((observer) => {console.log('performing operation:', op);const unsubscribe = next(op).subscribe({next(value) {console.log('we received value', value);observer.next(value);},error(err) {console.log('we received error', err);observer.error(err);},complete() {observer.complete();},});return unsubscribe;});};};
References​
If you need a more real reference for creating your custom link, you can check out some of the built-in links tRPC provides on GitHub.
The terminating link​
The terminating link is the last link in a link chain. Instead of calling the next
function, the terminating link is responsible for sending your composed tRPC operation to the tRPC server and returning an OperationResultEnvelope
.
The links
array that you add to the tRPC client config should have at least one link, and that link should be a terminating link. If links
don't have a terminating link at the end of them, the tRPC operation will not be sent to the tRPC server.
httpBatchLink
is the recommended terminating link by tRPC.
httpLink
and wsLink
are other examples of terminating links.
Managing context​
As an operation moves along your link chain, it maintains a context that each link can read and modify. This allows links to pass metadata along the chain that other links use in their execution logic.
Obtain the current context object and modify it by accessing op.context
.
You can set the context object's initial value for a particular operation by providing the context parameter to the query
or useQuery
hook (or mutation
, subscription
, etc.).