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  • Rank 215,985 (Top 5 %)
  • Language
    TypeScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 7 years ago
  • Updated 5 months ago

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Repository Details

User's idle service for Angular 15+

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angular-user-idle

Service for Angular 15+ to detect and control of user's idle (for previous versions use v3.0.x).

npm version

Important

The library was written for my personal needs. So I distribute it "as is" without advanced supporting and change requesting. If you like the library just use it if not then you're free to fork the repo and make what are you want.

Demo

See Demo app

Installation

npm install angular-user-idle

In app.module.ts:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { provideUserIdleConfig } from 'angular-user-idle';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

@NgModule({
  imports: [BrowserModule],
  declarations: [AppComponent],
  providers: [
    // Optionally you can set time for `idle`, `timeout` and `ping` in seconds.
    // Default values: `idle` is 600 (10 minutes), `timeout` is 300 (5 minutes) 
    // and `ping` is 120 (2 minutes).
    provideUserIdleConfig({ idle: 600, timeout: 300, ping: 120 })
  ],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule {}

Usage

You should init user idle service in one of core component or service of your app, for example login.component.ts:

import { Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
import { UserIdleService } from 'angular-user-idle';

@Component({
  templateUrl: './login.component.html'
})
export class LoginComponent implements OnInit {
  constructor(private userIdle: UserIdleService) {
  }

  ngOnInit() {
    //Start watching for user inactivity.
    this.userIdle.startWatching();
    
    // Start watching when user idle is starting.
    this.userIdle.onTimerStart().subscribe(count => console.log(count));
    
    // Start watch when time is up.
    this.userIdle.onTimeout().subscribe(() => console.log('Time is up!'));
  }

  stop() {
    this.userIdle.stopTimer();
  }

  stopWatching() {
    this.userIdle.stopWatching();
  }

  startWatching() {
    this.userIdle.startWatching();
  }

  restart() {
    this.userIdle.resetTimer();
  }
}
About ping

Please note that ping is used if you want to perform some action periodically every n-minutes in lifecycle of timer (from start timer to timeout).

For example, if you want to make a request to refresh token every 2 minutes you set ping to 120 and subscribe to ping's observable like this:

this.idle.ping$.subscribe(() => console.log("PING"));

The main schema will be as follow:

|–– 2m (ping)––4m (ping) ––6m (ping)...-– 10m (user idle detected, start timer for 5 min) –- 12m (ping) –– 14m (ping) –– 15m (time is out)|

If you don't use a ping just set ping to any value (not null) and just ignore it.

API

startWatching(): void;

Start user idle service and configure it.

onTimerStart(): Observable<number>

Fired when timer is starting and return observable (stream) of timer's count.

onTimeout(): Observable<boolean>;

Fired when time is out and id user did not stop the timer.

stopTimer()

Stop timer.

resetTimer()

Reset timer after onTimeout() has been fired.

stopWatching()

Stop user idle service.

setConfigValues({idle, timeout, ping})

Set config values after module was initialized.

setCustomActivityEvents(customEvents: Observable<any>): void

Set custom activity events after module was initialized.

Service logic:
  • User is inactive for 10 minutes
  • onTimerStart() is fire and return countdown for 5 minutes
  • If user did not stop timer by stopTimer() then time is up and onTimeout() is fire.