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@haikal212/angular-user-idle

v2.2.6

Published

User's idle service for Angular 6+

Downloads

7

Readme

angular-user-idle

Service for Angular 6+ to detect and control of user's idle.

Important

This library was written for needs of my corporate project and this library compiles and works (Angular 6) very well and as I expected. Unfortunately, I don't have necessary time to maintenance my library as fast as you can expected. I have a plan to review my code to try to fix a bugs that was reported by other users but I don't know when I do it. Thank for your understanding.

To use this library in Angular 5.x use angular-user-idle ver. 1.1.0 (depreacated and don't supported!)

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 { UserIdleModule } from 'angular-user-idle';

import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    BrowserModule,
    
    // 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).
    UserIdleModule.forRoot({idle: 600, timeout: 300, ping: 120})
  ],
  declarations: [AppComponent],
  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.jade'
})
export class LoginComponent implements OnInit {

  readonly googlePlayLink: string;
  readonly appStoreLink: string;

  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.