Set up Amplify DataStore
DataStore with Amplify
Amplify DataStore provides a programming model for leveraging shared and distributed data without writing additional code for offline and online scenarios, which makes working with distributed, cross-user data just as simple as working with local-only data.
Goal
To setup and configure your application with Amplify DataStore and use it to persist data locally on a device.
Prerequisites
An application with Amplify libraries integrated and a minimum target of any of the following:
- iOS 13.0, using Xcode 14.1 or later.
- macOS 10.15, using Xcode 14.1 or later.
- tvOS 13.0, using Xcode 14.3 or later.
- watchOS 9.0, using Xcode 14.3 or later.
- visionOS 1.0, using Xcode 15 or later. (Preview support - see below for more details.)
For a full example, please follow the project setup walkthrough.
Install Amplify Libraries
-
To install Amplify Libraries in your application, open your project in Xcode and select File > Add Packages....
-
Enter the Amplify Library for Swift GitHub repo URL (
https://github.com/aws-amplify/amplify-swift
) into the search bar and click Add Package.
- Lastly, choose AWSDataStorePlugin and Amplify. Then click Add Package.
Setup local development environment
To use Amplify, you must first initialize it for use in your project. If you haven't already done so, run this command:
amplify init
The base structure for a DataStore app is created by adding a new GraphQL API to your app.
# For new APIsamplify add api
# For existing APIsamplify update api
The CLI will prompt you to configure your API. Select GraphQL as the API type and reply to the questions as shown below. Conflict detection is required when using DataStore to sync data with the cloud.
? Please select from one of the below mentioned services: `GraphQL`? Here is the GraphQL API that we will create. Select a setting to edit or continue: `Name`? Provide API name: `BlogAppApi`? Here is the GraphQL API that we will create. Select a setting to edit or continue: `Authorization modes: API key (default, expiration time: 7 days from now)`? Choose the default authorization type for the API `API key`? Enter a description for the API key: `BlogAPIKey`? After how many days from now the API key should expire (1-365): `365`? Configure additional auth types? `No`? Here is the GraphQL API that we will create. Select a setting to edit or continue: `Conflict detection (required for DataStore): Disabled`? Enable conflict detection? `Yes`? Select the default resolution strategy `Auto Merge`? Here is the GraphQL API that we will create. Select a setting to edit or continue: `Continue`? Choose a schema template `Single object with fields (e.g., “Todo” with ID, name, description)`
The amplify add api
command adds a new AmplifyConfig
group to your Xcode project. It will contain the following files:
AmplifyConfig/
amplifyconfiguration.json
awsconfiguration.json
schema.graphql
Idiomatic persistence
DataStore relies on platform standard data structures to represent the data schema in an idiomatic way. The persistence language is composed by data types that satisfies the Model
interface and operations defined by common verbs such as save
, query
and delete
.
Data schema
The first step to create an app backed by a persistent datastore is to define a schema. DataStore uses GraphQL schema files as the definition of the application data model. The schema contains data types and relationships that represent the app's functionality.
Sample schema
For the next steps, let's start with a schema for a small blog application. Currently, it has only a single model. New types and constructs will be added to this base schema as more concepts are presented.
Open the schema.graphql
file located by default at amplify/backend/{api_name}/
and define a model Post
as follows.
type Post @model { id: ID! title: String! status: PostStatus! rating: Int content: String}
enum PostStatus { ACTIVE INACTIVE}
Now you will to convert the platform-agnostic schema.graphql
into platform-specific data structures. DataStore relies on code generation to guarantee schemas are correctly converted to platform code.
Like the initial setup, models can be generated either using the IDE integration or Amplify CLI directly.
Code generation: Platform integration
On iOS the amplify
CLI offers an Xcode integration that automatically adds the Amplify-specific files to your project.
-
Run the command:
amplify codegen models -
The
amplify codegen models
command adds a newAmplifyModels
group to your Xcode project. It will contain the following files:
AmplifyModels/
AmplifyModels.swift
Post.swift
Post+Schema.swift
PostStatus.swift
- Build the project (
Cmd+b
).
Code generation: Amplify CLI
Models can also be generated using the Amplify CLI directly.
In your terminal, make sure you are in your project/root folder and execute the codegen command:
amplify codegen models
You can find the generated files at amplify/generated/models/
.
Initialize Amplify DataStore
To initialize the Amplify DataStore call Amplify.add(plugin:)
method and add the AWSDataStorePlugin
, then call Amplify.configure()
.
Add the following imports to the top of your AppDelegate.swift
file:
import Amplifyimport AWSDataStorePlugin
Add the following code
In your App
scene, configure Amplify in the initializer:
@mainstruct MyAmplifyApp: App {
var body: some Scene { WindowGroup { ContentView() } }
init() { do { // AmplifyModels is generated in the previous step let dataStorePlugin = AWSDataStorePlugin(modelRegistration: AmplifyModels()) try Amplify.add(plugin: dataStorePlugin) try Amplify.configure() print("Amplify configured with DataStore plugin") } catch { print("Failed to initialize Amplify with \(error)") } }}
Add to your AppDelegate's application:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions
method
func application( _ application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplication.LaunchOptionsKey: Any]?) -> Bool {
do { // AmplifyModels is generated in the previous step let dataStorePlugin = AWSDataStorePlugin(modelRegistration: AmplifyModels()) try Amplify.add(plugin: dataStorePlugin) try Amplify.configure() print("Amplify configured with DataStore plugin") } catch { print("Failed to initialize Amplify with \(error)") return false }
return true}
Upon building and running this application you should see the following in your console window:
Amplify configured with DataStore plugin
Persistence operations
Now the application is ready to execute persistence operations. The data will be persisted to a local database, enabling offline-first use cases by default.
Even though a GraphQL API is already added to your project, the cloud synchronization will only be enabled when the API plugin is initialized and the backend provisioned. See the Next steps for more info.
Writing to the database
To write to the database, create an instance of the Post
model and save it.
let post = Post(title: "Create an Amplify DataStore app", status: .active)do { try await Amplify.DataStore.save(post) print("Post saved successfully!")} catch let error as DataStoreError { print("Error saving post \(error)")} catch { print("Unexpected error \(error)")}
let post = Post(title: "Create an Amplify DataStore app", status: .active)let sink = Amplify.Publisher.create { try await Amplify.DataStore.save(post)}.sink { if case let .failure(error) = $0 { print("Error saving post \(error)") }}receiveValue: { print("Post saved successfully! \($0)")}
Reading from the database
To read from the database, the simplest approach is to query for all records of a given model type.
do { let posts = try await Amplify.DataStore.query(Post.self) print("Posts retrieved successfully: \(posts)")} catch let error as DataStoreError { print("Error retrieving posts \(error)")} catch { print("Unexpected error \(error)")}
let sink = Amplify.Publisher.create { try await Amplify.DataStore.query(Post.self)}.sink { if case let .failure(error) = $0 { print("Error retrieving posts \(error)") }}receiveValue: { posts in print("Posts retrieved successfully: \(posts)")}
Next steps
Congratulations! You’ve created and retrieved data from the local database. Check out the following links to see other Amplify DataStore use cases and advanced concepts: