Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js

A timeline visually represents the work required to finish our project. It displays the dates that each activity was completed so we can monitor our progress. On the other hand, it may also convey what is required to achieve deadlines, making it more s…

A timeline visually represents the work required to finish our project. It displays the dates that each activity was completed so we can monitor our progress. On the other hand, it may also convey what is required to achieve deadlines, making it more straightforward to manage expectations and assign priorities to projects in the long term.

The post will teach us how to build a timeline tracker with Cloudinary and Xata in a Next.js application.

Check out the live demo here.

GitHub Repository

GitHub logo

Olanetsoft
/
Timeline-Tracker-with-Cloudinary-Xata-and-NextJs

Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata and NextJs

This is a Next.js project bootstrapped with create-next-app.

Getting Started

First, run the development server:

npm run dev
# or
yarn dev

Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

You can start editing the page by modifying pages/index.js. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.

API routes can be accessed on http://localhost:3000/api/hello. This endpoint can be edited in pages/api/hello.js.

The pages/api directory is mapped to /api/*. Files in this directory are treated as API routes instead of React pages.

Learn More

To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:

You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository – your feedback and contributions are welcome!

Deploy on Vercel

The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from…

What is Cloudinary?

Cloudinary provides a secure and comprehensive API for uploading media files fast and efficiently from the server side, the browser, or a mobile application. We can upload media assets using Cloudinary’s REST API or client libraries (SDKs) which makes integrating with websites and mobile apps more accessible.

What is Xata?

Xata is a serverless data platform that enables us to manage, scale, prevent downtime, cache, and maintain our database to improve our development workflow. Additionally, it offers a relational database, an effective search engine, and much more.

Prerequisites

Before getting started with this tutorial, we should have the following:

  • Basic understanding of ES6 Javascript features
  • NodeJs installed in our PC
  • Knowledge of React and React hooks
  • Yarn or NPM package manager

Project Setup and Installation

To proceed, let us clone the starter project in our preferred directory with the git command below:

git clone https://github.com/Olanetsoft/Timeline-Tracker-with-Cloudinary-Xata-and-NextJs/tree/starter

Run the following command to install all dependencies using the yarn package manager.

yarn && yarn dev

Or Run the following command to install all dependencies using the npm package manager to start the project on http://localhost:3000.

npm install && npm run dev 

We should have something similar to what we have below.

Timeline Tracker

Creating and Setting Up Xata

In this section, we will set up a Xata profile by signing up for a new account or log in. We will get redirected to our dashboard after successful sign-up, as shown below.

Idris Olubisi Xata workspace

Next, we will click Add a database, enter our preferred database name*, and* click create. We will be redirected to the database page similar to what is shown below.

Add database on Xata

We will create a table called users to save all the records of users that signed up on our platform, as shown below.

Create database table on Xata

Create Table

Add the following columns to the users table.

Column Name Data Type Unique
firstName String [ ]
lastName String [ ]
email Email [x]
password String [ ]

We will repeat the above process to create a new table called timelines with the following columns;

Column Name Data Type Unique Table
title String [ ]
description String [ ]
timeline String [ ]
image_url String [ ]
user Link [ ] users table

Next, we will connect our app to the remote Xata database we created using the following command below.

# Install the Xata CLI globally
npm i -g @xata.io/cli

After installing the Xata CLI globally, we will use the following command to initiate the database instance locally.

xata init --db https://Olubisi-Idris-Ayinde-s-workspace-s.us-east-1.xata.sh/db/timeline

To get the above code snippet for our database, go to the user’s table and click Get code snippet, as shown below.

Get code snippet on Xata.

Copy code snippet on the Xata dashboard

after running the command to initialize the project; we will see a prompt asking us to select a few configurations. Let us choose the following.

Xata cli configuration

Our browser automatically opens up to set a name for the API key, as shown below. Feel free to choose your preferred name.

Set API key for Xata

API Key

On our terminal, we can accept other prompts to add .gitignore and .env, as shown below.

Xata CLI

In the root of our project, we will see an env file with our XATA_API_KEY and XataClient inside the directory /src/xata.js.

We have successfully configured Xata in our project.

Configuring Cloudinary and DB to Upload Images

We will be using Cloudinary’s upload media assets. Create a free Cloudinary account to obtain Cloud Name, API Key, and API Secret.

Cloudinary vonfig

Update the .env file in the root directory of our project.

CLOUDINARY_CLOUD_NAME= '*********************'
CLOUDINARY_API_KEY='****************************'
CLOUDINARY_SECRET= "****************************"

Stop the application from running in the terminal and run yarn dev or npm run dev to restart the server.

Implementing User Authentication

In this section, we will implement user authentication functionality to help users register and login on to our application to create a timeline.

Registration Functionality

Inside the pages/api/ directory, update the register.js file with the following code snippet.

# pages/api/register.js

import { getXataClient } from "../../src/xata";
import { promisify } from "util";
import bcrypt from "bcryptjs"; // bcrypt to hash user password

// Hash password with bcrypt
const hash = promisify(bcrypt.hash);

// initialize XataClient function
const xata = getXataClient();

export default async function register(req, res) {
 // Get user data from request body
 const { firstName, lastName, email, password } = req.body;

 // Fetch user from database using email address as unique identifier if it exists
 const userExist = await xata.db.users.filter({ email }).getFirst();

 // If user exists, return error
 if (userExist) {
     res.status(400);
     throw new Error("User already exists"); // throw error if user with email already exists
 }

 // Create a new user in the database
 const user = await xata.db.users.create({
     firstName,
     lastName,
     email,
     password: await hash(password, 10),
  });

 res.json({ message: "Success" });
   if (!user) {
   res.status(400);
   throw new Error("Invalid user data");
  }
}

In the code snippet above, we:

  • Created a function called register with req and res as a parameter
  • Extracted firstName, lastName, email, and password from the request body
  • Check if a user already exists using their email address
  • Hash the user’s password using the bycrypt package
  • Create a new user record in our database using the Xata client getXataClient and return a success message if the user doedoesn’tist

Next, please navigate the register.js file under the /pages directory and update it with the following code snippet.

https://gist.github.com/Olanetsoft/48d1da1ff3c7e1afe2226446f9b5a88a

In the code snippet above, the handleSubmit function sends the user data to the register API we created earlier, allowing us to create a new user in our database.

Let’s head over to the Navber.js file in the components/ directory and update it with the following code snippet.

import Head from "next/head";
import Image from "next/image";
import Link from "next/link";
import { useRouter } from "next/router";

const Navbar = ({ isAuthenticated }) => {
  const router = useRouter();

  return (
    <div className="relative container mx-auto px-6 flex flex-col space-y-2">
      <div className="flex flex-col space-y-4 pb-10">
        <header className="flex flex-col items-center justify-center space-y-4">
          <h1 className="text-4xl font-bold text-center">
            <Link href="/" className="text-white-600 hover:text-gray-400">
              Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata and NextJs
            </Link>
          </h1>
          {isAuthenticated ? (
            <button
              className="bg-gray-600 hover:bg-gray-700 text-white font-bold py-2 px-4 rounded focus:outline-none focus:shadow-outline"
              type="button"
              onClick={() => {
                router.push("/upload");
              }}
            >
              Add New Timeline
            </button>
          ) : (
            <button
              className="bg-gray-600 hover:bg-gray-700 text-white font-bold py-2 px-4 rounded focus:outline-none focus:shadow-outline"
              type="button"
              onClick={() => {
                router.push("/register");
              }}
            >
              Register or Login to Create a Timeline
            </button>
          )}
        </header>
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default Navbar;

In the code snippet above, we added isAuthenticated props and a check to only display Register or Login to Create a Timeline when a user is not logged in.

Next, we can update the index.js under the pages/ directory with the following code snippet to implement the isAuthenticated data and retrieve all the timeline records created in our database.

https://gist.github.com/Olanetsoft/0e1f2cae8ca73a031ae94dc99e4062a2

Heading over to our browser, we should have something similar to what is shown below. In the following section, we will implement the Login functionality.

Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary,Xata and NextJs

Login Functionality

Similar to registering users on our platform, we will validate and log them into our system after registration. Let’s update login.js in the pages/api directory with the following code snippet.

https://gist.github.com/Olanetsoft/12df225182f163ee6358a8b458908134

In the code snippet above, we:

  • Created a function called login with req and res as a parameter
  • Extracted email and password from the request body
  • Check if a user already exists using their email address from the Xata database
  • Compare the hashed user’s password using the bycrypt package
  • Save the user token and Id in cookies to be used later in the tutorial

Next, we will update the login.js file in the pages/ directory.

https://gist.github.com/Olanetsoft/19788a926afb407cd710c382dabbb05b

Implementing User Upload Functionality

In the previous steps, we successfully implemented user authentication; we will proceed in this section to implement the upload functionality to allow logged-in users to create timelines.

In the upload.js file under the pages/api directory, let’s update it with the following code snippet.

https://gist.github.com/Olanetsoft/3cbb351d8e2d22ffb644de652bf99002

In the code snippet above, we implemented an API that allows users to create a new timeline, upload it to Cloudinary and save it into our Xata database.

Next, we will update the upload.js file in the pages/ directory to consume the upload API we just implemented with the following code snippet.

https://gist.github.com/Olanetsoft/ea55a33ffedceee903109003c7557fbb

Testing our application, we should have something similar to what is shown below.

Conclusion

This post teaches us how to build a timeline tracker using Cloudinary, Xata, and NextJs.

Resources


Print Share Comment Cite Upload Translate
APA
Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx (2024-03-28T19:52:28+00:00) » Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/.
MLA
" » Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js." Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx - Friday November 25, 2022, https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/
HARVARD
Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx Friday November 25, 2022 » Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js., viewed 2024-03-28T19:52:28+00:00,<https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/>
VANCOUVER
Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx - » Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js. [Internet]. [Accessed 2024-03-28T19:52:28+00:00]. Available from: https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/
CHICAGO
" » Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js." Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx - Accessed 2024-03-28T19:52:28+00:00. https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/
IEEE
" » Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js." Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx [Online]. Available: https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/. [Accessed: 2024-03-28T19:52:28+00:00]
rf:citation
» Build a Timeline Tracker with Cloudinary, Xata, and Next.js | Olubisi Idris Ayinde💡 | Sciencx | https://www.scien.cx/2022/11/25/build-a-timeline-tracker-with-cloudinary-xata-and-next-js/ | 2024-03-28T19:52:28+00:00
https://github.com/addpipe/simple-recorderjs-demo