| name | react-admin |
| description | This skill should be used when building, modifying, or debugging a react-admin application — including creating resources, lists, forms, data fetching, authentication, relationships between entities, custom pages, or any CRUD admin interface built with react-admin. |
React-Admin Development Guide
React-admin is a framework for building single-page applications on top of REST/GraphQL APIs. It builds on top of React Query, react-hook-form, react-router, and Material UI. It provides 150+ components and dozens of hooks. Before writing custom code, always check if react-admin already provides a component or hook for the task. Full documentation: https://marmelab.com/react-admin/doc/
Providers (Backend Abstraction)
React-admin never calls APIs directly. All communication goes through providers — adapters that translate react-admin's standardized calls into API-specific requests. The three main providers are:
- dataProvider: All CRUD operations (
getList, getOne, create, update, delete, getMany, getManyReference, updateMany, deleteMany). See DataProviders and 50+ existing adapters.
- authProvider: Authentication and authorization. See Authentication.
- i18nProvider: Translations (
translate, changeLocale, getLocale).
Critical rule: Never use fetch, axios, or direct HTTP calls in components. Always use data provider hooks. This ensures proper caching, loading states, error handling, authentication, and optimistic rendering.
Composition (Not God Components)
React-admin uses composition over configuration. Override behavior by passing child components, not by setting dozens of props:
<Edit actions={<MyCustomActions />}>
<SimpleForm>
<TextInput source="title" />
</SimpleForm>
</Edit>
To customize the layout, pass a custom layout component to <Admin layout={MyLayout}>. To customize the menu, pass it to <Layout menu={MyMenu}>. This chaining is by design — see Architecture.
Context: Pull, Don't Push
React-admin components expose data to descendants via React contexts. Access data using hooks rather than passing props down:
useRecordContext() — current record in Show/Edit/Create views. See useRecordContext.
useListContext() — list data, filters, pagination, sort in List views. See useListContext.
useShowContext(), useEditContext(), useCreateContext() — page-level state for detail views.
useTranslate() — translation function from i18nProvider.
useGetIdentity() — current user from authProvider.
Hooks Over Custom Components
When a react-admin component's UI doesn't fit, use the underlying hook instead of building from scratch. Controller hooks (named use*Controller) provide all the logic without the UI:
useListController() — list fetching, filtering, pagination logic
useEditController() — edit form fetching and submission logic
useShowController() — show page data fetching logic
Routing
<Resource> declares CRUD routes automatically (/posts, /posts/create, /posts/:id/edit, /posts/:id/show). Use <CustomRoutes> for non-CRUD pages. Use useCreatePath() to build resource URLs and <Link> from react-admin for navigation. Default router is react-router (HashRouter), but TanStack Router is also supported via routerProvider. See Routing.
Data Fetching
Query Hooks (Reading Data)
const { data, total, isPending, error } = useGetList('posts', {
pagination: { page: 1, perPage: 25 },
sort: { field: 'created_at', order: 'DESC' },
filter: { status: 'published' },
});
const { data: record, isPending } = useGetOne('posts', { id: 123 });
const { data: records } = useGetMany('posts', { ids: [1, 2, 3] });
const { data, total } = useGetManyReference('comments', {
target: 'post_id', id: 123,
pagination: { page: 1, perPage: 25 },
});
See useGetList, useGetOne.
Mutation Hooks (Writing Data)
All mutations return [mutate, state]. They support three mutation modes:
- pessimistic (default): Wait for server response, then update UI.
- optimistic: Update UI immediately, revert on server error.
- undoable: Update UI, show undo notification, commit after delay.
const [create, { isPending }] = useCreate();
const [update] = useUpdate();
const [deleteOne] = useDelete();
create('posts', { data: { title: 'Hello' } });
update('posts', { id: 1, data: { title: 'Updated' }, previousData: record });
deleteOne('posts', { id: 1, previousData: record });
Pass mutationMode: 'optimistic' or 'undoable' for instant UI feedback. See useCreate, useUpdate.
Authentication & Authorization
const authProvider = {
login: ({ username, password }) => Promise<void>,
logout: () => Promise<void>,
checkAuth: () => Promise<void>,
checkError: (error) => Promise<void>,
getIdentity: () => Promise<{ id, fullName, avatar }>,
getPermissions: () => Promise<any>,
canAccess: ({ resource, action, record }) => Promise<boolean>,
};
Each auth provider method has a corresponding hook (e.g. useGetIdentity(), useCanAccess()).
- Custom routes are public by default. Wrap them with
<Authenticated> or call useAuthenticated() to require login. See Authenticated.
- Centralize authorization in
authProvider.canAccess(), not in individual components. Use useCanAccess() to check permissions. See useCanAccess and AuthRBAC.
- The dataProvider must include credentials (Bearer token, cookies) in requests — authProvider handles login, but dataProvider handles API calls. Configure
httpClient in data provider setup.
Relationships Between Entities
Fetching all the data (including relationships) upfront for a given page is an anti-pattern. Instead, fetch related records on demand using reference fields and inputs.
Displaying Related Records (Fields)
{}
<ReferenceField source="company_id" reference="companies" />
{}
<ReferenceManyField reference="comments" target="post_id">
<DataTable>
<TextField source="body" />
<DateField source="created_at" />
</DataTable>
</ReferenceManyField>
{}
<ReferenceArrayField source="tag_ids" reference="tags">
<SingleFieldList>
<ChipField source="name" />
</SingleFieldList>
</ReferenceArrayField>
See ReferenceField, ReferenceManyField, ReferenceArrayField.
Editing Related Records (Inputs)
{}
<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies" />
{}
<ReferenceArrayInput source="tag_ids" reference="tags" />
See ReferenceInput, ReferenceArrayInput.
Forms
React-admin forms are built on react-hook-form. Use <SimpleForm> for single-column layouts and <TabbedForm> for multi-tab layouts. See SimpleForm, TabbedForm.
Pass validators to input components: required(), minLength(min), maxLength(max), minValue(min), maxValue(max), number(), email(), regex(pattern, message), or a custom function returning an error string.
<TextInput source="title" validate={[required(), minLength(3)]} />
Use RHF's useWatch() to create dynamic forms that react to field values:
Resource Definition
Encapsulate resource components in index files for clean imports:
export default {
list: PostList,
create: PostCreate,
edit: PostEdit,
icon: PostIcon,
recordRepresentation: (record) => record.title,
};
See Resource, RecordRepresentation.
Custom Data Provider Methods
Extend the dataProvider with domain-specific methods:
const dataProvider = {
...baseDataProvider,
archivePost: async (id) => { },
};
Persistent Client State (Store)
Use useStore() for persistent user preferences (theme, column visibility, saved filters):
const [theme, setTheme] = useStore('theme', 'light');
See Store.
Notification, Redirect, Refresh
const notify = useNotify();
const redirect = useRedirect();
const refresh = useRefresh();
notify('Record saved', { type: 'success' });
redirect('list', 'posts');
redirect('edit', 'posts', 123);
refresh();
Deprecations
- Use DataTable instead of Datagrid
- Prefer
<CanAccess> and useCanAccess for authorization checks