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Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

You're reading from   Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase A comprehensive guide to database design, security, real-time data, storage, multi-tenancy, and more

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837630684
Length 534 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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David Lorenz David Lorenz
Author Profile Icon David Lorenz
David Lorenz
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Creating the Foundations of the Ticket System App
2. Chapter 1: Unveiling the Inner Workings of Supabase and Introducing the Book’s Project FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up Supabase with Next.js 4. Chapter 3: Creating the Ticket Management Pages, Layout, and Components 5. Part 2: Adding Multi-Tenancy and Learning RLS
6. Chapter 4: Adding Authentication and Application Protection 7. Chapter 5: Crafting Multi-Tenancy through Database and App Design 8. Chapter 6: Enforcing Tenant Permissions with RLS and Handling Tenant Domains 9. Chapter 7: Adding Tenant-Based Signups, including Google Login 10. Part 3: Managing Tickets and Interactions
11. Chapter 8: Implementing Dynamic Ticket Management 12. Chapter 9: Creating a User List with RPCs and Setting Ticket Assignees 13. Chapter 10: Enhancing Interactivity with Realtime Comments 14. Chapter 11: Adding, Securing, and Serving File Uploads with Supabase Storage 15. Part 4: Diving Deeper into Security and Advanced Features
16. Chapter 12: Avoiding Unwanted Data Manipulation and Undisclosed Exposures 17. Chapter 13: Adding Supabase Superpowers and Reviewing Production Hardening Tips 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Crafting Multi-Tenancy through Database and App Design

The previous chapter equipped you with strong authentication knowledge and the ability to create as many users as you want. Those users can now log in and see the Ticket Management UI, where a mocked tenant name and some mocked data can be found. But there is no sense of multi-tenancy yet. This is going to change now.

After clarifying the meaning of multi-tenancy, you will lay the database foundations for it by creating tables, a few tenants, and permissions to define which user should be able to access which tenant. With an excursion to backing up your database, you’ll ensure that none of your wonderful changes will be lost and see how that enables benefits teamwork as a nice side effect.

You’ll also overhaul your Next.js application so that it becomes tenant-aware and you can enable multi-tenancy with ease. We’ll finish up by learning how to combine everything we’ve learned to make sure that...

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