fandogh / graphql
Facebook GraphQL for Laravel
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Requires
- php: >=5.5.9
- illuminate/support: 5.*
- webonyx/graphql-php: ~0.5
Requires (Dev)
- orchestra/testbench: ~3.1
README
Use Facebook GraphQL with Laravel 5. It is based on the PHP implementation here. You can find more information about GraphQL in the GraphQL Introduction on the React blog or you can read the GraphQL specifications. This is a work in progress.
This package is compatible with Eloquent model (or any other data source). See the example below.
Installation
Dependencies:
Installation:
1- Require the package via Composer in your composer.json
.
{ "require": { "folklore/graphql": "0.4.*" } }
2- Run Composer to install or update the new requirement.
$ composer install
or
$ composer update
3- Add the service provider to your app/config/app.php
file
'Folklore\GraphQL\GraphQLServiceProvider',
4- Add the facade to your app/config/app.php
file
'GraphQL' => 'Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Facades\GraphQL',
5- Publish the configuration file
$ php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Folklore\GraphQL\GraphQLServiceProvider"
6- Review the configuration file
config/graphql.php
Usage
Advanced Usage
Creating a query
First you need to create a type.
namespace App\GraphQL\Type; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Type as GraphQLType; class UserType extends GraphQLType { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'User', 'description' => 'A user' ]; public function fields() { return [ 'id' => [ 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string()), 'description' => 'The id of the user' ], 'email' => [ 'type' => Type::string(), 'description' => 'The email of user' ] ]; } // If you want to resolve the field yourself, you can declare a method // with the following format resolve[FIELD_NAME]Field() protected function resolveEmailField($root, $args) { return strtolower($root->email); } }
Add the type to the config/graphql.php
configuration file
'types' => [ 'user' => 'App\GraphQL\Type\UserType' ]
You could also add the type with the GraphQL
Facade, in a service provider for example.
GraphQL::addType('App\GraphQL\Type\UserType', 'user');
Then you need to define a query that returns this type (or a list). You can also specify arguments that you can use in the resolve method.
namespace App\GraphQL\Query; use GraphQL; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Query; use App\User; class UsersQuery extends Query { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'Users query' ]; public function type() { return Type::listOf(GraphQL::type('user')); } public function args() { return [ 'id' => ['name' => 'id', 'type' => Type::string()], 'email' => ['name' => 'email', 'type' => Type::string()] ]; } public function resolve($root, $args) { if(isset($args['id'])) { return User::where('id' , $args['id'])->get(); } else if(isset($args['email'])) { return User::where('email', $args['email'])->get(); } else { return User::all(); } } }
Add the query to the config/graphql.php
configuration file
'schema' => [ 'query' => [ 'users' => 'App\GraphQL\Query\UsersQuery' ], // ... ]
Or using the GraphQL
facade
GraphQL::addQuery('App\GraphQL\Query\UsersQuery', 'users');
And that's it. You should be able to query GraphQL with a request to the url /graphql
(or anything you choose in your config). Try a GET request with the following query
input
query FetchUsers {
users {
id
email
}
}
For example, if you use homestead:
http://homestead.app/graphql?query=query+FetchUsers{users{id,email}}
Creating a mutation
A mutation is like any other query, it accepts arguments (which will be used to do the mutation) and return an object of a certain type.
For example a mutation to update the password of a user. First you need to define the Mutation.
namespace App\GraphQL\Mutation; use GraphQL; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Mutation; use App\User; class UpdateUserPasswordMutation extends Mutation { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'UpdateUserPassword' ]; public function type() { return GraphQL::type('user'); } public function args() { return [ 'id' => ['name' => 'id', 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string())], 'password' => ['name' => 'password', 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string())] ]; } public function resolve($root, $args) { $user = User::find($args['id']); if(!$user) { return null; } $user->password = bcrypt($args['password']); $user->save(); return $user; } }
As you can see in the resolve
method, you use the arguments to update your model and return it.
You then add the muation to the config/graphql.php
configuration file
'schema' => [ 'mutation' => [ 'updateUserPassword' => 'App\GraphQL\Mutation\UpdateUserPasswordMutation' ], // ... ]
Or using the GraphQL
facade
GraphQL::addMutation('App\GraphQL\Mutation\UpdateUserPasswordMutation', 'updateUserPassword');
You should then be able to use the following query on your endpoint to do the mutation.
mutation {
updateUserPassword(id: "1", password: "newpassword") {
id
email
}
}
Adding validation to mutation
It is possible to add validation rules to mutation. It uses the laravel Validator
to performs validation against the args
.
When creating a mutation, you can add a method to define the validation rules that apply by doing the following:
namespace App\GraphQL\Mutation; use GraphQL; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Mutation; use App\User; class UpdateUserEmailMutation extends Mutation { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'UpdateUserEmail' ]; public function type() { return GraphQL::type('user'); } public function args() { return [ 'id' => ['name' => 'id', 'type' => Type::string()], 'email' => ['name' => 'password', 'type' => Type::string()] ]; } public function rules() { return [ 'id' => ['required'], 'email' => ['required', 'email'] ]; } public function resolve($root, $args) { $user = User::find($args['id']); if(!$user) { return null; } $user->email = $args['email']; $user->save(); return $user; } }
Alternatively you can define rules with each args
class UpdateUserEmailMutation extends Mutation { //... public function args() { return [ 'id' => [ 'name' => 'id', 'type' => Type::string(), 'rules' => ['required'] ], 'email' => [ 'name' => 'password', 'type' => Type::string(), 'rules' => ['required', 'email'] ] ]; } //... }
When you execute a mutation, it will returns the validation errors. Since GraphQL specifications define a certain format for errors, the validation errors messages are added to the error object as a extra validation
attribute. To find the validation error, you should check for the error with a message
equals to 'validation'
, then the validation
attribute will contain the normal errors messages returned by the Laravel Validator.
{ "data": { "updateUserEmail": null }, "errors": [ { "message": "validation", "locations": [ { "line": 1, "column": 20 } ], "validation": { "email": [ "The email is invalid." ] } } ] }
Advanced usage
Query Variables
GraphQL offer you the possibility to use variables in your query so you don't need to "hardcode" value. This is done like that:
query FetchUserByID($id: String) {
user(id: $id) {
id
email
}
}
When you query the GraphQL endpoint, you can pass a params
parameter.
http://homestead.app/graphql?query=query+FetchUserByID($id:String){user(id:$id){id,email}}¶ms={"id":"1"}
Custom field
You can also define a field as a class if you want to reuse it in multiple types.
namespace App\GraphQL\Fields; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Field; class PictureField extends Field { protected $attributes = [ 'description' => 'A picture' ]; public function args() { return [ 'width' => [ 'type' => Type::int(), 'description' => 'The width of the picture' ], 'height' => [ 'type' => Type::int(), 'description' => 'The height of the picture' ] ]; } protected function resolve($root, $args) { $width = isset($args['width']) ? $args['width']:100; $height = isset($args['height']) ? $args['height']:100; return 'http://placehold.it/'.$width.'x'.$height; } }
You can then use it in your type declaration
namespace App\GraphQL\Type; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Type as GraphQLType; class UserType extends GraphQLType { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'User', 'description' => 'A user' ]; public function fields() { return [ 'id' => [ 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string()), 'description' => 'The id of the user' ], 'email' => [ 'type' => Type::string(), 'description' => 'The email of user' ], //Instead of passing an array, you pass a class path to your custom field 'picture' => App\GraphQL\Fields\PictureField::class ]; } }
Eager loading relationships
The third argument passed to a query's resolve method is an instance of GraphQL\Type\Definition\ResolveInfo
which you can use to retrieve keys from the request. The following is an example of using this information to eager load related Eloquent models.
Your Query would look like
namespace App\GraphQL\Query; use GraphQL; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\ResolveInfo; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Query; use App\User; class UsersQuery extends Query { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'Users query' ]; public function type() { return Type::listOf(GraphQL::type('user')); } public function args() { return [ 'id' => ['name' => 'id', 'type' => Type::string()], 'email' => ['name' => 'email', 'type' => Type::string()] ]; } public function resolve($root, $args, ResolveInfo $info) { $fields = $info->getFieldSelection($depth = 3); $users = User::query(); foreach ($fields as $field => $keys) { if ($field === 'profile') { $users->with('profile'); } if ($field === 'posts') { $users->with('posts'); } } return $users->get(); } }
Your Type for User would look like
<?php namespace App\GraphQL\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Facades\GraphQL; use GraphQL\Type\Definition\Type; use Folklore\GraphQL\Support\Type as GraphQLType; class UserType extends GraphQLType { /** * @var array */ protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'User', 'description' => 'A user', ]; /** * @return array */ public function fields() { return [ 'uuid' => [ 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string()), 'description' => 'The uuid of the user' ], 'email' => [ 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string()), 'description' => 'The email of user' ], 'profile' => [ 'type' => GraphQL::type('Profile'), 'description' => 'The user profile', ], 'posts' => [ 'type' => Type::listOf(GraphQL::type('Post')), 'description' => 'The user posts', ] ]; } }
At this point we have a profile and a post type as expected for any model
class ProfileType extends GraphQLType { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'Profile', 'description' => 'A user profile', ]; public function fields() { return [ 'name' => [ 'type' => Type::string(), 'description' => 'The name of user' ] ]; } }
class PostType extends GraphQLType { protected $attributes = [ 'name' => 'Post', 'description' => 'A post', ]; public function fields() { return [ 'title' => [ 'type' => Type::nonNull(Type::string()), 'description' => 'The title of the post' ], 'body' => [ 'type' => Type::string(), 'description' => 'The body the post' ] ]; } }
Lastly your query would look like, if using Homestead
For example, if you use homestead:
http://homestead.app/graphql?query=query+FetchUsers{users{uuid, email, team{name}}}