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🔮 Graphile's Crystal Monorepo
At Graphile we love GraphQL so much we named ourself for our love of it! This repository houses many of the Graphile packages that relate to GraphQL (or relate to the packages that relate to GraphQL, or relate to those package...); the two headline projects are Grafast and PostGraphile but there's many other packages, a fair few of which can be used independently - see below for more details.
Grafast: A cutting-edge planning and execution engine for
GraphQL.js ─ use this as a drop-in replacement for the execute
method from
GraphQL.js and by moving from traditional resolvers to Grafast "plan
resolvers" you'll be able to leverage the declarative nature of GraphQL requests
to execute your business logic in the most efficient way, leading to reduced
server load and happier customers. Use this if you're building your own GraphQL
schemas and want the best performance and efficiency without having to put much
extra effort in.
PostGraphile: An incredibly low-effort way to build a well structured and high-performance GraphQL API backed primarily by a PostgreSQL database. Our main focusses are performance, automatic best-practices and customisability/extensibility. Use this if you have a PostgreSQL database and you want to use it as the "source of truth" for an auto-generated GraphQL API (which you can still make significant changes to). NOTE: thanks to graphile-export you can also use this as a starting point for an API that you then manage yourself.
➡️ For PostGraphile V4 see the legacy branch |
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Project summaries
Here's a rough breakdown of the main packages:
- grafast - standalone cutting-edge planning and execution engine for
GraphQL; see above for full description.
- @dataplan/pg - plan classes for interacting with PostgreSQL
- @dataplan/json - plan classes for encoding/decoding JSON
- graphile-export - a package that can (under the right circumstances)
export an in-memory dynamically-constructed GraphQL schema to raw JavaScript
source code that can be imported and executed
- eslint-plugin-graphile-export - an ESLint plugin that helps you write code compatible with graphile-export
- jest-serializer-graphql-schema - a simple Jest serializer that
understands GraphQL schemas and thus does not fill snapshots with
\"\"\"
etc. - graphile-config - a module that handles the plugins, presets and configuration files for Graphile software - a universal configuration layer.
- graphile-build - a system for building a GraphQL.js schema from
"plugins", particularly useful for auto-generated GraphQL APIs (e.g.
PostGraphile uses this) but also useful for hand-rolled schemas that have a
lot of modular but widely-used concerns such as connections, naming, etc.
- graphile-build-pg - plugins for
graphile-build
that understand@dataplan/pg
(i.e. PostgreSQL) services and can generate types, relations, mutations, etc for these database resources.
- graphile-build-pg - plugins for
- @graphile/lru - an obsessively performant least-recently-used cache
(possibly the fastest general purpose LRU cache in Node.js) with a
ridiculously tiny feature set; you almost certainly want @isaacs'
lru-cache
instead of this. - pg-sql2 - a library for building highly dynamic SQL-injection-proof PostgreSQL queries using tagged template literals.
- pg-introspection - a strongly typed introspection library for PostgreSQL, generated from the PostgreSQL documentation to provide up-to-date details of each introspection field.
- postgraphile - pulls most of the above technologies together; see above for full description.
Crowd-funded open-source software
To help us develop this software sustainably, we ask all individuals and businesses that use it to help support its ongoing maintenance and development via sponsorship.
Click here to find out more about sponsors and sponsorship.
And please give some love to our featured sponsors 🤩:
<table><tr> <td align="center"><a href="https://www.the-guild.dev/"><img src="https://graphile.org/images/sponsors/theguild.png" width="90" height="90" alt="The Guild" /><br />The Guild</a> *</td> <td align="center"><a href="https://dovetailapp.com/"><img src="https://graphile.org/images/sponsors/dovetail.png" width="90" height="90" alt="Dovetail" /><br />Dovetail</a> *</td> <td align="center"><a href="https://stellate.co/"><img src="https://graphile.org/images/sponsors/Stellate.png" width="90" height="90" alt="Stellate" /><br />Stellate</a> *</td> <td align="center"><a href="https://gosteelhead.com/"><img src="https://graphile.org/images/sponsors/steelhead.svg" width="90" height="90" alt="Steelhead" /><br />Steelhead</a> *</td> </tr><tr> <td align="center"><a href=""><img src="https://graphile.org/images/sponsors/latchbio.jpg" width="90" height="90" alt="LatchBio" /><br />LatchBio</a> *</td> </tr></table><em>* Sponsors the entire Graphile suite</em>
<!-- SPONSORS_END -->Why the "crystal" monorepo?
Originally what is now Grafast (and was previously DataPlanner) was known by the codename "Graphile Crystal." This lead us to use the 🔮 emoji to represent the project in secret before we announced it publicly, as a codeword for those in the know. Now that Grafast is the name for our planning and execution engine and we needed a name for the monorepo that wasn't too GraphQL specific (since there are things in here that aren't strictly related to GraphQL) and we figured that calling it the Crystal monorepo would honour our original nickname for the project. Rumours that the name was inspired by the maintainers' crystal wedding anniversary are greatly exaggerated.