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Relay Library for GraphQL.js

This is a library to allow the easy creation of Relay-compliant servers using the GraphQL.js reference implementation of a GraphQL server.

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Getting Started

A basic understanding of GraphQL and of the GraphQL.js implementation is needed to provide context for this library.

An overview of GraphQL in general is available in the README for the Specification for GraphQL.

This library is designed to work with the GraphQL.js reference implementation of a GraphQL server.

An overview of the functionality that a Relay-compliant GraphQL server should provide is in the GraphQL Relay Specification on the Relay website. That overview describes a simple set of examples that exist as tests in this repository. A good way to get started with this repository is to walk through that documentation and the corresponding tests in this library together.

Using Relay Library for GraphQL.js

Install Relay Library for GraphQL.js

npm install graphql graphql-relay

When building a schema for GraphQL.js, the provided library functions can be used to simplify the creation of Relay patterns.

Connections

Helper functions are provided for both building the GraphQL types for connections and for implementing the resolve method for fields returning those types.

An example usage of these methods from the test schema:

var { connectionType: ShipConnection } = connectionDefinitions({
  nodeType: shipType,
});
var factionType = new GraphQLObjectType({
  name: 'Faction',
  fields: () => ({
    ships: {
      type: ShipConnection,
      args: connectionArgs,
      resolve: (faction, args) =>
        connectionFromArray(
          faction.ships.map((id) => data.Ship[id]),
          args,
        ),
    },
  }),
});

This shows adding a ships field to the Faction object that is a connection. It uses connectionDefinitions({nodeType: shipType}) to create the connection type, adds connectionArgs as arguments on this function, and then implements the resolve function by passing the array of ships and the arguments to connectionFromArray.

Object Identification

Helper functions are provided for both building the GraphQL types for nodes and for implementing global IDs around local IDs.

An example usage of these methods from the test schema:

var { nodeInterface, nodeField } = nodeDefinitions(
  (globalId) => {
    var { type, id } = fromGlobalId(globalId);
    return data[type][id];
  },
  (obj) => {
    return obj.ships ? factionType : shipType;
  },
);

var factionType = new GraphQLObjectType({
  name: 'Faction',
  fields: () => ({
    id: globalIdField(),
  }),
  interfaces: [nodeInterface],
});

var queryType = new GraphQLObjectType({
  name: 'Query',
  fields: () => ({
    node: nodeField,
  }),
});

This uses nodeDefinitions to construct the Node interface and the node field; it uses fromGlobalId to resolve the IDs passed in the implementation of the function mapping ID to object. It then uses the globalIdField method to create the id field on Faction, which also ensures implements the nodeInterface. Finally, it adds the node field to the query type, using the nodeField returned by nodeDefinitions.

Mutations

A helper function is provided for building mutations with single inputs and client mutation IDs.

An example usage of these methods from the test schema:

var shipMutation = mutationWithClientMutationId({
  name: 'IntroduceShip',
  inputFields: {
    shipName: {
      type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString),
    },
    factionId: {
      type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLID),
    },
  },
  outputFields: {
    ship: {
      type: shipType,
      resolve: (payload) => data['Ship'][payload.shipId],
    },
    faction: {
      type: factionType,
      resolve: (payload) => data['Faction'][payload.factionId],
    },
  },
  mutateAndGetPayload: ({ shipName, factionId }) => {
    var newShip = {
      id: getNewShipId(),
      name: shipName,
    };
    data.Ship[newShip.id] = newShip;
    data.Faction[factionId].ships.push(newShip.id);
    return {
      shipId: newShip.id,
      factionId: factionId,
    };
  },
});

var mutationType = new GraphQLObjectType({
  name: 'Mutation',
  fields: () => ({
    introduceShip: shipMutation,
  }),
});

This code creates a mutation named IntroduceShip, which takes a faction ID and a ship name as input. It outputs the Faction and the Ship in question. mutateAndGetPayload then gets an object with a property for each input field, performs the mutation by constructing the new ship, then returns an object that will be resolved by the output fields.

Our mutation type then creates the introduceShip field using the return value of mutationWithClientMutationId.

Contributing

After cloning this repo, ensure dependencies are installed by running:

npm install

This library is written in ES6 and uses Babel for ES5 transpilation and TypeScript for type safety. Widely consumable JavaScript can be produced by running:

npm run build

Once npm run build has run, you may import or require() directly from node.

After developing, the full test suite can be evaluated by running:

npm test

Opening a PR

We actively welcome pull requests. Learn how to contribute.

This repository is managed by EasyCLA. Project participants must sign the free (GraphQL Specification Membership agreement before making a contribution. You only need to do this one time, and it can be signed by individual contributors or their employers.

To initiate the signature process please open a PR against this repo. The EasyCLA bot will block the merge if we still need a membership agreement from you.

You can find detailed information here. If you have issues, please email operations@graphql.org.

If your company benefits from GraphQL and you would like to provide essential financial support for the systems and people that power our community, please also consider membership in the GraphQL Foundation.

Changelog

Changes are tracked as GitHub releases.

License

graphql-relay-js is MIT licensed.