@produce8/giraffql
v0.2.3
Published
Command line tool and package to merge and validate GraphQL schemas against a set of rules.
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giraffql
This package provides a command line tool to merge and validate GraphQL schema definitions against a set of rules.
If you're looking to lint your GraphQL queries, check out this ESLint plugin: apollographql/eslint-plugin-graphql.
Install
npm:
npm install giraffql
Usage
Usage: giraffql [options] [schema.graphql ...]
Options:
-r, --rules <rules>
only the rules specified will be used to validate the schema
example: --rules fields-have-descriptions,types-have-descriptions
-o, --rules-options <rulesOptions>
configure the specified rules with the passed in configuration options
example: --rules-options '{"enum-values-sorted-alphabetically":{"sortOrder":"lexicographical"}}'
-i, --ignore <ignore list>
ignore errors for specific schema members (see "Inline rule overrides" for an alternative way to do this)
example: --ignore '{"fields-have-descriptions":["Obvious","Query.obvious","Query.something.obvious"]}'
-f, --format <format>
choose the output format of the report
possible values: compact, json, text
-s, --stdin
schema definition will be read from STDIN instead of specified file
-c, --config-directory <path>
path to begin searching for config files
-p, --custom-rule-paths <paths>
path to additional custom rules to be loaded. Example: rules/*.js
--comment-descriptions
use old way of defining descriptions in GraphQL SDL
--old-implements-syntax
use old way of defining implemented interfaces in GraphQL SDL
--version
output the version number
-h, --help
output usage information
Configuration file
In addition to being able to configure giraffql
via command line options, it can also be configured via
one of the following configuration files.
For now, only rules
, schemaPaths
, customRulePaths
, and rulesOptions
can be configured in a configuration file, but more options may be added in the future.
In package.json
{
"giraffql": {
"rules": ["enum-values-sorted-alphabetically"],
"schemaPaths": ["path/to/my/schema/files/**.graphql"],
"customRulePaths": ["path/to/my/custom/rules/*.js"],
"rulesOptions": {
"enum-values-sorted-alphabetically": { "sortOrder": "lexicographical" }
}
}
}
In .giraffqlrc
{
"rules": ["enum-values-sorted-alphabetically"],
"schemaPaths": ["path/to/my/schema/files/**.graphql"],
"customRulePaths": ["path/to/my/custom/rules/*.js"],
"rulesOptions": {
"enum-values-sorted-alphabetically": { "sortOrder": "lexicographical" }
}
}
In giraffql.config.js
module.exports = {
rules: ['enum-values-sorted-alphabetically'],
schemaPaths: ['path/to/my/schema/files/**.graphql'],
customRulePaths: ['path/to/my/custom/rules/*.js'],
rulesOptions: {
'enum-values-sorted-alphabetically': { sortOrder: 'lexicographical' }
}
};
Inline rule overrides
There could be cases where a linter rule is undesirable for a specific part of a GraphQL schema.
Rather than disable the rule for the entire schema, it is possible to disable it for that specific part of the schema using an inline configuration.
There are 4 different inline configurations:
lint-disable rule1, rule2, ..., ruleN
will disable the specified rules, starting at the line it is defined, and until the end of the file or until the rule is re-enabled by an inline configuration.lint-enable rule1, rule2, ..., ruleN
will enable the specified rules, starting at the line it is defined, and until the end of the file or until the rule is disabled by an inline configuration.lint-disable-line rule1, rule2, ..., ruleN
will disable the specified rules for the given line.lint-enable-line rule1, rule2, ..., ruleN
will enable the specified rules for the given line.
One can use these inline configurations by adding them directly to the GraphQL schema as comments.
# lint-disable types-have-descriptions, fields-have-descriptions
type Query {
field: String
}
# lint-enable types-have-descriptions, fields-have-descriptions
"""
Mutation root
"""
type Mutation {
"""
Field description
"""
field: String
field2: String # lint-disable-line fields-have-descriptions
}
Note: If you are authoring your GraphQL schema using a tool that prevents you from adding comments, you may use the --ignore
to obtain the same functionality.
Built-in rules
arguments-have-descriptions
This rule will validate that all field arguments have a description.
defined-types-are-used
This rule will validate that all defined types are used at least once in the schema.
deprecations-have-a-reason
This rule will validate that all deprecations have a reason.
descriptions-are-capitalized
This rule will validate that all descriptions, if present, start with a capital letter.
enum-values-all-caps
This rule will validate that all enum values are capitalized.
enum-values-have-descriptions
This rule will validate that all enum values have a description.
enum-values-sorted-alphabetically
This rule will validate that all enum values are sorted alphabetically.
Accepts following rule options:
sortOrder
:<String>
- eitheralphabetical
orlexicographical
, defaults:alphabetical
fields-are-camel-cased
This rule will validate that object type field and interface type field names are camel cased.
fields-have-descriptions
This rule will validate that object type fields and interface type fields have a description.
input-object-fields-sorted-alphabetically
This rule will validate that all input object fields are sorted alphabetically.
Accepts following rule options:
sortOrder
:<String>
- eitheralphabetical
orlexicographical
, defaults:alphabetical
input-object-values-are-camel-cased
This rule will validate that input object value names are camel cased.
input-object-values-have-descriptions
This rule will validate that input object values have a description.
interface-fields-sorted-alphabetically
This rule will validate that all interface object fields are sorted alphabetically.
Accepts following rule options:
sortOrder
:<String>
- eitheralphabetical
orlexicographical
, defaults:alphabetical
relay-connection-types-spec
This rule will validate the schema adheres to section 2 (Connection Types) of the Relay Cursor Connections Specification.
More specifically:
- Only object type names may end in
Connection
. These object types are considered connection types. - Connection types must have a
edges
field that returns a list type. - Connection types must have a
pageInfo
field that returns a non-nullPageInfo
object.
relay-connection-arguments-spec
This rule will validate the schema adheres to section 4 (Arguments) of the Relay Cursor Connections Specification.
More specifically:
- A field that returns a
Connection
must include forward pagination arguments, backward pagination arguments, or both. - To enable forward pagination, two arguments are required:
first: Int
andafter: *
. - To enable backward pagination, two arguments are required:
last: Int
andbefore: *
.
Note: If only forward pagination is enabled, the first
argument can be specified as non-nullable (i.e., Int!
instead of Int
). Similarly, if only backward pagination is enabled, the last
argument can be specified as non-nullable.
This rule will validate the schema adheres to section 5 (PageInfo) of the Relay Cursor Connections Specification.
More specifically:
- A GraphQL schema must have a
PageInfo
object type. PageInfo
type must have ahasNextPage: Boolean!
field.PageInfo
type must have ahasPreviousPage: Boolean!
field.
type-fields-sorted-alphabetically
This rule will validate that all type object fields are sorted alphabetically.
Accepts following rule options:
sortOrder
:<String>
- eitheralphabetical
orlexicographical
, defaults:alphabetical
types-are-capitalized
This rule will validate that interface types and object types have capitalized names.
types-have-descriptions
This will will validate that interface types, object types, union types, scalar types, enum types and input types have descriptions.
Output formatters
The format of the output can be controlled via the --format
option.
The following formatters are currently available: text
, compact
, json
.
Text (default)
Sample output:
app/schema.graphql
5:1 The object type `QueryRoot` is missing a description. types-have-descriptions
6:3 The field `QueryRoot.songs` is missing a description. fields-have-descriptions
app/songs.graphql
1:1 The object type `Song` is missing a description. types-have-descriptions
3 errors detected
Each error is prefixed with the line number and column the error occurred on.
Compact
Sample output:
app/schema.graphql:5:1 The object type `QueryRoot` is missing a description. (types-have-descriptions)
app/schema.graphql:6:3 The field `QueryRoot.a` is missing a description. (fields-have-descriptions)
app/songs.graphql:1:1 The object type `Song` is missing a description. (types-have-descriptions)
Each error is prefixed with the path, the line number and column the error occurred on.
JSON
Sample output:
{
"errors": [
{
"message": "The object type `QueryRoot` is missing a description.",
"location": {
"line": 5,
"column": 1,
"file": "schema.graphql"
},
"rule": "types-have-descriptions"
},
{
"message": "The field `QueryRoot.a` is missing a description.",
"location": {
"line": 6,
"column": 3,
"file": "schema.graphql"
},
"rule": "fields-have-descriptions"
}
]
}
Exit codes
Verifying the exit code of the graphql-schema-lint
process is a good way of programmatically knowing the
result of the validation.
If the process exits with 0
it means all rules passed.
If the process exits with 1
it means one or many rules failed. Information about these failures can be obtained by
reading the stdout
and using the appropriate output formatter.
If the process exits with 2
it means an invalid configuration was provided. Information about this can be obtained by
reading the stderr
.
If the process exits with 3
it means an uncaught error happened. This most likely means you found a bug.
Customizing rules
giraffql
comes with a set of rules, but it's possible that it doesn't exactly match your expectations.
The --rules <rules>
allows you pick and choose what rules you want to use to validate your schema.
In some cases, you may want to write your own rules. giraffql
leverages GraphQL.js' visitor.js
in order to validate a schema.
You may define custom rules by following the usage of visitor.js and saving your newly created rule as a .js
file.
You can then instruct giraffql
to include this rule using the --custom-rule-paths <paths>
option flag.
For sample rules, see the src/rules
folder of this repository or
GraphQL.js' src/validation/rules
folder.