npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

ra-data-graphql

v5.3.4

Published

A GraphQL data provider for react-admin

Downloads

36,783

Readme

ra-data-graphql

Tools for building a GraphQL data provider for react-admin based on introspection. Built with Apollo Client

This is a low level library designed to be used as a base of other GraphQL providers (such as ra-data-graphql-simple). Do not use it directly. If you want to build a GraphQL data provider without using introspection, don't use this package but follow the Writing a data provider documentation.

Note: This library is meant to be used with Apollo on the client side, but you're free to use any graphql server.

How does it work?

In a nutshell, ra-data-graphql runs an introspection query on your GraphQL API and passes it to your adapter, along with the type of query that is being made (CREATE, UPDATE, GET_ONE, GET_LIST etc..) and the name of the resource that is being queried.

It is then the job of your GraphQL adapter to craft the GraphQL query that will match your backend conventions, and to provide a function that will parse the response of that query in a way that react-admin can understand.

Once the query and the function are passed back to ra-data-graphql, the actual HTTP request is sent (using ApolloClient) to your GraphQL API. The response from your backend is then parsed with the provided function and that parsed response is given to ra-core, the core of react-admin.

Below is a rough graph summarizing how the data flows:

ra-core => ra-data-graphql => your-adapter => ra-data-graphql => ra-core

Installation

Install with:

npm install --save graphql ra-data-graphql

or

yarn add graphql ra-data-graphql

Usage

Build the data provider on mount, and pass it to the <Admin> component when ready:

// in App.js
import * as React from 'react';
import { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
import buildGraphQLProvider from 'ra-data-graphql';
import { Admin, Resource } from 'react-admin';

import buildQuery from './buildQuery'; // see Specify your queries and mutations section below
import { PostCreate, PostEdit, PostList } from '../components/admin/posts';

const dataProvider = buildGraphQLProvider({ buildQuery });

const App = () =>  (
    <Admin dataProvider={dataProvider}>
        <Resource name="Post" list={PostList} edit={PostEdit} create={PostCreate} />
    </Admin>
);

export default App;

Options

Specify queries and mutations

For the provider to know how to map react-admin request to apollo queries and mutations, you must provide a buildQuery option. The buildQuery is a factory function that will be called with the introspection query result.

As a reminder, the result of a GraphQL introspection query is an object with 4 properties:

  • types: an array of all the GraphQL types discovered on your endpoint
  • queries: an array of all the GraphQL queries and mutations discovered on your endpoint
  • resources: an array of objects with a type property, which is the GraphQL type for this resource, and a property for each react-admin fetch verb for which we found a matching query or mutation
  • schema: the full schema

For example:

{
    types: [
        {
            name: 'Post',
            kind: 'OBJECT',
            fields: [
                { name: 'id', type: { kind: 'NON_NULL', ofType: { kind: 'SCALAR', name: 'ID' } } },
                { name: 'title', type: { kind: 'NON_NULL', ofType: { kind: 'SCALAR', name: 'String' } } },
                ...
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    queries: [
        {
            name: 'createPost',
            args: [
                { name: 'title', type: { kind: 'NON_NULL', ofType: { kind: 'SCALAR', name: 'String' } } }
            ],
            type : { kind: 'OBJECT', name: 'Category' }
        },
        ...
    ],
    resources: [
        {
            type: {
                name: 'Post',
                kind: 'OBJECT',
                fields: [
                    { name: 'id', type: { kind: 'NON_NULL', ofType: { kind: 'SCALAR', name: 'ID' } } },
                    { name: 'title', type: { kind: 'NON_NULL', ofType: { kind: 'SCALAR', name: 'String' } } },
                    ...
                ]
            },
            GET_LIST: {
                name: 'createPost',
                args: [
                    { name: 'title', type: { kind: 'NON_NULL', ofType: { kind: 'SCALAR', name: 'String' } } }
                ],
                type : { kind: 'OBJECT', name: 'Category' }
            },
            ...
        }
    ],
    schema: {} // Omitting for brevity
}

The buildQuery function receives this object and must return a function which will be called with the same parameters as the react-admin data provider, but must return an object matching the options of the ApolloClient query method with an additional parseResponse function.

This parseResponse function will be called with an ApolloQueryResult and must return the data expected by react-admin.

For example:

import buildFieldList from './buildFieldList';

const buildQuery = introspectionResults => (raFetchType, resourceName, params) => {
    const resource = introspectionResults.resources.find(r => r.type.name === resourceName);

    switch (raFetchType) {
        case 'GET_ONE':
            return {
                query: gql`query ${resource[raFetchType].name}($id: ID) {
                    data: ${resource[raFetchType].name}(id: $id) {
                        ${buildFieldList(introspectionResults, resource, raFetchType)}
                    }
                }`,
                variables: params, // params = { id: ... }
                parseResponse: response => response.data,
            }
            break;
        // ... other types handled here
    }
}
buildGraphQLProvider({ buildQuery });

Customize the Apollo client

You can specify the client options by calling buildGraphQLProvider like this:

import { createNetworkInterface } from 'react-apollo';

buildGraphQLProvider({
    client: {
        networkInterface: createNetworkInterface({
            uri: 'http://api.myproduct.com/graphql',
        }),
    },
});

You can pass any options supported by the ApolloClient constructor with the addition of uri which can be specified so that we create the network interface for you. Pass those options as clientOptions.

You can also supply your own ApolloClient instance directly with:

buildGraphQLProvider({ client: myClient });

Introspection Options

Instead of running an introspection query you can also provide the introspection query result directly. This speeds up the initial rendering of the Admin component as it no longer has to wait for the introspection query request to resolve.

import { __schema as schema } from './schema';

buildGraphQLProvider({
    introspection: { schema }
});

The ./schema file is a schema.json in ./src retrieved with get-graphql-schema --json <graphql_endpoint>.

Note: Importing the schema.json file will significantly increase the bundle size.

Troubleshooting

When I create or edit a resource, the list or edit page does not refresh its data

react-admin maintain its own cache of resources data but, by default, so does the Apollo client. For every query, we inject a default fetchPolicy set to network-only so that the Apollo client always refetch the data when requested.

Do not override this fetchPolicy.

Contributing

Run the tests with this command:

make test