The goal of this project is to provide full support of the GraphQL draft specification with a set of idiomatic, easy to use Go packages.
While still under heavy development (internal
APIs are almost certainly subject to change), this library is
safe for production use.
- minimal API
- support for
context.Context
- support for the
OpenTracing
standard - schema type-checking against resolvers
- resolvers are matched to the schema based on method sets (can resolve a GraphQL schema with a Go interface or Go struct).
- handles panics in resolvers
- parallel execution of resolvers
- subscriptions
We're trying out the GitHub Project feature to manage graphql-go
's development roadmap.
Feedback is welcome and appreciated.
package main
import (
"log"
"net/http"
graphql "github.com/graph-gophers/graphql-go"
"github.com/graph-gophers/graphql-go/relay"
)
type query struct{}
func (_ *query) Hello() string { return "Hello, world!" }
func main() {
s := `
type Query {
hello: String!
}
`
schema := graphql.MustParseSchema(s, &query{})
http.Handle("/query", &relay.Handler{Schema: schema})
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil))
}
To test:
$ curl -XPOST -d '{"query": "{ hello }"}' localhost:8080/query
A resolver must have one method or field for each field of the GraphQL type it resolves. The method or field name has to be exported and match the schema's field's name in a non-case-sensitive way.
You can use struct fields as resolvers by using SchemaOpt: UseFieldResolvers()
. For example,
opts := []graphql.SchemaOpt{graphql.UseFieldResolvers()}
schema := graphql.MustParseSchema(s, &query{}, opts...)
When using UseFieldResolvers
schema option, a struct field will be used only when:
- there is no method for a struct field
- a struct field does not implement an interface method
- a struct field does not have arguments
The method has up to two arguments:
- Optional
context.Context
argument. - Mandatory
*struct { ... }
argument if the corresponding GraphQL field has arguments. The names of the struct fields have to be exported and have to match the names of the GraphQL arguments in a non-case-sensitive way.
The method has up to two results:
- The GraphQL field's value as determined by the resolver.
- Optional
error
result.
Example for a simple resolver method:
func (r *helloWorldResolver) Hello() string {
return "Hello world!"
}
The following signature is also allowed:
func (r *helloWorldResolver) Hello(ctx context.Context) (string, error) {
return "Hello world!", nil
}
Errors returned by resolvers can include custom extensions by implementing the ResolverError
interface:
type ResolverError interface {
error
Extensions() map[string]interface{}
}
Example of a simple custom error:
type droidNotFoundError struct {
Code string `json:"code"`
Message string `json:"message"`
}
func (e droidNotFoundError) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("error [%s]: %s", e.Code, e.Message)
}
func (e droidNotFoundError) Extensions() map[string]interface{} {
return map[string]interface{}{
"code": e.Code,
"message": e.Message,
}
}
Which could produce a GraphQL error such as:
{
"errors": [
{
"message": "error [NotFound]: This is not the droid you are looking for",
"path": [
"droid"
],
"extensions": {
"code": "NotFound",
"message": "This is not the droid you are looking for"
}
}
],
"data": null
}
tonyghita/graphql-go-example - A more "productionized" version of the Star Wars API example given in this repository.
deltaskelta/graphql-go-pets-example - graphql-go resolving against a sqlite database.
OscarYuen/go-graphql-starter - A starter application integrated with dataloader, psql and basic authentication.
zaydek/graphql-go-walkthrough - A beginner friendly walkthrough for prospective developers.