/ra-data-prisma2

A react-admin data provider for Prisma and GraphCMS

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

ra-data-prisma2

Prisma on steroids: easily build backoffices with Prisma/GraphCMS plugged on react-admin!

Work in progress

If you wanna give it a try anyway, here's a quick preview on codesandbox. The API is hosted on Prisma's public servers, which means the API is limited to 10 API calls per seconds. Be aware that it might not be working because of that, or that performances may be poor.

Edit ra-data-prisma

Summary

What is react admin ? And what's ra-data-prisma2 ?

Find out more about the benefits of using react-admin with Prisma here.

Installation

Install with:

npm install --save graphql ra-data-prisma2

or

yarn add graphql ra-data-prisma2

Usage

This example assumes a Post type is defined in your datamodel.

// in App.js
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import buildOpenCrudProvider from 'ra-data-prisma2';
import { Admin, Resource, Delete } from 'react-admin';

import { PostCreate, PostEdit, PostList } from './posts';

const client = new ApolloClient();

class App extends Component {
    constructor() {
        super();
        this.state = { dataProvider: null };
    }
    componentDidMount() {
        buildOpenCrudProvider({ clientOptions: { uri: 'your_prisma_or_graphcms_endpoint' }})
            .then(dataProvider => this.setState({ dataProvider }));
    }

    render() {
        const { dataProvider } = this.state;

        if (!dataProvider) {
            return <div>Loading</div>;
        }

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

export default App;

And that's it, buildOpenCrudProvider will create a default ApolloClient for you and run an introspection query on your Prisma/GraphCMS endpoint, listing all potential resources.

Options

Customize the Apollo client

You can either supply the client options by calling buildOpenCrudProvider like this:

buildOpenCrudProvider({ clientOptions: { uri: 'your_prisma_or_graphcms_endpoint', ...otherApolloOptions } });

Or supply your client directly with:

buildOpenCrudProvider({ client: myClient });

Overriding a specific query

The default behavior might not be optimized especially when dealing with references. You can override a specific query by decorating the buildQuery function:

With a whole query

// in src/dataProvider.js
import buildOpenCrudProvider, { buildQuery } from 'ra-data-prisma2';

const enhanceBuildQuery = introspection => (fetchType, resource, params) => {
    const builtQuery = buildQuery(introspection)(fetchType, resource, params);

    if (resource === 'Command' && fetchType === 'GET_ONE') {
        return {
            // Use the default query variables and parseResponse
            ...builtQuery,
            // Override the query
            query: gql`
                query Command($id: ID!) {
                    data: Command(id: $id) {
                        id
                        reference
                        customer {
                            id
                            firstName
                            lastName
                        }
                    }
                }`,
        };
    }

    return builtQuery;
}

export default buildOpenCrudProvider({ buildQuery: enhanceBuildQuery })

Or using fragments

You can also override a query using the same API graphql-binding offers.

buildQuery accept a fourth parameter which is a fragment that will be used as the final query.

// in src/dataProvider.js
import buildOpenCrudProvider, { buildQuery } from 'ra-data-prisma2';

const enhanceBuildQuery = introspection => (fetchType, resource, params) => {
    if (resource === 'Command' && fetchType === 'GET_ONE') {
        // If you need auto-completion from your IDE, you can also use gql and provide a valid fragment
        return buildQuery(introspection)(fetchType, resource, params, `{
            id
            reference
            customer { id firstName lastName }
        }`);
    }

    return buildQuery(introspection)(fetchType, resource, params);
}

export default buildOpenCrudProvider({ buildQuery: enhanceBuildQuery })

As this approach can become really cumbersome, you can find a more elegant way to pass fragments in the example under /examples/prisma-ecommerce

Customize the introspection

These are the default options for introspection:

const introspectionOptions = {
    include: [], // Either an array of types to include or a function which will be called for every type discovered through introspection
    exclude: [], // Either an array of types to exclude or a function which will be called for every type discovered through introspection
}

// Including types
const introspectionOptions = {
    include: ['Post', 'Comment'],
};

// Excluding types
const introspectionOptions = {
    exclude: ['CommandItem'],
};

// Including types with a function
const introspectionOptions = {
    include: type => ['Post', 'Comment'].includes(type.name),
};

// Including types with a function
const introspectionOptions = {
    exclude: type => !['Post', 'Comment'].includes(type.name),
};

Note: exclude and include are mutualy exclusives and include will take precendance.

Note: When using functions, the type argument will be a type returned by the introspection query. Refer to the introspection documentation for more information.

Pass the introspection options to the buildApolloProvider function:

buildApolloProvider({ introspection: introspectionOptions });

Tips and workflow

Performance issues

As react-admin was originally made for REST endpoints, it cannot always take full advantage of GraphQL's benefits.

Although react-admin already has a load of bult-in optimizations (Read more here and here), it is not yet well suited when fetching n-to-many relations (multiple requests will be sent).

To counter that limitation, as shown above, you can override queries to directly provide all the fields that you will need to display your view.

Suggested workflow

As overriding all queries can be cumbersome, this should be done progressively.

  • Start by using react-admin the way you're supposed to (using <ReferenceField /> and <ReferenceManyField /> when trying to access references)
  • Detect the hot-spots
  • Override the queries on those hot-spots by providing all the fields necessary (as shown above)
  • Replace the <ReferenceField /> by simple fields (such as <TextField />) by accessing the resource in the following way: <TextField source="product.name" />
  • Replace the <ReferenceManyField /> by <ArrayField /> using the same technique as above

Contributing

Use the example under examples/prisma-ecommerce as a playground for improving ra-data-prisma2.

To easily enhance ra-data-prisma2 and get the changes reflected on examples/prisma-ecommerce, do the following:

  • cd ra-data-prisma2
  • yarn link
  • cd examples/prisma-ecommerce
  • yarn link ra-data-prisma2

Once this is done, the ra-data-prisma2 dependency will be replaced by the one on the repository. One last thing, don't forget to transpile the library with babel by running the following command on the root folder

yarn watch

You should now be good to go ! Run the tests with this command:

jest