/rover

✨🤖 🐶 the new CLI for Apollo

Primary LanguageRustOtherNOASSERTION

Rover

✨ 🤖 🐶 the new CLI for apollo

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This is the home of Rover, the new CLI for Apollo's suite of GraphQL developer productivity tools.

Note

This README contains just enough info to get you started with Rover. Our docs contain more detailed information that should be your primary reference for all things Rover.

Usage

A few useful Rover commands to interact with your graphs:

  1. Fetch a graph from a federated remote endpoint.
rover graph fetch test@cats
  1. Validate recent changes made to your local graph with rover graph check.
rover graph check --schema=./path-to-valid-sdl test@cats
  1. Publish your local graph to Apollo Studio.
rover graph publish --schema ./path-to-valid-schema test@cats

Command-line options

Rover 0.8.2
Apollo Developers <opensource@apollographql.com>

Rover - Your Graph Companion
Read the getting started guide by running:

    $ rover docs open start

To begin working with Rover and to authenticate with Apollo Studio,
run the following command:

    $ rover config auth

This will prompt you for an API Key that can be generated in Apollo Studio.

The most common commands from there are:

    - rover graph fetch: Fetch a graph schema from the Apollo graph registry
    - rover graph check: Check for breaking changes in a local graph schema against a graph schema
in the Apollo graph
registry
    - rover graph publish: Publish an updated graph schema to the Apollo graph registry

You can open the full documentation for Rover by running:

    $ rover docs open

USAGE:
    rover [OPTIONS] <SUBCOMMAND>

OPTIONS:
        --client-timeout <CLIENT_TIMEOUT>
            Configure the timeout length (in seconds) when performing HTTP(S) requests
            
            [default: 30]

    -h, --help
            Print help information

        --insecure-accept-invalid-certs
            Accept invalid certificates when performing HTTPS requests.
            
            You should think very carefully before using this flag.
            
            If invalid certificates are trusted, any certificate for any site will be trusted for
            use. This includes expired certificates. This introduces significant vulnerabilities,
            and should only be used as a last resort.

        --insecure-accept-invalid-hostnames
            Accept invalid hostnames when performing HTTPS requests.
            
            You should think very carefully before using this flag.
            
            If hostname verification is not used, any valid certificate for any site will be trusted
            for use from any other. This introduces a significant vulnerability to man-in-the-middle
            attacks.

    -l, --log <LOG_LEVEL>
            Specify Rover's log level
            
            [possible values: error, warn, info, debug, trace]

        --output <OUTPUT_TYPE>
            Specify Rover's output type
            
            [default: plain]
            [possible values: json, plain]

    -V, --version
            Print version information

SUBCOMMANDS:
    config
            Configuration profile commands
    docs
            Interact with Rover's documentation
    explain
            Explain error codes
    graph
            Graph API schema commands
    help
            Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
    readme
            Readme commands
    subgraph
            Subgraph schema commands
    supergraph
            Supergraph schema commands
    update
            Commands related to updating rover

This repo is organized as a cargo workspace, containing several related projects:

  • rover: Apollo's suite of GraphQL developer productivity tools
  • houston: utilities for configuring Rover
  • robot-panic: a fork of rust-cli/human-panic adjusted for Rover
  • rover-client: an HTTP client for making GraphQL requests for Rover
  • sputnik: a crate to aid in collection of anonymous data for Rust CLIs
  • timber: Rover's logging formatter

Installation Methods

Linux and MacOS curl | sh installer

To install the latest release of Rover:

curl -sSL https://rover.apollo.dev/nix/latest | sh

To install a specific version of Rover (note the v prefixing the version number):

Note: If you're installing Rover in a CI environment, it's best to target a specific version rather than using the latest URL, since future major breaking changes could affect CI workflows otherwise.

curl -sSL https://rover.apollo.dev/nix/v0.6.0 | sh

You will need curl installed on your system to run the above installation commands. You can get the latest version from the curl downloads page.

Note: rover supergraph compose is currently not available for Alpine Linux. You may track the progress for supporting this command on Alpine in this issue.

Windows PowerShell installer

iwr 'https://rover.apollo.dev/win/latest' | iex

To install a specific version of Rover (note the v prefixing the version number):

Note: If you're installing Rover in a CI environment, it's best to target a specific version rather than using the latest URL, since future major breaking changes could affect CI workflows otherwise.

iwr 'https://rover.apollo.dev/win/v0.6.0' | iex

npm installer

Rover is distributed on npm for easy integration with your JavaScript projects.

devDependency install

If you'd like to install rover as a devDependency in your JavaScript project, you can run npm i --save-dev @apollo/rover. You can then call rover directly in your package.json scripts, or you can run npx rover in your project directory to execute commands.

Manual download and install

If you'd like to call rover from any directory on your machine, you can run npm i -g @apollo/rover.

Note: Unfortunately if you've installed npm without a version manager such as nvm, you may have trouble with global installs. If you encounter an EACCES permission-related error while trying to install globally, DO NOT run the install command with sudo. This support page has information that should help to resolve this issue.

Without curl

You can also download the binary for your operating system and manually add its location to your PATH.

Unsupported architectures

If you don't see your CPU architecture supported as part of our release pipeline, you can build from source with cargo. Clone this repo, and run cargo xtask dist --version v0.1.3. This will compile a released version of Rover for you, and place the binary in your target directory.

git clone https://github.com/apollographql/rover
cargo xtask dist --version v0.1.3

From here you can either place the binary in your PATH manually, or run ./target/release/{optional_target}/rover install.

Contributions

See this page for info about contributing to Rover.

Licensing

Source code in this repository is covered by (i) an MIT compatible license or (ii) the Elastic License 2.0, in each case, as designated by a licensing file within a subdirectory or file header. The default throughout the repository is an MIT compatible license, unless a file header or a licensing file in a subdirectory specifies another license.