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GraphQL API for WordPress.
Download and install like any WordPress plugin. Details on Install and Activation
Documentation is being moved here, but some can still be found on the Wiki on this repository.
- Requires PHP 5.5+
- Requires WordPress 4.7+
This plugin brings the power of GraphQL to WordPress.
GraphQL is a query language spec that was open sourced by Facebook® in 2015, and has been used in production by Facebook® since 2012.
GraphQL has some similarities to REST in that it exposes an HTTP endpoint where requests can be sent and a JSON response is returned. However, where REST has a different endpoint per resource, GraphQL has just a single endpoint and the data returned isn't implicit, but rather explicit and matches the shape of the request.
A REST API is implicit, meaning that the data coming back from an endpoint is implied. An endpoint such as /posts/
implies that the data I will retrieve is data related to Post objects, but beyond that it's hard to know exactly what
will be returned. It might be more data than I need or might not be the data I need at all.
GraphQL is explicit, meaning that you ask for the data you want and you get the data back in the same shape that it was asked for.
Additionally, where REST requires multiple HTTP requests for related data, GraphQL allows related data to be queried and retrieved in a single request, and again, in the same shape of the request without any worry of over or under-fetching data.
GraphQL also provides rich introspection, allowing for queries to be run to find out details about the Schema, which is how powerful dev tools, such as GraphiQl have been able to be created.
GraphiQL is a fantastic GraphQL API Explorer / IDE. There are various versions of GraphiQL that you can find, including a Chrome Extension but my recommendation is the GraphiQL desktop app below:
-
Download the GraphiQL Desktop App
- Once the app is downloaded and installed, open the App.
- Set the
GraphQL Endpoint
tohttp://yoursite.com/graphql
. In order for the /graphql endpoint to work, you must have pretty permalinks enabled. - You should now be able to browse the GraphQL Schema via the "Docs" explorer at the top right.
- On the left side, you can execute GraphQL Queries
Please note that as the plugin continues to take shape, there might be breaking changes at any point. Once the plugin reaches a stable 1.0.0 release, breaking changes should be minimized and communicated appropriately if they are required.
Before anything is merged into the WPGraphQL code base it must pass all tests and have 100% code coverage. Travis-CI and Coveralls will check this when you create a pull request to the WPGraphQL repo. However, before that happens, you should ensure all of these requirements are met locally. The following will help you set up both testing and code coverage in your local environment.
To run unit tests and code coverage during development you'll need the following:
- Composer
- php-coveralls
composer global require php-coveralls/php-coveralls
- php-coveralls
- Xdebug
In order for tests to run, you need MySQL setup locally. The test suite will need 2 databases for testing.
One named wpgraphql_serve
and the other you can name yourself.
You can keep these databases around if you like and the test suite will use the existing databases, or you can delete them when you're done testing and the test suite will
re-install them as needed the next time you run the script to install the tests.
NOTE: You'll want the test database to be a true test database, not a database with valuable, existing information. The tests will create new data and clear out data, and you don't want to cause issues with a database you're actually using for projects.
To install the test suite/test databases, from the root of the plugin directory, in the command line run:
bin/install-wp-tests.sh <db-name> <db-user> <db-pass> [db-host] [wp-version]
For example:
bin/install-wp-tests.sh wpgraphql_test root password 127.0.0.1 latest
DEBUGGING: If you have run this command before in another branch you may already have a local copy of WordPress downloaded in your /private/tmp
directory.
If this is the case, please remove it and then run the install script again. Without removing this you may receive an error when running phpunit.
You may have different local environment configuration than what Travis CI has to run the tests, such as database username/password.
In the /tests
directory you will find *.suite.dist.yml
config files for each of the codeception test suites.
You can copy those files and remove the .dist
from the filename, and that file will be loaded locally before the .dist
file.
For example, if you wanted to update the dbName
or dbPassword
for your local tests, you could copy wpunit.suite.dist.yml
to wpunit.suite.yml
and update the dbName
or dbPassword
value to reflect your local database and password.
This file is .gitignored, so it will remain in your local environment but will not be added to the repo when you submit pull requests.
The tests are built on top of the Codeception testing framework.
To run the tests, after you've installed the test suite, as described above, you need to also install the wp-browser
.
@todo: Make this easier than running all these steps, but for now this is what we've got to do. Perhaps someone who's more of a Composer expert could lend some advise?:
rm -rf composer.lock vendor
to remove all composer dependencies and the composer lock filecomposer require lucatume/wp-browser --dev
to install the Codeception WordPress depsvendor/bin/codecept run
to run all the codeception tests- You can specify which tests to run like:
vendor/bin/codecept run wpunit
vendor/bin/codecept run functional
vendor/bin/codecept run unit
vendor/bin/codecept run acceptance
- You can specify which tests to run like:
A docker-compose
file in the root of this repo provides all of the testing prerequisites, allowing you to run
tests in isolation without installing anything locally (besides Docker).
Install dependencies using Composer. Note the --ignore-platform-reqs
which skips the checks for PHP extensions
inside the barebones Docker container.
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/app composer install --ignore-platform-reqs
Now you're ready to start the Docker containers: a PHP container to hold the code under test, a PHP/Apache container to serve WordPress, and a MariaDB container.
docker-compose build
docker-compose up -d
Your stack is starting! If this is your first time running that command, it will take a few minutes to download the referenced Docker images. Note that it takes about 15-30 seconds after this process completes for MariaDB to be ready to accept connections, so you'll need to wait that long before running the next command.
Now we install the WordPress testing suite inside the container, link the local codebase inside it, and activate it
as a plugin. Note that we are skipping database creation (handled by our docker-compose
file). The WordPress
version you pass here should match what is specified in docker-compose.yml
.
docker-compose run --rm tests ./bin/install-wp-tests.sh ignored root testing mysql_test 4.9.4 true
You now have a stable testing environment. The WPGraphQL codebase is mapped inside your containers and any changes
you make will be reflected almost immediately. We use Codeception Environments (--env
) to point tests to our
database container instead of 127.0.0.1
. Run your tests and repeat as necessary, e.g.:
docker-compose run --rm tests ./vendor/bin/codecept run acceptance --env docker
docker-compose run --rm tests ./vendor/bin/codecept run functional --env docker
docker-compose run --rm tests ./vendor/bin/codecept run wpunit --env docker
Code coverage for wpunit
tests can be generated using phpdbg
:
docker-compose run --rm tests phpdbg -qrr ./vendor/bin/codecept run wpunit --env docker --coverage --coverage-xml
If you need to test against a different WordPress version, you will need to destroy your environemnt, update
docker-compose.yml
and bin/Dockerfile
to point to the desired version, then recreate your environment.
You can generate code coverage for tests by passing --coverage
, --coverage-xml
or --coverage-html
with the tests.
--coverage
will print coverage info to the screen--coverage-xml
will save an XML file that can be used by services like Coveralls or CodeCov--coverage-html
will save the coverage report in an HTML file that you can browse.
The coverage details will be output to /tests/_output
As you'll note, running all of the tests in the entire test suite can be time consuming. If you would like to run only one test file instead of all of them, simply pass the test file you're trying to test, like so:
vendor/bin/codecept run wpunit AvatarObjectQueriesTest
To capture coverage for a single file, you can run the test like so:
vendor/bin/codecept run wpunit AvatarObjectQueriesTest --coverage
And you can output the coverage locally to HTML like so:
vendor/bin/codecept run wpunit AvatarObjectQueriesTest --coverage --coverage-html
This plugin brings the power of GraphQL (http://graphql.org/) to WordPress.
This plugin is based on the hard work of Jason Bahl, Ryan Kanner, Hughie Devore and Peter Pak of Digital First Media (https://github.com/dfmedia), and Edwin Cromley of BE-Webdesign (https://github.com/BE-Webdesign).
The plugin is built on top of the graphql-php library by Webonyx (https://github.com/webonyx/graphql-php) and makes use of the graphql-relay-php library by Ivome (https://github.com/ivome/graphql-relay-php/)
Special thanks to Digital First Media (http://digitalfirstmedia.com) for allocating development resources to push the project forward.
Some of the concepts and code are based on the WordPress Rest API. Much love to the folks (https://github.com/orgs/WP-API/people) that put their blood, sweat and tears into the WP-API project, as it's been huge in moving WordPress forward as a platform and helped inspire and direct the development of WPGraphQL.
Much love to Facebook® for open sourcing the GraphQL spec (https://facebook.github.io/graphql/), the amazing GraphiQL dev tools (https://github.com/graphql/graphiql), and maintaining the JavaScript GraphQL reference implementation (https://github.com/graphql/graphql-js)
Much love to Apollo (Meteor Development Group) for their work on driving GraphQL forward and providing a lot of insight into how to design GraphQL schemas, etc. Check them out: http://www.apollodata.com/