/FSharp.Data.GraphQL

FSharp implementation of Facebook GraphQL query language.

Primary LanguageF#MIT LicenseMIT

FSharp.Data.GraphQL

F# implementation of Facebook GraphQL query language specification.

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Quick start

type Person =
    { FirstName: string
      LastName: string }

// Define GraphQL type 
let PersonType = Define.Object(
    name = "Person",
    fields = [
        // Property resolver will be auto-generated
        Define.AutoField("firstName", String)
        // Asynchronous explicit member resolver
        Define.AsyncField("lastName", String, resolve = fun context person -> async { return person.LastName })
    ])

// Include person as a root query of a schema
let schema = Schema(query = PersonType)
// Create an Exector for the schema
let executor = Executor(schema)

// Retrieve person data
let johnSnow = { FirstName = "John"; LastName = "Snow" }
let reply = executor.AsyncExecute(parse "{ firstName, lastName }", johnSnow) |> Async.RunSynchronously
// #> { data: { "firstName", "John", "lastName", "Snow" } } 

It's type safe. Things like invalid fields or invalid return types will be checked at compile time.

Demos

GraphiQL client

Go to the GraphiQL sample directory. In order to run it, build and run the Star Wars API sample project with Debug settings - this will create a Giraffe server compatible with the GraphQL spec, running on port 8084. Then what you need is to run node.js graphiql frontend. To do so, run npm i to get all dependencies, and then run npm run serve | npm run dev - this will start a webpack server running on http://localhost:8090/ . Visit this link, and GraphiQL editor should appear. You may try it by applying following query:

{
  hero(id:"1000") {
    id,
    name,
    appearsIn,
    homePlanet,
    friends {
      ... on Human {
        name
      }
      ... on Droid {
        name
      }
    }
  }
}

Relay.js starter kit

A second sample is a F#-backed version of of popular Relay Starter Kit - an example application using React.js + Relay with Relay-compatible server API.

To run it, build FSharp.Data.GraphQL and FSharp.Data.GraphQL.Relay projects using Debug settings. Then start server by running server.fsx script in your FSI - this will start a relay-compatible F# server on port 8083. Then build node.js frontend by getting all dependencies (npm i) and running it (npm run serve | npm run dev) - this will start webpack server running React application using Relay for managing application state. You can visit it on http://localhost:8083/ .

In order to update client schema, visit http://localhost:8083/ and copy-paste the response (which is the introspection query result from the current F# server) into data/schema.json.

Stream features

The stream directive now has additional features, like batching (buffering) by interval and/or batch size. To make it work, a custom stream directive must be placed inside the SchemaConfig.Directives list, this custom directive containing two optional arguments called interval and preferredBatchSize:

let customStreamDirective =
    let args = [|
        Define.Input(
            "interval",
            Nullable Int,
            defaultValue = Some 2000,
            description = "An optional argument used to buffer stream results. ")
        Define.Input(
            "preferredBatchSize",
            Nullable Int,
            defaultValue = None,
            description = "An optional argument used to buffer stream results. ") |]
    { StreamDirective with Args = args }
let schemaConfig =
    { SchemaConfig.Default with
        Directives = [
            IncludeDirective
            SkipDirective
            DeferDirective
            customStreamDirective
            LiveDirective ] }

This boilerplate code can be easily reduced with a built-in implementation:

let streamOptions =
    { Interval = Some 2000; PreferredBatchSize = None }
let schemaConfig =
    SchemaConfig.DefaultWithBufferedStream(streamOptions)

Live queries

The live directive is now supported by the server component. To support live queries, each field of each type of the schema needs to be configured as a live field. This is done by using ILiveFieldSubscription and ILiveQuerySubscriptionProvider, which can be configured in the SchemaConfig:

type ILiveFieldSubscription =
    interface
        abstract member Identity : obj -> obj
        abstract member TypeName : string
        abstract member FieldName : string
    end

and ILiveFieldSubscription<'Object, 'Identity> =
    interface
        inherit ILiveFieldSubscription
        abstract member Identity : 'Object -> 'Identity
    end

and ILiveFieldSubscriptionProvider =
    interface
        abstract member HasSubscribers : string -> string -> bool
        abstract member IsRegistered : string -> string -> bool
        abstract member AsyncRegister : ILiveFieldSubscription -> Async<unit>
        abstract member TryFind : string -> string -> ILiveFieldSubscription option
        abstract member Add : obj -> string -> string -> IObservable<obj>
        abstract member AsyncPublish<'T> : string -> string -> 'T -> Async<unit>
    end

To set a field as a live field, call the Register extension method. Each subscription needs to know an object identity, so it must be configured on the Identity function of the ILiveFieldSubscription. Also, the name of the Type and the field inside the ObjectDef needs to be passed along:

let schemaConfig = SchemaConfig.Default
let schema = Schema(root, config = schemaConfig)
let subscription =
    { Identity = fun (x : Human) -> x.Id
      TypeName = "Hero"
      FieldName = "name" }

schemaConfig.LiveFieldSubscriptionProvider.Register subscription

With that, the field name of the hero is now able to go live, being updated to clients whenever it is queried with the live directive. To push updates to subscribers, just call Publish method, passing along the type name, the field name and the updated object:

let updatedHero = { hero with Name = "Han Solo - Test" }
schemaConfig.LiveFieldSubscriptionProvider.Publish "Hero" "name" updatedHero

Client Provider

Our client library now has a completely redesigned type provider. To start using it, you will first need access to the introspection schema for the server you are trying to connect. This can be done with the provider in one of two ways:

  1. Provide the URL to the desired GraphQL server (without any custom HTTP headers required). The provider will access the server, send an Introspection Query, and use the schema to provide the types used to make queries.
type MyProvider = GraphQLProvider<"http://some.graphqlserver.development.org">
  1. Provide an introspection json file to be used by the provider. Beware though that the introspection json should have all fields required by the provider. You can get the correct fields by running our standard introspection query on the desired server and saving it into a file on the same path as the project using the provider:
type MyProvider = GraphQLProvider<"swapi_schema.json">

From now on, you can start running queries and mutations:

let operation = 
    MyProvider.Operation<"""query q {
      hero (id: "1001") {
        name
        appearsIn
        homePlanet
        friends {
          ... on Human {
            name
            homePlanet
          }
          ... on Droid {
            name
            primaryFunction
          }
        }
      }
    }""">()

// This is a instance of GraphQLProviderRuntimeContext.
// You can use it to provider a runtime URL to access your server,
// and optionally additional HTTP headers (auth headers, for example).
// If you use a local introspection file to parse the schema,
// The runtime context is mandatory.
let runtimeContext =
  { ServerUrl = "http://some.graphqlserver.production.org"
    CustomHttpHeaders = None }

let result = operation.Run(runtimeContext)

// Query result objects have pretty-printing and structural equality.
printfn "Data: %A\n" result.Data
printfn "Errors: %A\n" result.Errors
printfn "Custom data: %A\n" result.CustomData

// Response from the server:
// Data: Some
//   {Hero = Some
//   {Name = Some "Darth Vader";
// AppearsIn = [|NewHope; Empire; Jedi|];
// HomePlanet = Some "Tatooine";
// Friends = [|Some {Name = Some "Wilhuff Tarkin";
// HomePlanet = <null>;}|];};}

// Errors: <null>

// Custom data: map [("documentId", 1221427401)]

For more information about how to use the client provider, see the examples folder.

Middleware

You can create and use middleware on top of the Executor<'Root> object.

The query execution process through the use of the Executor involves three phases:

  • Schema compile phase: this phase happens when the Executor<'Root> class is instantiated. In this phase, the Schema map of types is used to build a field execute map, which contains all field definitions alongside their field resolution functions. This map is used later on in the planning and execution phases to retrieve the values of the queried fields of the schema.

  • Operation planning phase: this phase happens before running a query that has no execution plan. This phase is responsible for analyzing the AST document generated by the query, and building an ExecutionPlan to execute it.

  • Operation execution phase: this phase is the phase that executes the query. It needs an execution plan, so, it commonly happens after the operation planning phase.

All the phases wrap the needed data to do the phase job inside a context object. They are expressed internally by functions:

let internal compileSchema (ctx : SchemaCompileContext) : unit =
  // ...

let internal planOperation (ctx: PlanningContext) : ExecutionPlan =
  // ...

let internal executeOperation (ctx : ExecutionContext) : AsyncVal<GQLResponse> =
  // ...

That way, in the compile schema phase, the schema is modified and execution maps are generated inside the SchemaCompileContext object. During the operation planning phase, values of the PlanningContext object are used to generate an execution plan, and finally, this plan is passed alongside other values in the ExecutionContext object to the operation execution phase, wich finally uses them to execute the query and generate a GQLResponse.

With that being said, a middleware can be used to intercept each phase and customize them as necessary. Each middleware must be implemented as a function with a specific signature, and wrapped inside an IExecutorMiddleware interface:

type SchemaCompileMiddleware =
    SchemaCompileContext -> (SchemaCompileContext -> unit) -> unit

type OperationPlanningMiddleware =
    PlanningContext -> (PlanningContext -> ExecutionPlan) -> ExecutionPlan

type OperationExecutionMiddleware =
    ExecutionContext -> (ExecutionContext -> AsyncVal<GQLResponse>) -> AsyncVal<GQLResponse>

type IExecutorMiddleware =
    abstract CompileSchema : SchemaCompileMiddleware option
    abstract PlanOperation : OperationPlanningMiddleware option
    abstract ExecuteOperationAsync : OperationExecutionMiddleware option

Optionally, for ease of implementation, concrete class to derive from can be used, receiving only the optional sub-middleware functions in the constructor:

type ExecutorMiddleware(?compile, ?plan, ?execute) =
    interface IExecutorMiddleware with
        member __.CompileSchema = compile
        member __.PlanOperation = plan
        member __.ExecuteOperationAsync = execute

Each of the middleware functions act like an intercept function, with two parameters: the context of the phase, the function of the next middleware (or the actual phase itself, wich is the last to run), and the return value. Those functions can be passed as an argument to the constructor of the Executor<'Root> object:

let middleware = [ ExecutorMiddleware(compileFn, planningFn, executionFn) ]
let executor = Executor(schema, middleware)

A simple example of a practical middleware can be one that measures the time needed to plan a query. The results of which get returned as part of the Metadata of the planning context. The Metadata object is a Map<string, obj> implementation that acts like a bag of information to be passed through each phase, until it is returned inside the GQLResponse object. You can use it to thread custom information through middleware:

let planningMiddleware (ctx : PlanningContext) (next : PlanningContext -> ExecutionPlan) =
    let watch = Stopwatch()
    watch.Start()
    let result = next ctx
    watch.Stop()
    let metadata = result.Metadata.Add("planningTime", watch.ElapsedMilliseconds)
    { result with Metadata = metadata }

Built-in middleware

There are some built-in middleware inside FSharp.Data.GraphQL.Server.Middleware package:

QueryWeightMiddleware

This middleware can be used to place weights on fields of the schema. Those weightened fields can now be used to protect the server from complex queries that could otherwise be used in DDOS attacks.

When defining a field, we use the extension method WithQueryWeight to place a weight on it:

let resolveFn (h : Human) =
  h.Friends |> List.map getCharacter |> List.toSeq

let field =
  Define.Field("friends", ListOf (Nullable CharacterType),
    resolve = resolveFn).WithQueryWeight(0.5)

Then we define the threshold middleware for the Executor. If we execute a query that ask for "friends of friends" in a recursive way, the executor will only accept nesting them 4 times before the query exceeds the weight threshold of 2.0:

let middleware = [ Define.QueryWeightMiddleware(2.0) ]

ObjectListFilterMiddleware

This middleware can be used to automatically generate a filter for list fields inside an object of the schema. This filter can be passed as an argument for the field on the query, and recovered in the ResolveFieldContext argument of the resolve function of the field.

For example, we can create a middleware for filtering list fields of an Human object, that are of the type Character option:

let middleware = [ Define.ObjectListFilterMiddleware<Human, Character option>() ]

The filter argument is an object that is mapped through a JSON definition inside an filter argument on the field. A simple example would be filtering friends of a hero that have their names starting with the letter A:

query TestQuery {
    hero(id:"1000") {
        id
        name
        appearsIn
        homePlanet
        friends (filter : { name_starts_with: "A" }) {
            id
            name
        }
    }
}

This filter is mapped by the middleware inside an ObjectListFilter definition:

type FieldFilter<'Val> =
    { FieldName : string
      Value : 'Val }

type ObjectListFilter =
    | And of ObjectListFilter * ObjectListFilter
    | Or of ObjectListFilter * ObjectListFilter
    | Not of ObjectListFilter
    | Equals of FieldFilter<System.IComparable>
    | GreaterThan of FieldFilter<System.IComparable>
    | LessThan of FieldFilter<System.IComparable>
    | StartsWith of FieldFilter<string>
    | EndsWith of FieldFilter<string>
    | Contains of FieldFilter<string>
    | FilterField of FieldFilter<ObjectListFilter>

And the value recovered by the filter in the query is usable in the ResolveFieldContext of the resolve function of the field. To easily access it, you can use the extension method Filter, wich returns an ObjectListFilter option (it does not have a value if the object doesn't implement a list with the middleware generic definition, or if the user didn't provide a filter input).

Define.Field("friends", ListOf (Nullable CharacterType),
    resolve = fun ctx (d : Droid) -> 
        ctx.Filter |> printfn "Droid friends filter: %A"
        d.Friends |> List.map getCharacter |> List.toSeq)

By retrieving this filter from the field resolution context, it is possible to use client code to customize the query to run against a database, for example, and extend your GraphQL API features.

LiveQueryMiddleware

This middleware can be used to quickly allow your schema fields to be able to be queried with a live directive, assuming that all of them have an identity property name that can be discovered by a function, IdentityNameResolver:

/// A function that resolves an identity name for a schema object, based on a object definition of it.
type IdentityNameResolver = ObjectDef -> string

For example, if all of our schema objects have an identity field named Id, we could use our middleware like this:

let schema = Schema(query = queryType)

let middleware = [ Define.LiveQueryMiddleware(fun _ -> "Id") ]

let executor = Executor(schema, middleware)

The IdentityNameResolver is optional, though. If no resolver function is provided, this default implementation of is used. Also, notifications to subscribers must be done via Publish of ILiveFieldSubscriptionProvider, like explained above.

Using extensions to build your own middleware

You can use extension methods provided by the FSharp.Data.GraphQL.Shared package to help building your own middleware. When making a middleware, often you will need to modify schema definitions to add features to the schema defined by the user code. The ObjectListFilter middleware is an example, where all fields that implements lists of a certain type needs to be modified, by accepting an argument called filter.

As field definitions are immutable by default, generating copies of them with improved features can be hard work sometimes. This is where the extension methods can help: for example, if you need to add an argument to an already defined field inside the schema compile phase, you can use the method WithArgs of the FieldDef<'Val> interface:

let field : FieldDef<'Val> = // Search for field inside ISchema
let arg : Define.Input("id", String)
let fieldWithArg = field.WithArgs([ arg ])

To see the complete list of extensions used to augment definitions, you can take a look at the TypeSystemExtensions module contained in the FSharp.Data.GraphQL.Shared package.