0.1.4 • Published 1 year ago

@as-integrations/google-cloud-functions v0.1.4

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 year ago

Apollo Server Integration for Google Cloud Functions

Introduction

A simple Apollo Server integration for use with Google Cloud Functions

Requirements

Installation

npm install @as-integrations/google-cloud-functions @google-cloud/functions/framework @apollo/server graphql

Usage

In the root of your project, create an Apollo Server instance and pass it to startServerAndCreateGoogleCloudFunctionsHandler, imported from @as-integrations/google-cloud-functions:

Google Cloud Functions requires you to name the function entry point. In this example, we name it apollo-graphql. Take note the the name you give to the function is the name you will use when deploying to Google Cloud Functions:

import { ApolloServer } from "@apollo/server";
import { startServerAndCreateGoogleCloudFunctionsHandler } from "@as-integrations/google-cloud-functions";

const resolvers = {
  Query: {
    hello: () => 'world',
  },
};


const typeDefs = gql`
  type Query {
    hello: String
  }
`;

const server = new ApolloServer({
  resolvers,
  typeDefs,
});

startServerAndCreateGoogleCloudFunctionsHandler(server, { functionTarget: "apollo-graphql" });

Example project

To develop, test and deploy your function, you will need to setup proper tooling to bundle your function and its dependencies.

We highly recommend taking a look at the the project example, which gives you an good starting point and sane defaults on how you can correctly bundle your function using esbuild and setup scripts for common development tasks.

Note

Why do I need to bundle my function?

You're probably writing your function in TypeScript, and you're probably using modern syntax from ES Modules like import and export. Google Cloud Functions Framework for Node.js does not support TypeScript, and it does not understand ES Modules.

Futhermore, Google Cloud Functions works by having an entry point signature supplied to the function handler. This means that the final bundle of code that gets uploaded to Google Cloud Functions needs to visibly have the function entry point, otherwise it will fail with the error: Function <function-name> is not defined in the provided module....

0.1.4

1 year ago