@weston/graphql-sequelize v4.0.6
graphql-sequelize
Installation
$ npm install --save graphql-sequelize
graphql-sequelize assumes you have graphql and sequelize installed.
Resolve helpers
A helper for resolving graphql queries targeted at Sequelize models or associations. Please take a look at the tests to best get an idea of implementation.
Features
- Automatically converts args to where if arg keys matches model attributes
- Automatically converts an arg named 'limit' to a sequelize limit
- Automatically converts an arg named 'order' to a sequelize order
- Only loads the attributes defined in the query (automatically adds primary key and foreign keys)
- Batching of nested associations (see dataloader-sequelize)
Relay & Connections
Examples
import {resolver} from 'graphql-sequelize';
let User = sequelize.define('user', {
name: Sequelize.STRING
});
let Task = sequelize.define('task', {
title: Sequelize.STRING
});
User.Tasks = User.hasMany(Task, {as: 'tasks'});
let taskType = new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'Task',
description: 'A task',
fields: {
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt),
description: 'The id of the task.',
},
title: {
type: GraphQLString,
description: 'The title of the task.',
}
}
});
let userType = new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'User',
description: 'A user',
fields: {
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt),
description: 'The id of the user.',
},
name: {
type: GraphQLString,
description: 'The name of the user.',
},
tasks: {
type: new GraphQLList(taskType),
resolve: resolver(User.Tasks)
}
}
});
let schema = new GraphQLSchema({
query: new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'RootQueryType',
fields: {
user: {
type: userType,
// args will automatically be mapped to `where`
args: {
id: {
description: 'id of the user',
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt)
}
},
resolve: resolver(User)
}
}
})
});
let schema = new GraphQLSchema({
query: new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'RootQueryType',
fields: {
users: {
// The resolver will use `findOne` or `findAll` depending on whether the field it's used in is a `GraphQLList` or not.
type: new GraphQLList(userType),
args: {
// An arg with the key limit will automatically be converted to a limit on the target
limit: {
type: GraphQLInt
},
// An arg with the key order will automatically be converted to a order on the target
order: {
type: GraphQLString
}
},
resolve: resolver(User)
}
}
})
});field helpers
field helpers help you automatically define a models attributes as fields for a GraphQL object type.
var Model = sequelize.define('User', {
email: {
type: Sequelize.STRING,
allowNull: false
},
firstName: {
type: Sequelize.STRING
},
lastName: {
type: Sequelize.STRING
}
});
import {attributeFields} from 'graphql-sequelize';
attributeFields(Model, {
// ... options
exclude: Array, // array of model attributes to ignore - default: []
only: Array, // only generate definitions for these model attributes - default: null
globalId: Boolean, // return an relay global id field - default: false
map: Object, // rename fields - default: {}
allowNull: Boolean, // disable wrapping mandatory fields in `GraphQLNonNull` - default: false
commentToDescription: Boolean, // convert model comment to GraphQL description - default: false
cache: Object, // Cache enum types to prevent duplicate type name error - default: {}
});
/*
{
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt)
},
email: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString)
},
firstName: {
type: GraphQLString
},
lastName: {
type: GraphQLString
}
}
*/
userType = new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'User',
description: 'A user',
fields: _.assign(attributeFields(Model), {
// ... extra fields
})
});Providing custom types
attributeFields uses the graphql-sequelize typeMapper to map Sequelize types to GraphQL types. You can supply your own
mapping function to override this behavior using the mapType export.
var Model = sequelize.define('User', {
email: {
type: Sequelize.STRING,
allowNull: false
},
isValid: {
type: Sequelize.BOOLEAN,
allowNull: false
}
});
import {attributeFields,typeMapper} from 'graphql-sequelize';
typeMapper.mapType((type) => {s
//map bools as strings
if (type instanceof Sequelize.BOOLEAN) {
return GraphQLString
}
//use default for everything else
return false
});
//map fields
attributeFields(Model);
/*
{
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt)
},
email: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString)
},
isValid: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString)
},
}
*/Renaming generated fields
attributeFields accepts a map option to customize the way the attribute fields are named. The map option accepts
an object or a function that returns a string.
var Model = sequelize.define('User', {
email: {
type: Sequelize.STRING,
allowNull: false
},
firstName: {
type: Sequelize.STRING
},
lastName: {
type: Sequelize.STRING
}
});
attributeFields(Model, {
map:{
email:"Email",
firstName:"FirstName",
lastName:"LastName"
}
});
/*
{
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt)
},
Email: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString)
},
FirstName: {
type: GraphQLString
},
LastName: {
type: GraphQLString
}
}
*/
attributeFields(Model, {
map:(k) => k.toLowerCase()
});
/*
{
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt)
},
email: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString)
},
firstname: {
type: GraphQLString
},
lastname: {
type: GraphQLString
}
}
*/ENUM attributes with non-alphanumeric characters
GraphQL enum types only support ASCII alphanumeric characters and underscores.
If you have other characters, like a dash (-) in your Sequelize enum types,
they will be converted to camelCase. For example: foo-bar becomes fooBar.
VIRTUAL attributes and GraphQL fields
If you have Sequelize.VIRTUAL attributes on your sequelize model, you need to explicitly set the return type and any field dependencies via new Sequelize.VIRTUAL(returnType, [dependencies ... ]).
For example, fullName here will not always return valid data when queried via GraphQL:
firstName: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
lastName: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
fullName: {
type: Sequelize.VIRTUAL,
get: function() { return `${this.firstName} ${this.lastName}`; },
},To work properly fullName needs to be more fully specified:
firstName: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
lastName: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
fullName: {
type: new Sequelize.VIRTUAL(Sequelize.STRING, ['firstName', 'lastName']),
get: function() { return `${this.firstName} ${this.lastName}`; },
},args helpers
defaultArgs
defaultArgs(Model) will return an object containing an arg with a key and type matching your models primary key and
the "where" argument for passing complex query operations described here
var Model = sequelize.define('User', {
});
defaultArgs(Model);
/*
{
id: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLInt)
}
}
*/
var Model = sequelize.define('Project', {
project_id: {
type: Sequelize.UUID
}
});
defaultArgs(Model);
/*
{
project_id: {
type: GraphQLString
},
where: {
type: JSONType
}
}
*/defaultListArgs
defaultListArgs will return an object like:
{
limit: {
type: GraphQLInt
},
order: {
type: GraphQLString
},
where: {
type: JSONType
}
}Which when added to args will let the resolver automatically support limit and ordering in args for graphql queries.
Should be used with fields of type GraphQLList.
import {defaultListArgs} from 'graphql-sequelize'
args: _.assign(defaultListArgs(), {
// ... additional args
})