@yeutech/ra-data-graphql-simple v2.0.0-RC2-yeutech.2
ra-data-graphql-simple
A GraphQL data provider for react-admin built with Apollo and tailored to target a simple GraphQL implementation.
Installation
Install with:
npm install --save graphql ra-data-graphql-simpleor
yarn add graphql ra-data-graphql-simpleUsage
The ra-data-graphql-simple package exposes a single function, which is a constructor for a dataProvider based on a GraphQL endpoint. When executed, this function calls the GraphQL endpoint, running an introspection query. It uses the result of this query (the GraphQL schema) to automatically configure the dataProvider accordingly.
// in App.js
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import buildGraphQLProvider from '@yeutech/ra-data-graphql-simple';
import { Admin, Resource, Delete } from '@yeutech/react-admin';
import { PostCreate, PostEdit, PostList } from './posts';
const client = new ApolloClient();
class App extends Component {
    constructor() {
        super();
        this.state = { dataProvider: null };
    }
    componentDidMount() {
        buildGraphQLProvider({ clientOptions: { uri: 'http://localhost:4000' }})
            .then(dataProvider => this.setState({ dataProvider }));
    }
    render() {
        const { dataProvider } = this.state;
        if (!dataProvider) {
            return <div>Loading</div>;
        }
        return (
            <Admin dataProvider={dataProvider}>
                <Resource name="Post" list={PostList} edit={PostEdit} create={PostCreate} remove={Delete} />
            </Admin>
        );
    }
}
export default App;Expected GraphQL Schema
The ra-data-graphql-simple function works against GraphQL servers that respect a certain GraphQL grammar. For instance, to handle all the actions on a Post resource, the GraphQL endpoint should support the following schema:
type Query {
  Post(id: ID!): Post
  allPosts(page: Int, perPage: Int, sortField: String, sortOrder: String, filter: PostFilter): [Post]
  _allPostsMeta(page: Int, perPage: Int, sortField: String, sortOrder: String, filter: PostFilter): ListMetadata
}
type Mutation {
  createPost(
    title: String!
    views: Int!
    user_id: ID!
    User: User
    Comments: [Comment]
  ): Post
  updatePost(
    id: ID!
    title: String!
    views: Int!
    user_id: ID!
    User: User
    Comments: [Comment]
  ): Post
  deletePost(id: ID!): Boolean
}
type Post {
    id: ID!
    title: String!
    views: Int!
    user_id: ID!
    User: User
    Comments: [Comment]
}
type PostFilter {
    q: String
    id: ID
    title: String
    views: Int
    views_lt: Int
    views_lte: Int
    views_gt: Int
    views_gte: Int
    user_id: ID
}
type ListMetadata {
    count: Int!
}
scalar DateThis is the grammar used e.g. by marmelab/json-graphql-server, a client-side GraphQL server used for test purposes.
Options
Customize the Apollo client
You can either supply the client options by calling buildGraphQLProvider like this:
buildGraphQLProvider({ clientOptions: { uri: 'http://localhost:4000', ...otherApolloOptions } });Or supply your client directly with:
buildGraphQLProvider({ client: myClient });Customize the introspection
These are the default options for introspection:
const introspectionOptions = {
    include: [], // Either an array of types to include or a function which will be called for every type discovered through introspection
    exclude: [], // Either an array of types to exclude or a function which will be called for every type discovered through introspection
}
// Including types
const introspectionOptions = {
    include: ['Post', 'Comment'],
};
// Excluding types
const introspectionOptions = {
    exclude: ['CommandItem'],
};
// Including types with a function
const introspectionOptions = {
    include: type => ['Post', 'Comment'].includes(type.name),
};
// Including types with a function
const introspectionOptions = {
    exclude: type => !['Post', 'Comment'].includes(type.name),
};Note: exclude and include are mutualy exclusives and include will take precendance.
Note: When using functions, the type argument will be a type returned by the introspection query. Refer to the introspection documentation for more information.
Pass the introspection options to the buildApolloProvider function:
buildApolloProvider({ introspection: introspectionOptions });DELETE_MANY and UPDATE_MANY Optimizations
You GraphQL backend may not allow multiple deletions or updates in a single query. This provider simply makes multiple requests to handle those. This is obviously not ideal but can be alleviated by supplying your own ApolloClient which could use the apollo-link-batch-http link if your GraphQL backend support query batching.
Contributing
Run the tests with this command:
make test7 years ago
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