A GraphQL data provider for react-admin built with Apollo and tailored to target a GraphQL API built using nestjs-query.
Install with:
npm install --save graphql ra-data-nestjs-queryor
yarn add graphql ra-data-nestjs-queryor
pnpm i graphql ra-data-nestjs-queryThe ra-data-nestjs-query 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 from 'react';
import { Component } from 'react';
import buildGraphQLProvider, { buildQuery } from 'ra-data-nestjs-query';
import { Admin, Resource } from 'react-admin';
import { PostCreate, PostEdit, PostList } from './posts';
const dataProvider = buildGraphQLProvider({ buildQuery });
const App = () => (
<Admin dataProvider={dataProvider} >
<Resource name="Post" list={PostList} edit={PostEdit} create={PostCreate} />
</Admin>
);
export default App;Note: the parser will generate additional .id properties for relation based types. These properties should be used as sources for reference based fields and inputs like ReferenceField: <ReferenceField label="Author Name" source="author.id" reference="User">.
The ra-data-nestjs-query function works against GraphQL servers that respect the GraphQL grammar used by nestjs-query.
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 });The default behavior might not be optimized especially when dealing with references. You can override a specific query by wrapping the buildQuery function:
// in src/dataProvider.js
import buildGraphQLProvider, { buildQuery } from 'ra-data-nestjs-query';
const myBuildQuery = introspection => (fetchType, resource, params) => {
const builtQuery = buildQuery(introspection)(fetchType, resource, params);
if (resource === 'Command' && fetchType === 'GET_ONE') {
return {
// Use the default query variables and parseResponse
...builtQuery,
// Override the query
query: gql`
query Command($id: ID!) {
data: Command(id: $id) {
id
reference
customer {
id
firstName
lastName
}
}
}`,
};
}
return builtQuery;
};
export default buildGraphQLProvider({ buildQuery: myBuildQuery })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 mutually exclusives and include will take precedence.
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 });Your GraphQL backend may not allow multiple deletions or updates in a single query. This provider defaults to simply making 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.
Run the tests with this command:
pnpm run test