149 lines
5.6 KiB
Markdown
149 lines
5.6 KiB
Markdown
# GraphQL implementation in Haskell
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[![Hackage Version](https://img.shields.io/hackage/v/graphql.svg)](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/graphql)
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[![Build Status](https://github.com/caraus-ecms/graphql/workflows/Haskell%20CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/caraus-ecms/graphql/actions?query=workflow%3A%22Haskell+CI%22)
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[![License](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-BSD--3--Clause-blue.svg)](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/caraus-ecms/graphql/master/LICENSE)
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[![Simple Haskell](https://www.simplehaskell.org/badges/badge.svg)](https://www.simplehaskell.org)
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This implementation is relatively low-level by design, it doesn't provide any
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mappings between the GraphQL types and Haskell's type system and avoids
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compile-time magic. It focuses on flexibility instead, so other solutions can
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be built on top of it.
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## State of the work
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For now this library provides:
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- Parser for the query and schema languages, as well as a printer for the query
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language (minimizer and pretty-printer).
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- Data structures to define a type system.
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- Executor (queries, mutations and subscriptions are supported).
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- Validation is work in progress.
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- Introspection isn't available yet.
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But the idea is to be a Haskell port of
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[`graphql-js`](https://github.com/graphql/graphql-js).
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For a more precise list of currently missing features see issues marked as
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"[not implemented](https://github.com/caraus-ecms/graphql/labels/not%20implemented)".
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## Documentation
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API documentation is available through
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[Hackage](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/graphql).
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You'll also find a small tutorial with some examples under
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[docs/tutorial](https://github.com/caraus-ecms/graphql/tree/master/docs/tutorial).
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### Getting started
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We start with a simple GraphQL API that provides us with some famous and less
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famous cites.
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```graphql
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"""
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Root Query type.
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"""
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type Query {
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"""
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Provides a cite.
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"""
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cite: String!
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}
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```
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This is called a GraphQL schema, it defines all queries supported by the API.
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`Query` is the root query type. Every GraphQL API should define a query type.
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`Query` has a single field `cite` that returns a `String`. The `!` after the
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type denotes that the returned value cannot be `Null`. GraphQL fields are
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nullable by default.
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To be able to work with this schema, we are going to implement it in Haskell.
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```haskell
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{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
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import Control.Exception (SomeException)
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import qualified Data.Aeson as Aeson
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import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy.Char8 as ByteString.Lazy.Char8
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import qualified Data.HashMap.Strict as HashMap
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import Language.GraphQL
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import Language.GraphQL.Type
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import qualified Language.GraphQL.Type.Out as Out
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-- GraphQL supports 3 kinds of operations: queries, mutations and subscriptions.
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-- Our first schema supports only queries.
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schema :: Schema IO
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schema = Schema
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{ query = queryType, mutation = Nothing, subscription = Nothing }
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-- GraphQL distinguishes between input and output types. Input types are field
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-- argument types and they are defined in Language.GraphQL.Type.In. Output types
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-- are result types, they are defined in Language.GraphQL.Type.Out. Root types
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-- are always object types.
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--
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-- Here we define a type "Query". The second argument is an optional
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-- description, the third one is the list of interfaces implemented by the
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-- object type. The last argument is a field map. Keys are field names, values
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-- are field definitions and resolvers. Resolvers are the functions, where the
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-- actual logic lives, they return values for the respective fields.
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queryType :: Out.ObjectType IO
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queryType = Out.ObjectType "Query" (Just "Root Query type.") []
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$ HashMap.singleton "cite" citeResolver
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where
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-- 'ValueResolver' is a 'Resolver' data constructor, it combines a field
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-- definition with its resolver function. This function resolves a value for
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-- a field (as opposed to the 'EventStreamResolver' used by subscriptions).
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-- Our resolver just returns a constant value.
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citeResolver = ValueResolver citeField
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$ pure "Piscis primum a capite foetat"
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-- The first argument is an optional field description. The second one is
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-- the field type and the third one is for arguments (we have none in this
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-- example).
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--
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-- GraphQL has named and wrapping types. String is a scalar, named type.
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-- Named types are nullable by default. To make our "cite" field
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-- non-nullable, we wrap it in the wrapping type, Non-Null.
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citeField = Out.Field
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(Just "Provides a cite.") (Out.NonNullScalarType string) HashMap.empty
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-- Now we can execute a query. Since our schema defines only one field,
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-- everything we can do is to ask to resolve it and give back the result.
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-- Since subscriptions don't return plain values, the 'graphql' function returns
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-- an 'Either'. 'Left' is for subscriptions, 'Right' is for queries and
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-- mutations.
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main :: IO ()
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main = do
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Right result <- graphql schema "{ cite }"
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ByteString.Lazy.Char8.putStrLn $ Aeson.encode result
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```
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Executing this query produces the following JSON:
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```json
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{
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"data": {
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"cite": "Piscis primum a capite foetat"
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}
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}
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```
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## Further information
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- [Contributing guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md).
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- [Changelog](CHANGELOG.md) – this one contains the most recent changes;
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individual changelogs for specific versions can be found on
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[Hackage](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/graphql).
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## Contact
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Suggestions, contributions and bug reports are welcome.
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Should you have questions on usage, please open an issue and ask – this helps
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to write useful documentation.
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Feel free to contact on Slack in [#haskell on
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GraphQL](https://graphql.slack.com/messages/haskell/). You can obtain an
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invitation [here](https://graphql-slack.herokuapp.com/).
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