Previously GraphQL field authorization happened like this: class ProjectType field :my_field, MyFieldType do authorize :permission end end This change allowed us to authorize like this instead: class ProjectType field :my_field, MyFieldType, authorize: :permission end A new initializer registers the `authorize` metadata keyword on GraphQL Schema Objects and Fields, and we can collect this data within the context of Instrumentation like this: field.metadata[:authorize] The previous functionality of authorize is still being used for mutations, as the #authorize method here is called at during the code that executes during the mutation, rather than when a field resolves. https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/57828
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GraphQL API
Authentication
Authentication happens through the GraphqlController
, right now this
uses the same authentication as the Rails application. So the session
can be shared.
It is also possible to add a private_token
to the querystring, or
add a HTTP_PRIVATE_TOKEN
header.
Authorization
Fields can be authorized using the same abilities used in the Rails
app. This can be done by supplying the authorize
option:
module Types
class QueryType < BaseObject
graphql_name 'Query'
field :project, Types::ProjectType, null: true, resolver: Resolvers::ProjectResolver, authorize: :read_project
end
end
Fields can be authorized against multiple abilities, in which case all
ability checks must pass. This requires explicitly passing a block to field
:
field :project, Types::ProjectType, null: true, resolver: Resolvers::ProjectResolver do
authorize [:read_project, :another_ability]
end
The object found by the resolve call is used for authorization.
TIP: Tip: When authorizing collections, try to load only what the currently authenticated user is allowed to view with our existing finders first. This minimizes database queries and unnecessary authorization checks of the loaded records.
Types
When exposing a model through the GraphQL API, we do so by creating a
new type in app/graphql/types
.
When exposing properties in a type, make sure to keep the logic inside the definition as minimal as possible. Instead, consider moving any logic into a presenter:
class Types::MergeRequestType < BaseObject
present_using MergeRequestPresenter
name 'MergeRequest'
end
An existing presenter could be used, but it is also possible to create a new presenter specifically for GraphQL.
The presenter is initialized using the object resolved by a field, and the context.
Connection Types
GraphQL uses cursor based pagination to expose collections of items. This provides the clients with a lot of flexibility while also allowing the backend to use different pagination models.
To expose a collection of resources we can use a connection type. This wraps the array with default pagination fields. For example a query for project-pipelines could look like this:
query($project_path: ID!) {
project(fullPath: $project_path) {
pipelines(first: 2) {
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
hasPreviousPage
}
edges {
cursor
node {
id
status
}
}
}
}
}
This would return the first 2 pipelines of a project and related pagination info., ordered by descending ID. The returned data would look like this:
{
"data": {
"project": {
"pipelines": {
"pageInfo": {
"hasNextPage": true,
"hasPreviousPage": false
},
"edges": [
{
"cursor": "Nzc=",
"node": {
"id": "77",
"status": "FAILED"
}
},
{
"cursor": "Njc=",
"node": {
"id": "67",
"status": "FAILED"
}
}
]
}
}
}
}
To get the next page, the cursor of the last known element could be passed:
query($project_path: ID!) {
project(fullPath: $project_path) {
pipelines(first: 2, after: "Njc=") {
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
hasPreviousPage
}
edges {
cursor
node {
id
status
}
}
}
}
}
Exposing permissions for a type
To expose permissions the current user has on a resource, you can call
the expose_permissions
passing in a separate type representing the
permissions for the resource.
For example:
module Types
class MergeRequestType < BaseObject
expose_permissions Types::MergeRequestPermissionsType
end
end
The permission type inherits from BasePermissionType
which includes
some helper methods, that allow exposing permissions as non-nullable
booleans:
class MergeRequestPermissionsType < BasePermissionType
present_using MergeRequestPresenter
graphql_name 'MergeRequestPermissions'
abilities :admin_merge_request, :update_merge_request, :create_note
ability_field :resolve_note,
description: 'Whether or not the user can resolve disussions on the merge request'
permission_field :push_to_source_branch, method: :can_push_to_source_branch?
end
permission_field
: Will act the same asgraphql-ruby
'sfield
method but setting a default description and type and making them non-nullable. These options can still be overridden by adding them as arguments.ability_field
: Expose an ability defined in our policies. This takes behaves the same way aspermission_field
and the same arguments can be overridden.abilities
: Allows exposing several abilities defined in our policies at once. The fields for these will all have be non-nullable booleans with a default description.
Resolvers
To find objects to display in a field, we can add resolvers to
app/graphql/resolvers
.
Arguments can be defined within the resolver, those arguments will be made available to the fields using the resolver.
We already have a FullPathLoader
that can be included in other
resolvers to quickly find Projects and Namespaces which will have a
lot of dependant objects.
To limit the amount of queries performed, we can use BatchLoader
.
Mutations
Mutations are used to change any stored values, or to trigger actions. In the same way a GET-request should not modify data, we cannot modify data in a regular GraphQL-query. We can however in a mutation.
Fields
In the most common situations, a mutation would return 2 fields:
- The resource being modified
- A list of errors explaining why the action could not be performed. If the mutation succeeded, this list would be empty.
By inheriting any new mutations from Mutations::BaseMutation
the
errors
field is automatically added. A clientMutationId
field is
also added, this can be used by the client to identify the result of a
single mutation when multiple are performed within a single request.
Building Mutations
Mutations live in app/graphql/mutations
ideally grouped per
resources they are mutating, similar to our services. They should
inherit Mutations::BaseMutation
. The fields defined on the mutation
will be returned as the result of the mutation.
Always provide a consistent GraphQL-name to the mutation, this name is
used to generate the input types and the field the mutation is mounted
on. The name should look like <Resource being modified><Mutation class name>
, for example the Mutations::MergeRequests::SetWip
mutation has GraphQL name MergeRequestSetWip
.
Arguments required by the mutation can be defined as arguments
required for a field. These will be wrapped up in an input type for
the mutation. For example, the Mutations::MergeRequests::SetWip
with GraphQL-name MergeRequestSetWip
defines these arguments:
argument :project_path, GraphQL::ID_TYPE,
required: true,
description: "The project the merge request to mutate is in"
argument :iid, GraphQL::ID_TYPE,
required: true,
description: "The iid of the merge request to mutate"
argument :wip,
GraphQL::BOOLEAN_TYPE,
required: false,
description: <<~DESC
Whether or not to set the merge request as a WIP.
If not passed, the value will be toggled.
DESC
This would automatically generate an input type called
MergeRequestSetWipInput
with the 3 arguments we specified and the
clientMutationId
.
These arguments are then passed to the resolve
method of a mutation
as keyword arguments. From here, we can call the service that will
modify the resource.
The resolve
method should then return a hash with the same field
names as defined on the mutation and an errors
array. For example,
the Mutations::MergeRequests::SetWip
defines a merge_request
field:
field :merge_request,
Types::MergeRequestType,
null: true,
description: "The merge request after mutation"
This means that the hash returned from resolve
in this mutation
should look like this:
{
# The merge request modified, this will be wrapped in the type
# defined on the field
merge_request: merge_request,
# An array if strings if the mutation failed after authorization
errors: merge_request.errors.full_messages
}
To make the mutation available it should be defined on the mutation
type that lives in graphql/types/mutation_types
. The
mount_mutation
helper method will define a field based on the
GraphQL-name of the mutation:
module Types
class MutationType < BaseObject
include Gitlab::Graphql::MountMutation
graphql_name "Mutation"
mount_mutation Mutations::MergeRequests::SetWip
end
end
Will generate a field called mergeRequestSetWip
that
Mutations::MergeRequests::SetWip
to be resolved.
Authorizing resources
To authorize resources inside a mutation, we can include the
Gitlab::Graphql::Authorize::AuthorizeResource
concern in the
mutation.
This allows us to provide the required abilities on the mutation like this:
module Mutations
module MergeRequests
class SetWip < Base
graphql_name 'MergeRequestSetWip'
authorize :update_merge_request
end
end
end
We can then call authorize!
in the resolve
method, passing in the resource we
want to validate the abilities for.
Alternatively, we can add a find_object
method that will load the
object on the mutation. This would allow you to use the
authorized_find!
and authorized_find!
helper methods.
When a user is not allowed to perform the action, or an object is not
found, we should raise a
Gitlab::Graphql::Errors::ResourceNotAvailable
error. Which will be
correctly rendered to the clients.
Testing
full stack tests for a graphql query or mutation live in
spec/requests/api/graphql
.
When adding a query, the a working graphql query
shared example can
be used to test if the query renders valid results.
Using the GraphqlHelpers#all_graphql_fields_for
-helper, a query
including all available fields can be constructed. This makes it easy
to add a test rendering all possible fields for a query.
To test GraphQL mutation requests, GraphqlHelpers
provides 2
helpers: graphql_mutation
which takes the name of the mutation, and
a hash with the input for the mutation. This will return a struct with
a mutation query, and prepared variables.
This struct can then be passed to the post_graphql_mutation
helper,
that will post the request with the correct params, like a GraphQL
client would do.
To access the response of a mutation, the graphql_mutation_response
helper is available.
Using these helpers, we can build specs like this:
let(:mutation) do
graphql_mutation(
:merge_request_set_wip,
project_path: 'gitlab-org/gitlab-ce',
iid: '1',
wip: true
)
end
it 'returns a successful response' do
post_graphql_mutation(mutation, current_user: user)
expect(response).to have_gitlab_http_status(:success)
expect(graphql_mutation_response(:merge_request_set_wip)['errors']).to be_empty
end