
Research
/Security News
Weaponizing Discord for Command and Control Across npm, PyPI, and RubyGems.org
Socket researchers uncover how threat actors weaponize Discord across the npm, PyPI, and RubyGems ecosystems to exfiltrate sensitive data.
@apollo-elements/haunted
Advanced tools
πΎ Haunted Hooks for Apollo GraphQL π
π Read the Full API Docs π
Apollo Elements haunted hooks are distributed through npm
, the node package manager. To install a copy of the latest version in your project's node_modules
directory, install npm on your system then run the following command in your project's root directory:
npm install --save @apollo-elements/haunted
See our docs on setting up Apollo client so your components can fetch their data.
This package provides useMutation
, useQuery
, and useSubscription
hooks.
Query data with the useQuery
hook.
First, let's define our component's GraphQL query.
query HelloQuery {
helloWorld {
name
greeting
}
}
Read our docs on working with GraphQL files during development and in production for more info, and be sure to read about generating TypeScript types from GraphQL to enhance your developer experience and reduce bugs.
Next, we'll define our UI component with the useQuery
hook. Import the hook and helpers, your query, and the types:
import { useQuery, component, html } from '@apollo-elements/haunted';
import { HelloQuery } from './Hello.query.graphql';
declare global {
interface HTMLElementTagNameMap {
'hello-query': HTMLElement
}
}
Then define your component's template function.
function Hello() {
const { data, error, loading } = useQuery(HelloQuery);
const greeting = data?.helloWorld.greeting ?? 'Hello';
const name = data?.helloWorld.name ?? 'Friend';
return html`
<what-spin-such-loader ?active="${loading}"></what-spin-such-loader>
<article id="error" ?hidden="${!error}">
<h2>π’ Such Sad, Very Error! π°</h2>
<pre><code>${error?.message}</code></pre>
</article>
<p>${greeting}, ${name}!</p>
`;
}
customElements.define('hello-query', component(Hello));
Mutations are how you affect change on your graph. Define a mutation in graphql.
mutation UpdateUser($username: String, $haircolor: String) {
updateUser(username: $username, haircolor: $haircolor) {
nickname
}
}
Then import useMutation
and the haunted
API along with your data types.
import { useMutation, useState, component, html } from '@apollo-elements/haunted';
import { UpdateUserMutation } from './UpdateUser.mutation.graphql';
declare global {
interface HTMLElementTagNameMap {
'update-user': HTMLElement;
}
}
Then to define your component's template function.
function UpdateUser() {
const [username, setUsername] = useState('');
const [haircolor, setHaircolor] = useState('Black');
const [updateUser, { data }] = useMutation(UpdateUserMutation);
const variables = { username, haircolor };
const nickname = data?.updateUser?.nickname ?? 'nothing';
return html`
<label> Name
<input type="text" @input="${e => setUsername(e.target.value)}"/>
</label>
<label> Hair Colour
<select @input="${e => setHaircolor(e.target.value)}">
<option>Black</option>
<option>Brown</option>
<option>Auburn</option>
<option>Red</option>
<option>Blond</option>
<option>Tutti Fruiti</option>
</select>
</label>
<button @click="${() => updateUser({ variables })}">Save</button>
<output ?hidden="${!data}">We'll call you ${nickname}</output>
`;
}
customElements.define('update-user', component(UpdateUser));
Subscriptions let you update your front end with real-time changes to the data graph.
subscription NewsFlash {
news
}
import { useSubscription, component, html } from '@apollo-elements/haunted';
import { NewsFlashSubscription } from './NewsFlash.subscription.graphql';
declare global {
interface HTMLElementTagNameMap {
'news-flash': HTMLElement;
}
}
function NewsFlash() {
const { data } = useSubscription(NewsFlashSubscription);
return html`
Latest News: ${data.news}
`;
}
customElements.define('news-flash', component(NewsFlashSubscription));
If you want your haunted components to register with the closest <apollo-client>
element, you have to write them using the function
keyword and pass this
as the hostElement
option.
function Connected() {
const { data } = useQuery(ConnectedQuery, {
hostElement: this,
});
}
That way, <apollo-client>
will be able to find your element in the DOM tree and connect to the controller which powers the hook.
apollo-elements
is a community project maintained by Benny Powers.
FAQs
π©βπ Haunted Hooks for Apollo GraphQL π
The npm package @apollo-elements/haunted receives a total of 370 weekly downloads. As such, @apollo-elements/haunted popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @apollo-elements/haunted demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago.Β It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
/Security News
Socket researchers uncover how threat actors weaponize Discord across the npm, PyPI, and RubyGems ecosystems to exfiltrate sensitive data.
Security News
Socket now integrates with Bun 1.3βs Security Scanner API to block risky packages at install time and enforce your organizationβs policies in local dev and CI.
Research
The Socket Threat Research Team is tracking weekly intrusions into the npm registry that follow a repeatable adversarial playbook used by North Korean state-sponsored actors.