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@dwwoelfel/graphql-parse-resolve-info
Advanced tools
Parse GraphQLResolveInfo (the 4th argument of resolve) into a simple tree
Parses a GraphQLResolveInfo
object into a tree of the fields that are being
requested to enable optimisations to your GraphQL schema (e.g. to determine
which fields are required from the SQL database).
Useful for optimising your GraphQL resolvers by allowing them to look ahead in the request, reducing the number of SQL queries or HTTP requests required to complete the GraphQL request.
Also provides a quick way to get the alias of the current field being resolved.
parseResolveInfo(resolveInfo)
Alias: parse
Gets the tree of subfields of the current field that is being requested, returning the following properties (recursively):
name
: the name of the GraphQL fieldalias
: the alias this GraphQL field has been requested as, or if no alias was specified then the name
args
: the arguments this field was called with; at the root level this
will be equivalent to the args
that the resolve(data, args, context, resolveInfo) {}
method receives, at deeper levels this allows you to get the
args
for the nested fields without waiting for their resolvers to be called.fieldsByTypeName
: an object keyed by GraphQL object type names, where the
values are another object keyed by the aliases of the fields requested with
values of the same format as the root level (i.e. {alias, name, args, fieldsByTypeName}
); see below for an exampleNote that because GraphQL supports interfaces a resolver may return items of
different types. For this reason, we key the fields by the GraphQL type name of
the various fragments that were requested into the fieldsByTypeName
field.
Once you know which specific type the result is going to be, you can then use
this type (and its interfaces) to determine which sub-fields were requested -
we provide a simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType
helper to aid you with
this. In many cases you will know what type the result will be (because it can
only be one type) so you will probably use this helper heavily.
Example usage:
const {
parseResolveInfo,
simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType
} = require('graphql-parse-resolve-info');
// or import { parseResolveInfo, simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType } from 'graphql-parse-resolve-info';
new GraphQLObjectType({
name: ...
fields: {
...
foo: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(ComplexType),
resolve(data, args, context, resolveInfo) {
const parsedResolveInfoFragment = parseResolveInfo(resolveInfo);
const { fields } = simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType(
parsedResolveInfoFragment,
ComplexType
);
console.dir(fields);
...
}
}
}
});
simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType(parsedResolveInfoFragment, ReturnType)
Alias: simplify
Given an object of the form returned by parseResolveInfo(...)
(which can be
the root-level instance, or it could be one of the nested subfields) and a
GraphQL type this method will return an object of the form above, with an
additional field fields
which only contains the fields compatible with the
specified ReturnType
.
Or, in other words, this simplifies the fieldsByTypeName
to an object of only
the fields compatible with ReturnType
.
Example usage:
const {
parseResolveInfo,
simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType
} = require('graphql-parse-resolve-info');
new GraphQLObjectType({
name: ...
fields: {
...
foo: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(ComplexType),
resolve(data, args, context, resolveInfo) {
const parsedResolveInfoFragment = parseResolveInfo(resolveInfo);
const { fields } = simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType(
parsedResolveInfoFragment,
ComplexType
);
...
}
}
}
});
getAliasFromResolveInfo(resolveInfo)
Alias: getAlias
Returns the alias of the field being requested (or, if no alias was specified, then the name of the field).
Example:
const { getAliasFromResolveInfo } = require('graphql-parse-resolve-info');
new GraphQLObjectType({
name: ...
fields: {
...
foo: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(GraphQLString),
resolve(data, args, context, resolveInfo) {
const alias = getAliasFromResolveInfo(resolveInfo);
return alias;
}
}
}
});
For the following GraphQL query:
{
allPosts {
edges {
cursor
node {
...PostDetails
author: personByAuthorId {
firstPost {
...PostDetails
}
friends {
nodes {
...PersonDetails
}
totalCount
pageInfo {
startCursor
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
fragment PersonDetails on Person {
id
name
firstName
}
fragment PostDetails on Post {
id
headline
headlineTrimmed
author: personByAuthorId {
...PersonDetails
}
}
The following resolver in the allPosts
field:
const Query = new GraphQLObjectType({
name: "Query",
fields: {
allPosts: {
type: new GraphQLNonNull(PostsConnection),
resolve(parent, args, context, resolveInfo) {
const parsedResolveInfoFragment = parseResolveInfo(resolveInfo);
const simplifiedFragment = simplifyParsedResolveInfoFragmentWithType(
parsedResolveInfoFragment,
resolveInfo.returnType
);
// ...
},
},
// ...
},
});
has parsedResolveInfoFragment
:
{ alias: 'allPosts',
name: 'allPosts',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ PostsConnection:
{ edges:
{ alias: 'edges',
name: 'edges',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ PostsEdge:
{ cursor:
{ alias: 'cursor',
name: 'cursor',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
node:
{ alias: 'node',
name: 'node',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ Post:
{ id: { alias: 'id', name: 'id', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
headline:
{ alias: 'headline',
name: 'headline',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
headlineTrimmed:
{ alias: 'headlineTrimmed',
name: 'headlineTrimmed',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
author:
{ alias: 'author',
name: 'personByAuthorId',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ Person:
{ id: { alias: 'id', name: 'id', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
name: { alias: 'name', name: 'name', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
firstName:
{ alias: 'firstName',
name: 'firstName',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
firstPost:
{ alias: 'firstPost',
name: 'firstPost',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ Post:
{ id: { alias: 'id', name: 'id', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
headline:
{ alias: 'headline',
name: 'headline',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
headlineTrimmed:
{ alias: 'headlineTrimmed',
name: 'headlineTrimmed',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
author:
{ alias: 'author',
name: 'personByAuthorId',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ Person:
{ id: { alias: 'id', name: 'id', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
name: { alias: 'name', name: 'name', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
firstName:
{ alias: 'firstName',
name: 'firstName',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} } } } } } } },
friends:
{ alias: 'friends',
name: 'friends',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ PeopleConnection:
{ nodes:
{ alias: 'nodes',
name: 'nodes',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ Person:
{ id: { alias: 'id', name: 'id', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
name: { alias: 'name', name: 'name', args: {}, fieldsByTypeName: {} },
firstName:
{ alias: 'firstName',
name: 'firstName',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} } } } },
totalCount:
{ alias: 'totalCount',
name: 'totalCount',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} },
pageInfo:
{ alias: 'pageInfo',
name: 'pageInfo',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
{ PageInfo:
{ startCursor:
{ alias: 'startCursor',
name: 'startCursor',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName: {} } } } } } } } } } } } } } } } } } },
and the simplified simplifiedFragment
is the same as
parsedResolveInfoFragment
, but with the additional root-level property
fields
which compresses the root-level property fieldsByTypeName
to a
single-level object containing only the fields compatible with
resolveInfo.returnType
(in this case: only edges
):
{ alias: 'allPosts',
name: 'allPosts',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
...as before...
fields:
{ edges:
{ alias: 'edges',
name: 'edges',
args: {},
fieldsByTypeName:
...as before...
This project was originally based on https://github.com/tjmehta/graphql-parse-fields, but has evolved a lot since then.
FAQs
Parse GraphQLResolveInfo (the 4th argument of resolve) into a simple tree
The npm package @dwwoelfel/graphql-parse-resolve-info receives a total of 1 weekly downloads. As such, @dwwoelfel/graphql-parse-resolve-info popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @dwwoelfel/graphql-parse-resolve-info demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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