graphql.js
GitHub GraphQL API client for browsers and Node

Usage
|
Browsers
|
Load @octokit/graphql directly from esm.sh
<script type="module">
import { graphql } from "https://esm.sh/@octokit/graphql";
</script>
|
|---|
|
Node
|
Install with npm install @octokit/graphql
import { graphql } from "@octokit/graphql";
|
|---|
Send a simple query
const { repository } = await graphql(
`
{
repository(owner: "octokit", name: "graphql.js") {
issues(last: 3) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}
`,
{
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
},
);
Authentication
The simplest way to authenticate a request is to set the Authorization header, e.g. to a personal access token.
const graphqlWithAuth = graphql.defaults({
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
});
const { repository } = await graphqlWithAuth(`
{
repository(owner: "octokit", name: "graphql.js") {
issues(last: 3) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}
`);
For more complex authentication strategies such as GitHub Apps or Basic, we recommend the according authentication library exported by @octokit/auth.
const { createAppAuth } = await import("@octokit/auth-app");
const auth = createAppAuth({
appId: process.env.APP_ID,
privateKey: process.env.PRIVATE_KEY,
installationId: 123,
});
const graphqlWithAuth = graphql.defaults({
request: {
hook: auth.hook,
},
});
const { repository } = await graphqlWithAuth(
`{
repository(owner: "octokit", name: "graphql.js") {
issues(last: 3) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}`,
);
Variables
⚠️ Do not use template literals in the query strings as they make your code vulnerable to query injection attacks (see #2). Use variables instead:
const { repository } = await graphql(
`
query lastIssues($owner: String!, $repo: String!, $num: Int = 3) {
repository(owner: $owner, name: $repo) {
issues(last: $num) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}
`,
{
owner: "octokit",
repo: "graphql.js",
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
},
);
Pass query together with headers and variables
import { graphql } from("@octokit/graphql");
const { repository } = await graphql({
query: `query lastIssues($owner: String!, $repo: String!, $num: Int = 3) {
repository(owner: $owner, name: $repo) {
issues(last: $num) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}`,
owner: "octokit",
repo: "graphql.js",
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
});
Use with GitHub Enterprise
import { graphql } from "@octokit/graphql";
graphql = graphql.defaults({
baseUrl: "https://github-enterprise.acme-inc.com/api",
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
});
const { repository } = await graphql(`
{
repository(owner: "acme-project", name: "acme-repo") {
issues(last: 3) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}
`);
Use custom @octokit/request instance
import { request } from "@octokit/request";
import { withCustomRequest } from "@octokit/graphql";
let requestCounter = 0;
const myRequest = request.defaults({
headers: {
authorization: "bearer secret123",
},
request: {
hook(request, options) {
requestCounter++;
return request(options);
},
},
});
const myGraphql = withCustomRequest(myRequest);
await request("/");
await myGraphql(`
{
repository(owner: "acme-project", name: "acme-repo") {
issues(last: 3) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
}
}
}
`);
TypeScript
@octokit/graphql is exposing proper types for its usage with TypeScript projects.
Additional Types
Additionally, GraphQlQueryResponseData has been exposed to users:
import type { GraphQlQueryResponseData } from "@octokit/graphql";
Errors
In case of a GraphQL error, error.message is set to a combined message describing all errors returned by the endpoint.
All errors can be accessed at error.errors. error.request has the request options such as query, variables and headers set for easier debugging.
import { graphql, GraphqlResponseError } from "@octokit/graphql";
graphql = graphql.defaults({
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
});
const query = `{
viewer {
bioHtml
}
}`;
try {
const result = await graphql(query);
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof GraphqlResponseError) {
console.log("Request failed:", error.request);
console.log(error.message);
} else {
}
}
Partial responses
A GraphQL query may respond with partial data accompanied by errors. In this case we will throw an error but the partial data will still be accessible through error.data
import { graphql } from "@octokit/graphql";
graphql = graphql.defaults({
headers: {
authorization: `token secret123`,
},
});
const query = `{
repository(name: "probot", owner: "probot") {
name
ref(qualifiedName: "master") {
target {
... on Commit {
history(first: 25, after: "invalid cursor") {
nodes {
message
}
}
}
}
}
}
}`;
try {
const result = await graphql(query);
} catch (error) {
console.log("Request failed:", error.request);
console.log(error.message);
console.log(error.data);
}
Writing tests
You can pass a replacement for the built-in fetch implementation as request.fetch option. For example, using fetch-mock works great to write tests
import assert from "assert";
import fetchMock from "fetch-mock";
import { graphql } from "@octokit/graphql";
graphql("{ viewer { login } }", {
headers: {
authorization: "token secret123",
},
request: {
fetch: fetchMock
.sandbox()
.post("https://api.github.com/graphql", (url, options) => {
assert.strictEqual(options.headers.authorization, "token secret123");
assert.strictEqual(
options.body,
'{"query":"{ viewer { login } }"}',
"Sends correct query",
);
return { data: {} };
}),
},
});
License
MIT