Grafast
The next-generation planning and execution engine for GraphQL
Documentation: https://grafast.org/grafast/
About
Grafast understands GraphQL and (with your help) your business logic; this
allows it to orchestrate a GraphQL request's data requirements in an extremely
efficient manner, leading to excellent performance, reduced server load, and
happier customers.
This increased efficiency is achieved by leveraging the declarative nature of
GraphQL and deeper integration with your existing Node.js or remote business
logic via "plan resolvers" attached to the fields of your schema. These plan
resolvers detail the abstract steps necessary to execute the given field, these
steps are then combined with the steps from all other fields in the request into
an operation plan. This operation plan can then be rewritten and optimized
before execution, and can often be re-used for similar queries in the future.
In addition to "plan resolvers," Grafast is also backwards compatible with
traditional resolvers - in fact most existing GraphQL.js schemas should already
be executable via Grafast (and doing so should result in a small speed
improvement). Replace your resolvers with Grafast plan resolvers to see the
real efficiency gains!
Grafast schemas can be built using the same techniques other GraphQL.js
schemas can be built - Grafast schemas are GraphQL.js schemas - for example
schema-first, code-first or auto-generated. If you maintain a library that
builds GraphQL schemas, get in touch - we'd love to help you integrate Grafast
with it!
Crowd-funded open-source software
To help us develop this software sustainably, we ask all individuals and
businesses that use it to help support its ongoing maintenance and development
via sponsorship.
And please give some love to our featured sponsors 🤩:
* Sponsors the entire Graphile suite
Overview
Grafast is an alternative GraphQL execution engine for JavaScript; you can use
it as a drop-in replacement for the "execute" method of GraphQL.js. Any GraphQL
server that allows replacement of the execute
method (which includes any
server that fully supports [envelop][]) can support Grafast.
When Grafast sees a GraphQL request for the first time it will "plan" the
request: figuring out the data requirements, the steps that need to be taken,
and how to write the results to the response. This "first draft" plan will be
optimised and rewritten to give the best achievable performance (for example
removing redundant or duplicate processing steps, rewriting and merging
processing steps, etc). Finally, the plan will be executed, and the response
returned to the client. Future requests that are compatible with this plan can
be executed immediately without a need to re-plan.
Requirements
Grafast should work with any GraphQL.js schema that matches the following
requirements:
- GraphQL.js v16+
- you must not override the default GraphQL field resolver (TODO: support this)
- for every request:
context
must be an object (anything suitable to be used as the key to a
WeakMap
); if you do not need a context then {}
is perfectly acceptablerootValue
must be an object or null
/undefined
- resolver limitations:
- only explicit field resolvers (baked into the GraphQL schema) are supported,
i.e. resolvers passed via
rootValue
are not (currently) supported - our support for traditional GraphQL resolvers does not have full parity with
the fourth argument to
resolve
(aka resolveInfo
) - in particular, the
resolveInfo.path
property is not currently supported.
If you find a GraphQL schema that matches these requirements and doesn't work
with Grafast, please file an issue.
Advice
To reap the most benefit from using Grafast, you want as little to change
between executions as possible. In particular, this means you should:
- CRITICAL: Cache (e.g. with a LRU cache) the parsed GraphQL document, so
the same AST can be reused over and over for the same document
grafserv
handles this for you- Envelop users can use
@envelop/parser-cache
for this
- Don't use
rootValue
(Do you really need it? Use context
instead.) - Where possible, memoize the variables object (e.g. using a cache over
canonicalJSONStringify(variables)
) so the same variables results in the same
object in memory - Cache (e.g. with a LRU cache) the GraphQL
context
object, so the same
context can be reused over and over for the same user
- This is less important - feel free to break it if you need to, for example
if you're still using DataLoaders during migration
Usage
Where you would use graphql
from the graphql
module, use grafast
instead:
-import { graphql } from "graphql";
+import { grafast as graphql } from "grafast";
Where you would use execute
from the graphql
module, use grafast
's
execute
instead:
-import { execute } from "graphql";
+import { execute } from "grafast";
Full documentation
https://grafast.org/grafast/