apollo-studio-community
graphql-helix
apollo-studio-community | graphql-helix | |
---|---|---|
16 | 17 | |
246 | 831 | |
0.0% | 0.0% | |
6.6 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
TypeScript | ||
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
apollo-studio-community
-
How to Consume GraphQL API with Apollo Client in a Reactjs Application
HINT: Writing the query or mutation syntax can be time-consuming because you have to ensure everything is correct. But no worries, GraphQL is introspective, use this website to see and write your queries and mutations: https://studio.apollographql.com/, just put your GraphQL API and it will show you everything on that API.
-
Using Postman and Postman Interceptor to authenticate a session cookie based GraphQL API
I once had to authenticate requests made from Apollo Studio to my local development server. The locally running GraphQL API was using session cookies for authentication. While there were workarounds and configs in order to set cookies correctly for requests sent from Apollo Studio, I wasn't able to reliably make it work. Also, I didn't want to change the cookie configs in my server as it would mess with my frontend setup.
-
Using Apollo Studio with a PostgreSQL database
But it seems like in Apollo studio (https://studio.apollographql.com/) and Apollo servers in general, ask for an API link, not a database link.
-
Getting this error while setting apollo-server-micro with Next.js, What am I doing wrong ?
access-control-allow-origin: https://studio.apollographql.com
-
Building scalable solutions with Apollo Federation
Run the service with node index.js command. Navigate to http://localhost:4000/ in your browser. It will open up Apollo Studio.
-
Beginner friendly guide to nodejs express-server with mongodb,graphql and typescript
import express from "express"; import cors from 'cors' import { ApolloServer } from 'apollo-server-express'; import mongoose from 'mongoose'; import { resolvers } from './resolvers/TestResolver'; import { typeDefs } from './typeDefs/typedefs'; const PORT=4000; const startServer=async()=> { const app = express(); const allowedOrigins = [ 'http://localhost:3000', 'http://localhost:3001', 'https://studio.apollographql.com' ]; const corsOptions = { credentials: true, origin: function(origin, callback){ if(!origin) return callback(null, true); if(allowedOrigins.indexOf(origin) === -1){ var msg = 'The CORS policy for this site does not ' + 'allow access from the specified Origin.'; return callback(new Error(msg), false); } return callback(null, true); } } app.use(cors(corsOptions)) var uri = "mongodb://localhost:27017/testmongo"; //@ts-ignore mongoose.connect(uri, { useUnifiedTopology: true, useNewUrlParser: true }) .then(()=>console.log("connected to newmango db")) //rest routes app.get("/", (req, res) => { res.json({ data: "API is working...", }); }); const server = new ApolloServer({ typeDefs, resolvers, }); await server.start(); server.applyMiddleware({ app }); app.listen(PORT, () => { console.log(` Server is running at http://localhost:${PORT}`); }); } startServer().catch(e=>console.log("error strting server======== ",e))
-
Comprehensive Guide to GraphQL Clients, part 1
IDEs are test tools to check the correctness of your queries. You can define your queries in the IDE and then send them to the server. The server will return the data that is requested if the query is correct. There are a lot of IDEs available. The most popular and the simplest IDE for GraphQL queries is GraphiQL. The modern clone of GraphiQL is GraphQL Playground. The environment is cleaner and has some advanced features. The recent IDE for GraphQL queries is Apollo Explorer. All-around tools such as Postman and Insomnia are great tools for testing either GraphQL queries or RESTful APIs.
-
SWC with Apollo and Express.js | Issues with nodemon
apolloServer.applyMiddleware({ app, cors: false, // cors: { // credentials: true, // // origin: "https://studio.apollographql.com", // origin: "http://localhost:3000", // }, });
-
How to get a free GraphQL certification — Apollo Graph Developer
Apollo Studio — Apollo Studio is a cloud platform that helps you create, validate, and secure your organization's org chart.
-
CFP: Public REST API For Historical DEX Prices
What is the difference or advantage to public graphql api (except rest vs graphQl): https://studio.apollographql.com/ of defichain-income?
graphql-helix
-
Apollo Layoffs
Depends on language, I've build GraphQL servers in a few, though mostly JavaScript and Python. For Python I used to use Graphene, these days I use Strawberry.
For JavaScript, I originally used graphql-js and express-graphql, as these were the original libraries and I was a literal day 1 adopter. All the libraries are essentially just wrappers around graphql-js, so it's still viable to use directly. But for schema-building I now use Pothos (https://pothos-graphql.dev/), I'd probably use graphql-helix as the http layer (https://github.com/contra/graphql-helix).
-
Does Apollo GraphQL cost money to use in production? And other beginner questions about GraphQL
If you want a lower level graphql server https://graphql-helix.vercel.app/ or https://benzene.vercel.app/ might be worth checking out.
-
Code-first schema definition
While there are many GraphQL server packages available, we need one that will play nicely with Nuxt3's server engine (Nitro / h3). In the spirit of keeping things extensible and framework-agnostic, GraphQL Helix seems like a really good choice. Let's add it to our project:
-
What's next?
Looks interesting, have you tried graphql-helix?
-
When to use multiple endpoints in GraphQL
When using a JavaScript server, a convenient way to achieve this is with GraphQL Helix, which decouples the handling of the HTTP request from the GraphQL server. With Helix, we can have the routing logic be handled by a Node.js web framework (such as Express.js or Fastify), and then — depending on the requested path (i.e., the requested endpoint — we can provide the corresponding schema to the GraphQL server.
-
a first look at graphQL helix
GraphQL Helix is a framework and runtime agnostic collection of utility functions for building your own GraphQL HTTP server. Instead of providing a complete HTTP server or middleware plugin function, GraphQL Helix only provides a handful of functions for turning an HTTP request into a GraphQL execution result. You decide how to send back the response.
-
Introducing Envelop - The GraphQL Plugin System
import { envelop, useSchema, useLogger } from '@envelop/core'; import fastify from 'fastify'; import { processRequest, getGraphQLParameters } from 'graphql-helix'; // This creates the `getEnveloped` function for us. Behind the scense the wrapped functions are created once, here. const getEnveloped = envelop({ plugins: [useSchema(schema), useLogger()], }); const app = fastify(); app.route({ method: ['POST'], url: '/graphql', async handler(req, res) { // Here we can pass the request and make available as part of the "context". // The return value is the a GraphQL-proxy that exposes all the functions. const { parse, validate, contextFactory, execute, schema } = getEnveloped({ req, }); const request = { body: req.body, headers: req.headers, method: req.method, query: req.query, }; const { operationName, query, variables } = getGraphQLParameters(request); // Here, we pass our custom functions to Helix, and it will take care of the rest. const result = await processRequest({ operationName, query, variables, request, schema, parse, validate, execute, contextFactory, }); if (result.type === 'RESPONSE') { res.status(result.status); res.send(result.payload); } else { // You can find a complete example with Subscriptions and stream/defer here: // https://github.com/contrawork/graphql-helix/blob/master/examples/fastify/server.ts res.send({ errors: [{ message: 'Not Supported in this demo' }] }); } }, }); app.listen(3000, () => { console.log(`GraphQL server is running...`); });
-
Subscriptions and Live Queries - Real Time with GraphQL
Fortunately, we now have libraries like Graphql Helix, which, in my humble opinion, should replace express-graphql as the reference HTTP implementation since GraphQL Helix is also not tied to any web server framework.
-
GraphQL - Diving Deep
If you are using Node.js there are a lot of implementations of GraphQL servers with a few being express-graphql, apollo-server, mercurius, graphql-helix and more. And if you are using other languages, you can see a great list here
-
The Stack #1
Graphql Helix
What are some alternatives?
GraphQL for .NET - GraphQL for .NET
graphql-yoga - 🧘 Rewrite of a fully-featured GraphQL Server with focus on easy setup, performance & great developer experience. The core of Yoga implements WHATWG Fetch API and can run/deploy on any JS environment.
apollo-server - 🌍 Spec-compliant and production ready JavaScript GraphQL server that lets you develop in a schema-first way. Built for Express, Connect, Hapi, Koa, and more.
mercurius - Implement GraphQL servers and gateways with Fastify
apollo-federation
nestjs-graphql - GraphQL (TypeScript) module for Nest framework (node.js) 🍷
rocket-pool-mainnet
express-graphql - Create a GraphQL HTTP server with Express.
pt-br.react.dev - 🇧🇷 React documentation website in Portuguese (Brazil)
graphql-jit - GraphQL execution using a JIT compiler