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GraphQL has become an immensely popular alternative to REST APIs. The flexibility you get from using GraphQL makes it easier for developers to get any information they need for an app, and just the information they need for that portion of the app. That gives you the feel of a very customized API and can help cut down on bandwidth.
In this tutorial, I’ll show you how to write a custom GraphQL API using Node and Express. I’ll also show you how to secure parts of the API while making other parts open to the public.
Create the GraphQL API with Express
To create the API, start by creating a new folder and creating a package.json
file to manage your dependencies. You’ll also need to install a few dependencies to get GraphQL with Express up and running:
mkdir graphql-express
cd graphql-express
npm init -y
npm install express@2.8.4 express-graphql@0.6.12 graphql@14.0.2 graphql-tag@2.9.2 cors@2.8.4
Now create a file named index.js
. This will be your main entry point:
const express = require('express')
const cors = require('cors')
const graphqlHTTP = require('express-graphql')
const gql = require('graphql-tag')
const { buildASTSchema } = require('graphql')
const app = express()
app.use(cors())
const schema = buildASTSchema(gql`
type Query {
hello: String
}
`)
const rootValue = {
hello: () => 'Hello, world'
}
app.use('/graphql', graphqlHTTP({ schema, rootValue }))
const port = process.env.PORT || 4000
app.listen(port)
console.log(`Running a GraphQL API server at localhost:${port}/graphql`)
This is about as simple as a GraphQL server gets. All this does is return “Hello, world” when you query “hello”, but it’s a start. To take it for a test spin, run node .
, then in another tab open your browser to the GraphQL Playground. Once there, enter http://localhost:4000/graphql
to access your GraphQL server.
The GraphQL Playground will help explore your schema and test out queries. It even automatically creates some documentation for you.
Try querying for hello
using the following query:
query {
hello
}
Improve Your GraphQL Developer Experience
Here are a couple quick tips to help make your development experience a little better:
1. Install a linter to help catch bugs in your editor. This will help keep your styling consistent and catch any easily-avoidable bugs.
To install StandardJS, type npm install --save-dev standard@12.0.1
. Most editors will be able to show you warnings and errors as you type.
You can also edit the scripts
object of your package.json
so that you can run the linter at any time with npm test
:
"scripts": {
"test": "standard"
},
2. Automatically restart the server when you make changes.
Install nodemon
with npm install --save-dev nodemon@1.18.4
.
Add another script to package.json
, so you can run the server with npm start
. Combined with the above, your scripts
object should look like this:
"scripts": {
"test": "standard",
"start": "nodemon ."
},
Go ahead and close the server you had run with node .
and now type npm start
to restart the development server. From now on, any changes you make will automatically restart the server.
Create the GraphQL Queries
To get something a little more useful, let’s make a post editor. GraphQL is strongly typed, allowing you to create a type for each object and connect them. A common scenario might be to have a post with some text, that was written by a person. Update your schema to include these types. You can also update your Query
type to utilize these new types.
type Query {
posts: [Post]
post(id: ID): Post
authors: [Person]
author(id: ID): Person
}
type Post {
id: ID
author: Person
body: String
}
type Person {
id: ID
posts: [Post]
firstName: String
lastName: String
}
Even though the resolvers aren’t set up, you can already go back to GraphQL Playground and refresh the schema by clicking the circular arrow icon next to the localhost
URL.
The schema explorer is really useful for figuring out how to create your query. Click the green SCHEMA
button to check out your new schema.
You’ll need some way to store the data. To keep it simple, use JavaScript’s Map
object for in-memory storage. You can also create some classes that will help connect the data from one object to another.
const PEOPLE = new Map()
const POSTS = new Map()
class Post {
constructor (data) { Object.assign(this, data) }
get author () {
return PEOPLE.get(this.authorId)
}
}
class Person {
constructor (data) { Object.assign(this, data) }
get posts () {
return [...POSTS.values()].filter(post => post.authorId === this.id)
}
}
Now if you have an instance of a Person
, you can find all of their posts by simply asking for person.posts
. Since GraphQL lets you only ask for the data you want, the posts
getter will never get called unless you ask for it, which could speed up the query if that’s an expensive operation.
You’ll also need to update your resolvers (the functions in rootValue
) in order to accommodate these new types.
const rootValue = {
posts: () => POSTS.values(),
post: ({ id }) => POSTS.get(id),
authors: () => PEOPLE.values(),
author: ({ id }) => PEOPLE.get(id)
}
This is great, but there’s no data yet. For now, stub in some fake data. You can add this function and the call to it right after the assignment to rootValue
.
const initializeData = () => {
const fakePeople = [
{ id: '1', firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Doe' },
{ id: '2', firstName: 'Jane', lastName: 'Doe' }
]
fakePeople.forEach(person => PEOPLE.set(person.id, new Person(person)))
const fakePosts = [
{ id: '1', authorId: '1', body: 'Hello world' },
{ id: '2', authorId: '2', body: 'Hi, planet!' }
]
fakePosts.forEach(post => POSTS.set(post.id, new Post(post)))
}
initializeData()
Now that you have your queries all set up and some data stubbed in, go back to GraphQL Playground and play around a bit. Try getting all the posts, or get all the authors and posts associated with each one.
Or get weird and get a single post by id, then the author for that post, and all of that author’s posts (including the one you just queried).
Add User Authentication to Your Express + GraphQL API
One simple way to add authentication to your project is with Okta. Okta is a cloud service that allows developers to create, edit, and securely store user accounts and user account data, and connect them with one or multiple applications. If you don’t already have one, sign up for a forever-free developer account.
You’re going to need to save some information to use in the app. Create a new file named .env
. In it, enter in your organization URL.
HOST_URL=http://localhost:4000
OKTA_ORG_URL=https://{yourOktaOrgUrl}
You will also need a random string to use as an App Secret for sessions. You can generate this with the following command:
echo "APP_SECRET=`openssl rand -base64 32`" >> .env
Next, log in to your developer console, navigate to Applications, then click Add Application. Select Web, then click Next.
The page you come to after creating an application has some more information you need to save to your .env
file. Copy in the client ID and client secret.
OKTA_CLIENT_ID={yourClientId}
OKTA_CLIENT_SECRET={yourClientSecret}
The last piece of information you need from Okta is an API token. In your developer console, navigate to API -> Tokens, then click on Create Token. You can have many tokens, so just give this one a name that reminds you what it’s for, like “GraphQL Express”. You’ll be given a token that you can only see right now. If you lose the token, you’ll have to create another one. Add this to .env
also.
OKTA_TOKEN={yourOktaAPIToken}
Create a new file named okta.js
. This is where you’ll create some utility functions, as well as get the app initialized for Okta. When authenticated through Okta, your app will authenticate through an access token using JWT. You can use this to determine who a user is. To avoid dealing directly with authentication in your app, a user would sign in on Okta’s servers, then send you a JWT that you can verify.
okta.js
const session = require('express-session')
const OktaJwtVerifier = require('@okta/jwt-verifier')
const verifier = new OktaJwtVerifier({
clientId: process.env.OKTA_CLIENT_ID,
issuer: `${process.env.OKTA_ORG_URL}/oauth2/default`
})
const { Client } = require('@okta/okta-sdk-nodejs')
const client = new Client({
orgUrl: process.env.OKTA_ORG_URL,
token: process.env.OKTA_TOKEN
})
const { ExpressOIDC } = require('@okta/oidc-middleware')
const oidc = new ExpressOIDC({
issuer: `${process.env.OKTA_ORG_URL}/oauth2/default`,
client_id: process.env.OKTA_CLIENT_ID,
client_secret: process.env.OKTA_CLIENT_SECRET,
redirect_uri: `${process.env.HOST_URL}/authorization-code/callback`,
scope: 'openid profile'
})
const initializeApp = (app) => {
app.use(session({
secret: process.env.APP_SECRET,
resave: true,
saveUninitialized: false
}))
app.use(oidc.router)
app.use('/access-token', oidc.ensureAuthenticated(), async (req, res, next) => {
res.send(req.userContext.tokens.access_token)
})
}
module.exports = { client, verifier, initializeApp }
The initializeApp
function adds some middleware to allow you to log in with Okta. Whenever you go to the http://localhost:4000/access-token
, it will first check that you’re logged in. If you aren’t, it will first send you to Okta’s servers to authenticate. Once authentication is successful, it returns you to the /access-token
route and will print out your current access token, which will be valid for about an hour.
The client
that you’re exporting allows you to run some administrative calls on your server. You’ll be using it later to get more information about a user based on their ID.
the verifier
is what you use to verify that a JWT is valid, and it gives you some basic information about a user, like their user ID and email address.
Now, in index.js
, you’ll need to import this file and call the initializeApp
function. You also need to use a tool called dotenv
that will read your .env
file and add the variables to process.env
. At the very top of the file, add the following line:
require('dotenv').config({ path: '.env' })
Just after the app.use(cors())
line, add the following:
const okta = require('./okta')
okta.initializeApp(app)
To make this all work, you’ll also need to install a few new dependencies:
npm i @okta/jwt-verifier@0.0.12 @okta/oidc-middleware@1.0.0 @okta/oidc-sdk-nodejs@1.2.0 dotenv@6.0.0 express-session@1.15.6
You should now be able to go to http://localhost:4000/access-token
to log in and get an access token. If you were just at your developer console, you’ll probably find you’re already logged in. You can log out of your developer console to ensure the flow works properly.
Create GraphQL Mutations
Now it’s time to use real data. There may be some real John and Jane Does out there, but chances are they don’t have an account on your application yet. Next, I’ll show you how to add some mutations that will use your current user to create, edit, or delete a post.
To generate IDs for a post, you can use uuid
. Install it with npm install uuid@3.3.2
, then add it to index.js
with:
const uuid = require('uuid/v4')
That should go near the top of the file, next to the other require
statements.
While still in index.js
, add the following types to your schema:
The post Build a Simple API Service with Express and GraphQL appeared first on SitePoint.
by Braden Kelley via SitePoint
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