StarpTech / apollo-datasource-http

Optimized JSON HTTP Data Source for Apollo Server
MIT License
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apollo-server graphql rest

Apollo HTTP Data Source

CI


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Optimized JSON HTTP Data Source for Apollo Server

Documentation

View the Apollo Server documentation for data sources for more details.

Usage

To get started, install the apollo-datasource-http package:

npm install apollo-datasource-http

To define a data source, extend the HTTPDataSource class and implement the data fetching methods that your resolvers require. Data sources can then be provided via the dataSources property to the ApolloServer constructor, as demonstrated in the section below.

// instantiate a pool outside of your hotpath
const baseURL = 'https://movies-api.example.com'
const pool = new Pool(baseURL)

const server = new ApolloServer({
  typeDefs,
  resolvers,
  dataSources: () => {
    return {
      moviesAPI: new MoviesAPI(baseURL, pool),
    }
  },
})

Your implementation of these methods can call on convenience methods built into the HTTPDataSource class to perform HTTP requests, while making it easy to pass different options and handle errors.

import { Pool } from 'undici'
import { HTTPDataSource } from 'apollo-datasource-http'

const datasource = new (class MoviesAPI extends HTTPDataSource {
  constructor(baseURL: string, pool: Pool) {
    // global client options
    super(baseURL, {
      pool,
      clientOptions: {
        bodyTimeout: 5000,
        headersTimeout: 2000,
      },
      requestOptions: {
        headers: {
          'X-Client': 'client',
        },
      },
    })
  }

  onCacheKeyCalculation(request: Request): string {
    // return different key based on request options
  }

  async onRequest(request: Request): Promise<void> {
    // manipulate request before it is send
    // for example assign a AbortController signal to all requests and abort

    request.signal = this.context.abortController.signal

    setTimeout(() => {
      this.context.abortController.abort()
    }, 3000).unref()
  }

  onResponse<TResult = unknown>(request: Request, response: Response<TResult>): Response<TResult> {
    // manipulate response or handle unsuccessful response in a different way
    return super.onResponse(request, response)
  }

  onError(error: Error, request: Request): void {
    // in case of a request error
    if (error instanceof RequestError) {
      console.log(error.request, error.response)
    }
  }

  async createMovie() {
    return this.post('/movies', {
      body: {
        name: 'Dude Where\'s My Car',
      }
    })
  }

  async getMovie(id) {
    return this.get(`/movies/${id}`, {
      query: {
        a: 1,
      },
      context: {
        tracingName: 'getMovie',
      },
      headers: {
        'X-Foo': 'bar',
      },
      requestCache: {
        maxTtl: 10 * 60, // 10min, will respond for 10min with the cached result (updated every 10min)
        maxTtlIfError: 30 * 60, // 30min, will respond with the cached response in case of an error (for further 20min)
      },
    })
  }
})()

Hooks

Error handling

The http client throws for unsuccessful responses (statusCode >= 400). In case of an request error onError is executed. By default the error is rethrown as a ApolloError to avoid exposing sensitive information.

Benchmark

See README.md

Production checklist

This setup is in use with Redis. If you use Redis ensure that limits are set:

maxmemory 10mb
maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru

This will limit the cache to 10MB and removes the least recently used keys from the cache.

Versioning

We follow semver. Major version zero (0.y.z) is for initial development. Anything MAY change at any time. The public API SHOULD NOT be considered stable (source).

Node.js support

We test this software against latest major releases of the Node.js LTS policy. Current is included to catch regression earlier.