Minimalistic and developer friendly middleware and an Upload
scalar to add support for GraphQL multipart requests (file uploads via queries and
mutations) to various Node.js GraphQL servers.
This module was forked from graphql-upload
and graphql-upload-minimal
. The original module is exceptionally well documented and well written. It was very easy to fork and amend.
I needed to support typescript to use it properly in typescript projects.
To install graphql-upload-ts
and the graphql
peer dependency from npm run:
npm install graphql-upload-ts graphql
# or
yarn add graphql-upload-ts graphql
Use the graphqlUploadKoa
or graphqlUploadExpress
middleware just before GraphQL middleware. Alternatively, use processRequest
to create a
custom middleware.
A schema built with separate SDL and resolvers (e.g. using makeExecutableSchema
) requires the Upload
scalar to be setup.
Clients implementing the GraphQL multipart request spec upload files as Upload
scalar query or mutation variables. Their resolver values are
promises that resolve file upload details for processing and storage. Files are typically streamed into cloud storage but may also be stored in the filesystem.
Minimalistic code example showing how to upload a file along with arbitrary GraphQL data and save it to an S3 bucket.
Express.js middleware. You must put it before the main GraphQL sever middleware. Also, make sure there is no other Express.js middleware which parses multipart/form-data
HTTP requests before the graphqlUploadExpress
middleware!
import express from 'express';
import { graphqlHTTP } from 'express-graphql';
import { graphqlUploadExpress } from 'graphql-upload-ts';
express()
.use(
'/graphql',
graphqlUploadExpress({
maxFileSize: 10000000,
maxFiles: 10,
}),
graphqlHTTP({ schema: require('./my-schema') })
)
.listen(3000);
GraphQL schema:
scalar Upload
input DocumentUploadInput {
docType: String!
file: Upload!
}
type SuccessResult {
success: Boolean!
message: String
}
type Mutations {
uploadDocuments(docs: [DocumentUploadInput!]!): SuccessResult
}
GraphQL resolvers:
const { S3 } = require('aws-sdk');
const resolvers = {
Upload: require('graphql-upload-ts').GraphQLUpload,
Mutations: {
async uploadDocuments(root, { docs }, ctx) {
try {
const s3 = new S3({ apiVersion: '2006-03-01', params: { Bucket: 'my-bucket' } });
for (const doc of docs) {
const { createReadStream, filename /*, fieldName, mimetype, encoding */ } = await doc.file;
const Key = `${ctx.user.id}/${doc.docType}-${filename}`;
await s3.upload({ Key, Body: createReadStream() }).promise();
}
return { success: true };
} catch (error) {
console.log('File upload failed', error);
return { success: false, message: error.message };
}
},
},
};
os.tmpdir()
.Promise.all
or a more flexible solution such as Promise.allSettled
where an error in one does not reject them all.createReadStream
before the resolver returns; late calls (e.g. in an unawaited async function or callback) throw an error. Existing streams can still be used after a response is sent, although there are few valid reasons for not awaiting their completion.stream.destroy()
when an incomplete stream is no longer needed, or temporary files may not get cleaned up.overrideSendResponse
eg: graphqlUploadExpress({ overrideSendResponse: false })
to allow nestjs to handle response errors like throwing exceptions.The GraphQL multipart request spec allows a file to be used for multiple query or mutation variables (file deduplication), and for variables to be used in multiple places. GraphQL resolvers need to be able to manage independent file streams. As resolvers are executed asynchronously, it’s possible they will try to process files in a different order than received in the multipart request.
busboy
parses multipart request streams. Once the operations
and map
fields have been parsed, Upload
scalar values in the GraphQL operations are populated with promises, and the operations are passed down the middleware chain to GraphQL resolvers.
fs-capacitor
is used to buffer file uploads to the filesystem and coordinate simultaneous reading and writing. As soon as a file upload’s contents begins streaming, its data begins buffering to the filesystem and its associated promise resolves. GraphQL resolvers can then create new streams from the buffer by calling the function createReadStream
. The buffer is destroyed once all streams have ended or closed and the server has responded to the request. Any remaining buffer files will be cleaned when the process exits.
busboy
parses multipart request streams. Once the operations
and map
fields have been parsed, Upload
scalar values in the GraphQL operations are populated with promises, and the
operations are passed down the middleware chain to GraphQL resolvers.
The following environments are known to be compatible:
See also GraphQL multipart request spec server implementations.