PHP Client for GraphQL
Via composer:
composer require softonic/graphql-client
You can instantiate a simple client or with Oauth2 support.
<?php
$client = \Softonic\GraphQL\ClientBuilder::build('https://your-domain/graphql');
This package allows you to use thephpleague/oauth2-client adapters for authentication, so the endpoint depends on the adapter that you are using. The adapter could be custom or provided by the library as official or third party.
This is an example using a custom provider.
<?php
$options = [
'clientId' => 'myclient',
'clientSecret' => 'mysecret',
];
$provider = new Softonic\OAuth2\Client\Provider\Softonic($options);
$config = ['grant_type' => 'client_credentials', 'scope' => 'myscope'];
$cache = new \Symfony\Component\Cache\Adapter\FilesystemAdapter();
$client = \Softonic\GraphQL\ClientBuilder::buildWithOAuth2Provider(
'https://your-domain/graphql',
$provider,
$config,
$cache
);
You can use the client to execute queries and mutations and get the results.
<?php
/**
* Query Example
*/
$query = <<<'QUERY'
query GetFooBar($idFoo: String, $idBar: String) {
foo(id: $idFoo) {
id_foo
bar (id: $idBar) {
id_bar
}
}
}
QUERY;
$variables = [
'idFoo' => 'foo',
'idBar' => 'bar',
];
/** @var \Softonic\GraphQL\Client $client */
$response = $client->query($query, $variables);
if($response->hasErrors()) {
// Returns an array with all the errors found.
$response->getErrors();
}
else {
// Returns an array with all the data returned by the GraphQL server.
$response->getData();
}
/**
* Mutation Example
*/
$mutation = <<<'MUTATION'
mutation ($foo: ObjectInput!){
CreateObjectMutation (object: $foo) {
status
}
}
MUTATION;
$variables = [
'foo' => [
'id_foo' => 'foo',
'bar' => [
'id_bar' => 'bar'
]
]
];
/** @var \Softonic\GraphQL\Client $client */
$response = $client->query($mutation, $variables);
if($response->hasErrors()) {
// Returns an array with all the errors found.
$response->getErrors();
}
else {
// Returns an array with all the data returned by the GraphQL server.
$response->getData();
}
In the previous examples, the client is used to execute queries and mutations. The response object is used to get the results in array format.
This can be convenient for simple use cases, but it is not recommended for complex results or when you need to use that output to generate mutations. For this reason, the client provides another output called data objects. Those objects allow you to get the results in a more convenient format, allowing you to generate mutations, apply filters, etc.
The query result can be obtained as an object which will provide facilities to convert it to a mutation and modify the data easily. At the end, the mutation object will be able to be used as the variables of the mutation query in the GraphQL client.
First we execute a "read" query and obtain the result as an object compound of Items and Collections.
$response = $client->query($query, $variables);
$data = $response->getDataObject();
/**
* $data = new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_author' => 1234,
* 'genre' => 'adventure',
* 'chapters' => new QueryCollection([
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 1,
* 'name' => 'Chapter One',
* 'pov' => 'first person',
* 'pages' => new QueryCollection([]),
* ]),
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'name' => 'Chapter two',
* 'pov' => 'third person',
* 'pages' => new QueryCollection([
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 1,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 2,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]);
*/
We can also filter the results in order to work with fewer data later. The filter method returns a new object with the filtered results, so you need to reassign the object to the original one, if you want to modify it.
$data->chapters = $data->chapters->filter(['pov' => 'third person']);
/**
* $data = new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_author' => 1234,
* 'genre' => 'adventure',
* 'chapters' => new QueryCollection([
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'name' => 'Chapter two',
* 'pov' => 'third person',
* 'pages' => new QueryCollection([
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 1,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* new QueryItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 2,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]);
*/
Then we can generate the mutation variables object from the previous query results. This is build using a mutation config. The config for each type has the following parameters:
$mutationConfig = [
'book' => [
'linksTo' => '.',
'type' => MutationItem::class,
'children' => [
'chapters' => [
'type' => MutationItem::class,
'children' => [
'upsert' => [
'linksTo' => '.chapters',
'type' => MutationCollection::class,
'children' => [
'pages' => [
'type' => MutationItem::class,
'children' => [
'upsert' => [
'linksTo' => '.chapters.pages',
'type' => MutationCollection::class,
],
],
],
],
],
],
],
],
],
];
$mutation = Mutation::build($mutationConfig, $data);
/**
* $mutation = new MutationItem([
* 'book' => new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_author' => 1234,
* 'genre' => 'adventure',
* 'chapters' => new MutationItem([
* 'upsert' => new MutationCollection([
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 1,
* 'name' => 'Chapter One',
* 'pov' => 'first person',
* 'pages' => new MutationItem([
* 'upsert' => new MutationCollection([]),
* ]),
* ]),
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'name' => 'Chapter two',
* 'pov' => 'third person',
* 'pages' => new MutationItem([
* 'upsert' => new MutationCollection([
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 1,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 2,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]);
*/
$mutation->book->chapters->upsert->filter(['id_chapter' => 2])->pages->upsert->add([
'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
'id_chapter' => 2,
'id_page' => 3,
'has_illustrations' => false,
]);
$mutation->book->chapters->upsert->pages->upsert->filter([
'id_chapter' => 2,
'id_page' => 2,
])->set(['has_illustrations' => true]);
$itemToRemove = new MutationItem([
'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
'id_chapter' => 2,
'id_page' => 1,
'has_illustrations' => false,
]);
$mutation->book->chapters->upsert->files->upsert->remove($itemToRemove);
unset($mutation->book->chapters->upsert->pov);
/**
* $mutation = new MutationItem([
* 'book' => new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_author' => 1234,
* 'genre' => 'adventure',
* 'chapters' => new MutationItem([
* 'upsert' => new MutationCollection([
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 1,
* 'name' => 'Chapter One',
* 'pages' => new MutationItem([
* 'upsert' => new MutationCollection([]),
* ]),
* ]),
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'name' => 'Chapter two',
* 'pages' => new MutationItem([
* 'upsert' => new MutationCollection([
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 2,
* 'has_illustrations' => true,
* ]),
* new MutationItem([
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 3,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]),
* ]);
*/
Finally, the modified mutation data can be passed to the GraphQL client to execute the mutation. When the query is executed, the mutation variables are encoded using json_encode(). This modifies the mutation data just returning the items changed and its parents.
$mutationQuery = <<<'QUERY'
mutation ($book: BookInput!){
ReplaceBook (book: $book) {
status
}
}
QUERY;
$client->mutate($mutationQuery, $mutation);
So the final variables sent to the query would be:
/**
* $mutation = [
* 'book' => [
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_author' => 1234,
* 'genre' => 'adventure',
* 'chapters' => [
* 'upsert' => [
* [
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'name' => 'Chapter two',
* 'pages' => [
* 'upsert' => [
* [
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 2,
* 'has_illustrations' => true,
* ],
* [
* 'id_book' => 'f7cfd732-e3d8-3642-a919-ace8c38c2c6d',
* 'id_chapter' => 2,
* 'id_page' => 3,
* 'has_illustrations' => false,
* ],
* ],
* ],
* ],
* ],
* ],
* ],
* ];
*/
NOTE 2: The example has been done for a root Item "book", but it also works for a Collection as root object.
softonic/graphql-client
has a PHPUnit test suite, and a coding style compliance test suite using PHP CS Fixer.
To run the tests, run the following command from the project folder.
$ make tests
To open a terminal in the dev environment:
$ make debug
The Apache 2.0 license. Please see LICENSE for more information.