Skip to content

A GraphQL JVM Client - Java, Kotlin, Scala, etc.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

nimmadi/nodes

 
 

Repository files navigation

Nodes

A GraphQL JVM Client - Java, Kotlin, Scala, etc.

Build Status Coverage Status Download

Nodes is a GraphQL client designed for constructing queries from standard model definitions. Making this library suitable for any JVM application that wishes to interface with a GraphQL service in a familiar way - a simple, flexible, compatible, adoptable, understandable library for everyone!

The Nodes library is intended to be used in a similar fashion to other popular API interfaces so that application architecture can remain unchanged whether interfacing with a REST, SOAP, GraphQL, or any other API specification. A request entity is built for handling request specific parameters; a template is used for executing that request and mapping the response to a response entity; a response entity is used to gather the results.

Installing

Currently the library is hosted on bintray. This can be added to your installation repositories as demonstrated below.

Maven

<repositories>
    <repository>
        <id>bintray-americanexpress-maven</id>
        <url>https://dl.bintray.com/americanexpress/maven</url>
    </repository>
</repositories>

<dependencies>
    <dependency>
      <groupId>io.aexp.nodes.graphql</groupId>
      <artifactId>nodes</artifactId>
      <version>latest</version>
    </dependency>
</dependencies>

Gradle

repositories {
    maven {
        url 'https://dl.bintray.com/americanexpress/maven/'
    }
}

dependencies {
    compile 'io.aexp.nodes.graphql:nodes:latest'
}

Replace latest with the desired version to install. The versions available for installing can be found in the git tags, using semantic versioning.

Usage

GraphQLTemplate graphQLTemplate = new GraphQLTemplate();

GraphQLRequestEntity requestEntity = GraphQLRequestEntity.Builder()
    .url("http://graphql.example.com/graphql");
    .variables(new Variable("timeFormat", "MM/dd/yyyy"))
    .arguments(new Arguments("path.to.argument.property",
        new Argument("id", "d070633a9f9")))
    .scalars(BigDecimal.class)
    .request(SampleModel.class)
    .build();
GraphQLResponseEntity<SampleModel> responseEntity = graphQLTemplate.query(requestEntity, SampleModel.class);

Annotations to configure fields

@GraphQLArgument(name="name", value="defaultVal", type="String")

Used above property fields
name (required): GraphQL argument name
value (optional): default value to set the argument to
type (optional): how to parse the optional value. Accepts an enum of "String", "Boolean", "Integer", or "Float" - defaults to be parsed as a string.
You can specify fields arguments directly inline using this. This is good for static field arguments such as result display settings, for instance the format of a date or the locale of a message.

example:

    ...
    @GraphQLArgument(name="isPublic", value="true", type="Boolean")
    private User user;
    ...

result:

query {
    ...
    user(isPublic: true) {
        ...

@GraphQLArguments({@GraphQLArgument})

Used above property fields
Annotation for allowing mutliple default argument descriptions on one field

example:

    ...
    @GraphQLArguments({
        @GraphQLArgument(name="isPublic", value="true", type="Boolean"),
        @GraphQLArgument(name="username")
    })
    private User user;
    ...

result:

query {
    ...
    user(isPublic: true, username: null) {
        ...

@GraphQLIgnore

Used above property fields
Annotation to ignore the field when constructing the schema

example:

    ...
    @GraphQLIgnore
    private User user;
    ...

result:

query {
    ...

@GraphQLProperty(name="name", arguments={@GraphQLArgument(...)})

Used above property and class fields
name (required): GraphQL schema field name, the property's field name will be used as the alias
arguments (optional): arguments for the specified graphQL schema.
When used above property fields the annotation simply aliases that field, but when used above class fields it will replace the defined class name.

example:

    ...
    @GraphQLProperty(name="myFavoriteUser", arguments={
        @GraphQLArgument(name="username", value="amex")
    })
    private User user;
    ...

result:

query {
    ...
    myFavoriteUser: user(username: "amex") {
        ...

@GraphQLVariable(name="name", scalar="Float!")

Used above property fields
name (required): GraphQL variable name
type (required): GraphQL scalar type. Including optional and required parsing (!)
This is good for sharing the same variables across multiple input parameters in a query.

example:

    ...
    @GraphQLVariable(name="isPublic", scalar="Boolean")
    private User user;
    ...

result:

query($isPublic: Boolean) {
    ...
    user(isPublic: $isPublic) {
        ...

@GraphQLVariables({@GraphQLVariable})

Used above property fields
Annotation for allowing mutliple variables for a given field.

example:

    ...
    GraphQLVariables({
        @GraphQLVariable(name="isPublic", scalar="Boolean"),
        @GraphQLVariable(name="username", scalar="String!")
    })
    private User user;
    ...

result:

query($isPublic: Boolean, $username: String!) {
    ...
    user(isPublic: $isPublic, username: $username) {
        ...

Terminology

All language found in this library is aimed to align with the language used in the GraphQL specification. An example of this is GraphQL vs GraphQl, where in this library the GraphQL specification is favored over the Java standard.


Contributing

We welcome Your interest in the American Express Open Source Community on Github. Any Contributor to any Open Source Project managed by the American Express Open Source Community must accept and sign an Agreement indicating agreement to the terms below. Except for the rights granted in this Agreement to American Express and to recipients of software distributed by American Express, You reserve all right, title, and interest, if any, in and to Your Contributions. Please fill out the Agreement.

Please feel free to open pull requests and see CONTRIBUTING.md for commit formatting details.

License

Any contributions made under this project will be governed by the Apache License 2.0.

Code of Conduct

This project adheres to the American Express Community Guidelines. By participating, you are expected to honor these guidelines.

About

A GraphQL JVM Client - Java, Kotlin, Scala, etc.

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 100.0%