NAME
GraphQL::Client - A GraphQL client
VERSION
version 0.600
SYNOPSIS
my $graphql = GraphQL::Client->new(url => 'http://localhost:4000/graphql');
# Example: Hello world!
my $response = $graphql->execute('{hello}');
# Example: Kitchen sink
my $query = q[
query GetHuman {
human(id: $human_id) {
name
height
}
}
];
my $variables = {
human_id => 1000,
};
my $operation_name = 'GetHuman';
my $transport_options = {
headers => {
authorization => 'Bearer s3cr3t',
},
};
my $response = $graphql->execute($query, $variables, $operation_name, $transport_options);
# Example: Asynchronous with Mojo::UserAgent (promisify requires Future::Mojo)
my $ua = Mojo::UserAgent->new;
my $graphql = GraphQL::Client->new(ua => $ua, url => 'http://localhost:4000/graphql');
my $future = $graphql->execute('{hello}');
$future->promisify->then(sub {
my $response = shift;
...
});
DESCRIPTION
GraphQL::Client
provides a simple way to execute GraphQL queries and mutations on a server.
This module is the programmatic interface. There is also a graphql.
GraphQL servers are usually served over HTTP. The provided transport, GraphQL::Client::http, lets you plug in your own user agent, so this client works naturally with HTTP::Tiny, Mojo::UserAgent, and more. You can also use HTTP::AnyUA middleware.
ATTRIBUTES
url
The URL of a GraphQL endpoint, e.g. "http://myapiserver/graphql"
.
class
The package name of a transport.
By default this is automatically determined from the protocol portion of the "url".
transport
The transport object.
By default this is automatically constructed based on the "class".
unpack
Whether or not to "unpack" the response, which enables a different style for error-handling.
Default is 0.
See "ERROR HANDLING".
METHODS
new
$graphql = GraphQL::Client->new(%attributes);
Construct a new client.
execute
$response = $graphql->execute($query);
$response = $graphql->execute($query, \%variables);
$response = $graphql->execute($query, \%variables, $operation_name);
$response = $graphql->execute($query, \%variables, $operation_name, \%transport_options);
$response = $graphql->execute($query, \%variables, \%transport_options);
Execute a request on a GraphQL server, and get a response.
By default, the response will either be a hashref with the following structure or a Future that resolves to such a hashref, depending on the transport and how it is configured.
{
data => {
field1 => {...}, # or [...]
...
},
errors => [
{ message => 'some error message blah blah blah' },
...
],
}
Note: Setting the "unpack" attribute affects the response shape.
ERROR HANDLING
There are two different styles for handling errors.
If "unpack" is 0 (off), every response -- whether success or failure -- is enveloped like this:
{
data => {...},
errors => [...],
}
where data
might be missing or undef if errors occurred (though not necessarily) and errors
will be missing if the response completed without error.
It is up to you to check for errors in the response, so your code might look like this:
my $response = $graphql->execute(...);
if (my $errors = $response->{errors}) {
# handle $errors
}
else {
my $data = $response->{data};
# do something with $data
}
If unpack
is 1 (on), then "execute" will return just the data if there were no errors, otherwise it will throw an exception. So your code would instead look like this:
my $data = eval { $graphql->execute(...) };
if (my $error = $@) {
# handle errors
}
else {
# do something with $data
}
Or if you want to handle errors in a different stack frame, your code is simply this:
my $data = $graphql->execute(...);
# do something with $data
Both styles map to Future responses intuitively. If unpack
is 0, the response always resolves to the envelope structure. If unpack
is 1, successful responses will resolve to just the data and errors will fail/reject.
SEE ALSO
graphql - CLI program
GraphQL - Perl implementation of a GraphQL server
https://graphql.org/ - GraphQL project website
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://github.com/chazmcgarvey/graphql-client/issues
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
AUTHOR
Charles McGarvey <chazmcgarvey@brokenzipper.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2020 by Charles McGarvey.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.