Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Jul 6, 2022. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
113 lines (86 loc) · 4.1 KB

Mapping with conditional logic.md

File metadata and controls

113 lines (86 loc) · 4.1 KB

Mapping to GraphQL operations using conditional logic

GraphQL2REST allows you to use conditional logic clauses on the request parameters to determine whether a GraphQL operation mapped to a REST API route should be invoked.

The condition is tested on the aggregate of all request parameters (path, query and body), and is expressed using MongoDB query language query operators.

In the most common use case, we would like to map a single REST endpoint to two (or more) GraphQL operations but only invoke one of them based on the value or existence of a parameter (or field) in the payload.

To create such a decision tree, use an array of operations instead of one operation field in the endpoints section of the manifest.

Use the condition property to specify a condition on the request parameters object. The associated GraphQL operation will be invoked only if the condition is evaluated TRUE.

The general format of the condition is:

condition: { [condition to test] (in MongoDB query language) }

Specifically:

condition: { [parameter_name] : { [condition_test_on_the_parameter_value] } }

Where parameter_name is any parameter from the body, query or path params, and condition_test_on_the_parameter_value is expressed with MongoDB query operators.


Example:

Assume we want to add a GET /datasets endpoint, and map it to a corresponding GraphQL operation.

Consider these two GraphQL queries defined in the schema:

type Query {
	listDatasetsLegacy(): [OldDataset]!
	listDatasets: [Dataset]!
}

The first one is a legacy query, which we want to call if the user provides a query parameter "type" which has the values "old" or "v1". However, if the "type" parameter equals to "v2" or "new", listDatasets() should be called. Only one query should be invoked per REST call.

Example

"/datasets": {
	"get": {
		"operations": [{
				"operation": "listDatasetsLegacy",
				"condition": {
					"type": {
						"$in": ["old", "v1"]
					}
				}
			},
			{
				"operation": "listDatasets",
				"condition": {
					"type": {
						"$in": ["new", "v2"]
					}
				}
			}
		]
	}
}

This way, GET /datasets?type=old will invoke listDatasetsLegacy() and GET /datasets?type=new will invoke listDatasets(). In this case only one query will be invoked.

How logical evaluation works

Operations in the operations[] array are inspected sequentially in the order they are specified in the manifest file. Each operation with a condition is evaluated, and invoked if the condition is true. This means that multiple operations can be invoked one after another. If you wish to invoke only one GraphQL operation, make sure that there are mutually exclusive conditions on each of the operations in the array (so only one can be evaluated TRUE per REST API call).

In the example below, we use a mutually exclusive condition (on the existence of a parameter) to select the right GraphQL operation. Executing GET /documents will list all documents by calling the listAllDocuments() GraphQL query, while GET /documents?title=myTitle will invoke the getDocumentByTitle() query with the title argument "myTitle", thereby getting only a single document by its title.

This way we are able to keep our API fully RESTful where we have a single endpoint for the "documents" resource, and the GET /documents endpoint performs all document-related read-only operations.

"/documents": {
  	"get": {
  		"operations": [{         
  				"operation": "getDocumentByTitle", 
  				"condition": {  
  					"title": {
  						"$exists": true
  					}
  				}
  			},
  			{
  				"operation": "listAllDocuments",
  				"condition": {
  					"title": {
  						"$exists": false
  					}
  				}
  			}
  		]
  	}
  }

Next: read about using middleware functions on the request or jump to the pre-processing step.



[Back to the tutorial]