This is an adminjs adapter integrating GraphQL endpoints into adminjs.
Installation: npm add adminjs-graphql
.
This adapter lets you define AdminJS resources in terms of GraphQL queries and mutations.
Also, the adapter exposes the GraphQL connection, making it possible to do direct calls to the remote API from actions, et.c.
Register the adapter using the standard AdminJS.registerAdapter
method, then map each resource to GraphQL queries and mutations. Don't forget to initialize the connection before passing it to the AdminJS
constructor.
During initialization, the adapter will pull schema information from the GraphQL endpoint, and populate the resource properties.
You can either pass the whole GraphQLConnection
as a database to adminjs, or pass each resource individually using the connection's resources
map.
See the example below for basic usage using the Koa AdminJS router.
This convoluted example is a lucky example, since the GraphQL endpoint happens to match the filtering and pagination parameters passed by the adapter. In real situations, there will be more going on in the mapping implementation.
The only required operations to implement are count
, find
and findOne
. It's assumed that find
and findOne
return objects of the same shape.
You might want to build your own utility toolset to simplify the adaption of you GraphQL API. See src/builder for an example of such a toolset.
With context
being an ActionContext:
const graphQLResource = context.resource as GraphQLResourceAdapter;
const connection = graphQLResource.rawResource.connection;
const mutation = `
mutation ($answer: Int!) {
setAnswer(answer: $answer)
}`;
const response = await connection.request(mutation, {
answer: 42,
});
import AdminJS, { BaseRecord } from "adminjs";
import Koa from "koa";
import { buildRouter } from "@adminjs/koa";
import gql from "graphql-tag";
import {
FieldFilter,
FindOptions,
GraphQLAdapter,
GraphQLConnection,
} from "adminjs-graphql";
AdminJS.registerAdapter(GraphQLAdapter);
const connection = new GraphQLConnection(
[
{
id: "Thing",
count: (filter: FieldFilter[]) => ({
query: gql`
query ($filter: [FilterInput!]) {
thingCount(filter: $filter)
}
`,
variables: {
filter,
},
parseResult(result: Record<string, number>) {
return result.thingCount;
},
}),
find: (filter: FieldFilter[], options: FindOptions) => ({
query: gql`
query ($filter: [FilterInput!], $offset: Int, $limit: Int) {
things(
filter: $filter
offset: $offset
limit: $limit
) {
ID
name
}
}
`,
variables: {
filter,
offset: options.offset,
limit: options.limit,
},
parseResult(
result: Record<string, BaseRecord[]>
): BaseRecord[] {
return result.things;
},
}),
findOne: (ID: string | number) => ({
query: gql`
query ($ID: ID!) {
thing(ID: $ID) {
ID
name
}
}
`,
variables: {
ID,
},
parseResult(result: Record<string, BaseRecord | null>) {
return result.thing;
},
}),
sortableFields: ["name"],
},
],
{ name: "My stuff", url: "http://localhost:3000/graphql" },
(error: Error) => console.log(error)
);
connection
.init()
.then(() => {
const app = new Koa();
const admin = new AdminJS({
resources: [
{
resource: connection.r.Thing,
options: {
editProperties: ["name"],
listProperties: ["ID", "name"],
},
},
],
rootPath: "/admin",
});
const router = buildRouter(admin, app);
app.use(router.routes());
app.listen(3001);
})
.catch((err: Error) => {
console.log(err.message);
});