Elucid: Added Insight for GraphQL.
Accelerated by OS Labs and developed by Khayal Alasgarov, Vivian Wu, Spencer Szu, and Giovanni Iacobucci.
- Extensible error detection and messaging for common graphQL issues deriving from server problems and bad queries.
Elucid can be installed as an npm package:
- Download Elucid from npm in your terminal with
npm i elucid.js
In its current form, Elucid extends express-graphql's server middleware, so you'll need your GraphQL HTTP server setup running Express (or a similar web framework that supports connect styled middleware, such as Connect or Restify) as a prerequisite. Please see the express documentation for more information on how to use the express framework.
- Currently, Elucid is in beta release and adds additional insight and status code manipulation for simple queries.
- We intend to expand support in future releases to include multiple arguments, directives, variables, mutations and subscriptions.
Here's an example of a typical server.js setup running Elucid:
const express = require('express');
const path = require('path');
const schema = require('./schema/schema');
const resolvers = require('./schema/resolvers');
const elucid = require('elucid.js');
const PORT = 3000;
const app = express();
app.use(express.json());
// Handle requests to GraphQL endpoint
app.use('/graphql', elucid({
schema,
resolvers,
graphiql: true,
pretty: true,
}));
- Notice that after installation of its npm package, the Elucid function must be imported into your server file as a required module, 'elucid.js'.
- Then, the elucid function is passed into the Express 'use' method as its second argument.
- This is very similar to how express-graphql's 'graphqlHTTP' middleware function is used. In fact, the configuration object that elucid() takes as an argument passes its values through to an invocation of graphqlHTTP. That includes the keys 'schema' and 'resolvers' (note that these evaluate to your imported GraphQL schema and resolver files), as well as the config booleans 'graphiql' and 'pretty'.
- At runtime, elucid() will kick off a sequence of events under the hood. GraphqlHTTP will process the request. If it doesn't catch an error on its own, Elucid's functionality will kick in to do its additional post-processing, which may include modifying the default response status code and returning a more detailed, useful context message in the 'elucid' property of the response object's 'extensions' property.
Interested in making a contribution to Elucid? Click for our open-source contribution guidelines.
Happy bug hunting/data fetching! Team Elucid