Adds GraphQL support to your aiohttp application.
Based on flask-graphql by Syrus Akbary and sanic-graphql by Sergey Porivaev.
Use the GraphQLView view from aiohttp_graphql
from aiohttp import web
from aiohttp_graphql import GraphQLView
from schema import schema
app = web.Application()
GraphQLView.attach(app, schema=schema, graphiql=True)
# Optional, for adding batch query support (used in Apollo-Client)
GraphQLView.attach(app, schema=schema, batch=True, route_path="/graphql/batch")
if __name__ == '__main__':
web.run_app(app)This will add /graphql endpoint to your app (customizable by passing route_path='/mypath' to GraphQLView.attach) and enable the GraphiQL IDE.
Note: GraphQLView.attach is just a convenience function, and the same functionality can be achieved with
gql_view = GraphQLView(schema=schema, graphiql=True)
app.router.add_route('*', '/graphql', gql_view, name='graphql')It's worth noting that the the "view function" of GraphQLView is contained in GraphQLView.__call__. So, when you create an instance, that instance is callable with the request object as the sole positional argument. To illustrate:
gql_view = GraphQLView(schema=Schema, **kwargs)
gql_view(request) # <-- the instance is callable and expects a `aiohttp.web.Request` object.schema: TheGraphQLSchemaobject that you want the view to execute when it gets a valid request.context: A value to pass as thecontext_valueto graphqlexecutefunction. By default is set todictwith request object at keyrequest.root_value: Theroot_valueyou want to provide to graphqlexecute.pretty: Whether or not you want the response to be pretty printed JSON.graphiql: IfTrue, may present GraphiQL when loaded directly from a browser (a useful tool for debugging and exploration).graphiql_version: The graphiql version to load. Defaults to "1.0.3".graphiql_template: Inject a Jinja template string to customize GraphiQL.graphiql_html_title: The graphiql title to display. Defaults to "GraphiQL".jinja_env: Sets jinja environment to be used to process GraphiQL template. If Jinja’s async mode is enabled (byenable_async=True), usesTemplate.render_asyncinstead ofTemplate.render. If environment is not set, fallbacks to simple regex-based renderer.batch: Set the GraphQL view as batch (for using in Apollo-Client or ReactRelayNetworkLayer)middleware: A list of graphql middlewares.max_age: Sets the response header Access-Control-Max-Age for preflight requests.encode: the encoder to use for responses (sensibly defaults tographql_server.json_encode).format_error: the error formatter to use for responses (sensibly defaults tographql_server.default_format_error.enable_async: whetherasyncmode will be enabled.subscriptions: The GraphiQL socket endpoint for using subscriptions in graphql-ws.headers: An optional GraphQL string to use as the initial displayed request headers, if not provided, the stored headers will be used.default_query: An optional GraphQL string to use when no query is provided and no stored query exists from a previous session. If not provided, GraphiQL will use its own default query.header_editor_enabled: An optional boolean which enables the header editor when true. Defaults to false.should_persist_headers: An optional boolean which enables to persist headers to storage when true. Defaults to false.
Since v3, aiohttp-graphql code lives at graphql-server repository to keep any breaking change on the base package on sync with all other integrations. In order to contribute, please take a look at CONTRIBUTING.md.
Copyright for portions of project aiohttp-graphql are held by Syrus Akbary as part of project flask-graphql and sanic-graphql as part of project Sergey Porivaev. All other claims to this project aiohttp-graphql are held by Devin Fee.
This project is licensed under the MIT License.