Minimal GraphQL client supporting Node and browsers for scripts or simple apps
cross-fetch
has been removed and a globalfetch
is now default, making DOM the target and Node secondary.- Reduces overall size of the library.
- Node can still function but will require a defined
fetch
request
and related functions' last argument is now the entireRequestInit
object rather than just its headers.- That is to simplify many patterns but especially request abortion, for example:
import { GraphQLClient } from 'graphql-request'
const client = new GraphQLClient(endpoint)
function call() {
const controller = new AbortController()
const { signal } = controller
setTimeout(() => controller.abort(), 5000) // abort in 5 seconds
return client.request(query, variables, { signal })
}
- Features
- Install
- Quickstart
- Usage
- Node Version Support
- Community
- Examples
- FAQ
- Most simple & lightweight GraphQL client
- Promise-based API (works with
async
/await
) - Typescript support
- Isomorphic (works with Node / browsers)
npm add graphql-request graphql
Send a GraphQL query with a single line of code.
import { request, gql } from 'graphql-request'
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
request('https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/movies', query).then((data) => console.log(data))
import { request, GraphQLClient } from 'graphql-request'
// Run GraphQL queries/mutations using a static function
request(endpoint, query, variables).then((data) => console.log(data))
// ... or create a GraphQL client instance to send requests
const client = new GraphQLClient(endpoint, { headers: {} })
client.request(query, variables).then((data) => console.log(data))
We only officially support LTS Node versions. We also make an effort to support two additional versions:
- The latest even Node version if it is not LTS already.
- The odd Node version directly following the latest even version.
You are free to try using other versions of Node (e.g. 13.x
) with graphql-request
but at your own risk.
A GraphQL-Codegen plugin that generates a graphql-request
ready-to-use SDK, which is fully-typed.
import { GraphQLClient, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const graphQLClient = new GraphQLClient(endpoint, {
headers: {
authorization: 'Bearer MY_TOKEN',
},
})
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const data = await graphQLClient.request(query)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
If you want to set headers after the GraphQLClient has been initialised, you can use the setHeader()
or setHeaders()
functions.
import { setHeaders, setHeader, GraphQLClient } from 'graphql-request'
const client = new GraphQLClient(endpoint)
// Set a single header
client.setHeader('authorization', 'Bearer MY_TOKEN')
// Override all existing headers
client.setHeaders({
authorization: 'Bearer MY_TOKEN',
anotherheader: 'header_value',
})
It is possible to pass custom headers for each request. request()
and rawRequest()
accept a header object as the third parameter
import { GraphQLClient } from 'graphql-request'
const client = new GraphQLClient(endpoint)
const query = gql`
query getMovie($title: String!) {
Movie(title: $title) {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const variables = {
title: 'Inception',
}
const requestHeaders = {
authorization: 'Bearer MY_TOKEN',
}
// Overrides the clients headers with the passed values
const data = await client.request(query, variables, requestHeaders)
import { GraphQLClient, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const graphQLClient = new GraphQLClient(endpoint, {
credentials: 'include',
mode: 'cors',
})
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const data = await graphQLClient.request(query)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
import { request, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const query = gql`
query getMovie($title: String!) {
Movie(title: $title) {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const variables = {
title: 'Inception',
}
const data = await request(endpoint, query, variables)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
import { GraphQLClient, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const graphQLClient = new GraphQLClient(endpoint, {
headers: {
authorization: 'Bearer MY_TOKEN',
},
})
const mutation = gql`
mutation AddMovie($title: String!, $releaseDate: Int!) {
insert_movies_one(object: { title: $title, releaseDate: $releaseDate }) {
title
releaseDate
}
}
`
const variables = {
title: 'Inception',
releaseDate: 2010,
}
const data = await graphQLClient.request(mutation, variables)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
import { request, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
fullname # "Cannot query field 'fullname' on type 'Actor'. Did you mean 'name'?"
}
}
}
`
try {
const data = await request(endpoint, query)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
} catch (error) {
console.error(JSON.stringify(error, undefined, 2))
process.exit(1)
}
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
const { request, gql } = require('graphql-request')
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const data = await request(endpoint, query)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
npm install fetch-cookie
require('fetch-cookie/node-fetch')(require('node-fetch'))
import { GraphQLClient, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const graphQLClient = new GraphQLClient(endpoint, {
headers: {
authorization: 'Bearer MY_TOKEN',
},
})
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const data = await graphQLClient.rawRequest(query)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
npm install fetch-cookie
import { GraphQLClient, gql } from 'graphql-request'
import crossFetch from 'cross-fetch'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
// a cookie jar scoped to the client object
const fetch = require('fetch-cookie')(crossFetch)
const graphQLClient = new GraphQLClient(endpoint, { fetch })
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const data = await graphQLClient.rawRequest(query)
console.log(JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
The request
method will return the data
or errors
key from the response.
If you need to access the extensions
key you can use the rawRequest
method:
import { rawRequest, gql } from 'graphql-request'
async function main() {
const endpoint = 'https://api.graph.cool/simple/v1/cixos23120m0n0173veiiwrjr'
const query = gql`
{
Movie(title: "Inception") {
releaseDate
actors {
name
}
}
}
`
const { data, errors, extensions, headers, status } = await rawRequest(endpoint, query)
console.log(JSON.stringify({ data, errors, extensions, headers, status }, undefined, 2))
}
main().catch((error) => console.error(error))
import { request } from 'graphql-request'
const UploadUserAvatar = gql`
mutation uploadUserAvatar($userId: Int!, $file: Upload!) {
updateUser(id: $userId, input: { avatar: $file })
}
`
request('/api/graphql', UploadUserAvatar, {
userId: 1,
file: document.querySelector('input#avatar').files[0],
})
import { createReadStream } from 'fs'
import { request } from 'graphql-request'
const UploadUserAvatar = gql`
mutation uploadUserAvatar($userId: Int!, $file: Upload!) {
updateUser(id: $userId, input: { avatar: $file })
}
`
request('/api/graphql', UploadUserAvatar, {
userId: 1,
file: createReadStream('./avatar.img'),
})
graphql-request
uses a TypeScript type from the graphql
package such that if you are using TypeScript to build your project and you are using graphql-request
but don't have graphql
installed TypeScript build will fail. Details here. If you are a JS user then you do not technically need to install graphql
. However if you use an IDE that picks up TS types even for JS (like VSCode) then its still in your interest to install graphql
so that you can benefit from enhanced type safety during development.
No. It is there for convenience so that you can get the tooling support like prettier formatting and IDE syntax highlighting. You can use gql
from graphql-tag
if you need it for some reason too.
graphql-request
is the most minimal and simplest to use GraphQL client. It's perfect for small scripts or simple apps.
Compared to GraphQL clients like Apollo or Relay, graphql-request
doesn't have a built-in cache and has no integrations for frontend frameworks. The goal is to keep the package and API as minimal as possible.