This Postgraphile plugin allows you to enable mutation atomicity with GraphQL requests containing multiple mutations.
It's ideal if you would like to have client request repeatability when at least
one mutation in the GraphQL request fails. This would guarantee that either all
the mutations in the request are committed
when successful, or all are
rolled back
if at least one is erroneous.
yarn add postgraphile-plugin-atomic-mutations
npm install postgraphile-plugin-atomic-mutations
import {
AtomicMutationsPlugin,
getMutationAtomicityContext,
} from 'postgraphile-plugin-atomic-mutations';
const app = express();
app.use(
postgraphile(pgConfig, schema, {
// Append the plugin to the array.
appendPlugins: [AtomicMutationsPlugin],
async additionalGraphQLContextFromRequest(req, res) {
return {
// Additional context needed by the plugin
mutationAtomicityContext: getMutationAtomicityContext(req),
};
},
}),
);
app.listen(5000);
const getMutationAtomicityContext = (
req,
enablePluginByDefault = false,
): MutationAtomicityContext;
This function will extract the HTTP headers from the req
object passed as the
1st argument to determine if the mutation atomicity behavior will be enabled or
not. See Usage from Client for more details.
The 2nd argument enablePluginByDefault
will determine plugin behavior when the
HTTP header is not set (defaults to false
).
The plugin allows the client to decide when the mutation atomicity should be
applied per GraphQL request, using a custom HTTP header
'X-Mutation-Atomicity'
, which can be set to either 'on'
or 'off'
.
mutation MultipleMutationOperation {
# Mutation 1 - Successful
createTenant(input: {tenant: {name: "New Tenant"}}) {
tenant {
id
}
}
# Mutation 2 - Erroneous
updateTenant(input: {patch: {name: "Updated Tenant Name"}, id: "dd0f6631-3905-4cc0-bc75-6c7b1dcafa89"}) {
tenant {
name
}
}
# Mutation 3 - Successful
deleteTenant(input: {id: "761aa030-6965-4cfe-90cf-00d2dec41c61"}) {
tenant {
name
}
}
}
In the above example of a multiple mutation request, if we didn't use the plugin
at all, the outcome would be that Mutations #1
& #3
will be committed to the
database, while #2
will be rolled back due to its hypothetical error. But if
the same request is sent again from the client, there will be new exceptions
caused by mutations #1
& #3
(possibly for duplicate key violation, and no
matching criteria).
Now instead if we use the plugin, and the same request is made with the
'X-Mutation-Atomicity: on'
HTTP header set by the client, the Mutations #1
&
#3
will never be committed to the database since Mutation #2
caused an
error, thus, guaranteeing atomicity for the set of Mutations. If the client
decides to re-run the same request again, the outcome will be the same.
-
If there already exists plugins which are used in postgraphile options,
AtomicMutationsPlugin
must be appended after them - i.e.appendPlugins: [SomePlugin, AnotherPlugin, AtomicMutationsPlugin]
. -
As with any transaction management mechanism, the individual mutations must not contain any explicit
commit
orrollback
commands. -
Postgraphile v4 has an experimental feature enableQueryBatching which is currently not supported by the plugin.
- Improve tests to have more code coverage.
This project uses yarn
as the package manager, so make sure that pre-requisite
is installed.
npm install -g yarn
Then clone
& run yarn