Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
38 lines (26 loc) · 1.32 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

38 lines (26 loc) · 1.32 KB

GitHub GraphQL Experiments

This repository accompanies an unwritten blog post

Introduction

Recently, I was writing some scripts to audit and sync a github organization with an external list of users. GitHub recently changed their API over to graphql, so I thought it would be a fun time to experiment.

The simplest way to do this with the REST api, is a trivial for loop -- for each team, fetch the team info. A trivial implementation is at fetch-team-members-v3.py.

But, this has a lot of overhead. It's a REST call per team, and each call has a bunch of extraneous data. So, can we use graphql?

As it turns out, yes. But it took me awhile to work through the pagination.

Early Experiments

FIXME: Add content here

Final Realization

Ultimately, I realized that the correct way to handle the inner pagination was something akin to recursion. Fetch as much data as we can, and for anything incomplete, come back and fill in the details. Whether this is done inline, or as a second step doesn't matter much.

This results in something much more efficient. We're able to query for most of the teams, and most of their members with a single API call. And the few that require pagination can be followed up.

Proof of concept code can be see at fetch-team-members-v4.py.