A package to make it easier to use GraphQL and Neo4j together. neo4j-graphql-js
translates GraphQL queries to a single Cypher query, eliminating the need to write queries in GraphQL resolvers and for batching queries. It also exposes the Cypher query language through GraphQL via the @cypher
schema directive.
- Translate GraphQL queries to Cypher to simplify the process of writing GraphQL resolvers
- Allow for custom logic by overriding of any resolver function
- Work with
graphql-tools
,graphql-js
, andapollo-server
- Support GraphQL servers that need to resolve data from multiple data services/databases
- Expose the power of Cypher through GraphQL via the
@cypher
directive
neo4j-graphql-js
aims to simplify the process of building GraphQL APIs backed by Neo4j, embracing the paradigm of GraphQL First Development. Specifically,
- The Neo4j datamodel is defined by a GraphQL schema.
- Inside resolver functions, GraphQL queries are translated to Cypher queries and can be sent to a Neo4j database by including a Neo4j driver instance in the context object of the GraphQL request.
- Any resolver can be overridden by a custom resolver function implementation to allow for custom logic
- Optionally, GraphQL fields can be resolved by a user defined Cypher query through the use of the
@cypher
schema directive.
GraphQL First Development is all about starting with a well defined GraphQL schema. Here we'll use the GraphQL schema IDL syntax, compatible with graphql-tools (and other libraries) to define a simple schema:
const typeDefs = `
type Movie {
movieId: ID!
title: String
year: Int
plot: String
poster: String
imdbRating: Float
similar(first: Int = 3, offset: Int = 0): [Movie] @cypher(statement: "MATCH (this)-[:IN_GENRE]->(:Genre)<-[:IN_GENRE]-(o:Movie) RETURN o")
degree: Int @cypher(statement: "RETURN SIZE((this)-->())")
actors(first: Int = 3, offset: Int = 0): [Actor] @relation(name: "ACTED_IN", direction:IN)
}
type Actor {
id: ID!
name: String
movies: [Movie]
}
type Query {
Movie(id: ID, title: String, year: Int, imdbRating: Float, first: Int, offset: Int): [Movie]
}
`;
We define two types, Movie
and Actor
as well as a top level Query Movie
which becomes our entry point. This looks like a standard GraphQL schema, except for the use of two directives @relation
and @cypher
. In GraphQL directives allow us to annotate fields and provide an extension point for GraphQL. See GraphQL Schema Directive for an overview of all GraphQL schema directives exposed in neo4j-graphql.js
@cypher
directive - maps the specified Cypher query to the value of the field. In the Cypher query,this
is bound to the current object being resolved. See Adding Custom Logic for more information and examples of the@cypher
GraphQL schema directive.@relation
directive - used to indicate relationships in the data model. Thename
argument specifies the relationship type, anddirection
indicates the direction of the relationship (IN
for incoming relationships,OUT
for outgoing relationships, orBOTH
to match both directions). See the GraphQL Schema Design Guide for more information and examples.
Inside each resolver, use neo4j-graphql()
to generate the Cypher required to resolve the GraphQL query, passing through the query arguments, context and resolveInfo objects.
import { neo4jgraphql } from 'neo4j-graphql-js';
const resolvers = {
// entry point to GraphQL service
Query: {
Movie(object, params, ctx, resolveInfo) {
return neo4jgraphql(object, params, ctx, resolveInfo);
}
}
};
GraphQL to Cypher translation works by inspecting the GraphQL schema, the GraphQL query and arguments. For example, this simple GraphQL query
{
Movie(title: "River Runs Through It, A") {
title
year
imdbRating
}
}
is translated into the Cypher query
MATCH (movie:Movie {title:"River Runs Through It, A"})
RETURN movie { .title , .year , .imdbRating } AS movie
SKIP 0
A slightly more complicated traversal
{
Movie(title: "River Runs Through It, A") {
title
year
imdbRating
actors {
name
}
}
}
becomes
MATCH (movie:Movie {title:"River Runs Through It, A"})
RETURN movie { .title , .year , .imdbRating,
actors: [(movie)<-[ACTED_IN]-(movie_actors:Actor) | movie_actors { .name }] }
AS movie
SKIP 0
The
@cypher
directive feature has a dependency on the APOC procedure library, to enable subqueries. If you'd like to make use of the@cypher
feature you'll need to install the APOC procedure library.
GraphQL is fairly limited when it comes to expressing complex queries such as filtering, or aggregations. We expose the graph querying language Cypher through GraphQL via the @cypher
directive. Annotate a field in your schema with the @cypher
directive to map the results of that query to the annotated GraphQL field. For example:
type Movie {
movieId: ID!
title: String
year: Int
plot: String
similar(first: Int = 3, offset: Int = 0): [Movie]
@cypher(
statement: "MATCH (this)-[:IN_GENRE]->(:Genre)<-[:IN_GENRE]-(o:Movie) RETURN o ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC"
)
}
The field similar
will be resolved using the Cypher query
MATCH (this)-[:IN_GENRE]->(:Genre)<-[:IN_GENRE]-(o:Movie) RETURN o ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC
to find movies with overlapping Genres.
Querying a GraphQL field marked with a @cypher
directive executes that query as a subquery:
GraphQL:
{
Movie(title: "River Runs Through It, A") {
title
year
imdbRating
actors {
name
}
similar(first: 3) {
title
}
}
}
Cypher:
MATCH (movie:Movie {title:"River Runs Through It, A"})
RETURN movie { .title , .year , .imdbRating,
actors: [(movie)<-[ACTED_IN]-(movie_actors:Actor) | movie_actors { .name }],
similar: [ x IN apoc.cypher.runFirstColumn("
WITH {this} AS this
MATCH (this)-[:IN_GENRE]->(:Genre)<-[:IN_GENRE]-(o:Movie)
RETURN o",
{this: movie}, true) | x { .title }][..3]
} AS movie
SKIP 0
This means that the entire GraphQL request is still resolved with a single Cypher query, and thus a single round trip to the database.
Inject a Neo4j driver instance in the context of each GraphQL request and neo4j-graphql-js
will query the Neo4j database and return the results to resolve the GraphQL query.
let driver;
function context(headers, secrets) {
if (!driver) {
driver = neo4j.driver(
'bolt://localhost:7687',
neo4j.auth.basic('neo4j', 'letmein')
);
}
return { driver };
}
server.use(
'/graphql',
bodyParser.json(),
graphqlExpress(request => ({
schema,
rootValue,
context: context(request.headers, process.env)
}))
);
- Blog post: Five Common GraphQL Problems and How Neo4j-GraphQL Aims To Solve Them - Digging Into the Goals of A Neo4j-GraphQL Integration