mn create-app example.micronaut.micronautguide --build=gradle --lang=kotlin
Micronaut GraphQL
Learn how to use Micronaut GraphQL.
Authors: Iván López
Micronaut Version: 3.9.2
1. Getting Started
In this guide, we will create a Micronaut application written in Kotlin that uses GraphQL to expose some data.
GraphQL is a query language for APIs and a runtime for fulfilling those queries with your existing data. GraphQL provides a complete and understandable description of the data in your API, gives clients the power to ask for exactly what they need and nothing more, makes it easier to evolve APIs over time, and enables powerful developer tools.
2. What you will need
To complete this guide, you will need the following:
-
Some time on your hands
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A decent text editor or IDE
-
JDK 1.8 or greater installed with
JAVA_HOME
configured appropriately
3. Solution
We recommend that you follow the instructions in the next sections and create the application step by step. However, you can go right to the completed example.
-
Download and unzip the source
4. Writing the Application
Create an application using the Micronaut Command Line Interface or with Micronaut Launch.
If you don’t specify the --build argument, Gradle is used as the build tool. If you don’t specify the --lang argument, Java is used as the language.
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The previous command creates a Micronaut application with the default package example.micronaut
in a directory named micronautguide
.
5. GraphQL
Add the following dependency:
implementation("io.micronaut.graphql:micronaut-graphql")
By default GraphQL endpoint /graphql
is enabled so you don’t need to add any extra configuration.
5.1. Describe your schema
Create the file schema.graphqls
in src/main/resources
directory:
type Query {
bookById(id: ID): Book (1)
}
type Book { (2)
id: ID
name: String
pageCount: Int
author: Author
}
type Author { (3)
id: ID
firstName: String
lastName: String
}
1 | Declare a bookById query |
2 | Declare a Book type |
3 | Declare an Author type |
5.2. Book and Author classes
Create Book
and Author
classes that will mimic the data we want to expose:
package example.micronaut
import io.micronaut.core.annotation.Introspected
@Introspected
class Book(val id: String, val name: String, val pageCount: Int, val author: Author)
package example.micronaut
import io.micronaut.core.annotation.Introspected
@Introspected
class Author(val id: String, val firstName: String, val lastName: String)
5.3. Data repository
To keep this example simple, instead of retrieving the information from a database we will keep it in memory and just return it from there. In a real-world example you will use any external storage: relational database, SQL database, etc.
Create DbRepository
package example.micronaut
import java.util.stream.Collectors
import jakarta.inject.Singleton
@Singleton
class DbRepository {
fun findAllBooks(): List<Book> {
return books
}
fun findAllAuthors(): List<Author> {
return books.map(Book::author)
}
companion object {
private val books = listOf( (1)
Book("book-1", "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone", 223, Author("author-1", "Joanne", "Rowling")),
Book("book-2", "Moby Dick", 635, Author("author-2", "Herman", "Melville")),
Book("book-3", "Interview with the vampire", 371, Author("author-3", "Anne", "Rice"))
)
}
}
1 | These are the only books we have in our system. |
5.4. Data Fetchers
With a Data Fetcher we bind the GraphQL schema, and our domain model and execute the appropiate queries in our datastore to retrieve the requested data.
Create class GraphQLDataFetchers
package example.micronaut
import graphql.schema.DataFetcher
import graphql.schema.DataFetchingEnvironment
import java.util.function.Predicate
import jakarta.inject.Singleton
@Singleton
class GraphQLDataFetchers(private val dbRepository: DbRepository) { (1)
fun bookByIdDataFetcher(): DataFetcher<Book> {
return DataFetcher { dataFetchingEnvironment: DataFetchingEnvironment -> (2)
val bookId: String = dataFetchingEnvironment.getArgument("id") (3)
dbRepository.findAllBooks() (4)
.firstOrNull { book: Book -> (book.id == bookId) }
}
}
fun authorDataFetcher(): DataFetcher<Author> {
return DataFetcher { dataFetchingEnvironment: DataFetchingEnvironment ->
val book: Book = dataFetchingEnvironment.getSource() (5)
val authorBook: Author = book.author (6)
dbRepository.findAllAuthors() (7)
.firstOrNull {author: Author -> (author.id == authorBook.id) }
}
}
}
1 | Constructor injection for the DbRepository bean |
2 | Return a GraphQL dataFetchingEnvironment with the information about the query |
3 | Get the id parameter from the query |
4 | Access the repository to find the book. Remember that this should be backed by a real datastore |
5 | Get the Book related to a specific author |
6 | Get the Author |
7 | Access the repository to find the Author. |
5.5. Factory
Create the following factory that will bind the GraphQL schema to the code and types.
package example.micronaut
import graphql.GraphQL
import graphql.schema.GraphQLSchema
import graphql.schema.idl.RuntimeWiring
import graphql.schema.idl.SchemaGenerator
import graphql.schema.idl.SchemaParser
import graphql.schema.idl.TypeDefinitionRegistry
import graphql.schema.idl.TypeRuntimeWiring
import io.micronaut.context.annotation.Bean
import io.micronaut.context.annotation.Factory
import io.micronaut.core.io.ResourceResolver
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory
import java.io.BufferedReader
import java.io.InputStreamReader
import jakarta.inject.Singleton
@Factory (1)
class GraphQLFactory {
@Bean
@Singleton
fun graphQL(resourceResolver: ResourceResolver, graphQLDataFetchers: GraphQLDataFetchers): GraphQL {
val schemaParser = SchemaParser() (2)
val typeRegistry = TypeDefinitionRegistry()
val graphqlSchema = resourceResolver.getResourceAsStream("classpath:schema.graphqls") (3)
return if (graphqlSchema.isPresent) {
typeRegistry.merge(schemaParser.parse(BufferedReader(InputStreamReader(graphqlSchema.get())))) (4)
val runtimeWiring = RuntimeWiring.newRuntimeWiring() (5)
.type(TypeRuntimeWiring.newTypeWiring("Query")
.dataFetcher("bookById", graphQLDataFetchers.bookByIdDataFetcher())) (6)
.type(TypeRuntimeWiring.newTypeWiring("Book")
.dataFetcher("author", graphQLDataFetchers.authorDataFetcher())) (7)
.build()
val schemaGenerator = SchemaGenerator()
val graphQLSchema = schemaGenerator.makeExecutableSchema(typeRegistry, runtimeWiring) (8)
GraphQL.newGraphQL(graphQLSchema).build() (9)
} else {
LOG.debug("No GraphQL services found, returning empty schema")
GraphQL.Builder(GraphQLSchema.newSchema().build()).build()
}
}
companion object {
private val LOG = LoggerFactory.getLogger(GraphQLFactory::class.java)
}
}
1 | Annotate the class with @Factory so the Micronaut framework knows that this class will create beans |
2 | Create a new SchemaParser |
3 | Get the previously created schema.graphqls file from the classpath |
4 | Parse the schema |
5 | Create the runtime wiring |
6 | Bind a data fetcher for the bookById query |
7 | Bind a data fetcher to retrieve the author related to a book |
8 | Create the executable schema |
9 | Return the GraphQL bean |
6. Running the Application
To run the application, use the ./gradlew run
command, which starts the application on port 8080.
We want to execute a GraphQL query to retrieve a book by its id:
query {
bookById(id:"book-1") {
name,
pageCount,
author {
firstName
lastName
},
}
}
Run the following curl request:
curl -X POST 'http://localhost:8080/graphql' \
-H 'content-type: application/json' \
--data-binary '{"query":"{ bookById(id:\"book-1\") { name, pageCount, author { firstName, lastName} } }"}'
{"data":{"bookById":{"name":"Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone","pageCount":223,"author":{"firstName":"Joanne","lastName":"Rowling"}}}}
One of the nice features about GraphQL is that the client can decide the fields, and the order they want to retrieve. Now we send the following request:
curl -X POST 'http://localhost:8080/graphql' \
-H 'content-type: application/json' \
--data-binary '{"query":"{ bookById(id:\"book-1\") { pageCount, name, id } }"}'
{"data":{"bookById":{"pageCount":223,"name":"Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone","id":"book-1"}}}
Notice that now the application only responds with pageCount
, name
and id
fields, in that order.
7. Test the application
For testing the application we will use Micronaut HTTP Client to send a POST
request to the /graphql
endpoint.
Create the following class:
package example.micronaut
import io.micronaut.core.type.Argument
import io.micronaut.http.HttpRequest
import io.micronaut.http.HttpStatus
import io.micronaut.http.client.HttpClient
import io.micronaut.http.client.annotation.Client
import io.micronaut.test.extensions.junit5.annotation.MicronautTest
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertEquals
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertNotNull
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test
import jakarta.inject.Inject
@MicronautTest
class GraphQLControllerTest(@Client("/") val client: HttpClient) { (2)
@Test
fun testGraphQLController() {
val query = "{ \"query\": \"{ bookById(id:\\\"book-1\\\") { name, pageCount, author { firstName, lastName} } }\" }"
val request: HttpRequest<String> = HttpRequest.POST("/graphql", query)
val rsp = client.toBlocking().exchange(request, Argument.of(Map::class.java))
assertEquals(HttpStatus.OK, rsp.status())
assertNotNull(rsp.body())
val bookInfo = rsp.getBody(Map::class.java).get()["data"] as Map<*, *>
val bookById = bookInfo["bookById"] as Map<*, *>?
assertEquals("Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone", bookById!!["name"])
assertEquals(223, bookById["pageCount"])
val author = bookById["author"] as Map<*, *>?
assertEquals("Joanne", author!!["firstName"])
assertEquals("Rowling", author["lastName"])
}
}
To run the tests:
./gradlew test
Then open build/reports/tests/test/index.html
in a browser to see the results.
8. GraphiQL
As an extra feature that will help you during development, you can enable GraphiQL. GraphiQL is the GraphQL integrated development environment, and it helps to execute GraphQL queries.
It should only be used for development, so it’s not enabled by default. Add the following configuration to enable it:
graphql:
graphiql:
enabled: true
Start the application again and open http://localhost:8080/graphiql in your browser. You can write your GraphQL queries with integrated auto-completion and execute them to get the results in an easier and nicer way:
9. Generate a Micronaut Application Native Executable with GraalVM
We will use GraalVM, the polyglot embeddable virtual machine, to generate a native executable of our Micronaut application.
Compiling native executables ahead of time with GraalVM improves startup time and reduces the memory footprint of JVM-based applications.
Only Java and Kotlin projects support using GraalVM’s native-image tool. Groovy relies heavily on reflection, which is only partially supported by GraalVM.
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9.1. Native executable generation
The easiest way to install GraalVM on Linux or Mac is to use SDKMan.io.
sdk install java 22.3.r11-grl
If you still use Java 8, use the JDK11 version of GraalVM. |
sdk install java 22.3.r17-grl
For installation on Windows, or for manual installation on Linux or Mac, see the GraalVM Getting Started documentation.
After installing GraalVM, install the native-image
component, which is not installed by default:
gu install native-image
To generate a native executable using Gradle, run:
./gradlew nativeCompile
The native executable is created in build/native/nativeCompile
directory and can be run with build/native/nativeCompile/micronautguide
.
It is possible to customize the name of the native executable or pass additional parameters to GraalVM:
graalvmNative {
binaries {
main {
imageName.set('mn-graalvm-application') (1)
buildArgs.add('--verbose') (2)
}
}
}
1 | The native executable name will now be mn-graalvm-application |
2 | It is possible to pass extra arguments to build the native executable |
Start the native executable and execute the same curl request as before. You can also use the included GraphiQL browser to execute the queries.
10. Next steps
Take a look at the Micronaut GraphQL documentation.
11. Help with the Micronaut Framework
The Micronaut Foundation sponsored the creation of this Guide. A variety of consulting and support services are available.