This improves `parseJSONPath` and `encodeJSONPath` to encode special characters appropriately by delegating to Aeson.
This also makes a couple of improvements to `encodeJSONPath`.
1. The function is moved from `Hasura.Base.Error` to `Data.Parser.JSONPath`. This still doesn't seem too appropriate but it is somewhat better. I am basing this on the fact that its test cases already lived in `Data.Parser.JSONPathSpec`.
2. It now returns `Text`, not `String`.
4. It quotes strings with double quotes (`"`) rather than single quotes (`'`), just like JSON.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4935
GitOrigin-RevId: bf44353cd740500245f2e38907a7d6263ae0291c
(Work here originally done by awjchen, rebased and fixed up for merge by
jberryman)
This is part of a merge train towards GHC 9.2 compatibility. The main
issue is the use of the new abstract `KeyMap` in 2.0. See:
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/aeson-2.0.3.0/changelog
Alex's original work is here:
#4305
BEHAVIOR CHANGE NOTE: This change causes a different arbitrary ordering
of serialized Json, for example during metadata export. CLI users care
about this in particular, and so we need to call it out as a _behavior
change_ as we did in v2.5.0. The good news though is that after this
change ordering should be more stable (alphabetical key order).
See: https://hasurahq.slack.com/archives/C01M20G1YRW/p1654012632634389
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4611
Co-authored-by: awjchen <13142944+awjchen@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 700265162c782739b2bb88300ee3cda3819b2e87
### Description
Tests are not run the same way locally and on CI, which means that tests that work on CI can fail locally. In this case, the setup for each test is creating and dropping a table named `author`; a lot of the tests were also creating a table named `author` in source `pg1`. If `pg1` is the same as the default source, which is the case locally, then all of those tests fail, while the tests that use a default `pg1` such as CI would succeed.
This PR fixes this by renaming `author` to `author_local` where appropriate.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2982
GitOrigin-RevId: 5bc0149bc5f6cb27de9864afaded8af071ade454
The materialized views cannot be mutated, so this commit removes the option to run mutation on the materialized views via graphql endpoint. Before this, users could have tried running mutation for the materialized views using the graphql endpoint (or from HGE console), which would have resulted in the following error:
``` JSON
{
"errors": [
{
"extensions": {
"internal": {
"statement": "WITH \"articles_mat_view__mutation_result_alias\" AS (DELETE FROM \"public\".\"articles_mat_view\" WHERE (('true') AND (((((\"public\".\"articles_mat_view\".\"id\") = (('20155721-961c-4d8b-a5c4-873ed62c7a61')::uuid)) AND ('true')) AND ('true')) AND ('true'))) RETURNING * ), \"articles_mat_view__all_columns_alias\" AS (SELECT \"id\" , \"author_id\" , \"content\" , \"test_col\" , \"test_col2\" FROM \"articles_mat_view__mutation_result_alias\" ) SELECT json_build_object('affected_rows', (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM \"articles_mat_view__all_columns_alias\" ) ) ",
"prepared": false,
"error": {
"exec_status": "FatalError",
"hint": null,
"message": "cannot change materialized view \"articles_mat_view\"",
"status_code": "42809",
"description": null
},
"arguments": []
},
"path": "$",
"code": "unexpected"
},
"message": "database query error"
}
]
}
```
So, we don't want to generate the mutation fields for the materialized views altogether.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2226
GitOrigin-RevId: 4ef441764035a8039e1c780d454569ee1f2febc3
When adding object relationships, we set the nullability of the generated GraphQL field based on whether the database backend enforces that the referenced data always exists. For manual relationships (corresponding to `manual_configuration`), the database backend is unaware of any relationship between data, and hence such fields are always set to be nullable.
For relationships generated from foreign key constraints (corresponding to `foreign_key_constraint_on`), we distinguish between two cases:
1. The "forward" object relationship from a referencing table (i.e. which has the foreign key constraint) to a referenced table. This should be set to be non-nullable when all referencing columns are non-nullable. But in fact, it used to set it to be non-nullable if *any* referencing column is non-nullable, which is only correct in Postgres when `MATCH FULL` is set (a flag we don't consider). This fixes that by changing a boolean conjunction to a disjunction.
2. The "reverse" object relationship from a referenced table to a referencing table which has the foreign key constraint. This should always be set to be nullable. But in fact, it used to always be set to non-nullable, as was reported in hasura/graphql-engine#7201. This fixes that.
Moreover, we have moved the computation of the nullability from `Hasura.RQL.DDL.Relationship` to `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema.Select`: this nullability used to be passed through the `riIsNullable` field of `RelInfo`, but for array relationships this information is not actually used, and moreover the remaining fields of `RelInfo` are already enough to deduce the nullability.
This also adds regression tests for both (1) and (2) above.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2159
GitOrigin-RevId: 617f12765614f49746d18d3368f41dfae2f3e6ca
This claws back ~7min from integration tests (run serially, as with `dev.sh test --integration`
Further improvements would do well to focus on optimizing metadata operations, as `setup` dominates
GitOrigin-RevId: 76637d6fa953c2404627c4391447a05bf09355fa
Add optimistic concurrency control to the ‘replace_metadata’ call.
Prevents users from submitting out-of-date metadata to metadata-mutating APIs.
See https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/issues/472 for details.
GitOrigin-RevId: 5f220f347a3eba288a9098b01e9913ffd7e38166