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
* allow underscore prefix and special characters in json path
* server: Rewrite/refactor JSONPath parser
The JSONPath parser is also rewritten, the previous implementation
was written in a very explicitly “recursive descent” style, but the whole
point of using attoparsec is to be able to backtrack! Taking advantage
of the combinators makes for a much simpler parser.
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexis King <lexi.lambda@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksandra Sikora <ola.zxcvbnm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Shahidh K Muhammed <shahidh@hasura.io>
* add new optional field `claims_namespace_path` in JWT config
* return value when empty array is found in executeJSONPath
* update the docs related to claims_namespace_path
* improve encodeJSONPath, add property tests for parseJSONPath
* throw error if both claims_namespace_path and claims_namespace are set
* refactor the Data.Parser.JsonPath to Data.Parser.JSONPathSpec
* update the JWT docs
Co-Authored-By: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: rakeshkky <12475069+rakeshkky@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tirumarai Selvan <tirumarai.selvan@gmail.com>
The intention was to make this two cases, using a top-level YAML list.
The result was one test with duplicate keys (effectively only running
the second test). This is an error that's now flagged by newer ruamel.
Both tests needed to be "corrected" to pass and need review.
Examples
1) `
pytest --hge-urls "http://127.0.0.1:8080" --pg-urls "postgresql://admin@127.0.0.1:5432/hge_tests" -vv
`
2) `pytest --hge-urls "http://127.0.0.1:8080" "http://127.0.0.1:8081" --pg-urls "postgresql://admin@127.0.0.1:5432/hge_tests" "postgresql://admin@127.0.0.1:5432/hge_tests2" -vv
`
### Solution and Design
<!-- How is this issue solved/fixed? What is the design? -->
<!-- It's better if we elaborate -->
#### Reducing execution time of tests
- The Schema setup and teardown, which were earlier done per test method, usually takes around 1 sec.
- For mutations, the model has now been changed to only do schema setup and teardown once per test class.
- A data setup and teardown will be done once per test instead (usually takes ~10ms).
- For the test class to get this behaviour, one can can extend the class `DefaultTestMutations`.
- The function `dir()` should be define which returns the location of the configuration folder.
- Inside the configuration folder, there should be
- Files `<conf_dir>/schema_setup.yaml` and `<conf_dir>/schema_teardown.yaml`, which has the metadata query executed during schema setup and teardown respectively
- Files named `<conf_dir>/values_setup.yaml` and `<conf_dir>/values_teardown.yaml`. These files are executed to setup and remove data from the tables respectively.
#### Running Graphql queries on both http and websockets
- Each GraphQL query/mutation is run on the both HTTP and websocket protocols
- Pytests test parameterisation is used to achieve this
- The errors over websockets are slightly different from that on HTTP
- The code takes care of converting the errors in HTTP to errors in websockets
#### Parallel executation of tests.
- The plugin pytest-xdist helps in running tests on parallel workers.
- We are using this plugin to group tests by file and run on different workers.
- Parallel test worker processes operate on separate postgres databases(and separate graphql-engines connected to these databases). Thus tests on one worker will not affect the tests on the other worker.
- With two workers, this decreases execution times by half, as the tests on event triggers usually takes a long time, but does not consume much CPU.