This PR pretty much does the same thing to remote relationship types in schemacache as what #2979 did to remote relationship types in the IR. On main remote relationships are represented by types of form `T from to`. This PR changes it to `T from` which makes it a lot more reusable.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3037
GitOrigin-RevId: 90a5c9e2346c8dc2da6ec5b8c970d6c863d2afb8
This PR simplifies the types that represent a remote relationship in IR so that they can be reused in other parts (in remote schema types) which could have remote relationships.
The comments on the PR explain the main changes.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2979
GitOrigin-RevId: 559c51d9d6ae79e2183ce4347018741b9096ac74
GraphQL types can refer to each other in a circular way. The PDV framework used to use values of type `Unique` to recognize two fragments of GraphQL schema as being the same instance. Internally, this is based on `Data.Unique` from the `base` package, which simply increases a counter on every creation of a `Unique` object.
**NB**: The `Unique` values are _not_ used for knot tying the schema combinators themselves (i.e. `Parser`s). The knot tying for `Parser`s is purely based on keys provided to `memoizeOn`. The `Unique` values are _only_ used to recognize two pieces of GraphQL _schema_ as being identical. Originally, the idea was that this would help us with a perfectly correct identification of GraphQL types. But this fully correct equality checking of GraphQL types was never implemented, and does not seem to be necessary to prevent bugs.
Specifically, these `Unique` values are stored as part of `data Definition a`, which specifies a part of our internal abstract syntax tree for the GraphQL types that we expose. The `Unique` values get initialized by the `SchemaT` effect.
In #2894 and #2895, we are experimenting with how (parts of) the GraphQL types can be hidden behind certain permission predicates. This would allow a single GraphQL schema in memory to serve all roles, implementing #2711. The permission predicates get evaluated at query parsing time when we know what role is doing a certain request, thus outputting the correct GraphQL types for that role.
If the approach of #2895 is followed, then the `Definition` objects, and thus the `Unique` values, would be hidden behind the permission predicates. Since the permission predicates are evaluated only after the schema is already supposed to be built, this means that the permission predicates would prevent us from initializing the `Unique` values, rendering them useless.
The simplest remedy to this is to remove our usage of `Unique` altogether from the GraphQL schema and schema combinators. It doesn't serve a functional purpose, doesn't prevent bugs, and requires extra bookkeeping.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2980
GitOrigin-RevId: 50d3f9e0b9fbf578ac49c8fc773ba64a94b1f43d
Source typename customization (hasura/graphql-engine@aac64f2c81) introduced a mechanism to change certain names in the GraphQL schema that is exposed. In particular it allows last-minute modification of:
1. the names of some types, and
2. the names of some root fields.
The above two items are assigned distinct customization algorithms, and at times both algorithms are in scope. So a need to distinguish them is needed.
In the original design, this was addressed by introducing a newtype wrapper `Typename` around GraphQL `Name`s, dedicated to the names of types. However, in the majority of the codebase, type names are also represented by `Name`. For this reason, it was unavoidable to allow for easy conversion. This was supported by a `HasName Typename` instance, as well as by publishing the constructors of `Typename`.
This means that the type safety that newtypes can add is lost. In particular, it is now very easy to confuse type name customization with root field name customization.
This refactors the above design by instead introducing newtypes around the customization operations:
```haskell
newtype MkTypename = MkTypename {runMkTypename :: Name -> Name}
deriving (Semigroup, Monoid) via (Endo Name)
newtype MkRootFieldName = MkRootFieldName {runMkRootFieldName :: Name -> Name}
deriving (Semigroup, Monoid) via (Endo Name)
```
The `Monoid` instance allows easy composition of customization operations, piggybacking off of the type of `Endo`maps.
This design allows safe co-existence of the two customization algorithms, while avoiding the syntactic overhead of packing and unpacking newtypes.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2989
GitOrigin-RevId: da3a353a9b003ee40c8d0a1e02872e99d2edd3ca
We'll see if this improves compile times at all, but I think it's worth
doing as at least the most minimal form of module documentation.
This was accomplished by first compiling everything with
-ddump-minimal-imports, and then a bunch of scripting (with help from
ormolu)
**EDIT** it doesn't seem to improve CI compile times but the noise floor is high as it looks like we're not caching library dependencies anymore
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2730
GitOrigin-RevId: 667eb8de1e0f1af70420cbec90402922b8b84cb4
<!-- Thank you for ss in the Title above ^ -->
## Description
<!-- Please fill thier. -->
<!-- Describe the changes from a user's perspective -->
We don't have dependency reporting mechanism for `mssql_run_sql` API i.e when a database object (table, column etc.) is dropped through the API we should raise an exception if any dependencies (relationships, permissions etc.) with the database object exists in the metadata.
This PR addresses the above mentioned problem by
-> Integrating transaction to the API to rollback the SQL query execution if dependencies exists and exception is thrown
-> Accepting `cascade` optional field in the API payload to drop the dependencies, if any
-> Accepting `check_metadata_consistency` optional field to bypass (if value set to `false`) the dependency check
### Related Issues
<!-- Please make surt title -->
<!-- Add the issue number below (e.g. #234) -->
Close#1853
### Solution and Design
<!-- How is this iss -->
<!-- It's better if we elaborate -->
The design/solution follows the `run_sql` API implementation for Postgres backend.
### Steps to test and verify
<!-- If this is a fehis is a bug-fix, how do we verify the fix? -->
- Create author - article tables and track them
- Defined object and array relationships
- Try to drop the article table without cascade or cascade set to `false`
- The server should raise the relationship dependency exists exception
## Changelog
- ✅ `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR.
If no changelog is required, then add the `no-changelog-required` label.
## Affected components
<!-- Remove non-affected components from the list -->
- ✅ Server
- ❎ Console
- ❎ CLI
- ❎ Docs
- ❎ Community Content
- ❎ Build System
- ✅ Tests
- ❎ Other (list it)
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2636
GitOrigin-RevId: 0ab152295394056c4ca6f02923142a1658ad25dc
>
### Description
>
Insert mutations for MSSQL backend. This PR implements execution logic.
### Changelog
- [x] `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR. If no changelog is required, then add the `no-changelog-required` label.
### Affected components
- [x] Server
- [x] Tests
### Related Issues
->
Close https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/issues/2114
### Steps to test and verify
>
Track a MSSQL table and perform the generated insert mutation to test.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2248
Co-authored-by: Abby Sassel <3883855+sassela@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Philip Lykke Carlsen <358550+plcplc@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 936f138c80d7a928180e6e7b0c4da64ecc1f7ebc
This commit applies ormolu to the whole Haskell code base by running `make format`.
For in-flight branches, simply merging changes from `main` will result in merge conflicts.
To avoid this, update your branch using the following instructions. Replace `<format-commit>`
by the hash of *this* commit.
$ git checkout my-feature-branch
$ git merge <format-commit>^ # and resolve conflicts normally
$ make format
$ git commit -a -m "reformat with ormolu"
$ git merge -s ours post-ormolu
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2404
GitOrigin-RevId: 75049f5c12f430c615eafb4c6b8e83e371e01c8e
>
### Description
>
While adding [insert mutation schema parser for MSSQL backend](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2141) I also included [identity](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_column) notion to table columns across all backends. In MSSQL we cannot insert any value (even `DEFAULT` expression) into Identity columns. This behavior of identity columns is not same in Postgres as we can insert values. This PR drops the notion of identity in the column info. The context of identity columns for MSSQL is carried in `ExtraTableMetadata` type.
### Changelog
- [x] `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR. If no changelog is required, then add the `no-changelog-required` label.
### Affected components
- [x] Server
- [ ] Console
- [ ] CLI
- [ ] Docs
- [ ] Community Content
- [ ] Build System
- [x] Tests
- [ ] Other (list it)
### Related Issues
->
Fix https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/7557https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2378
GitOrigin-RevId: c18b5708e2e6107423a0a95a7fc2e9721e8a21a1
## Description
Almost all our data structures use strictness annotations, following [our styleguide's principle](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/blob/master/server/STYLE.md#dealing-with-laziness) of "by default, use strict data types and lazy functions". The very few cases where we actually need laziness were already explicitly labelled as lazy with the `~` prefix operator.
This PR simply globally enables `StrictData`, allowing us to express records without `!()` on every field, but makes no attempt at cleaning existing code.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1869
Co-authored-by: Philip Lykke Carlsen <358550+plcplc@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: e65c6e2f89413188da250122f64c2173615946ec
>
### Description
>
Correctly alias the aggregate field projections in site instead of aliasing them later stage.
PS: I discovered this required change while [developing SQL generation for MSSQL inserts](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2248).
### Changelog
- [ ] `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR. If no changelog is required, then add the `no-changelog-required` label.
### Affected components
- [x] Server
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2271
GitOrigin-RevId: 0d90fd8d8c0541b18ca9cb1197e413f3454bb227
>
### Description
>
This PR is an incremental work towards [enabling insert mutations on MSSQL](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1974). In this PR, we generate insert mutation schema parser for MSSQL backend.
### Changelog
- [ ] `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR. If no changelog is required, then add the `no-changelog-required` label.
### Affected components
- [x] Server
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2141
GitOrigin-RevId: 8595008dece35f7fded9c52e134de8b97b64f53f
This PR:
- removes a dependency on Postgres' `ToSQL` in other backends
- removes some usage of `unsafePerformIO` in `FronJSON` / `Arbitrary`
- fixes a `Set` into a `HashSet`
- moves some orphan instances where they belong:
- alongside others in `Hasura.Incremental` for `Cacheable`
- in `Hasura.Base.Instances` for `Hashable`
- introduces a local wrapper around ByteString to avoid unsound UTF8 instances
Some of the weird empty lines come from the fact that this PR is an offshoot of #1947.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1949
GitOrigin-RevId: ef9d34452946f8466878d8fdda857b0b43816de7
Query plan caching was introduced by - I believe - hasura/graphql-engine#1934 in order to reduce the query response latency. During the development of PDV in hasura/graphql-engine#4111, it was found out that the new architecture (for which query plan caching wasn't implemented) performed comparably to the pre-PDV architecture with caching. Hence, it was decided to leave query plan caching until some day in the future when it was deemed necessary.
Well, we're in the future now, and there still isn't a convincing argument for query plan caching. So the time has come to remove some references to query plan caching from the codebase. For the most part, any code being removed would probably not be very well suited to the post-PDV architecture of query execution, so arguably not much is lost.
Apart from simplifying the code, this PR will contribute towards making the GraphQL schema generation more modular, testable, and easier to profile. I'd like to eventually work towards a situation in which it's easy to generate a GraphQL schema parser *in isolation*, without being connected to a database, and then parse a GraphQL query *in isolation*, without even listening any HTTP port. It is important that both of these operations can be examined in detail, and in isolation, since they are two major performance bottlenecks, as well as phases where many important upcoming features hook into.
Implementation
The following have been removed:
- The entirety of `server/src-lib/Hasura/GraphQL/Execute/Plan.hs`
- The core phases of query parsing and execution no longer have any references to query plan caching. Note that this is not to be confused with query *response* caching, which is not affected by this PR. This includes removal of the types:
- - `Opaque`, which is replaced by a tuple. Note that the old implementation was broken and did not adequately hide the constructors.
- - `QueryReusability` (and the `markNotReusable` method). Notably, the implementation of the `ParseT` monad now consists of two, rather than three, monad transformers.
- Cache-related tests (in `server/src-test/Hasura/CacheBoundedSpec.hs`) have been removed .
- References to query plan caching in the documentation.
- The `planCacheOptions` in the `TenantConfig` type class was removed. However, during parsing, unrecognized fields in the YAML config get ignored, so this does not cause a breaking change. (Confirmed manually, as well as in consultation with @sordina.)
- The metrics no longer send cache hit/miss messages.
There are a few places in which one can still find references to query plan caching:
- We still accept the `--query-plan-cache-size` command-line option for backwards compatibility. The `HASURA_QUERY_PLAN_CACHE_SIZE` environment variable is not read.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1815
GitOrigin-RevId: 17d92b254ec093c62a7dfeec478658ede0813eb7
GJ IR changes cherry-picked from the original GJ branch. There is a separate (can be merged independently) PR for metadata changes (#1727) and there will be a different PR upcoming PR for execution changes.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1810
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <6562944+0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: c31956af29dc9c9b75d002aba7d93c230697c5f4
## Description
This PR fixes an oversight in the implementation of the resolvers of different backends. To implement resolution from environment variables, both MSSQL and BigQuery were directly fetching the process' environment variables, instead of using the careful curated set we thread from main. It was working just fine on OSS, but is failing on Cloud.
This PR fixes this by adding an additional argument to `resolveSourceConfig`, to ensure that backends always use the correct set of variables.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1891
GitOrigin-RevId: 58644cab7d041a8bf4235e2acfe9cf71533a92a1
### Description
In our haste to generalize everything for MSSQL, we put every single "suspicious" type in Backend, including ones that weren't required. `Alias` is one of those: it's only used in a type alias, and is actually just an implementation detail of the translation layer. This PR removes it.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1759
GitOrigin-RevId: fb348934ec65a51aae7f95d93c83c3bb704587b5
### Description
This PR removes all `fmapX` and `traverseX` functions from RQL.IR, favouring instead `Functor` and `Traversable` instances throughout the code. This was a relatively straightforward change, except for two small pain points: `AnnSelectG` and `AnnInsert`. Both were parametric over two types `a` and `v`, making it impossible to make them traversable functors... But it turns out that in every single use case, `a ~ f v`. By changing those types to take such an `f :: Type -> Type` as an argument instead of `a :: Type` makes it possible to make them functors.
The only small difference is for `AnnIns`, I had to introduce one `Identity` transformation for one of the `f` parameters. This is relatively straightforward.
### Notes
This PR fixes the most verbose BigQuery hint (`let` instead of `<- pure`).
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1668
GitOrigin-RevId: e632263a8c559aa04aeae10dcaec915b4a81ad1a
Previous versions of 'pg-client-hs' provided a Template Haskell splice
'sqlFromFile' which returned compile-time embedded PostgreSQL queries.
Rather than returning a concrete 'Query', however, this function
returned the polymorphic 'IsString txt => txt' which allowed the caller
to implicitly convert the result to anything other type with some
'IsString' instance.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1570
GitOrigin-RevId: fb4294439148ae8b2762138ece2d59e8e18ef5e0
### Description
This PR adds the required IR for DB to DB joins, based on @paf31 and @0x777 's `feature/db-to-db` branch.
To do so, it also refactors the IR to introduce a new type parameter, `r`, which is used to recursively constructs the `v` parameter of remote QueryDBs. When collecting remote joins, we replace `r` with `Const Void`, indicating at the type level that there cannot be any leftover remote join.
Furthermore, this PR refactors IR.Select for readability, moves some code from IR.Root to IR.Select to avoid having to deal with circular dependencies, and makes it compile by adding `error` in all new cases in the execution pipeline.
The diff doesn't make it clear, but most of Select.hs is actually unchanged. Declarations have just been reordered by topic, in the following order:
- type declarations
- instance declarations
- type aliases
- constructor functions
- traverse functions
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1580
Co-authored-by: Phil Freeman <630306+paf31@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: bbdcb4119cec8bb3fc32f1294f91b8dea0728721
Remote relationships are now supported on SQL Server and BigQuery. The major change though is the re-architecture of remote join execution logic. Prior to this PR, each backend is responsible for processing the remote relationships that are part of their AST.
This is not ideal as there is nothing specific about a remote join's execution that ties it to a backend. The only backend specific part is whether or not the specification of the remote relationship is valid (i.e, we'll need to validate whether the scalars are compatible).
The approach now changes to this:
1. Before delegating the AST to the backend, we traverse the AST, collect all the remote joins while modifying the AST to add necessary join fields where needed.
1. Once the remote joins are collected from the AST, the database call is made to fetch the response. The necessary data for the remote join(s) is collected from the database's response and one or more remote schema calls are constructed as necessary.
1. The remote schema calls are then executed and the data from the database and from the remote schemas is joined to produce the final response.
### Known issues
1. Ideally the traversal of the IR to collect remote joins should return an AST which does not include remote join fields. This operation can be type safe but isn't taken up as part of the PR.
1. There is a lot of code duplication between `Transport/HTTP.hs` and `Transport/Websocket.hs` which needs to be fixed ASAP. This too hasn't been taken up by this PR.
1. The type which represents the execution plan is only modified to handle our current remote joins and as such it will have to be changed to accommodate general remote joins.
1. Use of lenses would have reduced the boilerplate code to collect remote joins from the base AST.
1. The current remote join logic assumes that the join columns of a remote relationship appear with their names in the database response. This however is incorrect as they could be aliased. This can be taken up by anyone, I've left a comment in the code.
### Notes to the reviewers
I think it is best reviewed commit by commit.
1. The first one is very straight forward.
1. The second one refactors the remote join execution logic but other than moving things around, it doesn't change the user facing functionality. This moves Postgres specific parts to `Backends/Postgres` module from `Execute`. Some IR related code to `Hasura.RQL.IR` module. Simplifies various type class function signatures as a backend doesn't have to handle remote joins anymore
1. The third one fixes partial case matches that for some weird reason weren't shown as warnings before this refactor
1. The fourth one generalizes the validation logic of remote relationships and implements `scalarTypeGraphQLName` function on SQL Server and BigQuery which is used by the validation logic. This enables remote relationships on BigQuery and SQL Server.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1497
GitOrigin-RevId: 77dd8eed326602b16e9a8496f52f46d22b795598
event catalog:
- `hdb_catalog` is no longer automatically created
- catalog is initialised when the first event trigger is created
- catalog initialisation is done during the schema cache build, using `ArrowCache` so it is only run in response to a change to the set of event triggers
event queue:
- `processEventQueue` thread is prevented from starting when `HASURA_GRAPHQL_EVENTS_FETCH_INTERVAL=0`
- `processEventQueue` thread only processes sources for which at least one event trigger exists in some table in the source
Co-authored-by: Anon Ray <616387+ecthiender@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 73f256465d62490cd2b59dcd074718679993d4fe
Aggregate fields - both the table and the relationship fields haven't been enabled till now. This PR fixes enables the aggregate fields and fixes an issue with root aggregate fields.
Co-authored-by: Chris Done <11019+chrisdone@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: a6d7ed9b45cda6af659a57576a8623c725a7372f
While debugging issues with HLS, Reed Mullanix noticed that we don't use relative paths. This leads to problems when using HLS + Emacs due to a bug in `lsp-mode` which prevents it from finding the correct project root.
However, it is still a good practice to use relative paths in TH for other reasons, including being able to import these modules in GHCI.
This PR should make it so HLS-1.0 & emacs provide type inference, imports, etc., in all modules in our codebase.
GitOrigin-RevId: 5f53b9a7ccf46df1ea7be94ff0a5c6ec861f4ead
Fixes https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/issues/712
Main point of interest: the `Hasura.SQL.Backend` module.
This PR creates an `Exists` type indexed by indexed type and packed constraint while hiding all of its complexity by not exporting the constructor.
Existential constructors/types which are no longer (directly) existential:
- [X] BackendSourceInfo :: BackendSourceInfo
- [x] BackendSourceMetadata :: BackendSourceMetadata
- [x] MOSourceObjId :: MetadatObjId
- [x] SOSourceObj :: SchemaObjId
- [x] RFDB :: RootField
- [x] LQP :: LiveQueryPlan
- [x] ExecutionStep :: ExecStepDB
This PR also removes ALL usages of `Typeable.cast` from our codebase. We still need to derive `Typeable` in a few places in order to be able to derive `Data` in one place. I have not dug deeper to see why this is needed.
GitOrigin-RevId: bb47e957192e4bb0af4c4116aee7bb92f7983445
fixes#3868
docker image - `hasura/graphql-engine:inherited-roles-preview-48b73a2de`
Note:
To be able to use the inherited roles feature, the graphql-engine should be started with the env variable `HASURA_GRAPHQL_EXPERIMENTAL_FEATURES` set to `inherited_roles`.
Introduction
------------
This PR implements the idea of multiple roles as presented in this [paper](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/FGALanguageICDE07.pdf). The multiple roles feature in this PR can be used via inherited roles. An inherited role is a role which can be created by combining multiple singular roles. For example, if there are two roles `author` and `editor` configured in the graphql-engine, then we can create a inherited role with the name of `combined_author_editor` role which will combine the select permissions of the `author` and `editor` roles and then make GraphQL queries using the `combined_author_editor`.
How are select permissions of different roles are combined?
------------------------------------------------------------
A select permission includes 5 things:
1. Columns accessible to the role
2. Row selection filter
3. Limit
4. Allow aggregation
5. Scalar computed fields accessible to the role
Suppose there are two roles, `role1` gives access to the `address` column with row filter `P1` and `role2` gives access to both the `address` and the `phone` column with row filter `P2` and we create a new role `combined_roles` which combines `role1` and `role2`.
Let's say the following GraphQL query is queried with the `combined_roles` role.
```graphql
query {
employees {
address
phone
}
}
```
This will translate to the following SQL query:
```sql
select
(case when (P1 or P2) then address else null end) as address,
(case when P2 then phone else null end) as phone
from employee
where (P1 or P2)
```
The other parameters of the select permission will be combined in the following manner:
1. Limit - Minimum of the limits will be the limit of the inherited role
2. Allow aggregations - If any of the role allows aggregation, then the inherited role will allow aggregation
3. Scalar computed fields - same as table column fields, as in the above example
APIs for inherited roles:
----------------------
1. `add_inherited_role`
`add_inherited_role` is the [metadata API](https://hasura.io/docs/1.0/graphql/core/api-reference/index.html#schema-metadata-api) to create a new inherited role. It accepts two arguments
`role_name`: the name of the inherited role to be added (String)
`role_set`: list of roles that need to be combined (Array of Strings)
Example:
```json
{
"type": "add_inherited_role",
"args": {
"role_name":"combined_user",
"role_set":[
"user",
"user1"
]
}
}
```
After adding the inherited role, the inherited role can be used like single roles like earlier
Note:
An inherited role can only be created with non-inherited/singular roles.
2. `drop_inherited_role`
The `drop_inherited_role` API accepts the name of the inherited role and drops it from the metadata. It accepts a single argument:
`role_name`: name of the inherited role to be dropped
Example:
```json
{
"type": "drop_inherited_role",
"args": {
"role_name":"combined_user"
}
}
```
Metadata
---------
The derived roles metadata will be included under the `experimental_features` key while exporting the metadata.
```json
{
"experimental_features": {
"derived_roles": [
{
"role_name": "manager_is_employee_too",
"role_set": [
"employee",
"manager"
]
}
]
}
}
```
Scope
------
Only postgres queries and subscriptions are supported in this PR.
Important points:
-----------------
1. All columns exposed to an inherited role will be marked as `nullable`, this is done so that cell value nullification can be done.
TODOs
-------
- [ ] Tests
- [ ] Test a GraphQL query running with a inherited role without enabling inherited roles in experimental features
- [] Tests for aggregate queries, limit, computed fields, functions, subscriptions (?)
- [ ] Introspection test with a inherited role (nullability changes in a inherited role)
- [ ] Docs
- [ ] Changelog
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <6562944+0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 3b8ee1e11f5ceca80fe294f8c074d42fbccfec63