- Inline a few instances to avoid code duplication
- Use `(<$>)` to avoid `let`
- Improve error reporting when types of invalid kind are specified in `possibleTypes` or `interfaces`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/7540
GitOrigin-RevId: 954fb710f94a275daff938b9a6e58765c4286d0c
### Description
Each Backend executes queries against the database in a slightly different stack: Postgres uses its own `TXeT`, MSSQL uses a variant of it, BigQuery is simply in `ExceptT QErr IO`... To accommodate those variations, we had originally introduced an `ExecutionMonad b` type family in `BackendExecute`, allowing each backend to describe its own stack. It was then up to that backend's `BackendTransport` instance to implement running said stack, and converting the result back into our main app monad.
However, this was not without complications: `TraceT` is one of them: as it usually needs to be on the top of the stack, converting from one stack to the other implies the use `interpTraceT`, which is quite monstrous. Furthermore, as part of the Entitlement Services work, we're trying to move to a "Services" architecture in which the entire engine runs in one base monad, that delegates features and dependencies to monad constraints; and as a result we'd like to minimize the number of different monad stacks we have to maintain and translate from and to in the codebase.
To improve things, this PR changes `ExecutionMonad b` from an _absolute_ stack to a _relative_ one: i.e.: what needs to be stacked on top of our base monad for the execution. In `Transport`, we then only need to pop the top of the stack, and voila. This greatly simplifies the implementation of the backends, as there's no longer any need to do any stack transformation: MySQL's implementation becomes a `runIdentityT`! This also removes most mentions of `TraceT` from the execution code since it's no longer required: we can rely on the base monad's existing `MonadTrace` constraint.
To continue encapsulating monadic actions in `DBStepInfo` and avoid threading a bunch of `forall` all over the place, this PR introduces a small local helper: `OnBaseMonad`. One only downside of all this is that this requires adding `MonadBaseControl IO m` constraint all over the place: previously, we would run directly on `IO` and lift, and would therefore not need to bring that constraint all the way.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/7789
GitOrigin-RevId: e9b2e431c5c47fa9851abf87545c0415ff6d1a12
## Description
This PR removes `MetadataStorageT`, and cleans up all top-level error handling. In short: this PR changes `MonadMetadataStorage` to explicitly return a bunch of `Either QErr a`, instead of relying on the stack providing a `MonadError QErr`. Since we implement that class on the base monad *below any ExceptT*, this removes a lot of very complicated instances that make assumptions about the shape of the stack.
On the back of this, we can remove several layers of ExceptT from the core of the code, including the one in `RunT`, which allows us to remove several instances of `liftEitherM . runExceptT`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/7689
GitOrigin-RevId: 97d600154d690f58c0b93fb4cc2d30fd383fd8b8
What is the `Cacheable` type class about?
```haskell
class Eq a => Cacheable a where
unchanged :: Accesses -> a -> a -> Bool
default unchanged :: (Generic a, GCacheable (Rep a)) => Accesses -> a -> a -> Bool
unchanged accesses a b = gunchanged (from a) (from b) accesses
```
Its only method is an alternative to `(==)`. The added value of `unchanged` (and the additional `Accesses` argument) arises _only_ for one type, namely `Dependency`. Indeed, the `Cacheable (Dependency a)` instance is non-trivial, whereas every other `Cacheable` instance is completely boilerplate (and indeed either generated from `Generic`, or simply `unchanged _ = (==)`). The `Cacheable (Dependency a)` instance is the only one where the `Accesses` argument is not just passed onwards.
The only callsite of the `unchanged` method is in the `ArrowCache (Rule m)` method. That is to say that the `Cacheable` type class is used to decide when we can re-use parts of the schema cache between Metadata operations.
So what is the `Cacheable (Dependency a)` instance about? Normally, the output of a `Rule m a b` is re-used when the new input (of type `a`) is equal to the old one. But sometimes, that's too coarse: it might be that a certain `Rule m a b` only depends on a small part of its input of type `a`. A `Dependency` allows us to spell out what parts of `a` are being depended on, and these parts are recorded as values of types `Access a` in the state `Accesses`.
If the input `a` changes, but not in a way that touches the recorded `Accesses`, then the output `b` of that rule can be re-used without recomputing.
So now you understand _why_ we're passing `Accesses` to the `unchanged` method: `unchanged` is an equality check in disguise that just needs some additional context.
But we don't need to pass `Accesses` as a function argument. We can use the `reflection` package to pass it as type-level context. So the core of this PR is that we change the instance declaration from
```haskell
instance (Cacheable a) => Cacheable (Dependency a) where
```
to
```haskell
instance (Given Accesses, Eq a) => Eq (Dependency a) where
```
and use `(==)` instead of `unchanged`.
If you haven't seen `reflection` before: it's like a `MonadReader`, but it doesn't require a `Monad`.
In order to pass the current `Accesses` value, instead of simply passing the `Accesses` as a function argument, we need to instantiate the `Given Accesses` context. We use the `give` method from the `reflection` package for that.
```haskell
give :: forall r. Accesses -> (Given Accesses => r) -> r
unchanged :: (Given Accesses => Eq a) => Accesses -> a -> a -> Bool
unchanged accesses a b = give accesses (a == b)
```
With these three components in place, we can delete the `Cacheable` type class entirely.
The remainder of this PR is just to remove the `Cacheable` type class and its instances.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6877
GitOrigin-RevId: 7125f5e11d856e7672ab810a23d5bf5ad176e77f
### Description
This monster of a PR took way too long. As the title suggests, it reduces the schema context carried in the readers to the very strict minimum. In practice, that means that to build a source, we only require:
- the global `SchemaContext`
- the global `SchemaOptions` (soon to be renamed `SchemaSourceOptions`)
- that source's `SourceInfo`
Furthermore, _we no longer carry "default" customization options throughout the schema_. All customization information is extracted from the `SourceInfo`, when required. This prevents an entire category of bugs we had previously encountered, such as parts of the code using uninitialized / unupdated customization info.
In turn, this meant that we could remove the explicit threading of the `SourceInfo` throughout the schema, since it is now always available through the reader context.
Finally, this meant making a few adjustments to relay and actions as well, such as the introduction of a new separate "context" for actions, and a change to how we create some of the action-specific postgres scalar parsers.
I'll highlight with review comments the areas of interest.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6709
GitOrigin-RevId: ea80fddcb24e2513779dd04b0b700a55f0028dd1
Just forcing some of the most numerous thunks (with -hi profiling), it
seems some of these were retaining significant amount of data
this can follow merge of, or supersede #6679
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6710
GitOrigin-RevId: d0566ee288841e264637231a7f238946aa2e3564
This upgrades the version of Ormolu required by the HGE repository to v0.5.0.1, and reformats all code accordingly.
Ormolu v0.5 reformats code that uses infix operators. This is mostly useful, adding newlines and indentation to make it clear which operators are applied first, but in some cases, it's unpleasant. To make this easier on the eyes, I had to do the following:
* Add a few fixity declarations (search for `infix`)
* Add parentheses to make precedence clear, allowing Ormolu to keep everything on one line
* Rename `relevantEq` to `(==~)` in #6651 and set it to `infix 4`
* Add a few _.ormolu_ files (thanks to @hallettj for helping me get started), mostly for Autodocodec operators that don't have explicit fixity declarations
In general, I think these changes are quite reasonable. They mostly affect indentation.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6675
GitOrigin-RevId: cd47d87f1d089fb0bc9dcbbe7798dbceedcd7d83
>
## Description
->
This PR allows DC agents to define custom aggregate functions for their scalar types.
### Related Issues
->
GDC-189
### Solution and Design
>
We added a new property `aggregate_functions` to the scalar types capabilities. This allows the agent author to specify a set of aggregate functions supported by each scalar type, along with the function's result type.
During GraphQL schema generation, the custom aggregate functions are available via a new method `getCustomAggregateOperators` on the `Backend` type class.
Custom functions are merged with the builtin aggregate functions when building GraphQL schemas for table aggregate fields and for `order_by` operators on array relations.
### Steps to test and verify
>
• Codec tests for aggregate function capabilities have been added to the unit tests.
• Some custom aggregate operators have been added to the reference agent and are used in a new test in `api-tests`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6199
GitOrigin-RevId: e9c0d1617af93847c1493671fdbb794f573bde0c
The main aim of the PR is:
1. To set up a module structure for 'remote-schemas' package.
2. Move parts by the remote schema codebase into the new module structure to validate it.
## Notes to the reviewer
Why a PR with large-ish diff?
1. We've been making progress on the MM project but we don't yet know long it is going to take us to get to the first milestone. To understand this better, we need to figure out the unknowns as soon as possible. Hence I've taken a stab at the first two items in the [end-state](https://gist.github.com/0x777/ca2bdc4284d21c3eec153b51dea255c9) document to figure out the unknowns. Unsurprisingly, there are a bunch of issues that we haven't discussed earlier. These are documented in the 'open questions' section.
1. The diff is large but that is only code moved around and I've added a section that documents how things are moved. In addition, there are fair number of PR comments to help with the review process.
## Changes in the PR
### Module structure
Sets up the module structure as follows:
```
Hasura/
RemoteSchema/
Metadata/
Types.hs
SchemaCache/
Types.hs
Permission.hs
RemoteRelationship.hs
Build.hs
MetadataAPI/
Types.hs
Execute.hs
```
### 1. Types representing metadata are moved
Types that capture metadata information (currently scattered across several RQL modules) are moved into `Hasura.RemoteSchema.Metadata.Types`.
- This new module only depends on very 'core' modules such as
`Hasura.Session` for the notion of roles and `Hasura.Incremental` for `Cacheable` typeclass.
- The requirement on database modules is avoided by generalizing the remote schemas metadata to accept an arbitrary 'r' for a remote relationship
definition.
### 2. SchemaCache related types and build logic have been moved
Types that represent remote schemas information in SchemaCache are moved into `Hasura.RemoteSchema.SchemaCache.Types`.
Similar to `H.RS.Metadata.Types`, this module depends on 'core' modules except for `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser.Variable`. It has something to do with remote relationships but I haven't spent time looking into it. The validation of 'remote relationships to remote schema' is also something that needs to be looked at.
Rips out the logic that builds remote schema's SchemaCache information from the monolithic `buildSchemaCacheRule` and moves it into `Hasura.RemoteSchema.SchemaCache.Build`. Further, the `.SchemaCache.Permission` and `.SchemaCache.RemoteRelationship` have been created from existing modules that capture schema cache building logic for those two components.
This was a fair amount of work. On main, currently remote schema's SchemaCache information is built in two phases - in the first phase, 'permissions' and 'remote relationships' are ignored and in the second phase they are filled in.
While remote relationships can only be resolved after partially resolving sources and other remote schemas, the same isn't true for permissions. Further, most of the work that is done to resolve remote relationships can be moved to the first phase so that the second phase can be a very simple traversal.
This is the approach that was taken - resolve permissions and as much as remote relationships information in the first phase.
### 3. Metadata APIs related types and build logic have been moved
The types that represent remote schema related metadata APIs and the execution logic have been moved to `Hasura.RemoteSchema.MetadataAPI.Types` and `.Execute` modules respectively.
## Open questions:
1. `Hasura.RemoteSchema.Metadata.Types` is so called because I was hoping that all of the metadata related APIs of remote schema can be brought in at `Hasura.RemoteSchema.Metadata.API`. However, as metadata APIs depended on functions from `SchemaCache` module (see [1](ceba6d6226/server/src-lib/Hasura/RQL/DDL/RemoteSchema.hs (L55)) and [2](ceba6d6226/server/src-lib/Hasura/RQL/DDL/RemoteSchema.hs (L91)), it made more sense to create a separate top-level module for `MetadataAPI`s.
Maybe we can just have `Hasura.RemoteSchema.Metadata` and get rid of the extra nesting or have `Hasura.RemoteSchema.Metadata.{Core,Permission,RemoteRelationship}` if we want to break them down further.
1. `buildRemoteSchemas` in `H.RS.SchemaCache.Build` has the following type:
```haskell
buildRemoteSchemas ::
( ArrowChoice arr,
Inc.ArrowDistribute arr,
ArrowWriter (Seq CollectedInfo) arr,
Inc.ArrowCache m arr,
MonadIO m,
HasHttpManagerM m,
Inc.Cacheable remoteRelationshipDefinition,
ToJSON remoteRelationshipDefinition,
MonadError QErr m
) =>
Env.Environment ->
( (Inc.Dependency (HashMap RemoteSchemaName Inc.InvalidationKey), OrderedRoles),
[RemoteSchemaMetadataG remoteRelationshipDefinition]
)
`arr` HashMap RemoteSchemaName (PartiallyResolvedRemoteSchemaCtxG remoteRelationshipDefinition, MetadataObject)
```
Note the dependence on `CollectedInfo` which is defined as
```haskell
data CollectedInfo
= CIInconsistency InconsistentMetadata
| CIDependency
MetadataObject
-- ^ for error reporting on missing dependencies
SchemaObjId
SchemaDependency
deriving (Eq)
```
this pretty much means that remote schemas is dependent on types from databases, actions, ....
How do we fix this? Maybe introduce a typeclass such as `ArrowCollectRemoteSchemaDependencies` which is defined in `Hasura.RemoteSchema` and then implemented in graphql-engine?
1. The dependency on `buildSchemaCacheFor` in `.MetadataAPI.Execute` which has the following signature:
```haskell
buildSchemaCacheFor ::
(QErrM m, CacheRWM m, MetadataM m) =>
MetadataObjId ->
MetadataModifier ->
```
This can be easily resolved if we restrict what the metadata APIs are allowed to do. Currently, they operate in an unfettered access to modify SchemaCache (the `CacheRWM` constraint):
```haskell
runAddRemoteSchema ::
( QErrM m,
CacheRWM m,
MonadIO m,
HasHttpManagerM m,
MetadataM m,
Tracing.MonadTrace m
) =>
Env.Environment ->
AddRemoteSchemaQuery ->
m EncJSON
```
This should instead be changed to restrict remote schema APIs to only modify remote schema metadata (but has access to the remote schemas part of the schema cache), this dependency is completely removed.
```haskell
runAddRemoteSchema ::
( QErrM m,
MonadIO m,
HasHttpManagerM m,
MonadReader RemoteSchemasSchemaCache m,
MonadState RemoteSchemaMetadata m,
Tracing.MonadTrace m
) =>
Env.Environment ->
AddRemoteSchemaQuery ->
m RemoteSchemeMetadataObjId
```
The idea is that the core graphql-engine would call these functions and then call
`buildSchemaCacheFor`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6291
GitOrigin-RevId: 51357148c6404afe70219afa71bd1d59bdf4ffc6
## Description
This PR fixes hasura/graphql-engine#8345: when creating the final representation of a remote relationship to a remote schema (a `RemoteJoin`), we would mistakenly label ALL join fields in the selection set as being relevant to that one relationship: if there are more than one remote relationship to process in that selection set, that would be the union of all their join fields. The problem with this error is that, when processing remote relationships, we correctly ignore all the ones for which at least one join key is null. Consequently, this error would result in us ignoring remote relationships for which an _unrelated_ join key was null, resulting in that data missing in the final JSON result.
This PR simply ensures that the aggregation of fields that are passed to `createRemoteJoin` is pruned to only contain the fields relevant to the join being created. This is a very small change, and the bulk of this PR is the regression tests.
## Changelog
__Component__ : server
__Type__: bugfix
__Product__: community-edition
### Short Changelog
fix remote relationship to remote schema sometimes being erroneously null when multiple relationships are defined on the same table / graphql object ([#8345](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/8345))
### Long Changelog
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6420
GitOrigin-RevId: eb54462724b007f80b674dcf234adf6d9cfaaf79
This upgrades CI and anyone using Nix to HLint v3.4.1.
If you're not using Nix, this doesn't actually _do_ anything on your
local machine; it's just a suggestion.
It also applies a bunch of simple HLint refactors, using
`make lint-hs-fix`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6324
GitOrigin-RevId: de8267e4909d6dcd3f83543188517f3aaeebc5f3
- Remove a few unnecessary helper functions
- Delete kind annotations
- Bring GHC warnings and language extensions more in line with those of the `graphql-engine` library
- Constrain unconstrained dependency on `hasql-pool`
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6251
GitOrigin-RevId: 10c2530f007f70cf1464cec36566ee2264589881
- Remove `onJust` in favor of the more general `for_`
- Remove `withJust` which was used only once
- Remove `hashNub` in favor of `Ord`-based `uniques`
- Simplify some of the implementations in `Hasura.Prelude`
- Add `hlint` hint from `maybe True` to `all`, and `maybe False` to `any`
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6173
GitOrigin-RevId: 2c6ebbe2d04f60071d2a53a2d43c6d62dbc4b84e
This PR is the result of running the following commands:
```bash
$ git grep -l '".* : "' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i -E 's/(".*) : "/\1: "/'
$ scripts/dev.sh test --integration --accept
```
Also manually fixed a few tests and docs
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6148
GitOrigin-RevId: cf8b87605d41d9ce86613a41ac5fd18691f5a641
Result of executing the following commands:
```shell
# replace "as Q" imports with "as PG" (in retrospect this didn't need a regex)
git grep -lE 'as Q($|[^a-zA-Z])' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i -E 's/as Q($|[^a-zA-Z])/as PG\1/'
# replace " Q." with " PG."
git grep -lE ' Q\.' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i 's/ Q\./ PG./g'
# replace "(Q." with "(PG."
git grep -lE '\(Q\.' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i 's/(Q\./(PG./g'
# ditto, but for [, |, { and !
git grep -lE '\[Q\.' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i 's/\[Q\./\[PG./g'
git grep -l '|Q\.' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i 's/|Q\./|PG./g'
git grep -l '{Q\.' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i 's/{Q\./{PG./g'
git grep -l '!Q\.' -- '*.hs' | xargs sed -i 's/!Q\./!PG./g'
```
(Doing the `grep -l` before the `sed`, instead of `sed` on the entire codebase, reduces the number of `mtime` updates, and so reduces how many times a file gets recompiled while checking intermediate results.)
Finally, I manually removed a broken and unused `Arbitrary` instance in `Hasura.RQL.Network`. (It used an `import Test.QuickCheck.Arbitrary as Q` statement, which was erroneously caught by the first find-replace command.)
After this PR, `Q` is no longer used as an import qualifier. That was not the goal of this PR, but perhaps it's a useful fact for future efforts.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5933
GitOrigin-RevId: 8c84c59d57789111d40f5d3322c5a885dcfbf40e
The intent is to generalize `columnParser` to the point where it is the same across all backends, and then remove the interface in favor of a single implementation.
This extracts out `enumParser` and `possiblyNullable` as the two main areas that differ across backends. We may split `possiblyNullable` further so that we can extract some of that logic out into a common function too.
With these changes, the various `columnParser` implementations become semantically equivalent. They still do different things, and so reconciling them will require further changes.
Co-Authored-By: Antoine Leblanc <antoine@hasura.io>
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5841
GitOrigin-RevId: eec1770931eed5d72da70c97d7d0f00e33fa15d2
### Description
This PR attempts to fix several issues with source customization as it relates to remote relationships. There were several issues regarding casing: at the relationship border, we didn't properly set the target source's case, we didn't have access to the list of supported features to decide whether the feature was allowed or not, and we didn't have access to the global default.
However, all of that information is available when we build the schema cache, as we do resolve the case of some elements such as function names: we can therefore resolve source information at the same time, and simplify both the root of the schema and the remote relationship border.
To do this, this PR introduces a new type, `ResolvedSourceCustomization`, to be used in the Schema Cache, as opposed to the metadata's `SourceCustomization`, following a pattern established by a lot of other types.
### Remaining work and open questions
One major point of confusion: it seems to me that we didn't set the case at all across remote relationships, which would suggest we would use the case of the LHS source across the subset of the RHS one that is accessible through the remote relationship, which would in turn "corrupt" the parser cache and might result in the wrong case being used for that source later on. Is that assesment correct, and was I right to fix it?
Another one is that we seem not to be using the local case of the RHS to name the field in an object relationship; unless I'm mistaken we only use it for array relationships? Is that intentional?
This PR is also missing tests that would show-case the difference, and a changelog entry. To my knowledge, all the tests of this feature are in the python test suite; this could be the opportunity to move them to the hspec suite, but this might be a considerable amount of work?
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5619
GitOrigin-RevId: 51a81b713a74575e82d9f96b51633f158ce3a47b
### Description
This PR changes all the schema code to operate in a specific `SchemaT` monad, rather than in an arbitrary `m` monad. `SchemaT` is intended to be used opaquely with `runSourceSchema` and `runRemoteSchema`. The main goal of this is to allow a different reader context per part of the schema: this PR also minimizes the contexts. This means that we no longer require `SchemaOptions` when building remote schemas' schema, and this PR therefore removes a lot of dummy / placeholder values accordingly.
### Performance and stacking
This PR has been through several iterations. #5339 was the original version, that accomplished the same thing by stacking readers on top of the stack at every remote relationship boundary. This raised performance concerns, and @0x777 confirmed with an ad-hoc test that in some extreme cases we could see up to a 10% performance impact. This version, while more verbose, allows us to unstack / re-stack the readers, and avoid that problem. #5517 adds a new benchmark set to be able to automatically measure this on every PR.
### Remaining work
- [x] a comment (or perhaps even a Note?) should be added to `SchemaT`
- [x] we probably want for #5517 to be merged first so that we can confirm the lack of performance penalty
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5458
GitOrigin-RevId: e06b83d90da475f745b838f1fd8f8b4d9d3f4b10
### Description
This PR is a first step towards having a dedicated reader context per schema block. It adds the required Reader instance, and switches from a `SchemaT ReaderT` stack to a `ReaderT SchemaT` stack. Furthermore, it cleans up / harmonizes some of the top-level schema building functions.
Sources and remotes are now built each within their own run of `runReaderT`: for now, the reader context is the same in both cases, meaning no special care is required at the boundary of remote relationships.
Actions are explicitly run with the source context for now; we could envision creating a third and distinct context for them.
This PR is expected to be a no-op.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5300
GitOrigin-RevId: a014e5b3504eb4ef740c820d305d6d2695f622f7
It's about time.
To do this I had to check a few more boxes.
* I copied the flags from `graphql-engine.cabal` to the libraries in `server/lib`.
* I moved `Cacheable` instances of schema parser types beside the typeclass declaration.
* I removed imports of `Hasura.Prelude` from the tests, and rewrote them accordingly.
* I copied the `TestMonad` parse monad into `server/src-test/Hasura/GraphQL/Schema/RemoteTest.hs`, which was using it. I think this could be done with the real thing, but I tried replacing it with constraints and it messed with my head somewhat.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5311
GitOrigin-RevId: ebebcc50a16f2d517b7f730fe72410827ca3e86c
Followup to hasura/graphql-engine-mono#4713.
The `memoizeOn` method, part of `MonadSchema`, originally had the following type:
```haskell
memoizeOn
:: (HasCallStack, Ord a, Typeable a, Typeable b, Typeable k)
=> TH.Name
-> a
-> m (Parser k n b)
-> m (Parser k n b)
```
The reason for operating on `Parser`s specifically was that the `MonadSchema` effect would additionally initialize certain `Unique` values, which appear (nested in) the type of `Parser`.
hasura/graphql-engine-mono#518 changed the type of `memoizeOn`, to additionally allow memoizing `FieldParser`s. These also contained a `Unique` value, which was similarly initialized by the `MonadSchema` effect. The new type of `memoizeOn` was as follows:
```haskell
memoizeOn
:: forall p d a b
. (HasCallStack, HasDefinition (p n b) d, Ord a, Typeable p, Typeable a, Typeable b)
=> TH.Name
-> a
-> m (p n b)
-> m (p n b)
```
Note the type `p n b` of the value being memoized: by choosing `p` to be either `Parser k` or `FieldParser`, both can be memoized. Also note the new `HasDefinition (p n b) d` constraint, which provided a `Lens` for accessing the `Unique` value to be initialized.
A quick simplification is that the `HasCallStack` constraint has never been used by any code. This was realized in hasura/graphql-engine-mono#4713, by removing that constraint.
hasura/graphql-engine-mono#2980 removed the `Unique` value from our GraphQL-related types entirely, as their original purpose was never truly realized. One part of removing `Unique` consisted of dropping the `HasDefinition (p n b) d` constraint from `memoizeOn`.
What I didn't realize at the time was that this meant that the type of `memoizeOn` could be generalized and simplified much further. This PR finally implements that generalization. The new type is as follows:
```haskell
memoizeOn ::
forall a p.
(Ord a, Typeable a, Typeable p) =>
TH.Name ->
a ->
m p ->
m p
```
This change has a couple of consequences.
1. While constructing the schema, we often output `Maybe (Parser ...)`, to model that the existence of certain pieces of GraphQL schema sometimes depends on the permissions that a certain role has. The previous versions of `memoizeOn` were not able to handle this, as the only thing they could memoize was fully-defined (if not yet fully-evaluated) `(Field)Parser`s. This much more general API _would_ allow memoizing `Maybe (Parser ...)`s. However, we probably have to be continue being cautious with this: if we blindly memoize all `Maybe (Parser ...)`s, the resulting code may never be able to decide whether the value is `Just` or `Nothing` - i.e. it never commits to the existence-or-not of a GraphQL schema fragment. This would manifest as a non-well-founded knot tying, and this would get reported as an error by the implementation of `memoizeOn`.
tl;dr: This generalization _technically_ allows for memoizing `Maybe` values, but we probably still want to avoid doing so.
For this reason, the PR adds a specialized version of `memoizeOn` to `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema.Parser`.
2. There is no longer any need to connect the `MonadSchema` knot-tying effect with the `MonadParse` effect. In fact, after this PR, the `memoizeOn` method is completely GraphQL-agnostic, and so we implement hasura/graphql-engine-mono#4726, separating `memoizeOn` from `MonadParse` entirely - `memoizeOn` can be defined and implemented as a general Haskell typeclass method.
Since `MonadSchema` has been made into a single-type-parameter type class, it has been renamed to something more general, namely `MonadMemoize`. Its only task is to memoize arbitrary `Typeable p` objects under a combined key consisting of a `TH.Name` and a `Typeable a`.
Also for this reason, the new `MonadMemoize` has been moved to the more general `Control.Monad.Memoize`.
3. After this change, it's somewhat clearer what `memoizeOn` does: it memoizes an arbitrary value of a `Typeable` type. The only thing that needs to be understood in its implementation is how the manual blackholing works. There is no more semantic interaction with _any_ GraphQL code.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4725
Co-authored-by: Daniel Harvey <4729125+danieljharvey@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 089fa2e82c2ce29da76850e994eabb1e261f9c92
### Description
By definition, root fields are at the root of the schema: only functions that craft root fields need to know about how to customize the name of root fields. However, the presence of `Has MkRootFieldName` in `MonadBuildSchemaBase` meant that the entirety of the schema building code was implicitly aware of / capable of altering root field names.
This PR removes this constraint, and moves it to the functions that do craft root fields. This has several upsides:
- it makes it more explicit where root fields are being crafted
- it prevents functions that should not use this from mistakenly applying it to non-root fields
- it simplifies the shared schema context
### Future work
- can we maybe pass this as an argument, instead of making it a required part of the context?
- ~~AFAICT, we only ever use `mempty` for it: is this actually dead code that we should actually just remove altogether?~~
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5235
GitOrigin-RevId: 4268751f3ab87ae8e03b6fe9e1efa1b096200027
For some reason these functions exist in `Backends.Postgres.SQL.Value`.
We don't want to depend on that module here.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5292
GitOrigin-RevId: a09bd3cdb0caf08938bce0728a8d281344c1d4ce
### Description
I am not 100% sure about this PR; while I think the code is better this way, I'm willing to be convinced otherwise.
In short, this PR moves the `RoleName` field into the `SchemaContext`, instead of being a nebulous `Has RoleName` constraint on the reader monad. The major upside of this is that it makes it an explicit named field, rather than something that must be given as part of a tuple of arguments when calling `runReader`.
However, the downside is that it breaks the helper permissions functions of `Schema.Table`, which relied on `Has RoleName r`. This PR makes the choice of passing the role name explicitly to all of those functions, which in turn means first explicitly fetching the role name in a lot of places. It makes it more explicit when a schema building block relies on the role name, but is a bit verbose...
### Alternatives
Some alternatives worth considering:
- attempting something like `Has context r, Has RoleName context`, which would allow them to be independent from the context but still fetch the role name from the reader, but might require type annotations to not be ambiguous
- keeping the permission functions the same, with `Has RoleName r`, and introducing a bunch of newtypes instead of using tuples to explicitly implement all the required `Has` instances
- changing the permission functions to `Has SchemaContext r`, since they are functions used only to build the schema, and therefore may be allowed to be tied to the context.
What do y'all think?
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5073
GitOrigin-RevId: 8fd09fafb54905a4d115ef30842d35da0c3db5d2
In the process of decoupling the schema parsers from the GraphQL Engine, we need to remove dependencies on `Hasura.Base.Error`.
First of all, we have avoided using `QErr` in schema parsers code, instead returning a more appropriate data type which can be converted to a `Hasura.Base.Error.QErr` later.
Secondly, we create a new `ParseErrorCode` type to represent parse failure types, which are then converted to a `Hasura.Base.Error.Code` later.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5181
GitOrigin-RevId: 8655e26adb1e7d5e3d552c77a8a403f987b53467
Makes the init specs shorter by using `shouldBe` instead of `shouldSatisfy` wherever possible. This also makes test failures more expressive.
It also simplifies boolean logic in most places, following HLint warnings. These changes brought to you by `hlint --refactor`, which is basically magic.
I have left some redundancy in the boolean logic for clarity, along with the appropriate HLint suppressions.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5087
GitOrigin-RevId: 52bf3626be2615e6a32a0fc0e8be19cca31ee4ad
This introduces an `ErrorMessage` newtype which wraps `Text` in a manner which is designed to be easy to construct, and difficult to deconstruct.
It provides functionality similar to `Data.Text.Extended`, but designed _only_ for error messages. Error messages are constructed through `fromString`, concatenation, or the `toErrorValue` function, which is designed to be overridden for all meaningful domain types that might show up in an error message. Notably, there are not and should never be instances of `ToErrorValue` for `String`, `Text`, `Int`, etc. This is so that we correctly represent the value in a way that is specific to its type. For example, all `Name` values (from the _graphql-parser-hs_ library) are single-quoted now; no exceptions.
I have mostly had to add `instance ToErrorValue` for various backend types (and also add newtypes where necessary). Some of these are not strictly necessary for this changeset, as I had bigger aspirations when I started. These aspirations have been tempered by trying and failing twice.
As such, in this changeset, I have started by introducing this type to the `parseError` and `parseErrorWith` functions. In the future, I would like to extend this to the `QErr` record and the various `throwError` functions, but this is a much larger task and should probably be done in stages.
For now, `toErrorMessage` and `fromErrorMessage` are provided for conversion to and from `Text`, but the intent is to stop exporting these once all error messages are converted to the new type.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5018
GitOrigin-RevId: 84b37e238992e4312255a87ca44f41af65e2d89a
This removes the one remaining instance of `unsafeMkName` in production
code, uses `G.name` where possible in tests, and ignores instances where
it's not possible (such as `instance Arbitrary G.Name`).
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5074
GitOrigin-RevId: d8049edf1f1bc2ef25f34874ef5bd5a5934bd33d
### Description
A trivial PR, extracted out of #4936, that removes remote schema permissions from the schema context, as they are only ever used at the top level: whether or not we need to use remote schema permissions is not something that impacts _how_ we build the schema, but whether some parts of the schema should be built at all, and therefore doesn't need to be accessible throughout the build process.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5050
GitOrigin-RevId: 734673370393d5640ad753222982baf2698f6d8f
This moves `MkTypename` and `NamingCase` into their own modules, with the intent of reducing the scope of the schema parsers code, and trying to reduce imports of large modules when small ones will do.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4978
GitOrigin-RevId: 19541257fe010035390f6183a4eaa37bae0d3ca1
Earlier, if the `select` root field had a custom root field set, the same custom root field was then used for the streaming subscription root field as well. This leads to duplicate root fields being generated in the `subscription_root`.
This PR fixes that. It provides a way to customize the streaming subscription root field and not use the `select` root field's custom root field name for the streaming subscription root field.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4967
Co-authored-by: Anon Ray <616387+ecthiender@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 54e74ce97561b0e5cfdfc60d1ca340aaebecf7d4
This reduces the usage of "utils" modules in the parsers code, especially those that are simply re-exported from elsewhere, to facilitate extracting the parsers code into its own library.
It mostly inlines the imports that are re-exported from `Hasura.Prelude` and `Data.Parser.JSONPath`. It also removes references to `Data.*.Extended` modules. When necessary, it re-implements the functionality (which is typically trivial).
It does not tackle all external dependencies. I observed the following that will take more work:
- `Data.GADT.Compare.Extended`
- `Data.Text.Extended`
- `Hasura.Base.Error`
- `Hasura.RQL.Types.Common`
- `Hasura.Server.Utils`
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4964
GitOrigin-RevId: 54ad3c1b7a31f13e34340ebe9fcc36d0ad57b8bd
We only use these `Show` instances in error messages (where we call
`show` explicitly anyway) and test cases (in which Hspec requires `Show
a` for any `a` in an assertion).
This removes the instance in favor of a custom `showQErr` function
(which serializes the error to JSON). It is then used in certain error
message production which previously called `show` on a `QErr`.
There are two places where we serialize a QErr and then construct a new
QErr from the resulting string. Instead, we modify the existing QErr to
add extra information.
An orphan `Show QErr` instance is retained for tests so that we can have
nice test failure messages.
This is preparation for future changes in which the error message within
`QErr` will not be exposed directly, and therefore will not have a
`Show` instance. That said, it feels like a sensible kind of cleanup
anyway.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4897
GitOrigin-RevId: 8f79f7a356f0aea571156f39aefac242bf751f3a
The definition of the Parse monad (which implements MonadParse) can be simplified from using two monad transformers to a single monad. We can simplify from:
```haskell
newtype Parse a = Parse
{ unParse :: ReaderT JSONPath (Except ParseError) a }
```
to
```haskell
newtype Parse a = Parse
{ unParse :: Except ParseError a }
```
In other words, we don't actually need a Reader monad at all.
The technique is that rather than _always_ keeping track of the `JSONPath` while traversing the query, instead simply wait until an error occurs, and if it does, we adjust its `JSONPath` while we're unrolling the stack, using `withExceptT`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4807
Co-authored-by: Daniel Harvey <4729125+danieljharvey@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 94de2c97dc65cb0bd918050cf5e99ac62168b331
### Description
This PR rewrites OpenAPI to be more idiomatic. Some noteworthy changes:
- we accumulate all required information during the Analyze phase, to avoid having to do a single lookup in the schema cache during the OpenAPI generation phase (we now only need the schema cache as input to run the analysis)
- we no longer build intermediary endpoint information and aggregate it, we directly build the the `PathItem` for each endpoint; additionally, that means we no longer have to assume that different methods have the same metadata
- we no longer have to first declare types, then craft references: we do everything in one step
- we now properly deal with nullability by treating "typeName" and "typeName!" as different
- we add a bunch of additional fields in the generated "schema", such as title
- we do now support enum values in both input and output positions
- checking whether the request body is required is now performed on the fly rather than by introspecting the generated schema
- the methods in the file are sorted by topic
### Controversial point
However, this PR creates some additional complexity, that we might not want to keep. The main complexity is _knot-tying_: to avoid lookups when generating the OpenAPI, it builds an actual graph of input types, which means that we need something similar to (but simpler than) `MonadSchema`, to avoid infinite recursions when analyzing the input types of a query. To do this, this PR introduces `CircularT`, a lesser `SchemaT` that aims at avoiding ever having to reinvent this particular wheel ever again.
### Remaining work
- [x] fix existing tests (they are all failing due to some of the schema changes)
- [ ] add tests to cover the new features:
- [x] tests for `CircularT`
- [ ] tests for enums in output schemas
- [x] extract / document `CircularT` if we wish to keep it
- [x] add more comments to `OpenAPI`
- [x] have a second look at `buildVariableSchema`
- [x] fix all missing diagnostics in `Analyze`
- [x] add a Changelog entry?
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4654
Co-authored-by: David Overton <7734777+dmoverton@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: f4a9191f22dfcc1dccefd6a52f5c586b6ad17172
The code that builds the GraphQL schema, and `buildGQLContext` in particular, is partial: not every value of `(ServerConfigCtx, GraphQLQueryType, SourceCache, HashMap RemoteSchemaName (RemoteSchemaCtx, MetadataObject), ActionCache, AnnotatedCustomTypes)` results in a valid GraphQL schema. When it fails, we want to be able to return better error messages than we currently do.
The key thing that is missing is a way to trace back GraphQL type information to their origin from the Hasura metadata. Currently, we have a number of correctness checks of our GraphQL schema. But these correctness checks only have access to pure GraphQL type information, and hence can only report errors in terms of that. Possibly the worst is the "conflicting definitions" error, which, in practice, can only be debugged by Hasura engineers. This is terrible DX for customers.
This PR allows us to print better error messages, by adding a field to the `Definition` type that traces the GraphQL type to its origin in the metadata. So the idea is simple: just add `MetadataObjId`, or `Maybe` that, or some other sum type of that, to `Definition`.
However, we want to avoid having to import a `Hasura.RQL` module from `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser`. So we instead define this additional field of `Definition` through a new type parameter, which is threaded through in `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser`. We then define type synonyms in `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema.Parser` that fill in this type parameter, so that it is not visible for the majority of the codebase.
The idea of associating metadata information to `Definition`s really comes to fruition when combined with hasura/graphql-engine-mono#4517. Their combination would allow us to use the API of fatal errors (just like the current `MonadError QErr`) to report _inconsistencies_ in the metadata. Such inconsistencies are then _automatically_ ignored. So no ad-hoc decisions need to be made on how to cut out inconsistent metadata from the GraphQL schema. This will allow us to report much better errors, as well as improve the likelihood of a successful HGE startup.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4770
Co-authored-by: Samir Talwar <47582+SamirTalwar@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 728402b0cae83ae8e83463a826ceeb609001acae
### Description
This PR removes the need for the `SourceCache` when building the schema for the actions. To do so, it changes the way we represent custom types in the source cache. Instead of trying to reuse the same `ObjectTypeDefinition` and `TypeRelationship`. we now have separate `AnnotatedObjectType` and `AnnotatedRelationship`. When building them, at schema cache building time, we persist all the relevant source information, so that it's all available at schema building time.
This PR makes no attempt at re-using `RemoteRelationship` primitives, to avoid having to change the way async action queries are executed, and to avoid having to make complicated changes to how we parse and represent those relationships.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4813
GitOrigin-RevId: 3cc65c5a043c8d3da5f7214eed40c558c4349327
Pretty much all quasi-quoted names in the server code base have ended up in `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser.Constants`. I'm now finding this unpleasant for two reasons:
1. I would like to factor out the parser code into its own Cabal package, and I don't want to have to expose all these names.
2. Most of them really have nothing to do with the parsers.
In order to remedy this, I have:
1. moved the names used by parser code to `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser.DirectiveName`, as they're all related to directives;
2. moved `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser.Constants` to `Hasura.Name`, changing the qualified import name from `G` to `Name`;
3. moved names only used in tests to the appropriate test case;
4. removed unused items from `Hasura.Name`; and
5. grouped related names.
Most of the changes are simply changing `G` to `Name`, which I find much more meaningful.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4777
GitOrigin-RevId: a77aa0aee137b2b5e6faec94495d3a9fbfa1348b
### Description
This small clean-up PR makes one further step towards backend-agnostic actions: it makes all the code parsing custom types backend agnostic. Surprisingly, this could be done *without* the need to finish generalizing the column parser. The remaining sore point is async queries, that still target Postgres explicitly.
In theory, this is enough to start allowing non-Postgres scalars in custom types. In practice, however:
- no other backend exposes scalars in a way that would allow users to do that as of this PR;
- we currently have no strategy to avoid / detect scalar collisions across backends.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4691
GitOrigin-RevId: bfe63fb131e306663d4406697ce23c02736566c5
## Description
Following on from #4572, this removes more dead code as identified by Weeder. Comments and thoughts similarly welcome!
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4587
GitOrigin-RevId: 73aa6a5a2833ee41d29b71fcd0a72ed19822ca73
(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
This PR is a first step in a series of cleanups of action relationships. This first step does not contain any behavioral change, and it simply reorganizes / prunes / rearranges / documents the code. Mainly:
- it divides some files in RQL.Types between metadata types, schema cache types, execution types;
- it renames some types for consistency;
- it minimizes exports and prunes unnecessary types;
- it moves some types in places where they make more sense;
- it replaces uses of `DMap BackendTag` with `BackendMap`.
Most of the "movement" within files re-organizes declarations in a "top-down" fashion, by moving all TH splices to the end of the file, which avoids order or declarations mattering.
### Optional list types
One main type change this PR makes is a replacement of variant list types in `CustomTypes.hs`; we had `Maybe [a]`, or sometimes `Maybe (NonEmpty a)`. This PR harmonizes all of them to `[a]`, as most of the code would use them as such, by doing `fromMaybe []` or `maybe [] toList`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4613
GitOrigin-RevId: bc624e10df587eba862ff27a5e8021b32d0d78a2
## Motivation
This PR rewrites most of Relay to achieve the following:
- ~~fix a bug in which the same node id could refer to two different tables in the schema~~
- remove one of the few remaining uses of the source cache in the schema building code
In doing so, it also:
- simplifies the `BackendSchema` class by removing `node` from it,
- makes it much easier for other backends to support Relay,
- documents, re-organizes, and clarifies the code.
## Description
This PR introduces a new `NodeId` version ~~, and adapts the Postgres code to always generate this V2 version~~. This new id contains the source name, in addition to the table name, in order to disambiguate similar table names across different sources (which is now possible with source customization). In doing so, it now explicitly handles that case for V1 node ids, and returns an explicit error message instead of running the risk of _silently returning the wrong information_.
Furthermore, it adapts `nodeField` to support multiple backends; most of the code was trivial to generalize, and as a result it lowers the cost of entry for other backends, that now only need to support `AFNodeId` in their translation layer.
Finally, it removes one more cycle in the schema building code, by using the same trick we used for remote relationships instead of using the memoization trick of #4576.
## Remaining work
- ~~[ ]write a Changelog entry~~
- ~~[x] adapt all tests that were asserting on an old node id~~
## Future work
This PR was adapted from its original form to avoid a breaking change: while it introduces a Node ID V2, we keep generating V1 IDs and the parser rejects V2 IDs. It will be easy to make the switch at a later data in a subsequent PR.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4593
GitOrigin-RevId: 88e5cb91e8b0646900547fa8c7c0e1463de267a1
This is a first step towards clarifying the role of `UnpreparedValue` as part of the IR. It certainly does not belong in the parser framework.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4588
GitOrigin-RevId: d1582a0b266729b79e00d31057178a4099168e6d
### Description
The main goal of this PR is, as stated, to remove the circular dependency in the schema building code. This cycle arises from the existence of remote relationships: when we build the schema for a source A, a remote relationship might force us to jump to the schema of a source B, or some remote schema. As a result, we end up having to do a dispatch from a "leaf" of the schema, similar to the one done at the root. In turn, this forces us to carry along in the schema a lot of information required for that dispatch, AND it forces us to import the instances in scope, creating an import loop.
As discussed in #4489, this PR implements the "dependency injection" solution: we pass to the schema a function to call to do the dispatch, and to get a generated field for a remote relationship. That way, this function can be chosen at the root level, and the leaves need not be aware of the overall context.
This PR grew a bit bigger than that, however; in an attempt to try and remove the `SourceCache` from the schema altogether, it changed a lot of functions across the schema building code, to thread along the `SourceInfo b` of the source being built. This avoids having to do cache lookups within a given source. A few cases remain, such as relay, that we might try to tackle in a subsequent PR.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4557
GitOrigin-RevId: 9388e48372877520a72a9fd1677005df9f7b2d72
### Description
There were several functions in `GraphQL.Schema.Common` that were unrelated to the schema building process, and were about metadata manipulation or dependency computation. Having those functions in the schema part of the code forces several places in the code to depend on the schema code, despite being completely unrelated.
This PR moves those functions where they make sense: alongside similar functions in `RQL.Types.*`, and rewrites `getRemoteDependencies` for clarity (it was using the term "indirect dependency" in a way that was inconsistent with the rest of the code).
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4568
GitOrigin-RevId: 948a18cebbb337a8bb6367c1f2d2ef5628209d96
By generalizing the instances, they can be written as attached instance derivations, rather than standalone ones.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4518
GitOrigin-RevId: 7a387911cf6ad46fe6acd36648275d6c2c68ffe3
A very minor cleanup (came out of documenting the architecture of actions). Does what's mentioned in the title.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4451
GitOrigin-RevId: d480ff438256df468df65b43d15f92a30b14b997
## Description
As the name suggests, `DML.Internal` contains internal implementation details of RQL's DML. However, a lot of unrelated parts of the codebase still use some of the code it contains. This PR fixes this, and removes all imports of `RQL.DML.Internal` from outside of `RQL.DML`. Most of the time, this involves moving a function out of `DML.Internal` to an underlying module (see `getRolePermInfo`) or moving a function _back_ into it (see `checkRetCols`).
This PR also clarifies a bit the situation with `withTyAnn` and `withTypeAnn` by renaming the former into `withScalarTypeAnn` and moving them together. Worth noting: there might be a bug lurking in that function, as it doesn't seem to use the proper type annotations for some extension types!
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4380
GitOrigin-RevId: c8ae5b4e8378fefc0bcccf778d97813df727d3cb
## Description
This PR removes `RQL.Types`, which was now only re-exporting a bunch of unrelated modules.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4363
GitOrigin-RevId: 894f29a19bff70b3dad8abc5d9858434d5065417
## Description
This small PR moves all functions in `RQL.Types.hs` to better locations. Most `askX` functions are moved alongside the `unsafe` functions they use. Several other functions are moved closer to their call site. `MetadataM` is moved alongside `Metadata`. This PR also documents the `ask` functions.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4355
GitOrigin-RevId: 0498a7e8f98e7a94af911dd375cad84ace7ddffa
### Description
Small PR that moves code out of `RQL.Types.hs`. Specifically, it moves `HasServerConfigCtx` to where `ServerConfigCtx` is defined. This removes code from `RQL.Types`, makes the dependency on `Server.Types` more explicit, and will make some further cleanups easier.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4336
GitOrigin-RevId: 95bb3467d741763892c4e68a38760497157ba1aa
In hasura/graphql-engine@7547786b2b, we made the logic that does a specific correctness check on the GraphQL schema runnable _post_-startup. However, in order to error out as early as possible, we explicitly do it on startup anyway.
Unfortunately a few instances of that logic were forgotten: until now we only executed it for non-relay authenticated GraphQL schemas.
This re-implements the "conflicting types" check for both the Relay schema, and for the unauthenticated schemas.
One key point where it does _not_ re-implement it is in `buildFullestDBSchema`, which is a very sketchy method that builds a GraphQL schema that is _only_ used internally in order to mark parts of the schema as inconsistent. There are two reasons I do not add the check here:
- This logic should get replaced entirely - see hasura/graphql-engine-mono#3882.
- Having conflicting types in `buildFullestDBSchema` does not imply there is actually a user-facing issue. The only "conflicting types" which are problematic are the ones which result in illegal _user-facing_ GraphQL schemas. `buildFullestDBSchema` is _never_ user-facing.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3885
GitOrigin-RevId: 49517dcbf51bcd97a3890514ec5e47499f770f32
`encJFromAssocList` is broken since it does not appropriately escape the keys of the JSON dictionaries. Presumably it should.
This is a hotfix for a JSON encoding issue. Longer-term solutions are being discussed in hasura/graphql-engine-mono#3736.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4139
GitOrigin-RevId: 27afff319d268a4ec017c8eafd694cc17c2fd7f0
### Motivation
While we strive to write clear code, we have historically struggled at Hasura with having very different styles and standards across the codebase. There's been efforts to standardize our coding style, we have an official styleguide that isn't maintained as closely as it should... We still have some work in front of us.
However, in the last ~year or so, there's been a huge push towards incrementally improving the situation. As part of this we've been blocking PRs that don't add enough comments, or don't improve the files that they touch.
While looking at `Hasura.GraphQL.Analyse`, it became apparent that this file did not meet the engineering standards that I would expect to see addressed during a code review. Some ways in which I think it falls short:
- lack of documentation
- no clear distinction between public / internal components
- "unidiomatic" Haskell code (such as using `Either Result Error`)
While there's no problem with a file looking like this during development, those issues should have been caught at review time. The fact that they weren't indicates a problem in our process that we will need to address: code quality and maintainability is paramount, and we all need to do our part.
### Description
This PR rewrites all of `Hasura.GraphQL.Analyze`, and adapts `Hasura.Server.OpenAPI` accordingly where needed. I've attempted to clarify names and add documentation based on my understanding of the code, and to clean what was unused (such as field variables). I don't think this PR is good enough as is, and I welcome criticism where I got my comments wrong / am happy to help y'all add more.
This PR makes one small change in the way error messages are reported (and adjusts the corresponding test accordingly); each error message is now prefixed with the path within the selection set:
```
⚠️ $.test.foo.bar.baz.mizpelled: field 'mizpelled' not found in object 'Baz'
```
### Note
This PR is currently **on top of #3962**. You can preview the changes in isolation by [diffing the branches](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/compare/nicuveo/clean-rest-endpoint-inconsistency-check..nicuveo/rewrite-analysis).
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3963
Co-authored-by: paritosh-08 <85472423+paritosh-08@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 5ec38e0e753f0c12096a350db0737658495e2f15
### Motivation
#2338 introduced a way to validate REST queries against the metadata after a change, to properly report any inconsistency that would emerge from a change in the underlying structure of our schema. However, the way this was done was quite complex and error-prone. Namely: we would use the generated schema parsers to statically execute an introspection query, similar to the one we use for remote schemas, then parse the resulting bytestring as it were coming from a remote schema.
This led to several issues: the code was using remote schema primitives, and was associated with remote schema code, despite being unrelated, which led to absurd situations like creating fake `Variable`s whose type was also their name. A lot of the code had to deal with the fact that we might fail to re-parse our own schema. Additionally, some of it was dead code, that for some reason GHC did not warn about? But more fundamentally, this architecture decision creates a dependency between unrelated pieces of the engine: modifying the internal processing of root fields or the introspection of remote schemas now risks impacting the unrelated `OpenAPI` feature.
### Description
This PR decouples that process from the remote schema introspection logic and from the execution engine by making `Analyse` and `OpenAPI` work on the generic `G.SchemaIntrospection` instead. To accomplish this, it:
- adds `GraphQL.Parser.Schema.Convert`, to convert from our "live" schema back to a flat `SchemaIntrospection`
- persists in the schema cache the `admin` introspection generated when building the schema, and uses it both for validation and for generating the `OpenAPI`.
### Known issues and limitations
This adds a bit of memory pressure to the engine, as we persist the entire schema in the schema cache. This might be acceptable in the short-term, but we have several potential ideas going forward should this be a problem:
- cache the result of `Analyze`: when it becomes possible to build the `OpenAPI` purely with the result of `Analyze` without any additional schema information, then we could cache that instead, reducing the footprint
- caching the `OpenAPI`: if it doesn't need to change every time the endpoint is queried, then it should be possible to cache the entire `OpenAPI` object instead of the schema
- cache a copy of the `FieldParsers` used to generate the schema: as those are persisted through the GraphQL `Context`, and are the only input required to generate the `Schema`, making them accessible in the schema cache would allow us to have the exact same feature with no additional memory cost, at the price of a slightly slower and more complicated process (need to rebuild the `Schema` every time we query the OpenAPI endpoint)
- cache nothing at all, and rebuild the admin schema from scratch every time.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3962
Co-authored-by: paritosh-08 <85472423+paritosh-08@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: a8b9808170b231fdf6787983b4a9ed286cde27e0
### Description
This very small PR fixes an error introduced in #3811, when changing the collision detection code: we were properly doing collision detection for remote schemas for the unauthenticated context, and also removing remote relationships... but then we were not using the result to build the schema.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3986
GitOrigin-RevId: 26a5553bf82574f2764fd594b0616dfea95a4757
### Description
This PR extends the `RemoteSchema` parsers to also include remote relationships. This include a significant refactoring of the top level schema building blocks, since remote schemas can no longer be built in isolation: they have to be built within the same run of `MonadSchema` as the sources. It is originally taken from the changes in #3069 and was slightly adapted.
I highly recommend turning OFF whitespace in the Github UI for `Schema.hs`, since I've adjusted the indentation of two large functions.
### Warning
Given the lack of a feature flag, this PR technically **enables the feature**. While the metadata API is not plugged in, a savvy user could use `replace_metadata` to set a metadata that contains remote joins from remote schemas, and they would be enabled. Is this acceptable?
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3811
GitOrigin-RevId: a5b00f865cdb8890b0fc02b139c2ebd48929f138
<!-- Thank you for ss in the Title above ^ -->
## Description ✍️
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<!-- Describe the changes from a user's perspective -->
Add some documentation on `ActionFieldG` type.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3945
GitOrigin-RevId: d9543ed7a8fe3ccfe9f5267c3a2ac71fb040f4db
### Description
This PR cleans `processRemoteJoins` by splitting the code, introducing comments, and applied the same strategies than #3810 did. Most importantly, it introduces a new module `RemoteJoin.Source`, made to be very similar to `RemoteJoin.RemoteSchema`, that exposes the required tooling to make a join call to a source, which decluters `Join`. Furthermore, this PR uses the same "dependency injection" to make the core of `Join` free from IO: this opens the door to testing the join engine in the unit tests.
None of the functions were modified when moved from their old module to the new one, but there's no way to easily see this in a diff.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3894
GitOrigin-RevId: 1e7c43006f092326e061f9ba12674e207b628bef
### Description
This PR moves Hasura-specific schema functions from `Hasura.GraphQL.Parser.Class` into `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema.Common`. It also removes the two corresponding monad aliases, and consequently harmonizes several parts of the code to use the same common constraint.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3947
GitOrigin-RevId: 40985a7d86da97a311bd480f9a57cc18c350c2a8
### Description
This PR improves the `Collect` module by re-ordering the functions to make clear what is public API and what is internal implementation. Furthermore, it makes use of `traverseOf` and `traverseFields` to reduce duplication. To do so, it also introduces a few more lenses in the rest of the codebase, and uses this opportunity to harmonize some structures that were not following our naming convention.
While the diff is massive, a lot of it is just code moving around; the file is now divided into separate sections:
- entry points: IR types for which we want to run the collection
- internal monadic structure
- internal traversals: functions that do nothing but drill down further
- actual transformations: the three cases where we do actually have work to do: selection sets on which we do want to insert join columns, extract remote relationships... those functions are left unchanged by this PR
- internal helpers
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3863
GitOrigin-RevId: f7cbecfae9eed9737b62acfa5848bfcf9d4651f6
### Description
#3810 was merged with comments still open; this small PR does a few minute clean-ups to address some remaining nits.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3941
GitOrigin-RevId: 3d15eb399828123640a73247b848bc4ddff02c38
### Description
This very small PR introduces `unionWithM`, to allow hashmap union that might fail, and uses it to transform an `error` into a `throw500`. It also reorders `HashMap.Strict.Extended` to group all "union" functions together.
There is, however, a broader question of whether we should encourage the proliferation of such functions. If so, we might also want to consider:
- `mapWithKeyM`, to remove the `unsafeMkName` of `RemoteJoin.Collect`
- `forWithKey`, as a flipped version of `traverseWithKey`
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3917
GitOrigin-RevId: a488d5bf04a73878b9e42f27ede36199bb4c920a
### Description
This PR adds the ability to perform remote joins from remote schemas in the engine. To do so, we alter the definition of an `ExecutionStep` targeting a remote schema: the `ExecStepRemote` constructor now expects a `Maybe RemoteJoins`. This new argument is used when processing the execution step, in the transport layer (either `Transport.HTTP` or `Transport.WebSocket`).
For this `Maybe RemoteJoins` to be extracted from a parsed query, this PR also extends the `Execute.RemoteJoin.Collect` module, to implement "collection" from a selection set. Not only do those new functions extract the remote joins, but they also apply all necessary transformations to the selection sets (such as inserting the necessary "phantom" fields used as join keys).
Finally in `Execute.RemoteJoin.Join`, we make two changes. First, we now always look for nested remote joins, regardless of whether the join we just performed went to a source or a remote schema; and second we adapt our join tree logic according to the special cases that were added to deal with remote server edge cases.
Additionally, this PR refactors / cleans / documents `Execute.RemoteJoin.RemoteServer`. This is not required as part of this change and could be moved to a separate PR if needed (a similar cleanup of `Join` is done independently in #3894). It also introduces a draft of a new documentation page for this project, that will be refined in the release PR that ships the feature (either #3069 or a copy of it).
While this PR extends the engine, it doesn't plug such relationships in the schema, meaning that, as of this PR, the new code paths in `Join` are technically unreachable. Adding the corresponding schema code and, ultimately, enabling the metadata API will be done in subsequent PRs.
### Keeping track of concrete type names
The main change this PR makes to the existing `Join` code is to handle a new reserved field we sometimes use when targeting remote servers: the `__hasura_internal_typename` field. In short, a GraphQL selection set can sometimes "branch" based on the concrete "runtime type" of the object on which the selection happens:
```graphql
query {
author(id: 53478) {
... on Writer {
name
articles {
title
}
}
... on Artist {
name
articles {
title
}
}
}
}
```
If both of those `articles` are remote joins, we need to be able, when we get the answer, to differentiate between the two different cases. We do this by asking for `__typename`, to be able to decide if we're in the `Writer` or the `Artist` branch of the query.
To avoid further processing / customization of results, we only insert this `__hasura_internal_typename: __typename` field in the query in the case of unions of interfaces AND if we have the guarantee that we will processing the request as part of the remote joins "folding": that is, if there's any remote join in this branch in the tree. Otherwise, we don't insert the field, and we leave that part of the response untouched.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3810
GitOrigin-RevId: 89aaf16274d68e26ad3730b80c2d2fdc2896b96c
…rmance
It makes sense to try to utilize multiple threads for metadata
operations since we expect them to come one at a time (and likely at
lower load periods anyway).
As noted, although we build roles in parallel now, the admin role is
still a bottleneck. For replace_metadata on huge_schema, on my machine
I get:
BEFORE: 22.7 sec
AFTER: 13.5 sec
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3911
GitOrigin-RevId: 4d4ee6ac8b5506603e70e4fc666a3aacc054d493