### 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
They're tied to old-style cabal, and graphql-engine doesn't build with
those anymore anyhow.
Also removes a cabal.project Cabal version constraint related to Setup.hs.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3847
GitOrigin-RevId: 715e836cd2ddf7982143ba0ab8821f87a5eac0b1
### Description
Several libraries define `catMaybes` as `mapMaybe id`. We had it defined in `Data.HashMap.Strict.Extended` already. This small PR also defines it in `Extended` modules for other containers and replaces every occurrence of `mapMaybe id` accordingly.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3884
GitOrigin-RevId: d222a2ca2f4eb9b725b20450a62a626d3886dbf4
In hasura/graphql-engine#5144, we noticed that having remote relationships in the schema is problematic for Relay. In particular, we don't support remote schemas in Relay at all, and because of this, remote relationships were also broken.
The fix was easy: when we're building the schema for Relay, whenever we encounter a remote relationship in our configuration, we simply skip building that field. The implementation was easy: (see hasura/graphql-engine#5145)
```diff
- SFRemoteRelationship info -> pure $ mkRemoteRelationshipFld info
+ SFRemoteRelationship info ->
+ -- https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/5144
+ if isRelay then [] else pure $ mkRemoteRelationshipFld info
```
A test case was added in that PR to prevent us from accidentally re-including remote relationships in the Relay schema. (However, it now looks like that test case does not function correctly.)
The above code was later refactored in #3037, making use of the `MaybeT` effect. However, this effect was not used correctly, so that the result of the check was ignored.
This fixes the code to use the `MaybeT` effect correctly.
CC @0x777 @rakeshkky
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3868
GitOrigin-RevId: e528303e01eacf60173cba1eec1898986cf12359
### Description
There were several places in the codebase where we would either implement a generic container, or express the need for one. This PR extracts / creates all relevant containers, and adapts the relevant parts of the code to make use of said new generic containers. More specifically, it introduces the following modules:
- `Data.Set.Extended`, for new functions on `Data.Set`
- `Data.HashMap.Strict.Multi`, for hash maps that accept multiple values
- `Data.HashMap.Strict.NonEmpty`, for hash maps that can never be constructed as empty
- `Data.Trie`, for a generic implementation of a prefix tree
This PR makes use of those new containers in the following parts of the code:
- `Hasura.GraphQL.Execute.RemoteJoin.Types`
- `Hasura.RQL.Types.Endpoint*`
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3828
GitOrigin-RevId: e6c1b971bcb3f5ab66bc91d0fa4d0e9df7a0c6c6
The only purpose was enabling the developer API by default. I don't
think that justifies a flag and CPP usage.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3820
GitOrigin-RevId: 058c9a7b03e5e164ef88e35c42f50bae3c42b5b6
### Description
This PR is one further step towards remote joins from remote schemas. It introduces a custom partial AST to represent queries to remote schemas in the IR: we now need to augment what used to be a straightforward GraphQL AST with additional information for remote join fields.
This PR does the minimal amount of work to adjust the rest of the code accordingly, using `Void` in all places that expect a type representing remote relationships.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3794
GitOrigin-RevId: 33fc317731aace71f82ad158a1951ea93350d6cc
No logic in this PR, just tidying things up (renaming the backend from `Experimental` to `DataWrapper`).
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3779
GitOrigin-RevId: f11acf563ccd8b9f16bc23c5e92da392aa4cfb2c
## Description
This PR is in reference to #2449 (support IP blacklisting for multitenant)
*RFC Update: Add support for IPv6 blocking*
### Solution and Design
Using [http-client-restricted](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/http-client-restricted) package, we're creating the HTTP manager with restricting capabilities. The IPs can be supplied from the CLI arguments as `--ipv4BlocklistCidrs cidr1, cidr2...` or `--disableDefaultIPv4Blocklist` for a default IP list. The new manager will block all requests to the provided CIDRs.
We are extracting the error message string to show the end-user that given IP is blocked from being set as a webhook. There are 2 ways to extract the error message "connection to IP address is blocked". Given below are the responses from event trigger to a blocked IP for these implementations:
- 6d74fde316f61e246c861befcca5059d33972fa7 - We return the error message string as a HTTPErr(HOther) from `Hasura/Eventing/HTTP.hs`.
```
{
"data": {
"message": "blocked connection to private IP address "
},
"version": "2",
"type": "client_error"
}
```
- 88e17456345cbb449a5ecd4877c84c9f319dbc25 - We case match on HTTPExceptionContent for InternaException in `Hasura/HTTP.hs` and extract the error message string from it. (this is implemented as it handles all the cases where pro engine makes webhook requests)
```
{
"data": {
"message": {
"type": "http_exception",
"message": "blocked connection to private IP address ",
"request": {
"secure": false,
"path": "/webhook",
"responseTimeout": "ResponseTimeoutMicro 60000000",
"queryString": "",
"method": "POST",
"requestHeaders": {
"Content-Type": "application/json",
"X-B3-ParentSpanId": "5ae6573edb2a6b36",
"X-B3-TraceId": "29ea7bd6de6ebb8f",
"X-B3-SpanId": "303137d9f1d4f341",
"User-Agent": "hasura-graphql-engine/cerebushttp-ip-blacklist-a793a0e41-dirty"
},
"host": "139.59.90.109",
"port": 8000
}
}
},
"version": "2",
"type": "client_error"
}
```
### Steps to test and verify
The restricted IPs can be used as webhooks in event triggers, and hasura will return an error message in reponse.
### Limitations, known bugs & workarounds
- The `http-client-restricted` has a needlessly complex interface, and puts effort into implementing proxy support which we don't want, so we've inlined a stripped down version.
- Performance constraint: As the blocking is checked for each request, if a long list of blocked CIDRs is supplied, iterating through all of them is not what we would prefer. Using trie is suggested to overcome this. (Added to RFC)
- Calls to Lux endpoints are inconsistent: We use either the http manager from the ProServeCtx which is unrestricted, or the http manager from the ServeCtx which is restricted (the latter through the instances for MonadMetadataApiAuthorization and UserAuthentication). (The failure scenario here would be: cloud sets PRO_ENDPOINT to something that resolves to an internal address, and then restricted requests to those endpoints fail, causing auth to fail on user requests. This is about HTTP requests to lux auth endpoints.)
## Changelog
- ✅ `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR.
## Affected components
- ✅ Server
- ✅ Tests
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3186
Co-authored-by: Robert <132113+robx@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 5bd2de2d028bc416b02c99e996c7bebce56fb1e7
Numbers from CI for the new (currently noisy) `replace_metadata` adhoc benchmark:
chinook: 0.19s -> 0.16
huge_schema: 36.98s -> 29.89
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3685
GitOrigin-RevId: be79b666858b03e8407c0d89765e9aac0af8d40a
It was only used for one purpose. This makes the sketchy manager handling in schema cache init a bit more visible.
Should help make the change in #2449 more robust.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3677
GitOrigin-RevId: e34b990bafb4893663ae195d5bf329130056f1ff
I discovered and removed instances of Boolean Blindness about whether json numbers should be stringified or not.
Although quite far-reaching, this is a completely mechanical change and should have no observable impact outside the server code.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3763
GitOrigin-RevId: c588891afd8a6923a135c736f6581a43a2eddbc7
TL;DR
---
We go from this:
```haskell
(|
withRecordInconsistency
( (|
modifyErrA
( do
(info, dependencies) <- liftEitherA -< buildRelInfo relDef
recordDependencies -< (metadataObject, schemaObject, dependencies)
returnA -< info
)
|) (addTableContext @b table . addRelationshipContext)
)
|) metadataObject
```
to this:
```haskell
withRecordInconsistencyM metadataObject $ do
modifyErr (addTableContext @b table . addRelationshipContext) $ do
(info, dependencies) <- liftEither $ buildRelInfo relDef
recordDependenciesM metadataObject schemaObject dependencies
return info
```
Background
---
We use Haskell's `Arrows` language extension to gain some syntactic sugar when working with `Arrow`s. `Arrow`s are a programming abstraction comparable to `Monad`s.
Unfortunately the syntactic sugar provided by this language extension is not very sweet.
This PR shows how we can sometimes avoid using `Arrow`s altogether, without loss of functionality or correctness. It is a demo of a technique that can be used to cut down the amount of `Arrows`-based code in our codebase by about half.
Approach
---
Although _in general_ not every `Monad` is an `Arrow`, specific `Arrow` instantiations are exactly as powerful as their `Monad` equivalents. Otherwise they wouldn't be very equivalent, would they?
Just like `liftEither` interprets the `Either e` monad into an arbitrary monad implementing `MonadError e`, we add `interpA` which interprets certain concrete monads such as `Writer w` into specific arrows, e.g. ones satisfying `ArrowWriter w`. This means that the part of the code that only uses such interpretable effects can be written _monadically_, and then used in _arrow_ constructions down the line.
This approach cannot be used for arrow effects which do not have a monadic equivalent. In our codebase, the only instance of this is `ArrowCache m`, implemented by the `Rule m` arrow. So code written with `ArrowCache m` in the context cannot be rewritten monadically using this technique.
See also
---
- #1827
- #2210
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3543
Co-authored-by: jkachmar <8461423+jkachmar@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: eb79619c95f7a571bce99bc144ce42ee65d08505
…rking metadata operations
And add an initial benchmark for replace_metadata, to unblock some
performance improvements to that op in a PR to be merged after this.
This is an MVP just to have something in CI to reference when optimizing
metadata operations. See TODO for roadmap.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3673
Co-authored-by: jkachmar <8461423+jkachmar@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 968d1f92ca79c78ad90b2304d2214069bc739621
## Description
Hopefully this is relatively self-explanatory: this change splits the helper functions we've used to extend QuickCheck from the orphan instances and generators that we have defined for unit tests. These have now been placed in `Test.QuickCheck.Extended` and `Hasura.QuickCheck.Instances`, respectively.
This change also adds some documentation to the functions defined in `Test.QuickCheck.Extended` in the spirit of similar functions defined by `Test.QuickCheck`, itself.
### Motivation
We should adhere to the existing convention of constructing "extension modules" for common libraries separately from the code that takes advantage of these.
Alone, this wouldn't be a reason to split up `Hasura.Generators`, but we should **also** follow a convention of defining **all** orphan instances in modules whose names clearly indicate that they exist solely for the purpose of exporting these orphan instances (e.g. `Hasura.QuickCheck.Instances`).
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3747
GitOrigin-RevId: fb856a790b4a39163f81481d4f900fafb1797ea6
### Description
This PR adds a custom instance for `Show` to `ContextName`, to avoid combined names being rendered as `Combine Postgres Postgres`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3750
GitOrigin-RevId: 00a202e4191607c319bd202ea23623d6cc9f0dff
### Description
This small PR fixes a few errors in the setup of remote relationships. We were not using the proper local state setup functions coming from the LHS context, and the RHS function for remote relationships was misnamed.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3749
GitOrigin-RevId: 5f261aced6bf5dbb05749af10c59e01a9214ea11
In order to respond to GraphQL queries that make use of the introspection fields `__type` or `__schema`, we need two things:
- an overview of the relevant GraphQL type information, stored in a `Schema` object, and
- to have included the `__type` and `__schema` fields in the `query_root` that we generate.
It used to be necessary to do the above items in that order, since the `__type` and `__schema` fields (i.e. the respective `FieldParser`s) were generated _from_ a `Schema` object.
Thanks to recent refactorings in `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema.Introspect` (see hasura/graphql-engine-mono#2835 or hasura/graphql-engine@5760d9289c), the introspection fields _themselves_ are now `Schema`-agnostic, and simply return a function that takes a `Schema` object after parsing. For instance, the type of `schema`, corresponding to the `__schema` field, has literally changed as follows:
```diff
-schema :: MonadParse n => Schema -> FieldParser n ( J.Value)
+schema :: MonadParse n => FieldParser n (Schema -> J.Value)
```
This means that the introspection fields can be included in the GraphQL schema *before* we have generated a `Schema` object. In particular, rather than the current architecture of generating `Schema` at startup time for every role, we can instead generate `Schema` ad-hoc at query parsing time, only for those queries that make use of the introspection fields. This avoids us storing a `Schema` for every role for the lifetime of the server.
However: this introduces a functional change, as the code that generates the `Schema` object, and in particular the `accumulateTypeDefinitions` method, also does certain correctness checks, to prevent exposing a spec-incompliant GraphQL schema. If these correctness checks are being done at parsing time rather than startup time, then we catch certain errors only later on. For this reason, this PR adds an explicit run of this type accumulation at startup time. For efficiency reasons, and since this correctness check is not essential for correct operation of HGE, this is done for the admin role only.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3231
GitOrigin-RevId: 23701c548b785929b28667025436b6ce60bfe1cd
## Description
This PR adds the possibility for hspec tests to start a remote server with a custom schema, using the _morpheus_ library. In addition, it adds:
- X-to-DB object relationships tests
- X-to-DB array relationships tests
- X-to-RS relationships tests
For now, all those X are only postgres, but the tests are written in a way that will allow for it to easily be any other DB, or even remote schemas. The actual tests were taken mostly from #3069.
To achieve this, this PR heavily refactors the test harness. Most importantly: it generalizes the notion of a `Backend` to a notion of generic `Context`, allowing for contexts that are the unions of two backends, or of a backend and a remote schema.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3567
Co-authored-by: jkachmar <8461423+jkachmar@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 623f700ba482743f94d3eaf659e6cfa22cd0dbc9
There are three minor cleanups here:
- The first argument to the `setMetadataInCatalog` method is always `Just`. It is thus important to avoid `Maybe`, because this means that a crucial piece of code (saving metadata) is completely untested.
- Rather than spelling them out, we can derive the `Semigroup`/`Monoid` instances for `MetadataModifier` through the `Endo` type.
- I've renamed the name of the getter of the `MetadataModifier` newtype to **r**unMetadataModifier. Using record puns, this allows us to write:
```diff
- putMetadata $ unMetadataModifier metadataModifier metadata
+ putMetadata $ runMetadataModifier metadata
```
which is nicer to read.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3703
GitOrigin-RevId: fd36b3c5202017f5afc943c01dfdd7c82c099bdd
#### TODO
- [x] fix `hashable >= 1.3.1` serialization ordering issue [^1]
- `test_graphql_mutations.py::TestGraphQLMutateEnums` was failing
- [x] fix `unordered-containers` serialization ordering issue [^2]
- `test_graphql_queries.py` was failing on Citus
- [ ] verify that no new failures have been introduced
- [ ] open issues to fix the above
- identify test cases that "leak" implementation details by depending on `hashable` instance ordering
- bump `hashable >= 1.3.1` and update test cases with new ordering OR modify them so that ordering is stable
- bump `unordered-containers >= 0.2.15.0` and update test cases with new ordering OR modify them so that ordering is stable
- one of the test cases was failing on string equality comparison for a generated Citus query
- we probably don't want to _actually_ do this unless there are _very specific_ guarantees we want to make about generated query structure
---
Just what it says on the tin.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3538 updated the freeze file a few weeks ago, but it looks like the index state hadn't been updated since December so a lot of stuff that had newer versions didn't get updated.
---
EDIT: I should add, the motivation for doing this in the first place is that `hspec > 2.8.4` now supports specifying filtering spec trees based on patterns provided by the `HSPEC_MATCH` environment variable.
For example, one could have a script that executes the following:
```
HSPEC_MATCH="PostgreSQL" \
ghcid \
--command \
'cabal repl graphql-engine:test:tests-hspec \
--repl-option -O0 \
--repl-option -fobject-code' \
--test "main"
```
...which will loop on typechecking the `tests-hspec` component, and then as soon as it passes (i.e. no warnings or errors) will run _only_ the `PostgreSQL` sub-components.
[^1]: `hashable >= 1.3.1.0` [updated its default salts](https://github.com/haskell-unordered-containers/hashable/pull/196), which [broke serialization ordering](https://github.com/haskell/aeson/issues/837)
[^2]: `unordered-containers >= 0.2.16.0` [introduced changes to some of its internal functions](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/unordered-containers-0.2.16.0/changelog) which seem like they could have affected serialization stability
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3672
GitOrigin-RevId: bbd1d48c73db4021913f0b5345b7315a8d6525d3
We build the GraphQL schema by combining building blocks such as `tableSelectionSet` and `columnParser`. These building blocks individually build `{InputFields,Field,}Parser` objects. Those object specify the valid GraphQL schema.
Since the GraphQL schema is role-dependent, at some point we need to know what fragment of the GraphQL schema a specific role is allowed to access, and this is stored in `{Sel,Upd,Ins,Del}PermInfo` objects.
We have passed around these permission objects as function arguments to the schema building blocks since we first started dealing with permissions during the PDV refactor - see hasura/graphql-engine@5168b99e46 in hasura/graphql-engine#4111. This means that, for instance, `tableSelectionSet` has as its type:
```haskell
tableSelectionSet ::
forall b r m n.
MonadBuildSchema b r m n =>
SourceName ->
TableInfo b ->
SelPermInfo b ->
m (Parser 'Output n (AnnotatedFields b))
```
There are three reasons to change this.
1. We often pass a `Maybe (xPermInfo b)` instead of a proper `xPermInfo b`, and it's not clear what the intended semantics of this is. Some potential improvements on the data types involved are discussed in issue hasura/graphql-engine-mono#3125.
2. In most cases we also already pass a `TableInfo b`, and together with the `MonadRole` that is usually also in scope, this means that we could look up the required permissions regardless: so passing the permissions explicitly undermines the "single source of truth" principle. Breaking this principle also makes the code more difficult to read.
3. We are working towards role-based parsers (see hasura/graphql-engine-mono#2711), where the `{InputFields,Field,}Parser` objects are constructed in a role-invariant way, so that we have a single object that can be used for all roles. In particular, this means that the schema building blocks _need_ to be constructed in a role-invariant way. While this PR doesn't accomplish that, it does reduce the amount of role-specific arguments being passed, thus fixing hasura/graphql-engine-mono#3068.
Concretely, this PR simply drops the `xPermInfo b` argument from almost all schema building blocks. Instead these objects are looked up from the `TableInfo b` as-needed. The resulting code is considerably simpler and shorter.
One way to interpret this change is as follows. Before this PR, we figured out permissions at the top-level in `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema`, passing down the obtained `xPermInfo` objects as required. After this PR, we have a bottom-up approach where the schema building blocks themselves decide whether they want to be included for a particular role.
So this moves some permission logic out of `Hasura.GraphQL.Schema`, which is very complex.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3608
GitOrigin-RevId: 51a744f34ec7d57bc8077667ae7f9cb9c4f6c962
- consistent qualified imports
- less convoluted initialization of pro logging HTTP manager
- pass pro HTTP manager directly instead of via Has
- remove some dead healthcheck code
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3639
GitOrigin-RevId: dfa7b9c62d1842a07a8514cdb77f1ed86064fb06
## Description
This PR adds all the scaffolding for tests that require remote servers. It is mostly a refactor of `Feature`; where we listed for each test a list of individual backends, we now provide a list of `Context`s, that allows for tests to specify not only how it should be setup, but also what state needs to be carried around throughout the test. This will be useful when launching custom remote servers.
Additionally, this PR:
- cleans the way we generate logs in the engine as part of the tests
- cleans the cabal file
- introduce a few more helpers for sending commands to the engine (such as `postMetadata_`)
- allows for headers in queries sent to the engine (to support permissions tests)
- adds basic code to start / stop a "remote" server
This PR is a pre-requisite of #3567.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3573
Co-authored-by: jkachmar <8461423+jkachmar@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 05f808c6b85729dbb3ea6648c3e10a3c16b641ef
spec: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2278
Briefly:
- extend metadata so that allowlist entries get a new scope field
- update `add_collection_to_allowlist` to accept this new scope field,
and adds `update_scope_of_collection_in_allowlist` to change the scope
- scope can be global or role-based; a collection is available for every
role if it is global, and available to every listed role if it is role-based
- graphql-engine-oss is aware of role-based allowlist metadata; collections
with non-global scope are treated as if they weren't in the allowlist
To run the tests:
- `cabal run graphql-engine-tests -- unit --match Allowlist`
- py-tests against pro:
- launch `graphql-engine-pro` with `HASURA_GRAPHQL_ADMIN_SECRET` and `HASURA_GRAPHQL_ENABLE_ALLOWLIST`
- `pytest test_allowlist_queries.py --hge-urls=... --pg-urls=... --hge-key=... --test-allowlist-queries --pro-tests`
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2477
Co-authored-by: Anon Ray <616387+ecthiender@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert <132113+robx@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 01f8026fbe59d8701e2de30986511a452fce1a99
## Description
This PR is a subset of #3069, that does roughly that #3031 was aiming to do: add the schema cache building phase for relationships from remote servers. This PR does not change any of the code that *uses* remote relationships, meaning we ignore the added schema cache information. It also contains dependency-tracking code, which was originally missing from #3031; in turn, this pulls some of the metadata API as well, since we identify remote relationships by how they were created.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3540
GitOrigin-RevId: ed962b6d07fd4adbf0a71e0d79736a4e8b422fea
## Description
This PR updates the notes-extracting script, to allow for a stable sort across runs:
- files are now treated in alphabetical order of the full file name:
- within a file, notes are treated in order
- that order is reflected in the generated index file
- within a note, references are sorted by file, then by line number
Additionally it fixes(?) a note whose format was unexpected.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3352
GitOrigin-RevId: 2b2b57ec0aa2657d75a88e4951e6b19bb2d665e3
This change is because in https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2477, errors come out as
```
multiple declarations exist for the following allowlist : [CollectionName {unCollectionName = NonEmptyText {unNonEmptyText = "collection_1"}}]'
```
which is awfully messy. This changes it to
```
multiple declarations exist for the following allowlist: collection_1
```
This should improve error messages across the board -- e.g. `RoleName` has a nice `ToTxt` instance, while we used to use a derived `Show` instances. However, there might just be instances where the `Show` instance was better, bit hard to be sure based on scanning the code since we don't have test coverage for these errors.
Broken out of the allowlist PR since it affects more than just the allowlist.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3470
GitOrigin-RevId: 7a2c29f17d9f15d840cb2f89caefcdd3aae44d25