The only real use was for the dubious multitenant option
--consoleAssetsVersion, which actually overrode not just
the assets version. I.e., as far as I can tell, if you pass
--consoleAssetsVersion to multitenant, that version will
also make it into e.g. HTTP client user agent headers as
the proper graphql-engine version.
I'm dropping that option, since it seems unused in production
and I don't want to go to the effort of fixing it, but am happy
to look into that if folks feels strongly that it should be
kept.
(Reason for attacking this is that I was looking into http
client things around blacklisting, and the versioning thing
is a bit painful around http client headers.)
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2458
GitOrigin-RevId: a02b05557124bdba9f65e96b3aa2746aeee03f4a
This commit applies ormolu to the whole Haskell code base by running `make format`.
For in-flight branches, simply merging changes from `main` will result in merge conflicts.
To avoid this, update your branch using the following instructions. Replace `<format-commit>`
by the hash of *this* commit.
$ git checkout my-feature-branch
$ git merge <format-commit>^ # and resolve conflicts normally
$ make format
$ git commit -a -m "reformat with ormolu"
$ git merge -s ours post-ormolu
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2404
GitOrigin-RevId: 75049f5c12f430c615eafb4c6b8e83e371e01c8e
>
### Description
>
Few improvements to mssql transactions.
### Changelog
- [ ] `CHANGELOG.md` is updated with user-facing content relevant to this PR. If no changelog is required, then add the `no-changelog-required` label.
### Affected components
- [x] Server
- [ ] Console
- [ ] CLI
- [ ] Docs
- [ ] Community Content
- [ ] Build System
- [ ] Tests
- [ ] Other (list it)
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2324
GitOrigin-RevId: 808947188f5f3d196c7dfc4ebfa661629db5f8f7
This is a follow-up to #1959.
Today, I spent a while in review figuring out that a harmless PR change didn't do anything,
because it was moving from a `runLazy...` to something without the `Lazy`. So let's get
that source of confusion removed.
This should be a bit easier to review commit by commit, since some of the functions had
confusing names. (E.g. there was a misnamed `Migrate.Internal.runTx` before.)
The change should be a no-op.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2335
GitOrigin-RevId: 0f284c4c0f814482d7827e7732a6d49e7735b302
This is just a one-off fix, based on running ormolu across
the code base, which uses GHC's parser in haddock mode.
### Description
Fixes several instances of illegal haddock comments.
### Related Issues
#1679
### Steps to test and verify
Run ormolu over the codebase. Prior to this change, it complains that it
can't parse certain files due to malformed Haddock comments, after it
doesn't (there are still some other errors).
### Limitations, known bugs & workarounds
This doesn't ensure that we don't introduce similar issues in the future;
that'll be dealt with once we implement #1679.
#### Breaking changes
- [x] No Breaking changes, only touches code comments
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2010
GitOrigin-RevId: 7fbab0325ce13a16a04ff98d351f1af768e25d7c
### A long tale about encoding
GraphQL has an [introspection system](http://spec.graphql.org/June2018/#sec-Introspection), which allows its schema to be introspected. This is what we use to introspect [remote schemas](41383e1f88/server/src-rsr/introspection.json). There is one place in the introspection where we might find GraphQL values: the default value of an argument.
```json
{
"fields": [
{
"name": "echo",
"args": [
{
"name": "msg",
"defaultValue": "\"Hello\\nWorld!\""
}
]
}
]
}
```
Note that GraphQL's introspection is transport agnostic: the default value isn't returned as a JSON value, but as a _string-encoded GraphQL Value_. In this case, the value is the GraphQL String `"Hello\nWorld!"`. Embedded into a string, it is encoded as: `"\"Hello\\nWorld!\""`.
When we [parse that value](41383e1f88/server/src-lib/Hasura/GraphQL/RemoteServer.hs (L351)), we first extract that JSON string, to get its content, `"Hello\nWorld!"`, then use our [GraphQL Parser library](21c1ddfb41/src/Language/GraphQL/Draft/Parser.hs (L200)) to interpret this: we find the double quote, understand that the content is a String, unescape the backslashes, and end up with the desired string value: `['H', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', '\n', 'W', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd', '!']`. This all works fine.
However, there was a bug in the _printer_ part of our parser library: when printing back a String value, we would not re-escape characters properly. In practice, this meant that the GraphQL String `"Hello\nWorld"` would be encoded in JSON as `"\"Hello\nWorld!\""`. Note how the `\n` is not properly double-escaped. This led to a variety of problems, as described in #1965:
- we would successfully parse a remote schema containing such characters in its default values, but then would print those erroneous JSON values in our introspection, which would _crash the console_
- we would inject those default values in queries sent to remote schemas, and print them wrong doing so, sending invalid values to remote schemas and getting errors in result
It turns out that this bug had been lurking in the code for a long time: I combed through the history of [the parser library](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-parser-hs), and as far as I can tell, this bug has always been there. So why was it never caught? After all, we do have [round trip tests](21c1ddfb41/test/Spec.hs (L52)) that print + parse arbitrary values and check that we get the same value as a result. They do use any arbitrary unicode character in their generated strings. So... that should have covered it, right?
Well... it turns out that [the tests were ignoring errors](7678066c49/test/Spec.hs (L45)), and would always return "SUCCESS" in CI, even if they failed... Furthermore, the sample size was small enough that, most of the time, _they would not hit such characters_. Running the tests locally on a loop, I only got errors ~10% of the time...
This was all fixed in hasura/graphql-parser-hs#44. This was probably one of Hasura's longest standing bugs? ^^'
### Description
This PR bumps the version of graphql-parser-hs in the engine, and switches some of our own arbitrary tests to use unicode characters in text rather than alphanumeric values. It turns out those tests were much better at hitting "bad" values, and that they consistently failed when generating arbitrary unicode characters.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2031
GitOrigin-RevId: 54fa48270386a67336e5544351691619e0684559
### Description
A first PR, #1947, removed all the `Arbitrary` stuff from our codebase. But #1740, merged on the same day, added some tests relying on `Arbitrary`. In the merge process, some unneeded `Arbitrary` code got reintroduced.
This PR removes all `Arbitrary` stuff from `src-lib`, and cleans / refactor `Hasura.Generator` in `src-test` to only reduce it to the bare minimum amount of `Arbitrary` instances.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1957
GitOrigin-RevId: 7e76009bb022205e3737fca45749411a266cc08c
Query plan caching was introduced by - I believe - hasura/graphql-engine#1934 in order to reduce the query response latency. During the development of PDV in hasura/graphql-engine#4111, it was found out that the new architecture (for which query plan caching wasn't implemented) performed comparably to the pre-PDV architecture with caching. Hence, it was decided to leave query plan caching until some day in the future when it was deemed necessary.
Well, we're in the future now, and there still isn't a convincing argument for query plan caching. So the time has come to remove some references to query plan caching from the codebase. For the most part, any code being removed would probably not be very well suited to the post-PDV architecture of query execution, so arguably not much is lost.
Apart from simplifying the code, this PR will contribute towards making the GraphQL schema generation more modular, testable, and easier to profile. I'd like to eventually work towards a situation in which it's easy to generate a GraphQL schema parser *in isolation*, without being connected to a database, and then parse a GraphQL query *in isolation*, without even listening any HTTP port. It is important that both of these operations can be examined in detail, and in isolation, since they are two major performance bottlenecks, as well as phases where many important upcoming features hook into.
Implementation
The following have been removed:
- The entirety of `server/src-lib/Hasura/GraphQL/Execute/Plan.hs`
- The core phases of query parsing and execution no longer have any references to query plan caching. Note that this is not to be confused with query *response* caching, which is not affected by this PR. This includes removal of the types:
- - `Opaque`, which is replaced by a tuple. Note that the old implementation was broken and did not adequately hide the constructors.
- - `QueryReusability` (and the `markNotReusable` method). Notably, the implementation of the `ParseT` monad now consists of two, rather than three, monad transformers.
- Cache-related tests (in `server/src-test/Hasura/CacheBoundedSpec.hs`) have been removed .
- References to query plan caching in the documentation.
- The `planCacheOptions` in the `TenantConfig` type class was removed. However, during parsing, unrecognized fields in the YAML config get ignored, so this does not cause a breaking change. (Confirmed manually, as well as in consultation with @sordina.)
- The metrics no longer send cache hit/miss messages.
There are a few places in which one can still find references to query plan caching:
- We still accept the `--query-plan-cache-size` command-line option for backwards compatibility. The `HASURA_QUERY_PLAN_CACHE_SIZE` environment variable is not read.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1815
GitOrigin-RevId: 17d92b254ec093c62a7dfeec478658ede0813eb7
## Description
Thanks to #1664, the Metadata API types no longer require a `ToJSON` instance. This PR follows up with a cleanup of the types of the arguments to the metadata API:
- whenever possible, it moves those argument types to where they're used (RQL.DDL.*)
- it removes all unrequired instances (mostly `ToJSON`)
This PR does not attempt to do it for _all_ such argument types. For some of the metadata operations, the type used to describe the argument to the API and used to represent the value in the metadata are one and the same (like for `CreateEndpoint`). Sometimes, the two types are intertwined in complex ways (`RemoteRelationship` and `RemoteRelationshipDef`). In the spirit of only doing uncontroversial cleaning work, this PR only moves types that are not used outside of RQL.DDL.
Furthermore, this is a small step towards separating the different types all jumbled together in RQL.Types.
## Notes
This PR also improves several `FromJSON` instances to make use of `withObject`, and to use a human readable string instead of a type name in error messages whenever possible. For instance:
- before: `expected Object for Object, but encountered X`
after: `expected Object for add computed field, but encountered X`
- before: `Expecting an object for update query`
after: `expected Object for update query, but encountered X`
This PR also renames `CreateFunctionPermission` to `FunctionPermissionArgument`, to remove the quite surprising `type DropFunctionPermission = CreateFunctionPermission`.
This PR also deletes some dead code, mostly in RQL.DML.
This PR also moves a PG-specific source resolving function from DDL.Schema.Source to the only place where it is used: App.hs.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1844
GitOrigin-RevId: a594521194bb7fe6a111b02a9e099896f9fed59c
Remote relationships are now supported on SQL Server and BigQuery. The major change though is the re-architecture of remote join execution logic. Prior to this PR, each backend is responsible for processing the remote relationships that are part of their AST.
This is not ideal as there is nothing specific about a remote join's execution that ties it to a backend. The only backend specific part is whether or not the specification of the remote relationship is valid (i.e, we'll need to validate whether the scalars are compatible).
The approach now changes to this:
1. Before delegating the AST to the backend, we traverse the AST, collect all the remote joins while modifying the AST to add necessary join fields where needed.
1. Once the remote joins are collected from the AST, the database call is made to fetch the response. The necessary data for the remote join(s) is collected from the database's response and one or more remote schema calls are constructed as necessary.
1. The remote schema calls are then executed and the data from the database and from the remote schemas is joined to produce the final response.
### Known issues
1. Ideally the traversal of the IR to collect remote joins should return an AST which does not include remote join fields. This operation can be type safe but isn't taken up as part of the PR.
1. There is a lot of code duplication between `Transport/HTTP.hs` and `Transport/Websocket.hs` which needs to be fixed ASAP. This too hasn't been taken up by this PR.
1. The type which represents the execution plan is only modified to handle our current remote joins and as such it will have to be changed to accommodate general remote joins.
1. Use of lenses would have reduced the boilerplate code to collect remote joins from the base AST.
1. The current remote join logic assumes that the join columns of a remote relationship appear with their names in the database response. This however is incorrect as they could be aliased. This can be taken up by anyone, I've left a comment in the code.
### Notes to the reviewers
I think it is best reviewed commit by commit.
1. The first one is very straight forward.
1. The second one refactors the remote join execution logic but other than moving things around, it doesn't change the user facing functionality. This moves Postgres specific parts to `Backends/Postgres` module from `Execute`. Some IR related code to `Hasura.RQL.IR` module. Simplifies various type class function signatures as a backend doesn't have to handle remote joins anymore
1. The third one fixes partial case matches that for some weird reason weren't shown as warnings before this refactor
1. The fourth one generalizes the validation logic of remote relationships and implements `scalarTypeGraphQLName` function on SQL Server and BigQuery which is used by the validation logic. This enables remote relationships on BigQuery and SQL Server.
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1497
GitOrigin-RevId: 77dd8eed326602b16e9a8496f52f46d22b795598
This reverts the remote schema type customisation and namespacing feature temporarily as we test for certain conditions.
GitOrigin-RevId: f8ee97233da4597f703970c3998664c03582d8e7
This claws back ~7min from integration tests (run serially, as with `dev.sh test --integration`
Further improvements would do well to focus on optimizing metadata operations, as `setup` dominates
GitOrigin-RevId: 76637d6fa953c2404627c4391447a05bf09355fa
Modifying schema-sync implementation to use polling for OSS/Pro. Invalidations are now propagated via the `hdb_catalog.hdb_schema_notifications` table in OSS/Pro. Pattern followed is now a Listener/Processor split with Cloud listening for changes via a LISTEN/NOTIFY channel and OSS polling for resource version changes in the metadata table. See issue #460 for more details.
GitOrigin-RevId: 48434426df02e006f4ec328c0d5cd5b30183db25
Previously invalid REST endpoints would throw errors during schema cache build.
This PR changes the validation to instead add to the inconsistent metadata objects in order to allow use of `allow_inconsistent_metadata` with inconsistent REST endpoints.
All non-fatal endpoint definition errors are returned as inconsistent metadata warnings/errors depending on the use of `allow_inconsistent_metadata`. The endpoints with issues are then created and return informational runtime errors when they are called.
Console impact when creating endpoints is that error messages now refer to metadata inconsistencies rather than REST feature at the top level:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/92299/109911843-ede9ec00-7cfe-11eb-9c55-7cf924d662a6.png)
<img width="969" alt="image" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/92299/110258597-8336fa00-7ff7-11eb-872c-bfca945aa0e8.png">
Note: Conflicting endpoints generate one error per conflicting set of endpoints due to the implementation of `groupInconsistentMetadataById` and `imObjectIds`. This is done to ensure that error messages are terse, but may pose errors if there are some assumptions made surrounding `imObjectIds`.
Related to https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/473 (Allow Inconsistent Metadata (v2) #473 (Merged))
---
### Kodiak commit message
Changes the validation to use inconsistent metadata objects for REST endpoint issues.
#### Commit title
Inconsistent metadata for REST endpoints
GitOrigin-RevId: b9de971208e9bb0a319c57df8dace44cb115ff66
fixes#3868
docker image - `hasura/graphql-engine:inherited-roles-preview-48b73a2de`
Note:
To be able to use the inherited roles feature, the graphql-engine should be started with the env variable `HASURA_GRAPHQL_EXPERIMENTAL_FEATURES` set to `inherited_roles`.
Introduction
------------
This PR implements the idea of multiple roles as presented in this [paper](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/FGALanguageICDE07.pdf). The multiple roles feature in this PR can be used via inherited roles. An inherited role is a role which can be created by combining multiple singular roles. For example, if there are two roles `author` and `editor` configured in the graphql-engine, then we can create a inherited role with the name of `combined_author_editor` role which will combine the select permissions of the `author` and `editor` roles and then make GraphQL queries using the `combined_author_editor`.
How are select permissions of different roles are combined?
------------------------------------------------------------
A select permission includes 5 things:
1. Columns accessible to the role
2. Row selection filter
3. Limit
4. Allow aggregation
5. Scalar computed fields accessible to the role
Suppose there are two roles, `role1` gives access to the `address` column with row filter `P1` and `role2` gives access to both the `address` and the `phone` column with row filter `P2` and we create a new role `combined_roles` which combines `role1` and `role2`.
Let's say the following GraphQL query is queried with the `combined_roles` role.
```graphql
query {
employees {
address
phone
}
}
```
This will translate to the following SQL query:
```sql
select
(case when (P1 or P2) then address else null end) as address,
(case when P2 then phone else null end) as phone
from employee
where (P1 or P2)
```
The other parameters of the select permission will be combined in the following manner:
1. Limit - Minimum of the limits will be the limit of the inherited role
2. Allow aggregations - If any of the role allows aggregation, then the inherited role will allow aggregation
3. Scalar computed fields - same as table column fields, as in the above example
APIs for inherited roles:
----------------------
1. `add_inherited_role`
`add_inherited_role` is the [metadata API](https://hasura.io/docs/1.0/graphql/core/api-reference/index.html#schema-metadata-api) to create a new inherited role. It accepts two arguments
`role_name`: the name of the inherited role to be added (String)
`role_set`: list of roles that need to be combined (Array of Strings)
Example:
```json
{
"type": "add_inherited_role",
"args": {
"role_name":"combined_user",
"role_set":[
"user",
"user1"
]
}
}
```
After adding the inherited role, the inherited role can be used like single roles like earlier
Note:
An inherited role can only be created with non-inherited/singular roles.
2. `drop_inherited_role`
The `drop_inherited_role` API accepts the name of the inherited role and drops it from the metadata. It accepts a single argument:
`role_name`: name of the inherited role to be dropped
Example:
```json
{
"type": "drop_inherited_role",
"args": {
"role_name":"combined_user"
}
}
```
Metadata
---------
The derived roles metadata will be included under the `experimental_features` key while exporting the metadata.
```json
{
"experimental_features": {
"derived_roles": [
{
"role_name": "manager_is_employee_too",
"role_set": [
"employee",
"manager"
]
}
]
}
}
```
Scope
------
Only postgres queries and subscriptions are supported in this PR.
Important points:
-----------------
1. All columns exposed to an inherited role will be marked as `nullable`, this is done so that cell value nullification can be done.
TODOs
-------
- [ ] Tests
- [ ] Test a GraphQL query running with a inherited role without enabling inherited roles in experimental features
- [] Tests for aggregate queries, limit, computed fields, functions, subscriptions (?)
- [ ] Introspection test with a inherited role (nullability changes in a inherited role)
- [ ] Docs
- [ ] Changelog
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <6562944+0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 3b8ee1e11f5ceca80fe294f8c074d42fbccfec63
fixes https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/6449
A while back we added [support for customizing JWT claims](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/pull/3575) and this enabled to map a session variable to any value within the unregistered claims, but as reported in #6449 , users aren't able to map the `x-hasura-user-id` session variable to the `sub` standard JWT claim.
This PR fixes the above issue by allowing mapping session variables to standard JWT claims as well.
GitOrigin-RevId: d3e63d7580adac55eb212e0a1ecf7c33f5b3ac4b
fixes https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/2109
This PR accepts a new config `allowed_skew` in the JWT config to provide for some leeway while comparing the JWT expiry time.
GitOrigin-RevId: ef50cf77d8e2780478685096ed13794b5c4c9de4
This PR is a combination of the following other PRs:
- #169: move HasHttpManager out of RQL.Types
- #170: move UserInfoM to Hasura.Session
- #179: delete dead code from RQL.Types
- #180: move event related code to EventTrigger
GitOrigin-RevId: d97608d7945f2c7a0a37e307369983653eb62eb1
This is an incremental PR towards https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/pull/5797
Co-authored-by: Anon Ray <ecthiender@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: a6cb8c239b2ff840a0095e78845f682af0e588a9
* Remove unused ExitCode constructors
* Simplify shutdown logic
* Update server/src-lib/Hasura/App.hs
Co-authored-by: Brandon Simmons <brandon@hasura.io>
* WIP: fix zombie thread issue
* Use forkCodensity for the schema sync thread
* Use forkCodensity for the oauthTokenUpdateWorker
* Use forkCodensity for the schema update processor thread
* Add deprecation notice
* Logger threads use Codensity
* Add the MonadFix instance for Codensity to get log-sender thread logs
* Move outIdleGC out to the top level, WIP
* Update forkImmortal fuction for more logging info
* add back the idle GC to Pro
* setupAuth
* use ImmortalThreadLog
* Fix tests
* Add another finally block
* loud warnings
* Change log level
* hlint
* Finalize the logger in the correct place
* Add ManagedT
* Update server/src-lib/Hasura/Server/Auth.hs
Co-authored-by: Brandon Simmons <brandon@hasura.io>
* Comments etc.
Co-authored-by: Brandon Simmons <brandon@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Naveen Naidu <naveennaidu479@gmail.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 156065c5c3ace0e13d1997daef6921cc2e9f641c
Generalize TableCoreInfoRM, TableCoreCacheRT, some table metadata data types, generalize fromPGCol to fromCol, generalize some schema cache functions, prepare some enum schema cache code for generalization
GitOrigin-RevId: a65112bc1688e00fd707d27af087cb2585961da2
An incremental PR towards https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/pull/5797
- Expands `MonadMetadataStorage` with operations related to async actions and setting/updating metadata
GitOrigin-RevId: 53386b7b2d007e162050b826d0708897f0b4c8f6
This issue was very tricky to track down, but fortunately easy to fix.
The interaction here is subtle enough that it’s difficult to put into
English what would go wrong in what circumstances, but the new unit test
captures precisely that interaction to ensure it remains fixed.
* improve jsonpath parser to accept special characters and property tests for the same
* make the JWTClaimsMapValueG parametrizable
* add documentation in the JWT file
* modify processAuthZHeader
Co-authored-by: Karthikeyan Chinnakonda <karthikeyan@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Said commit had a lot of whitespace, formatting, and trivial
refactorings. We should be mindful that these have a real cost in terms
of review time and potential for bugs to be introduced.
a weeder pass in CI would have caught this.
Also some minor refactoring of bounded cache module:
- the maxBound check in `trim` was confusing and unnecessary
- consequently trim was unnecessary for lookupPure
Also add some basic tests
These must have gotten messed up during a refactor. As a consequence
almost all samples received so far fall into the single erroneous 0 to
1K seconds (originally supposed to be 1ms?) bucket.
I also re-thought what the numbers should be, but these are still
arbitrary and might want adjusting in the future.
* Pass environment variables around as a data structure, via @sordina
* Resolving build error
* Adding Environment passing note to changelog
* Removing references to ILTPollerLog as this seems to have been reintroduced from a bad merge
* removing commented-out imports
* Language pragmas already set by project
* Linking async thread
* Apply suggestions from code review
Use `runQueryTx` instead of `runLazyTx` for queries.
* remove the non-user facing entry in the changelog
Co-authored-by: Phil Freeman <paf31@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: Phil Freeman <phil@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
* generalize PGExecCtx to support specialized functions for various operations
* fix tests compilation
* allow customising PGExecCtx when starting the web server
The bulk of changes here is some shifting of code around and a little
parameterizing of functions for easier testing.
Also: comments, some renaming for clarity/less-chance-for-misue.
This also seems to squash a stubborn space leak we see with
subscriptions (linking to canonical #3388 for reference).
This may also fix some of the "Unexpected exception" websockets
exceptions we are now surfacing (see e.g. #4344)
Also: dev.sh: fix hpc reporting
Initial work on this done by Vamshi.
* move user info related code to Hasura.User module
* the RFC #4120 implementation; insert permissions with admin secret
* revert back to old RoleName based schema maps
An attempt made to avoid duplication of schema contexts in types
if any role doesn't possess any admin secret specific schema
* fix compile errors in haskell test
* keep 'user_vars' for session variables in http-logs
* no-op refacto
* tests for admin only inserts
* update docs for admin only inserts
* updated CHANGELOG.md
* default behaviour when admin secret is not set
* fix x-hasura-role to X-Hasura-Role in pytests
* introduce effective timeout in actions async tests
* update docs for admin-secret not configured case
* Update docs/graphql/manual/api-reference/schema-metadata-api/permission.rst
Co-Authored-By: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
* a complete iteration
backend insert permissions accessable via 'x-hasura-backend-privilege'
session variable
* console changes for backend-only permissions
* provide tooltip id; update labels and tooltips;
* requested changes
* requested changes
- remove className from Toggle component
- use appropriate function name (capitalizeFirstChar -> capitalize)
* use toggle props from definitelyTyped
* fix accidental commit
* Revert "introduce effective timeout in actions async tests"
This reverts commit b7a59c19d6.
* generate complete schema for both 'default' and 'backend' sessions
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
* remove unnecessary import, export Toggle as is
* update session variable in tooltip
* 'x-hasura-use-backend-only-permissions' variable to switch
* update help texts
* update docs
* update docs
* update console help text
* regenerate package-lock
* serve no backend schema when backend_only: false and header set to true
- Few type name refactor as suggested by @0x777
* update CHANGELOG.md
* Update CHANGELOG.md
* Update CHANGELOG.md
* fix a merge bug where a certain entity didn't get removed
Co-authored-by: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Rishichandra Wawhal <rishi@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: rikinsk <rikin.kachhia@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tirumarai Selvan <tiru@hasura.io>
* config options for internal errors for non-admin role, close#4031
More detailed action debug info is added in response 'internal' field
* add docs
* update CHANGELOG.md
* set admin graphql errors option in ci tests, minor changes to docs
* fix tests
Don't use any auth for sync actions error tests. The request body
changes based on auth type in session_variables (x-hasura-auth-mode)
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
* use a new sum type to represent the inclusion of internal errors
As suggested in review by @0x777
-> Move around few modules in to specific API folder
-> Saperate types from Init.hs
* fix tests
Don't use any auth for sync actions error tests. The request body
changes based on auth type in session_variables (x-hasura-auth-mode)
* move 'HttpResponse' to 'Hasura.HTTP' module
* update change log with breaking change warning
* Update CHANGELOG.md
Co-authored-by: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Tirumarai Selvan <tiru@hasura.io>
* allow underscore prefix and special characters in json path
* server: Rewrite/refactor JSONPath parser
The JSONPath parser is also rewritten, the previous implementation
was written in a very explicitly “recursive descent” style, but the whole
point of using attoparsec is to be able to backtrack! Taking advantage
of the combinators makes for a much simpler parser.
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexis King <lexi.lambda@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksandra Sikora <ola.zxcvbnm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Shahidh K Muhammed <shahidh@hasura.io>
* add new optional field `claims_namespace_path` in JWT config
* return value when empty array is found in executeJSONPath
* update the docs related to claims_namespace_path
* improve encodeJSONPath, add property tests for parseJSONPath
* throw error if both claims_namespace_path and claims_namespace are set
* refactor the Data.Parser.JsonPath to Data.Parser.JSONPathSpec
* update the JWT docs
Co-Authored-By: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: Marion Schleifer <marion@hasura.io>
Co-authored-by: rakeshkky <12475069+rakeshkky@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tirumarai Selvan <tirumarai.selvan@gmail.com>
* basic doc for actions
* custom_types, sync and async actions
* switch to graphql-parser-hs on github
* update docs
* metadata import/export
* webhook calls are now supported
* relationships in sync actions
* initialise.sql is now in sync with the migration file
* fix metadata tests
* allow specifying arguments of actions
* fix blacklist check on check_build_worthiness job
* track custom_types and actions related tables
* handlers are now triggered on async actions
* default to pgjson unless a field is involved in relationships, for generating definition list
* use 'true' for action filter for non admin role
* fix create_action_permission sql query
* drop permissions when dropping an action
* add a hdb_role view (and relationships) to fetch all roles in the system
* rename 'webhook' key in action definition to 'handler'
* allow templating actions wehook URLs with env vars
* add 'update_action' /v1/query type
* allow forwarding client headers by setting `forward_client_headers` in action definition
* add 'headers' configuration in action definition
* handle webhook error response based on status codes
* support array relationships for custom types
* implement single row mutation, see https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/3731
* single row mutation: rename 'pk_columns' -> 'columns' and no-op refactor
* use top level primary key inputs for delete_by_pk & account select permissions for single row mutations
* use only REST semantics to resolve the webhook response
* use 'pk_columns' instead of 'columns' for update_by_pk input
* add python basic tests for single row mutations
* add action context (name) in webhook payload
* Async action response is accessible for non admin roles only if
the request session vars equals to action's
* clean nulls, empty arrays for actions, custom types in export metadata
* async action mutation returns only the UUID of the action
* unit tests for URL template parser
* Basic sync actions python tests
* fix output in async query & add async tests
* add admin secret header in async actions python test
* document async action architecture in Resolve/Action.hs file
* support actions returning array of objects
* tests for list type response actions
* update docs with actions and custom types metadata API reference
* update actions python tests as per #f8e1330
Co-authored-by: Tirumarai Selvan <tirumarai.selvan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aravind Shankar <face11301@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rakesh Emmadi <12475069+rakeshkky@users.noreply.github.com>
* Add downgrade command
* Add docs per @lexi-lambda's suggestions
* make tests pass
* Update hdb_version once, from Haskell
* more work based on feedback
* Improve the usage message
* Small docs changes
* Test downgrades exist for each tag
* Update downgrading.rst
* Use git-log to find tags which are ancestors of the current commit
Co-authored-by: Vamshi Surabhi <0x777@users.noreply.github.com>
We upload a set of accumulating timers and counters to track service
time for different types of operations, across several dimensions (e.g.
did we hit the plan cache, was a remote involved, etc.)
Also...
Standardize on DiffTime as a standard duration type, and try to use it
consistently.
See discussion here:
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/pull/3584#pullrequestreview-340679369
It should be possible to overwrite that module so the new threadDelay
sticks per the pattern in #3705 blocked on #3558
Rename the Control.Concurrent.Extended.threadDelay to `sleep` since a
naive use with a literal argument would be very bad!
We catch a bug in 'computeTimeDiff'.
Add convenient 'Read' instances to the time unit utility types. Make
'Second' a newtype to support this.
This fixes#3759. Also, while we’re at it, also improve the way
invalidations are synced across instances so enums and remote schemas
are appropriately reloaded by the schema syncing process.
* export metadata without nulls, empty arrays
* property tests for 'ReplaceMetadata' using QuickCheck
-> Derive Arbitrary class for 'ReplaceMetadata' dependant types
* reduce property test cases number to 30
QuickCheck generates the `ReplaceMetadata` value really large
for higher number test cases. Encoded JSON for such values is large and
consumes more memory. Thus, CI is giving up while running property
tests.
* circle-ci: Add property tests as saperate job
* add no command mode to tests
* add yaml.v2 to go mod
* remove indirect comment for yaml.v2 dependency
* save permissions, relationships and collections in catalog with 'is_system_defined'
* Use common stanzas in the .cabal file
* Refactor migration code into lib instead of exe
* Add new server test suite that exercises migrations
* Make graphql-engine clean succeed even if the schema does not exist