Commit Graph

32 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Evie Ciobanu
56f2501ab9 server/nada: minor refactoring around SQL-generation unit tests
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5524
GitOrigin-RevId: a9f1bcf66f731829c48cb6ced5d968c2e2f4ae80
2022-08-18 09:01:07 +00:00
Samir Talwar
aa18f65217 server: Move the schema parsers to their own library.
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
2022-08-05 13:53:39 +00:00
Auke Booij
1007ea27ae server: refactor MonadSchema into MonadMemoize
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
2022-08-04 13:45:53 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
0a69db81c9 Move RoleName into SchemaContext.
### 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
2022-07-29 15:38:44 +00:00
Evie Ciobanu
d76aab99e1 server: postgres multiple updates
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4837
GitOrigin-RevId: 505f669298298fd004dfc4e84eaa0d21df055216
2022-07-18 15:16:47 +00:00
Tom Harding
2e7e6fd98a Move SchemaOptions to its own module, remove magic bools
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/5048
GitOrigin-RevId: f666a10c6af5feda9d761d3ffee5c77695361fdf
2022-07-14 17:59:01 +00:00
Samir Talwar
c980af1b8f Move MkTypename and NamingCase into their own modules.
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
2022-07-12 14:01:28 +00:00
Auke Booij
8ccf7724ce server: Metadata origin for definitions (type parameter version v2)
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
2022-06-28 15:53:44 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
664633fc4b Remove the source cache from the schema context
### Description

This PR removes the source cache from the schema context. :)

PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4830
GitOrigin-RevId: af312a22b70d042c5faf8d67c0cee254537be836
2022-06-23 11:43:17 +00:00
Samir Talwar
8db9b77c77 server: Reorganize quasi-quoted names.
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
2022-06-23 09:15:31 +00:00
Brandon Simmons
6e8da71ece server: migrate to aeson-2 in preparation for ghc 9.2 upgrade
(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
2022-06-08 15:32:27 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
eaba2e08d3 Clean Relay's code, break schema cycles, introduce Node ID V2
## 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
2022-06-07 13:36:29 +00:00
Auke Booij
13fc1c62d1 Move Hasura.GraphQL.Parser.Column to .RQL.IR. and .GraphQL.Schema.
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
2022-05-30 22:07:57 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
498442b1d3 Remove circular dependency in schema building code
### 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
2022-05-27 17:22:38 +00:00
Evie Ciobanu
a8c0137f21 server: add infrastructure to write runit tests for update parsers
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4533
GitOrigin-RevId: d094149d6cbdeebe152c58032715bad725480d9b
2022-05-26 14:06:24 +00:00
paritosh-08
fd30fb343b server: naming conventions for auto generated fields
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3982
Co-authored-by: Brandon Simmons <210815+jberryman@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: f90b2e8f394e7bd69780f003d2d980475f104f42
2022-05-26 11:55:29 +00:00
Puru Gupta
5501f686df server: do not serialize env vars in logs or errors: PR I - Remote Schemas
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4463
Co-authored-by: Naveen Naidu <30195193+Naveenaidu@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brandon Simmons <210815+jberryman@users.noreply.github.com>
GitOrigin-RevId: 71c6824130d71312f5bd5ae94fc268c0544c6ca3
2022-05-21 09:05:59 +00:00
Solomon
c945b2d391 Replaces litName splices with name quasiquotes
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4267
GitOrigin-RevId: 2d93c35a7e34dbada3b72aabcae5fc2858bbfc29
2022-04-18 19:44:04 +00:00
jkachmar
647231b685 Yeet some default-extensions
Manually enables:
* EmptyCase
* ExistentialQuantification
* QuantifiedConstraints
* QuasiQuotes
* TemplateHaskell
* TypeFamilyDependencies

...in the following components:
* 'graphql-engine' library
* 'graphql-engine' 'src-test'
* 'graphql-engine' 'tests/integration'
* 'graphql-engine' tests-hspec'

Additionally, performs some light refactoring and documentation.

PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/3991
GitOrigin-RevId: 514477d3466b01f60eca8935d0fef60dd0756838
2022-03-16 00:40:17 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
376c7d48f1 Add remote relationships from remote schemas in schema parser generators
### 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
2022-03-14 16:22:50 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
85b8753fde Cleanup post #3810
### 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
2022-03-10 02:13:49 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
6e1761f8f9 Enable remote joins from remote schemas in the execution engine.
### 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
2022-03-09 03:18:22 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
a1886b3729 Generalize remote schemas IR
### 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
2022-02-25 20:38:46 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
f7071b3c93 Changed RemoteSchemaIntrospection's internal representation from a list to a hashmap.
### Description

This PR changes the internal representation of a parsed remote schema. We were still using a list of type definitions, meaning every time we were doing a type lookup we had to iterate through a linked list! 🙀 It was very noticeable on large schemas, that need to do a lot of lookups. This PR consequently changes the internal representation to a HashMap. Building the OneGraph schema on my machine now takes **23 seconds**, compared to **367 seconds** before this patch.

Some important points:
- ~~this PR removes a check for type duplication in remote schemas; it's unclear to me whether that's something we need to add back or not~~ (no longer true)
- this PR makes it obvious that we do not distinguish between "this remote schema is missing type X" and "this remote schema expects type X to be an object, but it's a scalar"; this PR doesn't change anything about it, but adds a comment where we could surface that error (see [2991](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/issues/2991))

PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2963
GitOrigin-RevId: f5c96ad40f4e0afcf8cef635b4d64178111f98d3
2021-11-30 14:47:50 +00:00
David Overton
5bfce057c6 Refactor remote schema customization
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/2771
GitOrigin-RevId: 0c90136f956df3f4552140e6ca3d2f4766f8b3f5
2021-11-30 00:38:27 +00:00
Robert
11a454c2d6 server, pro: actually reformat the code-base using ormolu
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
2021-09-23 22:57:37 +00:00
jkachmar
c322af93f8 server: Uses GraphQL type in remote variable cache key
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1801

GitOrigin-RevId: 98843e422b2431849b675acdb318ffae2f492f18
2021-08-04 21:24:36 +00:00
David Overton
1abb1dee69 Remote Schema Customization take 2 using parser tranformations
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/1740

GitOrigin-RevId: e807952058243a97f67cd9969fa434933a08652f
2021-07-30 11:33:59 +00:00
Vamshi Surabhi
e8e4f30dd6 server: support remote relationships on SQL Server and BigQuery (#1497)
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
2021-06-11 03:27:39 +00:00
Vamshi Surabhi
96104ec1a8 Revert "remote schema typename customisation"
This reverts the remote schema type customisation and namespacing feature temporarily as we test for certain conditions.

GitOrigin-RevId: f8ee97233da4597f703970c3998664c03582d8e7
2021-06-10 09:57:16 +00:00
David Overton
4a69fdeb01 Dmoverton/5863 prefix namespacing
GitOrigin-RevId: 108e8b25e745cb4f74d143d316262049cef62b70
2021-06-09 22:42:05 +00:00
Antoine Leblanc
6e95f761f5 server: rewrite remote input parsers to deal with partial variable expansion (fix hasura/graphql-engine#6656)
GitOrigin-RevId: e0b197a0fd1e259d43e6152b726b350c4d527a4b
2021-05-24 20:13:47 +00:00