.. meta:: :description: Action handlers for Hasura actions :keywords: hasura, docs, actions, handlers .. _action_handlers: Action handlers =============== .. contents:: Table of contents :backlinks: none :depth: 1 :local: Introduction ------------ Actions need to be backed by custom business logic. This business logic can be defined in a handler which is an HTTP webhook. HTTP handler ------------ When the action is executed i.e. when the query or the mutation is called, Hasura makes a ``POST`` request to the handler with the action arguments and the session variables. The request payload is of the format: .. code-block:: json { "action": { "name": "" }, "input": { "arg1": "", "arg2": "" }, "session_variables": { "x-hasura-user-id": "", "x-hasura-role": "" } } .. note:: All ``session_variables`` in the request payload have lowercase keys. Returning a success response ---------------------------- To return a success response, you must send back a response payload of action's response type. The HTTP status code must be ``2xx`` for a successful response. Returning an error response --------------------------- To return an error response, you must send back an error object. An error object looks like: .. code-block:: json { "message": "", "code": "" } The HTTP status code must be ``4xx`` for an error response. Example ------- For example, consider the following mutation. .. code-block:: graphql extend type Mutation { UserLogin (username: String!, email: String!): UserInfo } type UserInfo { accessToken: String! userId: Int! } Let's say, the following mutation is executed: .. code-block:: graphql mutation { UserLogin (username: "jake", password: "secretpassword") { accessToken userId } } Hasura will call the handler with the following payload: .. code-block:: json { "action": { "name": "UserLogin" }, "input": { "username": "jake", "password": "secretpassword" }, "session_variables": { "x-hasura-user-id": "423", "x-hasura-role": "user" } } To return a success response, you must send the response of the action's output type (in this case, ``UserInfo``) with a status code ``2xx``. So a sample response would be: .. code-block:: json { "accessToken": "eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVC", "userId": 4829 } To throw an error, you must a response payload of the following type while setting the status code as ``4xx``. .. code-block:: json { "message": "invalid credentials" } .. _securing_action_handlers: Restrict access to your action handler -------------------------------------- You might want to restrict access to your action handler in order to ensure that it can only get called by your Hasura instance and not by third parties. Adding an action secret ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ One possible way of restricting access to an action handler is by adding a header to the action that is automatically sent with each request to the webhook, and then adding a check against that in your action handler. .. contents:: :backlinks: none :depth: 1 :local: .. note:: Adding an action secret is a simple way of restricting access to an action handler and will suffice in most use cases. However, if you have more profound security requirements, you might want to choose advanced security solutions tailored to your needs. Step 1: Configure your Hasura instance ************************************** In your Hasura server, add the action secret as an environment variable, say ``ACTION_SECRET_ENV``. Step 2: Add a header to your action *********************************** For your action, add a header that will act as an action secret. .. rst-class:: api_tabs .. tabs:: .. tab:: Console Head to the ``Actions -> [action-name]`` tab in the console and scroll down to ``Headers``. You can now configure an action secret by adding a header: .. thumbnail:: /img/graphql/manual/actions/action-secret-header.png :alt: Console action secret :width: 75% Then hit ``Save``. .. tab:: CLI Go to ``metadata/actions.yaml`` in the Hasura project directory. Update the definition of your action by adding the action secret as a header: .. code-block:: yaml :emphasize-lines: 7-9 - actions - name: actionName definition: kind: synchronous handler: http://localhost:3000 forward_client_headers: true headers: - name: ACTION_SECRET value_from_env: ACTION_SECRET_ENV Save the changes and run ``hasura metadata apply`` to set the headers. This secret is only known by Hasura and is passed to your endpoint with every call, thus making sure only Hasura can successfully authenticate with the action handler. .. note:: The name for the action secret is not defined by Hasura and can be chosen freely. Step 3: Verify the secret in your action handler ************************************************ First, load the action secret as an environment variable in your action handler by adding it to your ``.env`` file (this file might be a different one depending on your framework). Second, you need to write some code in your action handler to check that the action secret passed as a header equals to the one you stored as an environment variable. The following is an example of a simple authorization middleware with Express: .. code-block:: javascript // use authorization for all routes app.use(authorizationMiddleware); // authorize action call function authorizationMiddleware(req, res, next){ if (correctSecretProvided(req)) next(); else res.sendStatus(403); } // check if the secret sent in the header equals to the secret stored as an env variable function correctSecretProvided(req) { const requiredSecret = process.env.ACTION_SECRET_ENV; const providedSecret = req.headers['ACTION_SECRET']; return requiredSecret == providedSecret; }