.. meta:: :description: Manage Hasura actions relationships :keywords: hasura, docs, actions, relationships .. _actions_relationships: Actions relationships ===================== .. contents:: Table of contents :backlinks: none :depth: 2 :local: Introduction ------------ Actions are a way to extend your GraphQL schema with custom queries or mutations. It is quite a typical case that an action's response is actually related to existing objects in the schema and the action needs to be connected with the rest of the graph. For example, a custom ``insertAuthor`` action will be related to the ``author`` object in the schema. Hence, we would want to be able to get information about the ``author`` from the graph as a response of the ``insertAuthor`` mutation. Using action output type's relationships ---------------------------------------- Actions can be connected to the rest of the graph by setting up relationships on its return output type. This allows complex responses to be returned as an action's response traversing the graph via the output type's relationships. **For example**, given the action: .. code-block:: graphql type Mutation { updateAuthor ( id: Int! name: String! ): UpdateAuthorOutput } type UpdateAuthorOutput { author_id : Int! } We can create an object relationship called ``updatedAuthor`` between the ``UpdateAuthorOutput`` object type and the ``author`` table using the ``UpdateAuthorOutput.author_id`` and ``author.id`` fields. The object type will now be modified as: .. code-block:: graphql :emphasize-lines: 3 type UpdateAuthorOutput { author_id : Int! updatedAuthor: author } Now we can make a mutation request with a complex response such as: .. code-block:: graphql mutation updateAuthorAndGetArticles($id: Int, $name: String) { updateAuthor(id: $id, name: $name) { author_id updatedAuthor { id name articles { id title } } } } See more details at :ref:`custom object type relationships ` Creating relationships for custom object types ********************************************** You can create relationships for custom output types by: .. rst-class:: api_tabs .. tabs:: .. tab:: Console Head to the ``Actions -> [action-name] -> Relationships`` tab in the console for the action returning the output type. Set the output type relationship as shown below: .. thumbnail:: /img/graphql/core/actions/actions-relationship.png :alt: Console action relationship Hit ``Save`` to create the relationship. .. tab:: CLI Go to ``metadata/actions.yaml`` in the Hasura project directory. Update the definition of the ``UpdateAuthorOutput`` object type as: .. code-block:: yaml :emphasize-lines: 4-11 - custom_types - objects - name: UpdateAuthorOutput relationships: - name: updatedAuthor type: object remote_table: schema: public name: author field_mapping: author_id: id Save the changes and run ``hasura metadata apply`` to create the relationship. .. tab:: API Action relationships can be added while defining custom types via the :ref:`set_custom_types metadata API `: .. code-block:: http :emphasize-lines: 20-29 POST /v1/query HTTP/1.1 Content-Type: application/json X-Hasura-Role: admin { "type": "set_custom_types", "args": { "scalars": [], "enums": [], "input_objects": [], "objects": [ { "name": "UpdateAuthorOutput", "fields": [ { "name": "author_id", "type": "Int!" } ], "relationships": [ { "name": "updatedAuthor", "type": "object", "remote_table": "author", "field_mapping": { "author_id": "id" } } ] } ] } } .. admonition:: Additional Resources Introduction to Hasura Actions - `View Recording `__.