Custom GraphQL Resolvers
You can extend the GraphQL API generated by OpenReader with custom queries. To do that, define GraphQL query resolvers in the designated module src/server-extension/resolvers.
All resolver classes (including any additional types) must be exported by
src/server-extension/resolvers/index.ts.
A custom resolver should import TypeGraphQL types and use annotations provided by the library to define query arguments and return types. If your squid lacks a type-graphql dependency, add it with:
Custom resolvers are normally used in combination with TypeORM EntityManager for accessing the API server target database. It is automatically injected when defined as a single constructor argument of the resolver.
Examples
Simple entity counter
import { Query, Resolver } from "type-graphql";
import type { EntityManager } from "typeorm";
import { Burn } from "../model";
@Resolver()
export class CountResolver {
constructor(private tx: () => Promise<EntityManager>) {}
@Query(() => Number)
async totalBurns(): Promise<number> {
const manager = await this.tx();
return await manager.getRepository(Burn).count();
}
}
This example is designed to work with the evm template:
Save the example code
Save the example code to src/server-extension/resolver.ts.
Re-export CountResolver
Re-export CountResolver at src/server-extension/resolvers/index.ts:export { CountResolver } from "../resolver";
Rebuild and restart
Rebuild the squid with npm run build and (re)start the GraphQL server with npx squid-graphql-server.
totalBurns selection will appear in the GraphiQL playground.
Custom SQL query
import { Arg, Field, ObjectType, Query, Resolver } from "type-graphql";
import type { EntityManager } from "typeorm";
import { MyEntity } from "../model";
// Define custom GraphQL ObjectType of the query result
@ObjectType()
export class MyQueryResult {
@Field(() => Number, { nullable: false })
total!: number;
@Field(() => Number, { nullable: false })
max!: number;
constructor(props: Partial<MyQueryResult>) {
Object.assign(this, props);
}
}
@Resolver()
export class MyResolver {
// Set by dependency injection
constructor(private tx: () => Promise<EntityManager>) {}
@Query(() => [MyQueryResult])
async myQuery(): Promise<MyQueryResult[]> {
const manager = await this.tx();
// execute custom SQL query
const result = await manager.getRepository(MyEntity).query(`
SELECT
COUNT(x) as total,
MAX(y) as max
FROM my_entity
GROUP BY month
`);
return result;
}
}
More examples
Some great examples of @subsquid/graphql-server-based custom resolvers can be spotted in the wild in the Rubick repo by KodaDot.
For more examples of resolvers, see TypeGraphQL examples repo.
Logging
To keep logging consistent across the entire GraphQL server, use @subsquid/logger:
import { createLogger } from "@subsquid/logger";
// using a custom namespace ':my-resolver' for resolver logs
const LOG = createLogger("sqd:graphql-server:my-resolver");
LOG.info("created a dedicated logger for my-resolver");
LOG here is a logger object identical to ctx.log interface-wise.
Interaction with global settings
--max-response-size used for DoS protection is ignored in custom resolvers.
- Caching works on custom queries in exactly the same way as it does on the schema-derived queries.
Troubleshooting
Add import 'reflect-metadata' on top of your custom resolver module and install the package if necessary.