Simple, pluggable, zero-dependency, GraphQL over HTTP spec compliant server, client and audit suite.
Quickly check for compliance? Visit graphql-http.com!
Want a full-featured server? See the servers section!
Need subscriptions? Try graphql-ws or graphql-sse instead!
yarn add graphql-http
import { GraphQLSchema, GraphQLObjectType, GraphQLString } from 'graphql';
/**
* Construct a GraphQL schema and define the necessary resolvers.
*
* type Query {
* hello: String
* }
*/
const schema = new GraphQLSchema({
query: new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'Query',
fields: {
hello: {
type: GraphQLString,
resolve: () => 'world',
},
},
}),
});
With http
import http from 'http';
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/http';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create the GraphQL over HTTP Node request handler
const handler = createHandler({ schema });
// Create a HTTP server using the listener on `/graphql`
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
if (req.url.startsWith('/graphql')) {
handler(req, res);
} else {
res.writeHead(404).end();
}
});
server.listen(4000);
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
With http2
Browsers might complain about self-signed SSL/TLS certificates. Help can be found on StackOverflow.
$ openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -sha256 -subj '/CN=localhost' \
-keyout localhost-privkey.pem -out localhost-cert.pem
import fs from 'fs';
import http2 from 'http2';
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/http2';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create the GraphQL over HTTP Node request handler
const handler = createHandler({ schema });
// Create a HTTP/2 server using the handler on `/graphql`
const server = http2.createSecureServer(
{
key: fs.readFileSync('localhost-privkey.pem'),
cert: fs.readFileSync('localhost-cert.pem'),
},
(req, res) => {
if (req.url.startsWith('/graphql')) {
handler(req, res);
} else {
res.writeHead(404).end();
}
},
);
server.listen(4000);
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
With express
import express from 'express'; // yarn add express
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/express';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create an express instance serving all methods on `/graphql`
// where the GraphQL over HTTP express request handler is
const app = express();
app.all('/graphql', createHandler({ schema }));
app.listen({ port: 4000 });
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
With fastify
import Fastify from 'fastify'; // yarn add fastify
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/fastify';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create a fastify instance serving all methods on `/graphql`
// where the GraphQL over HTTP fastify request handler is
const fastify = Fastify();
fastify.all('/graphql', createHandler({ schema }));
fastify.listen({ port: 4000 });
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
With Koa
import Koa from 'koa'; // yarn add koa
import mount from 'koa-mount'; // yarn add koa-mount
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/koa';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
const app = new Koa();
app.use(mount('/graphql', createHandler({ schema })));
app.listen({ port: 4000 });
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
With uWebSockets.js
import uWS from 'uWebSockets.js'; // yarn add uWebSockets.js@uNetworking/uWebSockets.js#<version>
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/uWebSockets';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
uWS
.App()
.any('/graphql', createHandler({ schema }))
.listen(4000, () => {
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
});
With Deno
import { serve } from 'https://deno.land/[email protected]/http/server.ts';
import { createHandler } from 'https://esm.sh/graphql-http/lib/use/fetch';
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create the GraphQL over HTTP native fetch handler
const handler = createHandler({ schema });
// Start serving on `/graphql` using the handler
await serve(
(req: Request) => {
const [path, _search] = req.url.split('?');
if (path.endsWith('/graphql')) {
return handler(req);
} else {
return new Response(null, { status: 404 });
}
},
{
port: 4000, // Listening to port 4000
},
);
With Bun
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/fetch'; // bun install graphql-http
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create the GraphQL over HTTP native fetch handler
const handler = createHandler({ schema });
// Start serving on `/graphql` using the handler
export default {
port: 4000, // Listening to port 4000
fetch(req) {
const [path, _search] = req.url.split('?');
if (path.endsWith('/graphql')) {
return handler(req);
} else {
return new Response(null, { status: 404 });
}
},
};
With Netlify Functions
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/@netlify/functions'; // yarn add @netlify/functions
import { schema } from './previous-step';
// Create the GraphQL over HTTP native fetch handler
export const handler = createHandler({ schema });
import { createClient } from 'graphql-http';
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://localhost:4000/graphql',
});
(async () => {
let cancel = () => {
/* abort the request if it is in-flight */
};
const result = await new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
let result;
cancel = client.subscribe(
{
query: '{ hello }',
},
{
next: (data) => (result = data),
error: reject,
complete: () => resolve(result),
},
);
});
expect(result).toEqual({ hello: 'world' });
})();
Serve GraphiQL
Thanks to ruru
, serving GraphiQL is as easy as running:
npx ruru -SP -p 4001 -e http://localhost:4000/graphql
Open http://localhost:4001 in the browser to use it.
π Client usage with Promise
import { ExecutionResult } from 'graphql';
import { createClient, RequestParams } from 'graphql-http';
import { getSession } from './my-auth';
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://hey.there:4000/graphql',
headers: async () => {
const session = await getSession();
if (session) {
return {
Authorization: `Bearer ${session.token}`,
};
}
},
});
function execute<Data, Extensions>(
params: RequestParams,
): [request: Promise<ExecutionResult<Data, Extensions>>, cancel: () => void] {
let cancel!: () => void;
const request = new Promise<ExecutionResult<Data, Extensions>>(
(resolve, reject) => {
let result: ExecutionResult<Data, Extensions>;
cancel = client.subscribe<Data, Extensions>(params, {
next: (data) => (result = data),
error: reject,
complete: () => resolve(result),
});
},
);
return [request, cancel];
}
(async () => {
const [request, cancel] = execute({
query: '{ hello }',
});
// just an example, not a real function
onUserLeavePage(() => {
cancel();
});
const result = await request;
expect(result).toBe({ data: { hello: 'world' } });
})();
π Client usage with Observable
import { Observable } from 'relay-runtime';
// or
import { Observable } from '@apollo/client/core';
// or
import { Observable } from 'rxjs';
// or
import Observable from 'zen-observable';
// or any other lib which implements Observables as per the ECMAScript proposal: https://github.com/tc39/proposal-observable
import { createClient } from 'graphql-http';
import { getSession } from './my-auth';
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://graphql.loves:4000/observables',
headers: async () => {
const session = await getSession();
if (session) {
return {
Authorization: `Bearer ${session.token}`,
};
}
},
});
const observable = new Observable((observer) =>
client.subscribe({ query: '{ hello }' }, observer),
);
const subscription = observable.subscribe({
next: (result) => {
expect(result).toBe({ data: { hello: 'world' } });
},
});
// unsubscribe will cancel the request if it is pending
subscription.unsubscribe();
π Client usage with Relay
import { GraphQLError } from 'graphql';
import {
Network,
Observable,
RequestParameters,
Variables,
} from 'relay-runtime';
import { createClient } from 'graphql-http';
import { getSession } from './my-auth';
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://i.love:4000/graphql',
headers: async () => {
const session = await getSession();
if (session) {
return {
Authorization: `Bearer ${session.token}`,
};
}
},
});
function fetch(operation: RequestParameters, variables: Variables) {
return Observable.create((sink) => {
if (!operation.text) {
return sink.error(new Error('Operation text cannot be empty'));
}
return client.subscribe(
{
operationName: operation.name,
query: operation.text,
variables,
},
sink,
);
});
}
export const network = Network.create(fetch);
π Client usage with Apollo
import {
ApolloLink,
Operation,
FetchResult,
Observable,
} from '@apollo/client/core';
import { print, GraphQLError } from 'graphql';
import { createClient, ClientOptions, Client } from 'graphql-http';
import { getSession } from './my-auth';
class HTTPLink extends ApolloLink {
private client: Client;
constructor(options: ClientOptions) {
super();
this.client = createClient(options);
}
public request(operation: Operation): Observable<FetchResult> {
return new Observable((sink) => {
return this.client.subscribe<FetchResult>(
{ ...operation, query: print(operation.query) },
{
next: sink.next.bind(sink),
complete: sink.complete.bind(sink),
error: sink.error.bind(sink),
},
);
});
}
}
const link = new HTTPLink({
url: 'http://where.is:4000/graphql',
headers: async () => {
const session = await getSession();
if (session) {
return {
Authorization: `Bearer ${session.token}`,
};
}
},
});
π Client usage with request retries
import { createClient, NetworkError } from 'graphql-http';
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://unstable.service:4000/graphql',
shouldRetry: async (err: NetworkError, retries: number) => {
if (retries > 3) {
// max 3 retries and then report service down
return false;
}
// try again when service unavailable, could be temporary
if (err.response?.status === 503) {
// wait one second (you can alternatively time the promise resolution to your preference)
await new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 1000));
return true;
}
// otherwise report error immediately
return false;
},
});
π Client usage in browser
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<title>GraphQL over HTTP</title>
<script
type="text/javascript"
src="https://unpkg.com/graphql-http/umd/graphql-http.min.js"
></script>
</head>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
const client = graphqlHttp.createClient({
url: 'http://umdfor.the:4000/win/graphql',
});
// consider other recipes for usage inspiration
</script>
</body>
</html>
π Client usage in Node
const fetch = require('node-fetch'); // yarn add node-fetch
const { AbortController } = require('node-abort-controller'); // (node < v15) yarn add node-abort-controller
const { createClient } = require('graphql-http');
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://no.browser:4000/graphql',
fetchFn: fetch,
abortControllerImpl: AbortController, // node < v15
});
// consider other recipes for usage inspiration
π Client usage in Deno
import { createClient } from 'https://esm.sh/graphql-http';
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://deno.earth:4000/graphql',
});
// consider other recipes for usage inspiration
π Client usage in Bun
import { createClient } from 'graphql-http'; // bun install graphql-http
const client = createClient({
url: 'http://bun.bread:4000/graphql',
});
// consider other recipes for usage inspiration
π Server handler migration from express-graphql
import express from 'express';
import { schema } from './my-graphql-schema';
-import { graphqlHTTP } from 'express-graphql';
+import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/express';
const app = express();
app.use(
'/graphql',
- graphqlHTTP({ schema }),
+ createHandler({ schema }),
);
app.listen(4000);
π Server handler usage with authentication
Authenticate the user within graphql-http
during GraphQL execution context assembly. This is a approach is less safe compared to early authentication (see early authentication in Node) because some GraphQL preparations or operations are executed even if the user is not unauthorized.
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http';
import {
schema,
getUserFromCookies,
getUserFromAuthorizationHeader,
} from './my-graphql';
const handler = createHandler({
schema,
context: async (req) => {
// process token, authenticate user and attach it to your graphql context
const userId = await getUserFromCookies(req.headers.cookie);
// or
const userId = await getUserFromAuthorizationHeader(
req.headers.authorization,
);
// respond with 401 if the user was not authenticated
if (!userId) {
return [null, { status: 401, statusText: 'Unauthorized' }];
}
// otherwise attach the user to the graphql context
return { userId };
},
});
π Server handler usage with custom context value
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http';
import { schema, getDynamicContext } from './my-graphql';
const handler = createHandler({
schema,
context: async (req, args) => {
return getDynamicContext(req, args);
},
// or static context by supplying the value directly
});
π Server handler usage with custom execution arguments
import { parse } from 'graphql';
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http';
import { getSchemaForRequest, myValidationRules } from './my-graphql';
const handler = createHandler({
onSubscribe: async (req, params) => {
const schema = await getSchemaForRequest(req);
const args = {
schema,
operationName: params.operationName,
document: parse(params.query),
variableValues: params.variables,
};
return args;
},
});
π Server handler usage in Node with early authentication (recommended)
Authenticate the user early, before reaching graphql-http
. This is the recommended approach because no GraphQL preparations or operations are executed if the user is not authorized.
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http';
import {
schema,
getUserFromCookies,
getUserFromAuthorizationHeader,
} from './my-graphql';
const handler = createHandler({
schema,
context: async (req) => {
// user is authenticated early (see below), simply attach it to the graphql context
return { userId: req.raw.userId };
},
});
const server = http.createServer(async (req, res) => {
if (!req.url.startsWith('/graphql')) {
return res.writeHead(404).end();
}
try {
// process token, authenticate user and attach it to the request
req.userId = await getUserFromCookies(req.headers.cookie);
// or
req.userId = await getUserFromAuthorizationHeader(
req.headers.authorization,
);
// respond with 401 if the user was not authenticated
if (!req.userId) {
return res.writeHead(401, 'Unauthorized').end();
}
const [body, init] = await handler({
url: req.url,
method: req.method,
headers: req.headers,
body: () =>
new Promise((resolve) => {
let body = '';
req.on('data', (chunk) => (body += chunk));
req.on('end', () => resolve(body));
}),
raw: req,
});
res.writeHead(init.status, init.statusText, init.headers).end(body);
} catch (err) {
res.writeHead(500).end(err.message);
}
});
server.listen(4000);
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
π Server handler usage with graphql-upload and http
import http from 'http';
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/http';
import processRequest from 'graphql-upload/processRequest.mjs'; // yarn add graphql-upload
import { schema } from './my-graphql';
const handler = createHandler({
schema,
async parseRequestParams(req) {
const params = await processRequest(req.raw, req.context.res);
if (Array.isArray(params)) {
throw new Error('Batching is not supported');
}
return {
...params,
// variables must be an object as per the GraphQL over HTTP spec
variables: Object(params.variables),
};
},
});
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
if (req.url.startsWith('/graphql')) {
handler(req, res);
} else {
res.writeHead(404).end();
}
});
server.listen(4000);
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
π Server handler usage with graphql-upload and express
import express from 'express'; // yarn add express
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/express';
import processRequest from 'graphql-upload/processRequest.mjs'; // yarn add graphql-upload
import { schema } from './my-graphql';
const app = express();
app.all(
'/graphql',
createHandler({
schema,
async parseRequestParams(req) {
const params = await processRequest(req.raw, req.context.res);
if (Array.isArray(params)) {
throw new Error('Batching is not supported');
}
return {
...params,
// variables must be an object as per the GraphQL over HTTP spec
variables: Object(params.variables),
};
},
}),
);
app.listen({ port: 4000 });
console.log('Listening to port 4000');
π Audit for servers usage in Jest environment
import { fetch } from '@whatwg-node/fetch';
import { serverAudits } from 'graphql-http';
for (const audit of serverAudits({
url: 'http://localhost:4000/graphql',
fetchFn: fetch,
})) {
test(audit.name, async () => {
const result = await audit.fn();
if (result.status === 'error') {
throw result.reason;
}
if (result.status === 'warn') {
console.warn(result.reason); // or throw if you want full compliance (warnings are not requirements)
}
// result.status === 'ok'
});
}
π Audit for servers usage in Deno environment
import { serverAudits } from 'npm:graphql-http';
for (const audit of serverAudits({
url: 'http://localhost:4000/graphql',
fetchFn: fetch,
})) {
Deno.test(audit.name, async () => {
const result = await audit.fn();
if (result.status === 'error') {
throw result.reason;
}
if (result.status === 'warn') {
console.warn(result.reason); // or throw if you want full compliance (warnings are not requirements)
}
// Avoid leaking resources
if ('body' in result && result.body instanceof ReadableStream) {
await result.body.cancel();
}
});
}
Put the above contents in a file and run it with deno test --allow-net
.
Only GraphQL over HTTP
This is the official GraphQL over HTTP spec reference implementation and as such follows the specification strictly without any additional features (like playgrounds or GUIs, file uploads, @stream/@defer directives and subscriptions).
Having said this, graphql-http is mostly aimed for library authors and simple server setups, where the requirements are exact to what the aforementioned spec offers.
If you want a feature-full server with bleeding edge technologies, you're recommended to use one of the following servers.
Their compliance with the GraphQL over HTTP spec is checked automatically and updated regularly.
Check the docs folder out for TypeDoc generated documentation.
Inspect audits of other implementations in the implementations folder. Adding your implementation is very welcome, see how!
File a bug, contribute with code, or improve documentation? Read more in CONTRIBUTING.md.
If your company benefits from GraphQL and you would like to provide essential financial support for the systems and people that power our community, please also consider membership in the GraphQL Foundation.