An on-the-fly GraphQL Schema generator from Eloquent models for Laravel.
This package requires PHP 7.2 and Laravel 6 or higher. To get started with Bakery, simply run:
composer require scrnhq/laravel-bakery
After installing Bakery, publish the configuration and asserts using the bakery:install
Artisan command.
php artisan bakery:install
After running this command, the configuration file should be located at config/bakery.php
. The default
App\Bakery\User
Bakery model schema refers to the App\User
model.
You can find your new GraphQL API at /graphql
and you can navigate to /graphql/explore
to find GraphiQL, the
graphical interactive GraphQL IDE.
query {
users {
items {
id
}
}
}
Model schemas are classes that lets you connect your Eloquent models with the GraphQL API. In there you can define which fields are available, which of them can be mutated and much more.
By default, Bakery model schema's are stored in the app\Bakery
directory. You can generate a new model schema using
the handy bakery:modelschema
Artisan command.
php artisan bakery:modelschema Post
The model
property of a model schema defines which Eloquent model it corresponds to.
/**
* The model the schema corresponds to.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $model = \App\Post::class;
All model schema's in the
app/Bakery
directory will automatically be registered by Bakery. If you choose to store your model schema's differently, you need to define and register your schema manually.
You are not required to manually define and register a Schema. You can skip this step if you do not wish to manually register a schema.
In order to make model schemas available within GraphQL, they must be registered in a Schema. First you must create
a new Schema
class. Next, you should set the schema
item in the config/bakery.php
file to the newly created
Schema.
There are two ways to manually registering model schemas in Bakery. You can use the modelsIn
method in the schema
to load all models schemas in a given directory, or you can manually return an array of models schemas.
namespace App\Support;
use Bakery\Support\Schema as BaseSchema;
class Schema extends BaseSchema
{
/*
* Get the models for the schema.
*
* @return array
*/
public function models()
{
return $this->modelsIn(app_path('Bakery'));
// Or, manually.
return [
App\Bakery\User::class,
App\Bakery\Post::class,
];
}
}
Now that you have created and registered your model schemas with Bakery, you can browse to /graphql/explore
and query
your models in the interactive playground GraphQL.
query {
posts {
items {
id
}
}
}
If everything is set up properly you will get a collection of posts in your database. You can also use GraphQL to retrieve a single post.
query {
posts(id: "1") {
id
}
}
Just like Laravel, Bakery follows naming conventions. It uses Laravel's pluralization library to transform your model
into queries so you can fetch an individual Post with post
and a collection of Posts with posts
.
Now, each Bakery model schema contains a fields
that return an array of fields, which extend the
\Bakery\Fields\Field
class. To add a field to model schema, simply add it to fields
method, where the key of
the item must match the name of the model attribute
.
use Bakery\Field;
/**
* Get the fields for the schema.
*
* @return array
*/
public function fields(): array
{
return [
'title' => Field::string(),
];
}
Now you can query the title of the posts in GraphQL.
query {
post(id: "1") {
id
title
}
}
Bakery has the following fields available:
Field::boolean()
Field::float()
Field::ID()
Field::int()
Field::string()
In addition to the fields described above, Bakery supports Eloquent relationships, too. To add a relationship to the
model schema, simply add it to the relations
method, where the key of the item must match the relation name. Let's
say a User
model hasMany
Post
models. Then you would define your Bakery model schema's like so:
app\Bakery\User.php
use Bakery\Field;
use App\Bakery\Post;
/**
* Get the fields for the schema.
*
* @return array
*/
public function relations()
{
return [
'posts' => Field::collection(Post::class),
];
}
The inverse of the previous relation is that a Post
model belongsTo
a User
model. The Bakery model schema
would be defined like so:
app\Bakery\Post.php
use Bakery\Field;
use App\Bakery\User;
/**
* Get the fields for the schema.
*
* @return array
*/
public function relations()
{
return [
'user' => Field::model(User::class),
];
}
This way you can get all posts related to a user within a single GraphQL query.
query {
user(id: "1") {
id
posts {
id
}
}
}
Another key feature of GraphQL that Bakery fully supports are mutations. Bakery automatically creates the create
,
update
, and delete
mutations for each registered model. Bakery also seamlessly uses Laravel's policies to
authorize the actions of your users.
Having policies for your models is required for Bakery mutations to work. See https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/authorization for more information.
For example, with the model schemas mentioned above, you could create a Post
with a simple GraphQL mutation.
mutation {
createPost(input: {
title: "Hello world!"
}) {
id
}
}