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GraphQL Server Example

This example shows how to implement a GraphQL server with TypeScript based on Prisma, graphql-yoga and GraphQL Nexus.

How to use

1. Download example & install dependencies

Clone the repository:

git clone git@github.com:prisma/prisma-examples.git

Install Node dependencies:

cd prisma-examples/typescript/graphql
npm install

2. Install the Prisma CLI

To run the example, you need the Prisma CLI. Please install it via NPM or using another method:

npm install -g prisma

3. Set up database & deploy Prisma datamodel

For this example, you'll use a free demo database (AWS Aurora) hosted in Prisma Cloud. To set up your database, run:

prisma deploy

Then, follow these steps in the interactive CLI wizard:

  1. Select Demo server
  2. Authenticate with Prisma Cloud in your browser (if necessary)
  3. Back in your terminal, confirm all suggested values
Alternative: Run Prisma locally via Docker
  1. Ensure you have Docker installed on your machine. If not, you can get it from here.
  2. Create docker-compose.yml for MySQL (see here for Postgres):
    version: '3'
    services:
      prisma:
        image: prismagraphql/prisma:1.34
        restart: always
        ports:
        - "4466:4466"
        environment:
          PRISMA_CONFIG: |
            port: 4466
            databases:
              default:
                connector: mysql
                host: mysql
                port: 3306
                user: root
                password: prisma
                migrations: true
      mysql:
        image: mysql:5.7
        restart: always
        environment:
          MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: prisma
        volumes:
          - mysql:/var/lib/mysql
    volumes:
      mysql:
  3. Run docker-compose up -d
  4. Set the endpoint in prisma.yml to http://localhost:4466
  5. Run prisma deploy

You can now use Prisma Admin to view and edit your data by appending /_admin to your Prisma endpoint.

4. Start the GraphQL server

Launch your GraphQL server with this command:

npm run start

Navigate to http://localhost:4000 in your browser to explore the API of your GraphQL server in a GraphQL Playground.

5. Using the GraphQL API

The schema that specifies the API operations of your GraphQL server is defined in ./src/schema.graphql. Below are a number of operations that you can send to the API using the GraphQL Playground.

Feel free to adjust any operation by adding or removing fields. The GraphQL Playground helps you with its auto-completion and query validation features.

Retrieve all published posts and their authors

query {
  feed {
    id
    title
    content
    published
    author {
      id
      name
      email
    }
  }
}
See more API operations

Create a new user

mutation {
  signupUser(
    name: "Sarah"
    email: "sarah@prisma.io"
  ) {
    id
  }
}

Create a new draft

mutation {
  createDraft(
    title: "Join the Prisma Slack"
    content: "https://slack.prisma.io"
    authorEmail: "alice@prisma.io"
  ) {
    id
    published
  }
}

Publish an existing draft

mutation {
  publish(id: "__POST_ID__") {
    id
    published
  }
}

Note: You need to replace the __POST_ID__-placeholder with an actual id from a Post item. You can find one e.g. using the filterPosts-query.

Search for posts with a specific title or content

{
  filterPosts(searchString: "graphql") {
    id
    title
    content
    published 
    author {
      id
      name
      email
    }
  }
}

Retrieve a single post

{
  post(id: "__POST_ID__") {
    id
    title
    content
    published
    author {
      id
      name
      email
    }
  }
}

Note: You need to replace the __POST_ID__-placeholder with an actual id from a Post item. You can find one e.g. using the filterPosts-query.

Delete a post

mutation {
  deletePost(id: "__POST_ID__") {
    id
  }
}

Note: You need to replace the __POST_ID__-placeholder with an actual id from a Post item. You can find one e.g. using the filterPosts-query.

6. Changing the GraphQL schema

To make changes to the GraphQL schema, you need to manipulate the Query and Mutation types that are defined in index.ts.

Note that the start script also starts a development server that automatically updates your schema every time you save a file. This way, the auto-generated GraphQL schema updates whenever you make changes in to the Query or Mutation types inside your TypeScript code.

Next steps

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