GraphQL-Ruby 1.9+ includes GraphQL::Execution::Lookahead
for checking whether child fields are selected. You can use this to optimize database access, for example, selecting only the needed fields from the database.
Add extras: [:lookahead]
to your field configuration to recieve an injected lookahead:
field :files, [Types::File], null: false, extras: [:lookahead]
Then, update your resolver method to accept a lookahead:
argument:
def files(lookahead:)
# ...
end
That argument will be injected by the GraphQL runtime.
Inside your field resolver, you can use the lookahead to check for child fields. For example, you can check for a specific selection:
def files(lookahead:)
if lookahead.selects?(:full_path)
# This is a query like `files { fullPath ... }`
else
# This query doesn't have `fullPath`
end
end
Or, you can list all the selected fields:
def files(lookahead:)
all_selections = lookahead.selections.map(&:name)
if all_selections == [:name]
# Only `files { name }` was selected, use a fast cached value:
object.file_names.map { |n| { name: n }}
else
# Lots of fields were selected, fall back to a more resource-intensive approach
FileSystemHelper.load_files_for(object)
end
end
Lookaheads are chainable, so you can use them to check nested selections too:
def files(lookahead:)
if lookahead.selection(:history).selects?(:author)
# For example, `files { history { author { ... } } }`
# We're checking for commit authors, so load those objects appropriately ...
else
# Not selecting commit authors ...
end
end
Nested lookaheads return empty objects when there’s no selection (not nil
), so the code above will never have a “no method error on nil
”.
If you want to see what selections were made on the items in a connection, you can use nested lookaheads. However, don’t forget to check for edges { node }
and nodes { ... }
, if you support that shortcut field. For example:
field :products, Types::Product.connection_type, null: false, extras: [:lookahead]
def products(lookahead:)
selects_quantity_available = lookahead.selection(:nodes).selects?(:quantity_available) ||
# ^^ check for `products { nodes { quantityAvailable } }`
lookahead.selection(:edges).selection(:node).selects?(:quantity_available)
# ^^ check for `products { edges { node { quantityAvailable } } }`
if selects_quantity_available
# ...
else
# ...
end
end
That way, you can check for specific selections on the nodes in a connection.