-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 112
/
genqlient.yaml
263 lines (248 loc) · 12.2 KB
/
genqlient.yaml
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
# genqlient.yaml is genqlient's configuration file. This genqlient.yaml is an
# example; use `go run github.com/Khan/genqlient --init` to generate a simple
# starting point. By default, genqlient looks for the configuration file
# named [.]genqlient.y[a]ml in the current directory or any ancestor; or the
# filename may be given as an argument.
# The filename with the GraphQL schema (in SDL format), relative to
# genqlient.yaml.
# This can also be a glob-pattern, or a list of filenames or globs, such as:
# schema:
# - user.graphql
# - ./schema/*.graphql
# - ./*/*.graphql # matches ./a/b.graphql, but not ./a/b/c.graphql
# - ./**/*.graphql # matches ./a.graphql, ./a/b/c.graphql, etc.
# The glob-pattern "**" is interpreted by github.com/bmatcuk/doublestar/v4, and
# matches zero or more path components (so you want **/*.graphql, not
# **.graphql). Each pattern must match at least one file, to avoid mistakes.
schema: schema.graphql
# Filename(s) or globs with the operations for which to generate code, relative
# to genqlient.yaml.
#
# These may be .graphql files, containing the queries in SDL format, or
# Go files, in which case any string-literal starting with (optional
# whitespace and) the string "# @genqlient" will be extracted as a query.
#
# Like schema, this may be a single filename or glob, or a list of those.
operations:
- genqlient.graphql
- "pkg/*.go"
# The filename to which to write the generated code, relative to
# genqlient.yaml. Default: generated.go.
generated: generated/genqlient.go
# The package name for the output code; defaults to the package-name
# corresponding to the setting of `generated`, above.
#
# This is rarely needed: only if you want the package-name to differ from the
# suffix of the package-path, and there are no other Go files in the package
# already.
package: mygenerated
# If set, a file at this path (relative to genqlient.yaml) will be generated
# containing the exact operations that genqlient will send to the server.
#
# This is useful for systems which require queries to be explicitly
# safelisted (e.g. [1]), especially for cases like queries involving fragments
# where it may not exactly match the input queries, or for other static
# analysis. The JSON is an object of the form
# {"operations": [{
# "operationName": "operationname",
# "query": "query operationName { ... }",
# "sourceLocation": "myqueriesfile.graphql",
# }]}
# Keys may be added in the future.
#
# By default, no such file is written.
#
# [1] https://www.apollographql.com/docs/studio/operation-registry/
export_operations: operations.json
# Set to the fully-qualified name of a Go type which generated helpers
# should accept and use as the context.Context for HTTP requests.
#
# Defaults to context.Context; set to "-" to omit context entirely (i.e.
# use context.Background()). Must be a type which implements
# context.Context.
context_type: context.Context
# If set, a function to get a graphql.Client, perhaps from the context.
# By default, the client must be passed explicitly to each genqlient
# generated query-helper.
#
# This is useful if you have a shared client, either a global, or
# available from context, and don't want to pass it explicitly. In this
# case the signature of the genqlient-generated helpers will omit the
# `graphql.Context` and they will call this function instead.
#
# Must be the fully-qualified name of a function which accepts a context
# (of the type configured as ContextType (above), which defaults to
# `context.Context`, or a function of no arguments if ContextType is set
# to the empty string) and returns (graphql.Client, error). If the
# client-getter returns an error, the helper will return the error
# without making a query.
client_getter: "github.com/you/yourpkg.GetClient"
# If set, fields with a struct type will default to having
# the "pointer: true, omitempty: true" flag.
#
# This can be useful for struct schema where it would be burdensome
# to manually set the flags on a large number of fields.
#
# Defaults to false.
use_struct_references: boolean
# If set, generated code will have a third return parameter of type
# map[string]interface{}. This will contain the optional values
# of the Extensions field send from Servers.
# ref.: https://spec.graphql.org/October2021/#sec-Response-Format
#
# This can be useful for extending the GraphQL Protocol.
#
# Defaults to false.
use_extensions: boolean
# Customize how models are generated for optional fields. This can currently
# be set to one of the following values:
# - value (default): optional fields are generated as values, the same as
# non-optional fields. E.g. fields with GraphQL types `String` or `String!`
# will both map to the Go type `string`. When values are absent in
# responses the zero value will be used.
# - pointer: optional fields are generated as pointers. E.g. fields with
# GraphQL type `String` will map to the Go type `*string`. When values are
# absent in responses `nil` will be used. Optional list fields do not use
# pointers-to-slices, so the GraphQL type `[String]` will map to the Go
# type `[]*string`, not `*[]*string`; GraphQL null and empty list simply
# map to Go nil- and empty-slice.
# - generic: optional fields are generated as type parameters to a generic type
# specified by `optional_generic_type`. E.g. fields with GraphQL type `String`
# will map to the Go type `generic.Type[string]`. This is useful if you have a
# type that mimics the behavior of Option<A> or Maybe<A> in other languages like
# Rust, Java, or Haskell.
optional: value
# Only used when `optional: generic` is set. `example.Type` must be a fully qualified
# generic type with only one generic parameter e.g. atomic.Value[string].
# It must also implement the `encoding/json.Marshaler` and `encoding/json.Unmarshaler`
# interface if you want it to serialize / deserialize properly.
optional_generic_type: github.com/organisation/repository/example.Type
# A map from GraphQL type name to Go fully-qualified type name to override
# the Go type genqlient will use for this GraphQL type.
#
# This is primarily used for custom scalars, or to map builtin scalars
# to a nonstandard type that is defined elsewhere. By default,
# builtin scalars are mapped to the obvious Go types (String and ID to
# string, Int to int, Float to float64, and Boolean to bool), but this
# setting will extend or override those mappings. (See also
# @genqlient(typename: ...), which can be used to map builtin scalars
# to a nonstandard type that genqlient defines for you.)
#
# genqlient does not validate these types in any way; they must define
# whatever logic is needed (MarshalJSON/UnmarshalJSON or JSON tags) to
# convert to/from JSON. For this reason, it's not recommended to use this
# setting to map object, interface, or union types, because nothing
# guarantees that the fields requested in the query match those present in
# the Go type.
#
# Note: if binding to types in the same package as the generated code, make
# sure you don't bind to generated types! Otherwise, things get very circular.
#
# To get equivalent behavior in just one query, use @genqlient(bind: ...);
# see genqlient_directive.graphql for more details.
bindings:
# To bind a scalar:
DateTime:
# The fully-qualified name of the Go type to which to bind. For example:
# time.Time
# map[string]interface{}
# github.com/you/yourpkg/subpkg.MyType
# Specifically, this can be any of the following expressions:
# - any named type (qualified by the full package path)
# - any predeclared basic type (string, int, etc.)
# - interface{}
# - for any allowed type T, *T, []T, [N]T, and map[string]T
# but can't be, for example:
# - an inline (unnamed) struct or interface type
# - a map whose key-type is not string
# - a nonstandard way of spelling those, (interface {/* hi */},
# map[ string ]T)
type: time.Time
# Optionally, the fully-qualified name of the function to use when
# marshaling this type.
#
# This is useful when you want to bind to a standard type, but use
# nonstandard marshaling, for example when making requests to a server
# that's not compatible with Go's default time format. It is only used for
# types passed as arguments, i.e. input types, scalars, and enums.
#
# The function should have a signature similar to json.Marshal, i.e., it
# will be passed one argument which will be a pointer to a value of the
# given type, and must return two values: the JSON as a `[]byte`, and an
# error. For example, you might specify
# unmarshaler: github.com/you/yourpkg.MarshalMyType
# and that function is defined as e.g.:
# func MarshalMyType(v *MyType) ([]byte, error)
#
# Note that the `omitempty` option is ignored for types with custom
# marshalers; the custom marshaler can of course choose to map any value it
# wishes to `"null"` which in GraphQL has the same effect.
#
# The default is to use ordinary JSON-marshaling.
marshaler: github.com/you/yourpkg.MarshalDateTime
# Optionally, the fully-qualified name of the function to use when
# unmarshaling this type.
#
# This is similar to marshaler, above, but for unmarshaling. The specified
# function should have a signature similar to json.Unmarshal, i.e., it will
# be passed two arguments, a []byte of JSON to unmarshal and a pointer to a
# value of the given type, and must return an error. For example, you
# might specify
# unmarshaler: github.com/you/yourpkg.UnmarshalMyType
# and that function is defined as e.g.:
# func UnmarshalMyType(b []byte, v *MyType) error
#
# The default is to use ordinary JSON-unmarshaling.
unmarshaler: github.com/you/yourpkg.UnmarshalDateTime
# To bind an object type:
MyType:
type: github.com/you/yourpkg.GoType
# If set, a GraphQL selection which must exactly match the fields
# requested whenever this type is used. Only applies if the GraphQL type
# is a composite output type (object, interface, or union).
#
# This is useful if Type is a struct whose UnmarshalJSON or other methods
# expect that you requested certain fields. For example, given the below
# config, genqlient will reject if you make a query
# { fieldOfMytype { id title } }
# The fields must match exactly, including the ordering: "{ name id }"
# will be rejected. But the arguments and directives, if any, need not
# match.
#
# TODO(benkraft): Also add ExpectIncludesFields and ExpectSubsetOfFields,
# or something, if you want to say, for example, that you have to request
# certain fields but others are optional.
expect_exact_fields: "{ id name }"
# unmarshaler and marshaler are also valid here, see above for details.
# A list of packages for which genqlient should automatically generate
# bindings. This is equivalent to adding a entry
# TypeName:
# type: github.com/you/yourpkg/models.TypeName
# to the bindings map, above, for each exported type in the package. Multiple
# packages may be specified, and later ones take precedence over earlier ones.
# Explicit entries in bindings take precedence over all package bindings.
#
# Note: make sure this isn't the package with your generated code, or things
# will get circular very fast.
package_bindings:
- package: github.com/you/yourpkg/models
# Configuration for genqlient's smart-casing.
#
# By default genqlient tries to convert GraphQL type names to Go style
# automatically. Sometimes it doesn't do a great job; this suite of options
# lets you configure its algorithm as makes sense for your schema.
#
# Options below support the following values:
# - default: use genqlient's default algorithm, which tries to convert GraphQL
# names to exported Go names. This is usually best for GraphQL schemas using
# idiomatic GraphQL types.
# - raw: map the GraphQL type exactly; don't try to convert it to Go style.
# This is usually best for schemas with casing conflicts, e.g. enums with
# values which differ only in casing.
casing:
# Use the given casing-style (see above) for all GraphQL enum values.
all_enums: raw
# Use the given casing-style (see above) for the enum values in the given
# GraphQL types (takes precedence over all_enum_values).
enums:
MyEnum: raw