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Building a GraphQL API with Spring for GraphQL

This repository contains a GraphQL demo, with an API server application and a React client for displaying a list of companies. The tutorial for creating this example is available on Okta Developer Blog.

Prerequisites:

Getting Started

To install this example, run the following commands:

git clone https://github.com/oktadev/auth0-spring-graphql-react-example.git spring-graphql-react
cd spring-graphql-react

Run the Spring Boot GraphQL server

The following steps apply to the server application spring-graphql-api.

cd spring-graphql-api

Set up the seed data

Download the following seed files to an empty folder:

Edit the file src/main/docker/neo4j.yml and update the seed data csv folder path:

name: companies
services:
  neo4j:
    image: neo4j:5
    volumes:
      - <csv-folder>:/var/lib/neo4j/import

Run a local Neo4j database

Create the file src/main/docker/.env with the following content:

NEO4J_PASSWORD=verysecret

In a terminal, go to the docker folder and run:

docker compose -f neo4j.yml up

Create the server application in Auth0

Sign up at Auth0 and install the Auth0 CLI that will help you create the tenant and the client applications.

In the command line login to Auth0 with the CLI:

auth0 login

The command output will display a device confirmation code and open a browser session to activate the device.

NOTE: My browser was not displaying anything, so I had to manually activate the device by opening the URL https://auth0.auth0.com/activate?user_code={deviceCode}.

On successful login, you will see the tenant, which you will use as the issuer later:

✪ Welcome to the Auth0 CLI 🎊

If you don't have an account, please create one here: https://auth0.com/signup.

Your device confirmation code is: KGFL-LNVB

 ▸    Press Enter to open the browser to log in or ^C to quit...

Waiting for the login to complete in the browser... ⣻Opening in existing browser session.
Waiting for the login to complete in the browser... done

 ▸    Successfully logged in.
 ▸    Tenant: dev-avup2laz.us.auth0.com

The next step is to create a client app, which you can do in one command:

auth0 apps create \
  --name "GraphQL Server" \
  --description "Spring Boot GraphQL Resource Server" \
  --type regular \
  --callbacks http://localhost:8080/login/oauth2/code/okta \
  --logout-urls http://localhost:8080 \
  --reveal-secrets

Once the app is created, you will see the OIDC app's configuration:

=== dev-avup2laz.us.auth0.com application created

  CLIENT ID            ***
  NAME                 GraphQL Server
  DESCRIPTION          Spring Boot GraphQL Resource Server
  TYPE                 Regular Web Application
  CLIENT SECRET        ***
  CALLBACKS            http://localhost:8080/login/oauth2/code/okta
  ALLOWED LOGOUT URLS  http://localhost:8080
  ALLOWED ORIGINS
  ALLOWED WEB ORIGINS
  TOKEN ENDPOINT AUTH
  GRANTS               implicit, authorization_code, refresh_token, client_credentials

 ▸    Quickstarts: https://auth0.com/docs/quickstart/webapp
 ▸    Hint: Emulate this app's login flow by running `auth0 test login ***`
 ▸    Hint: Consider running `auth0 quickstarts download ***`

Add the audience, clientId, issuer and clientSecret to an .env file in the server root folder:

export SPRING_NEO4J_AUTHENTICATION_PASSWORD=verysecret
export OKTA_OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET=<client-secret>
export OKTA_OAUTH2_ISSUER=https://<your-auth0-domain>/
export OKTA_OAUTH2_CLIENT_ID=<client-id>
export OKTA_OAUTH2_AUDIENCE=https://<your-auth0-domain>/api/v2/

Again, in the server root folder, run the application with:

source .env && ./gradlew bootRun

Wait for the logs to inform the seed data migrations have run (it might take a while):

2023-09-13T11:52:08.041-03:00  ... Applied migration 001 ("Constraint").
2023-09-13T11:52:12.121-03:00  ... Applied migration 002 ("Company").
2023-09-13T11:52:16.508-03:00  ... Applied migration 003 ("Person").
2023-09-13T11:52:22.635-03:00  ... Applied migration 004 ("PersonCompany").
2023-09-13T11:52:25.979-03:00  ... Applied migration 005 ("CompanyData").
2023-09-13T11:52:27.703-03:00  ... Applied migration 006 ("Land").

Run the React client

The following steps apply to the React client application react-graphql.

cd react-graphql

Create the client application in Auth0

With the Auth0 client, create an SPA application:

auth0 apps create \
  --name "React client for GraphQL" \
  --description "SPA React client for a Spring GraphQL API" \
  --type spa \
  --callbacks http://localhost:3000/callback \
  --logout-urls http://localhost:3000 \
  --origins http://localhost:3000 \
  --web-origins http://localhost:3000

Copy the file .env.example to .env.local. Set the auth0 domain, the client Id, audience and callback URL:

NEXT_PUBLIC_API_SERVER_URL=http://localhost:8080
NEXT_PUBLIC_AUTH0_DOMAIN=<your-auth0-domain>
NEXT_PUBLIC_AUTH0_CLIENT_ID=<client-id>
NEXT_PUBLIC_AUTH0_CALLBACK_URL=http://localhost:3000/callback
NEXT_PUBLIC_AUTH0_AUDIENCE=https://<your-auth0-domain>/api/v2/

Run the application with:

npm install && npm run dev

Go to http://localhost:3000 and you should be redirected to the Auth0 universal login page. After login in, you should see a companies list.

Help

Please post any questions as comments on the blog post, or on the Okta Developer Forums.

License

Apache 2.0, see LICENSE.

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