Skip to content

Octokit plugin to paginate GraphQL Query responses

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

octokit/plugin-paginate-graphql.js

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

plugin-paginate-graphql.js

Octokit plugin to paginate GraphQL API endpoint responses

@latest Build Status

Usage

Browsers

Load @octokit/plugin-paginate-graphql and @octokit/core (or core-compatible module) directly from esm.sh

<script type="module">
  import { Octokit } from "https://esm.sh/@octokit/core";
  import { paginateGraphQL } from "https://esm.sh/@octokit/plugin-paginate-graphql";
</script>
Node

Install with npm install @octokit/core @octokit/plugin-paginate-graphql. Optionally replace @octokit/core with a core-compatible module

import { Octokit } from "@octokit/core";
import { paginateGraphQL } from "@octokit/plugin-paginate-graphql";

Important

As we use conditional exports, you will need to adapt your tsconfig.json by setting "moduleResolution": "node16", "module": "node16".

See the TypeScript docs on package.json "exports".
See this helpful guide on transitioning to ESM from @sindresorhus

const MyOctokit = Octokit.plugin(paginateGraphQL);
const octokit = new MyOctokit({ auth: "secret123" });

const { repository } = await octokit.graphql.paginate(
  `query paginate($cursor: String) {
    repository(owner: "octokit", name: "rest.js") {
      issues(first: 10, after: $cursor) {
        nodes {
          title
        }
        pageInfo {
          hasNextPage
          endCursor
        }
      }
    }
  }`,
);

console.log(`Found ${repository.issues.nodes.length} issues!`);

There are two conventions this plugin relies on:

  1. The name of the cursor variable must be $cursor
  2. You must include a valid pageInfo object in the paginated resource (see Pagination Direction for more info on what is considered valid)

octokit.graphql.paginate()

The paginateGraphQL plugin adds a new octokit.graphql.paginate() method which accepts a query with a single $cursor variable that is used to paginate.

The query gets passed over to the octokit.graphql()-function. The response is then scanned for the required pageInfo-object. If hasNextPage is true, it will automatically use the endCursor to execute the next query until hasNextPage is false.

While iterating, it continually merges all nodes and/or edges of all responses and returns a combined response in the end.

Warning Please note that this plugin only supports pagination of a single resource - so you can not execute queries with parallel or nested pagination. You can find more details in the chapter below.

octokit.graphql.paginate.iterator()

If your target runtime environments supports async iterators (such as most modern browsers and Node 10+), you can iterate through each response:

const pageIterator = octokit.graphql.paginate.iterator(
  `query paginate($cursor: String) {
    repository(owner: "octokit", name: "rest.js") {
      issues(first: 10, after: $cursor) {
        nodes {
          title
        }
        pageInfo {
          hasNextPage
          endCursor
        }
      }
    }
  }`,
);

for await (const response of pageIterator) {
  const issues = response.repository.issues;
  console.log(`${issues.length} issues found.`);
}

Variables

Just like with octokit/graphql.js, you can pass your own variables as a second parameter to the paginate or iterator function.

await octokit.graphql.paginate(
  `
      query paginate($cursor: String, $organization: String!) {
        repository(owner: $organization, name: "rest.js") {
          issues(first: 10, after: $cursor) {
            nodes {
              title
            }
            pageInfo {
              hasNextPage
              endCursor
            }
          }
        }
      }
    `,
  {
    organization: "octokit",
  },
);

You can also use this to pass a initial cursor value:

await octokit.graphql.paginate(
  `
      query paginate($cursor: String, $organization: String!) {
        repository(owner: $organization, name: "rest.js") {
          issues(first: 10, after: $cursor) {
            nodes {
              title
            }
            pageInfo {
              hasNextPage
              endCursor
            }
          }
        }
      }
    `,
  {
    organization: "octokit",
    cursor: "initialValue",
  },
);

Pagination Direction

You can control the pagination direction by the properties defined in the pageInfo resource.

For a forward pagination, use:

pageInfo {
  hasNextPage
  endCursor
}

For a backwards pagination, use:

pageInfo {
  hasPreviousPage
  startCursor
}

If you provide all 4 properties in a pageInfo, the plugin will default to forward pagination.

Unsupported: Nested pagination

Nested pagination with GraphQL is complicated, so the following is not supported:

await octokit.graphql.paginate((cursor) => {
  const issuesCursor = cursor.create("issuesCursor");
  const commentsCursor = cursor.create("issuesCursor");
  return `{
    repository(owner: "octokit", name: "rest.js") {
      issues(first: 10, after: ${issuesCursor}) {
        nodes {
          title,
          comments(first: 10, after: ${commentsCursor}) {
            nodes: {
              body
            }
            pageInfo {
              hasNextPage
              endCursor
            }
          }
        }
        pageInfo {
          hasNextPage
          endCursor
        }
      }
    }
  }`;
});

There is a great video from GitHub Universe 2019 Advanced patterns for GitHub's GraphQL API by @ReaLoretta that goes into depth why this is so hard to achieve and patterns and ways around it.

TypeScript Support

You can type the response of the paginateGraphQL() and iterator() functions like this:

await octokit.graphql.paginate<RepositoryIssueResponseType>((cursor) => {
  return `{
      repository(owner: "octokit", name: "rest.js") {
        issues(first: 10, after: ${cursor.create()}) {
          nodes {
            title
          }
          pageInfo {
            hasNextPage
            endCursor
          }
        }
      }
    }`;
});

You can utilize the PageInfoForward and PageInfoBackward-Interfaces exported from this library to construct your response-types:

import { PageInfoForward } from "@octokit/plugin-paginate-graphql";

type Issues = {
  title: string;
};

type IssueResponseType = {
  repository: {
    issues: {
      nodes: Issues[];
      pageInfo: PageInfoForward;
    };
  };
};

// Response will be of type IssueResponseType
const response = await octokit.graphql.paginate<IssueResponseType>((cursor) => {
  return `{
      repository(owner: "octokit", name: "rest.js") {
        issues(first: 10, after: ${cursor.create()}) {
          nodes {
            title
          }
          pageInfo {
            hasNextPage
            endCursor
          }
        }
      }
    }`;
});

The PageInfoBackward contains the properties hasPreviousPage and startCursor and can be used accordingly when doing backwards pagination.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

License

MIT