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graphql-language-service-server

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Server process backing the GraphQL Language Service.

GraphQL Language Service Server provides an interface for building GraphQL language services for IDEs.

Partial support for Microsoft's Language Server Protocol is in place, with more to come in the future.

Supported features include:

  • Diagnostics (GraphQL syntax linting/validations) (spec-compliant)
  • Autocomplete suggestions (spec-compliant)
  • Hyperlink to fragment definitions and named types (type, input, enum) definitions (spec-compliant)
  • Outline view support for queries
  • Support for gql graphql and other template tags inside javascript, typescript, jsx and tsx files, and an interface to allow custom parsing of all files.

Installation and Usage

Dependencies

An LSP compatible client with it's own file watcher, that sends watch notifications to the server.

DROPPED: GraphQL Language Service no longer depends on Watchman

Installation

npm install --save graphql-language-service-server
# or
yarn add graphql-language-service-server

We also provide a CLI interface to this server, see graphql-language-service-cli

Usage

Initialize the GraphQL Language Server with the startServer function:

import { startServer } from 'graphql-language-service-server';

await startServer({
  method: 'node',
});

If you are developing a service or extension, this is the LSP language server you want to run.

When developing vscode extensions, just the above is enough to get started for your extension's ServerOptions.run.module, for example.

startServer function takes the following parameters:

Parameter Required Description
port true when method is socket, false otherwise port for the LSP server to run on
method false socket, streams, or node (ipc)
config false custom graphql-config instance from loadConfig (see example above)
configDir false the directory where graphql-config is found
extensions false array of functions to transform the graphql-config and add extensions dynamically
parser false Customize all file parsing by overriding the default parseDocument function
fileExtensions false. defaults to ['.js', '.ts', '.tsx, '.jsx'] Customize file extensions used by the default LSP parser

GraphQL configuration file

You must provide a graphql config file

Check out graphql-config to learn the many ways you can define your graphql config

.graphqlrc or .graphqlrc.yml/yaml or graphql.config.yml

schema: 'packages/api/src/schema.graphql'
documents: 'packages/app/src/components/**/*.{tsx,ts}'
extensions:
  endpoints:
    example:
      url: 'http://localhost:8000'
  customExtension:
    foo: true

.graphqlrc or .graphqlrc.json or graphql.config.json

{ "schema": "https://localhost:8000" }

graphql.config.js or .graphqlrc.js

module.exports = { schema: 'https://localhost:8000' };

custom startServer

use graphql config loadConfig for further customization:

import { loadConfig } from 'graphql-config'; // 3.0.0 or later!

await startServer({
  method: 'node',
  // or instead of configName, an exact path (relative from rootDir or absolute)

  // deprecated for: loadConfigOptions.rootDir. root directory for graphql config file(s), or for relative resolution for exact `filePath`. default process.cwd()
  // configDir: '',
  loadConfigOptions: {
    // any of the options for graphql-config@3 `loadConfig()`

    // rootDir is same as `configDir` before, the path where the graphql config file would be found by cosmic-config
    rootDir: 'config/',
    // or - the relative or absolute path to your file
    filePath: 'exact/path/to/config.js (also supports yml, json)',
    // myPlatform.config.js/json/yaml works now!
    configName: 'myPlatform',
  },
});

The graphql-config features we support are:

module.exports = {
  extensions: {
    // add customDirectives *legacy*. you can now provide multiple schema pointers to config.schema/project.schema, including inline strings
    "customDirectives": ["@myExampleDirective"],
     // a function that returns rules array with parameter `ValidationContext` from `graphql/validation`
    "customValidationRules": require('./config/customValidationRules')
    "languageService": {
      // should the language service read from source files? if false, it generates a schema from the project/config schema
      useSchemaFileDefinitions: false
    }
  }
}

we also load require('dotenv').config(), so you can use process.env variables from local .env files!

Workspace Configuration

The LSP Server reads config by sending workspace/configuration method when it initializes.

Parameter Default Description
graphql-config.load.baseDir workspace root or process.cwd() the path where graphql config looks for config files
graphql-config.load.filePath null exact filepath of the config file.
graphql-config.load.configName graphql config name prefix instead of graphql
graphql-config.load.legacy true backwards compatibility with graphql-config@2
graphql-config.dotEnvPath null backwards compatibility with graphql-config@2
vsode-graphql.useSchemaFileDefinitions false whether the LSP server will use source files, or generate an SDL from config.schema/project.schema

all the graphql-config.load.* configuration values come from static loadConfig() options in graphql config.

(more coming soon!)

Architectural Overview

GraphQL Language Service currently communicates via Stream transport with the IDE server. GraphQL server will receive/send RPC messages to perform language service features, while caching the necessary GraphQL artifacts such as fragment definitions, GraphQL schemas etc. More about the server interface and RPC message format below.

The IDE server should launch a separate GraphQL server with its own child process for each .graphqlrc.yml file the IDE finds (using the nearest ancestor directory relative to the file currently being edited):

./application

  ./productA
    .graphqlrc.yml
    ProductAQuery.graphql
    ProductASchema.graphql

  ./productB
    .graphqlrc.yml
    ProductBQuery.graphql
    ProductBSchema.graphql

A separate GraphQL server should be instantiated for ProductA and ProductB, each with its own .graphqlrc.yml file, as illustrated in the directory structure above.

The IDE server should manage the lifecycle of the GraphQL server. Ideally, the IDE server should spawn a child process for each of the GraphQL Language Service processes necessary, and gracefully exit the processes as the IDE closes. In case of errors or a sudden halt the GraphQL Language Service will close as the stream from the IDE closes.

Server Interface

GraphQL Language Server uses JSON-RPC to communicate with the IDE servers. Microsoft's language server currently supports two communication transports: Stream (stdio) and IPC. For IPC transport, the reference guide to be used for development is the language server protocol documentation.

For each transport, there is a slight difference in JSON message format, especially in how the methods to be invoked are defined - below are the currently supported methods for each transport (will be updated as progress is made):

Stream IPC
Diagnostics getDiagnostics textDocument/publishDiagnostics
Autocompletion getAutocompleteSuggestions textDocument/completion
Outline getOutline textDocument/outline
Document Symbols getDocumentSymbols textDocument/symbols
Workspace Symbols getWorkspaceSymbols workspace/symbols
Go-to definition getDefinition textDocument/definition
Workspace Definition getWorkspaceDefinition workspace/definition
File Events Not supported yet didOpen/didClose/didSave/didChange events