Getting started with GitLab GraphQL API
This guide demonstrates basic usage of the GitLab GraphQL API.
See the GraphQL API style guide for implementation details aimed at developers who wish to work on developing the API itself.
Running examples
The examples documented here can be run using:
- The command line.
- GraphiQL.
Command line
You can run GraphQL queries in a curl
request on the command line on your local machine.
A GraphQL request can be made as a POST
request to /api/graphql
with the query as the payload.
You can authorize your request by generating a personal access token
to use as a bearer token.
Example:
GRAPHQL_TOKEN=<your-token>
curl "https://gitlab.com/api/graphql" --header "Authorization: Bearer $GRAPHQL_TOKEN" --header "Content-Type: application/json" --request POST --data "{\"query\": \"query {currentUser {name}}\"}"
GraphiQL
GraphiQL (pronounced "graphical") allows you to run queries directly against the server endpoint with syntax highlighting and autocomplete. It also allows you to explore the schema and types.
The examples below:
- Can be run directly against GitLab 11.0 or later, though some of the types and fields may not be supported in older versions.
- Works against GitLab.com without any further setup. Make sure you are signed in and navigate to the GraphiQL Explorer.
If you want to run the queries locally, or on a self-managed instance, you must either:
- Create the
gitlab-org
group with a project calledgraphql-sandbox
under it. Create several issues within the project. - Edit the queries to replace
gitlab-org/graphql-sandbox
with your own group and project.
Please refer to running GraphiQL for more information.
NOTE:
If you are running GitLab 11.0 to 12.0, enable the graphql
feature flag.
Queries and mutations
The GitLab GraphQL API can be used to perform:
- Queries for data retrieval.
- Mutations for creating, updating, and deleting data.
NOTE:
In the GitLab GraphQL API, id
refers to a
Global ID,
which is an object identifier in the format of "gid://gitlab/Issue/123"
.
GitLab GraphQL Schema outlines which objects and fields are available for clients to query and their corresponding data types.
Example: Get only the names of all the projects the currently logged in user can access (up to a limit, more on that later)
in the group gitlab-org
.
query {
group(fullPath: "gitlab-org") {
id
name
projects {
nodes {
name
}
}
}
}
Example: Get a specific project and the title of Issue #2.
query {
project(fullPath: "gitlab-org/graphql-sandbox") {
name
issue(iid: "2") {
title
}
}
}
Graph traversal
When retrieving child nodes use:
- the
edges { node { } }
syntax. - the short form
nodes { }
syntax.
Underneath it all is a graph we are traversing, hence the name GraphQL.
Example: Get a project (only its name) and the titles of all its issues.
query {
project(fullPath: "gitlab-org/graphql-sandbox") {
name
issues {
nodes {
title
description
}
}
}
}
More about queries: GraphQL docs
Authorization
Authorization uses the same engine as the GitLab application (and GitLab.com). So if you've signed in to GitLab and use GraphiQL, all queries are performed as you, the signed in user. For more information, see the GitLab API documentation.
Mutations
Mutations make changes to data. We can update, delete, or create new records. Mutations generally use InputTypes and variables, neither of which appear here.
Mutations have:
- Inputs. For example, arguments, such as which emoji you'd like to award, and to which object.
- Return statements. That is, what you'd like to get back when it's successful.
- Errors. Always ask for what went wrong, just in case.
Creation mutations
Example: Let's have some tea - add a :tea:
reaction emoji to an issue.
mutation {
awardEmojiAdd(input: { awardableId: "gid://gitlab/Issue/27039960",
name: "tea"
}) {
awardEmoji {
name
description
unicode
emoji
unicodeVersion
user {
name
}
}
errors
}
}
Example: Add a comment to the issue (we're using the ID of the GitLab.com
issue - but
if you're using a local instance, you must get the ID of an issue you can write to).
mutation {
createNote(input: { noteableId: "gid://gitlab/Issue/27039960",
body: "*sips tea*"
}) {
note {
id
body
discussion {
id
}
}
errors
}
}
Update mutations
When you see the result id
of the note you created - take a note of it. Now let's edit it to sip faster!
mutation {
updateNote(input: { id: "gid://gitlab/Note/<note ID>",
body: "*SIPS TEA*"
}) {
note {
id
body
}
errors
}
}
Deletion mutations
Let's delete the comment, since our tea is all gone.
mutation {
destroyNote(input: { id: "gid://gitlab/Note/<note ID>" }) {
note {
id
body
}
errors
}
}
You should get something like the following output:
{
"data": {
"destroyNote": {
"errors": [],
"note": null
}
}
}
We've asked for the note details, but it doesn't exist anymore, so we get null
.
More about mutations: GraphQL Docs.
Introspective queries
Clients can query the GraphQL endpoint for information about its own schema. by making an introspective query.
It is through an introspection query that the GraphiQL Query Explorer
gets all of its knowledge about our GraphQL schema to do autocompletion and provide
its interactive Docs
tab.
Example: Get all the type names in the schema.
{
__schema {
types {
name
}
}
}
Example: Get all the fields associated with Issue.
kind
tells us the enum value for the type, like OBJECT
, SCALAR
or INTERFACE
.
query IssueTypes {
__type(name: "Issue") {
kind
name
fields {
name
description
type {
name
}
}
}
}
More about introspection: GraphQL docs
Sorting
Some of the GitLab GraphQL endpoints allow you to specify how you'd like a collection of objects to be sorted. You can only sort by what the schema allows you to.
Example: Issues can be sorted by creation date:
query {
project(fullPath: "gitlab-org/graphql-sandbox") {
name
issues(sort: created_asc) {
nodes {
title
createdAt
}
}
}
}
Pagination
Pagination is a way of only asking for a subset of the records (say, the first 10). If we want more of them, we can make another request for the next 10 from the server (in the form of something like "please give me the next 10 records").
By default, the GitLab GraphQL API returns 100 records per page.
This can be changed by using first
or last
arguments. Both arguments take a value,
so first: 10
returns the first 10 records, and last: 10
the last 10 records.
There is a limit on how many records will be returned per page, which is generally 100
.
Example: Retrieve only the first 2 issues (slicing). The cursor
field gives us a position from which
we can retrieve further records relative to that one.
query {
project(fullPath: "gitlab-org/graphql-sandbox") {
name
issues(first: 2) {
edges {
node {
title
}
}
pageInfo {
endCursor
hasNextPage
}
}
}
}
Example: Retrieve the next 3. (The cursor value
eyJpZCI6IjI3MDM4OTMzIiwiY3JlYXRlZF9hdCI6IjIwMTktMTEtMTQgMDU6NTY6NDQgVVRDIn0
could be different, but it's the cursor
value returned for the second issue returned above.)
query {
project(fullPath: "gitlab-org/graphql-sandbox") {
name
issues(first: 3, after: "eyJpZCI6IjI3MDM4OTMzIiwiY3JlYXRlZF9hdCI6IjIwMTktMTEtMTQgMDU6NTY6NDQgVVRDIn0") {
edges {
node {
title
}
cursor
}
pageInfo {
endCursor
hasNextPage
}
}
}
}
More on pagination and cursors: GraphQL docs