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A graphql subscriptions implementation using redis and apollo's graphql-subscriptions

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Fork of graphql-redis-subscriptions

This is a fork that contains a fix already submitted in a PR. Once the fix is merged (or else the underlying issue is fixed) we can go back to consuming the original package as we normally would.

Please note that dependant projects may consume the master branch so be careful if you push any changes to it.

Original README contents

This package implements the PubSubEngine Interface from the graphql-subscriptions package and also the new AsyncIterator interface. It allows you to connect your subscriptions manager to a Redis Pub Sub mechanism to support multiple subscription manager instances.

Installation

At first, install the graphql-redis-subscriptions package:

npm install graphql-redis-subscriptions

As the graphql-subscriptions package is declared as a peer dependency, you might receive warning about an unmet peer dependency if it's not installed already by one of your other packages. In that case you also need to install it too:

npm install graphql-subscriptions

Using as AsyncIterator

Define your GraphQL schema with a Subscription type:

schema {
  query: Query
  mutation: Mutation
  subscription: Subscription
}

type Subscription {
    somethingChanged: Result
}

type Result {
    id: String
}

Now, let's create a simple RedisPubSub instance:

import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';
const pubsub = new RedisPubSub();

Now, implement your Subscriptions type resolver, using the pubsub.asyncIterator to map the event you need:

const SOMETHING_CHANGED_TOPIC = 'something_changed';

export const resolvers = {
  Subscription: {
    somethingChanged: {
      subscribe: () => pubsub.asyncIterator(SOMETHING_CHANGED_TOPIC),
    },
  },
}

Subscriptions resolvers are not a function, but an object with subscribe method, that returns AsyncIterable.

Calling the method asyncIterator of the RedisPubSub instance will send redis a SUBSCRIBE message to the topic provided and will return an AsyncIterator binded to the RedisPubSub instance and listens to any event published on that topic. Now, the GraphQL engine knows that somethingChanged is a subscription, and every time we will use pubsub.publish over this topic, the RedisPubSub will PUBLISH the event over redis to all other subscribed instances and those in their turn will emit the event to GraphQL using the next callback given by the GraphQL engine.

pubsub.publish(SOMETHING_CHANGED_TOPIC, { somethingChanged: { id: "123" }});

Dynamically create a topic based on subscription args passed on the query

export const resolvers = {
  Subscription: {
    somethingChanged: {
      subscribe: (_, args) => pubsub.asyncIterator(`${SOMETHING_CHANGED_TOPIC}.${args.relevantId}`),
    },
  },
}

Using a pattern on subscription

export const resolvers = {
  Subscription: {
    somethingChanged: {
      subscribe: (_, args) => pubsub.asyncIterator(`${SOMETHING_CHANGED_TOPIC}.${args.relevantId}.*`, { pattern: true })
    },
  },
}

Using both arguments and payload to filter events

import { withFilter } from 'graphql-subscriptions';

export const resolvers = {
  Subscription: {
    somethingChanged: {
      subscribe: withFilter(
        (_, args) => pubsub.asyncIterator(`${SOMETHING_CHANGED_TOPIC}.${args.relevantId}`),
        (payload, variables) => payload.somethingChanged.id === variables.relevantId,
      ),
    },
  },
}

Configuring RedisPubSub

RedisPubSub constructor can be passed a configuration object to enable some advanced features.

export interface PubSubRedisOptions {
  connection?: RedisOptions | string;
  triggerTransform?: TriggerTransform;
  connectionListener?: (err?: Error) => void;
  publisher?: RedisClient;
  subscriber?: RedisClient;
  reviver?: Reviver;
  serializer?: Serializer;
  deserializer?: Deserializer;
  messageEventName?: string;
  pmessageEventName?: string;
}
option type default description
connection object | string undefined the connection option is passed as is to the ioredis constructor to create redis subscriber and publisher instances. for greater controll, use publisher and subscriber options.
triggerTransform function (trigger) => trigger deprecated
connectionListener function undefined pass in connection listener to log errors or make sure connection to redis instance was created successfully.
publisher function undefined must be passed along side subscriber. see #creating-a-redis-client
subscriber function undefined must be passed along side publisher. see #creating-a-redis-client
reviver function undefined see #using-a-custom-reviver
serializer function undefined see #using-a-custom-serializerdeserializer
deserializer function undefined see #using-a-custom-serializerdeserializer
messageEventName string undefined see #receiving-messages-as-buffers
pmessageEventName string undefined see #receiving-messages-as-buffers

Creating a Redis Client

The basic usage is great for development and you will be able to connect to a Redis server running on your system seamlessly. For production usage, it is recommended to pass a redis client (like ioredis) to the RedisPubSub constructor. This way you can control all the options of your redis connection, for example the connection retry strategy.

import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';
import * as Redis from 'ioredis';

const options = {
  host: REDIS_DOMAIN_NAME,
  port: PORT_NUMBER,
  retryStrategy: times => {
    // reconnect after
    return Math.min(times * 50, 2000);
  }
};

const pubsub = new RedisPubSub({
  ...,
  publisher: new Redis(options),
  subscriber: new Redis(options)
});

Receiving messages as Buffers

Some Redis use cases require receiving binary-safe data back from redis (in a Buffer). To accomplish this, override the event names for receiving messages and pmessages. Different redis clients use different names, for example:

library message event message event (Buffer) pmessage event pmessage event (Buffer)
ioredis message messageBuffer pmessage pmessageBuffer
node-redis message message_buffer pmessage pmessage_buffer
import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';
import * as Redis from 'ioredis';

const pubsub = new RedisPubSub({
  ...,
  // Tells RedisPubSub to register callbacks on the messageBuffer and pmessageBuffer EventEmitters
  messageEventName: 'messageBuffer',
  pmessageEventName: 'pmessageBuffer',
});

Also works with your Redis Cluster

import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';
import { Cluster } from 'ioredis';

const cluster = new Cluster(REDIS_NODES); // like: [{host: 'ipOrHost', port: 1234}, ...]
const pubsub = new RedisPubSub({
  ...,
  publisher: cluster,
  subscriber: cluster
});

You can learn more on the ioredis package here.

Using a custom serializer/deserializer

By default, Javascript objects are (de)serialized using the JSON.stringify and JSON.parse methods. You may pass your own serializer and/or deserializer function(s) as part of the options.

The deserializer will be called with an extra context object containing pattern (if available) and channel properties, allowing you to access this information when subscribing to a pattern.

import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';
import { someSerializer, someDeserializer } from 'some-serializer-library';

const serialize = (source) => {
  return someSerializer(source);
};

const deserialize = (sourceOrBuffer, { channel, pattern }) => {
  return someDeserializer(sourceOrBuffer, channel, pattern);
};

const pubSub = new RedisPubSub({ ..., serializer: serialize, deserializer: deserialize });

Using a custom reviver

By default, Javascript objects are serialized using the JSON.stringify and JSON.parse methods. This means that not all objects - such as Date or Regexp objects - will deserialize correctly without a custom reviver, that work out of the box with the default in-memory implementation. For handling such objects, you may pass your own reviver function to JSON.parse, for example to handle Date objects the following reviver can be used:

import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';

const dateReviver = (key, value) => {
  const isISO8601Z = /^(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})T(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}(?:\.\d*)?)Z$/;
  if (typeof value === 'string' && isISO8601Z.test(value)) {
    const tempDateNumber = Date.parse(value);
    if (!isNaN(tempDateNumber)) {
      return new Date(tempDateNumber);
    }
  }
  return value;
};

const pubSub = new RedisPubSub({ ..., reviver: dateReviver });

pubSub.publish('Test', {
  validTime: new Date(),
  invalidTime: '2018-13-01T12:00:00Z'
});
pubSub.subscribe('Test', message => {
  message.validTime; // Javascript Date
  message.invalidTime; // string
});

Old Usage (Deprecated)

import { RedisPubSub } from 'graphql-redis-subscriptions';
const pubsub = new RedisPubSub();
const subscriptionManager = new SubscriptionManager({
  schema,
  pubsub,
  setupFunctions: {},
});

Using Trigger Transform (Deprecated)

Recently, graphql-subscriptions package added a way to pass in options to each call of subscribe. Those options are constructed via the setupFunctions object you provide the Subscription Manager constructor. The reason for graphql-subscriptions to add that feature is to allow pub sub engines a way to reduce their subscription set using the best method of said engine. For example, Meteor's live query could use Mongo selector with arguments passed from the subscription like the subscribed entity id. For Redis, this could be a bit more simplified, but much more generic. The standard for Redis subscriptions is to use dot notations to make the subscription more specific. This is only the standard but I would like to present an example of creating a specific subscription using the channel options feature.

First I create a simple and generic trigger transform

const triggerTransform = (trigger, {path}) => [trigger, ...path].join('.');

Then I pass it to the RedisPubSub constructor.

const pubsub = new RedisPubSub({
  triggerTransform,
});

Lastly, I provide a setupFunction for commentsAdded subscription field. It specifies one trigger called comments.added and it is called with the channelOptions object that holds repoName path fragment.

const subscriptionManager = new SubscriptionManager({
  schema,
  setupFunctions: {
    commentsAdded: (options, {repoName}) => ({
      'comments.added': {
        channelOptions: {path: [repoName]},
      },
    }),
  },
  pubsub,
});

When I call subscribe like this:

const query = `
  subscription X($repoName: String!) {
    commentsAdded(repoName: $repoName)
  }
`;
const variables = {repoName: 'graphql-redis-subscriptions'};
subscriptionManager.subscribe({query, operationName: 'X', variables, callback});

The subscription string that Redis will receive will be comments.added.graphql-redis-subscriptions. This subscription string is much more specific and means the the filtering required for this type of subscription is not needed anymore. This is one step towards lifting the load off of the GraphQL API server regarding subscriptions.

Tests

Spin a Redis in docker server and cluster

Please refer to https://github.com/Grokzen/docker-redis-cluster documentation to start a cluster

$ docker run --rm -p 6379:6379 redis:alpine
$ export REDIS_CLUSTER_IP=0.0.0.0; docker run -e "IP=0.0.0.0" --rm -p 7006:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 grokzen/redis-cluster

Test

npm run test

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A graphql subscriptions implementation using redis and apollo's graphql-subscriptions

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