A GraphQL client for Elixir.
Index
Installation
def deps do
[{:neuron, "~> 4.1.2"}]
endJSON library
Neuron defaults to using Jason for JSON encoding and decoding. To use Jason, add it to your deps
{:jason, "~> 1.1"}It is also possible to customize which JSON library that is used
Neuron.Config.set(json_library: AnotherJSONLibrary)Connection
Neuron defaults to using HTTP(S) protocol with HTTPoison for Connecting to GraphQL endpoint. You can however customize that behaviour, by providing custom library, which should implement Neuron.Connection behaviour:
defmodule MyConnection do
@behaviour Neuron.Connection
@impl Neuron.Connection
def call(body, options) do
IO.inspect("NEURON CALLED")
Neuron.Connection.Http.call(body, options)
end
endThen set it up in config:
Neuron.Config.set(connection_module: MyConnection)Usage
iex> Neuron.Config.set(url: "https://example.com/graph")
iex> Neuron.query("""
{
films {
count
}
}
""")
# Response will be:
{:ok, %Neuron.Response{body: %{"data" => %{"films" => %{ "count": 123 }}}, status_code: 200, headers: []}}
# You can also run mutations
iex> Neuron.query("""
mutation createUser($name: String!) {
createUser(name: $name) {
id
name
}
}
""",
%{name: "uesteibar"}
)
# You can also set url and headers as shown below
iex> Neuron.query("""
mutation createUser($name: String!) {
createUser(name: $name) {
id
name
}
}
""",
%{name: "uesteibar"},
url: "https://example.com/graph",
headers: [authorization: "Bearer <token>"]
)More extensive documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/neuron.
Running locally
Clone the repository
git clone git@github.com:uesteibar/neuron.gitInstall dependencies
cd neuron
mix deps.getTo run the tests
mix testStyle guide
Code is formatted with mix format and mix credo should not show warnings.
To format the code and run static code analysis with credo
mix format
mix credoContributing
Pull requests are always welcome =)
The project uses standard-changelog to update the Changelog with each commit message and upgrade the package version.
For that reason every contribution should have a title and body that follows the conventional commits standard conventions (e.g. feat(connection): Make it smarter than Jarvis).
To make this process easier, you can do the following:
Install commitizen and cz-conventional-changelog globally
npm i -g commitizen cz-conventional-changelog
Save cz-conventional-changelog as default
echo '{ "path": "cz-conventional-changelog" }' > ~/.czrc
Instead of git commit, you can now run
git czand follow the instructions to generate the commit message.