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# Quickstart
This page will give you a short introduction to the concepts in Juniper.
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Juniper follows a [code-first approach][schema_approach] to defining GraphQL schemas. If you would like to use a [schema-first approach][schema_approach] instead, consider [juniper-from-schema][] for generating code from a schema file.
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## Installation
!FILENAME Cargo.toml
```toml
[dependencies]
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juniper = { git = "https://github.com/graphql-rust/juniper" }
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```
## Schema example
Exposing simple enums and structs as GraphQL is just a matter of adding a custom
derive attribute to them. Juniper includes support for basic Rust types that
naturally map to GraphQL features, such as `Option<T>` , `Vec<T>` , `Box<T>` ,
`String` , `f64` , and `i32` , references, and slices.
For more advanced mappings, Juniper provides multiple macros to map your Rust
types to a GraphQL schema. The most important one is the
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[graphql_object][graphql_object] procedural macro that is used for declaring an object with
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resolvers, which you will use for the `Query` and `Mutation` roots.
```rust
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# extern crate juniper;
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use juniper::{FieldResult, EmptySubscription};
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# struct DatabasePool;
# impl DatabasePool {
# fn get_connection(&self) -> FieldResult<DatabasePool> { Ok(DatabasePool) }
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# fn find_human(&self, _id: &str) -> FieldResult<Human> { Err("")? }
# fn insert_human(&self, _human: &NewHuman) -> FieldResult<Human> { Err("")? }
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# }
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#[derive(juniper::GraphQLEnum)]
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enum Episode {
NewHope,
Empire,
Jedi,
}
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#[derive(juniper::GraphQLObject)]
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#[graphql(description="A humanoid creature in the Star Wars universe")]
struct Human {
id: String,
name: String,
appears_in: Vec< Episode > ,
home_planet: String,
}
// There is also a custom derive for mapping GraphQL input objects.
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#[derive(juniper::GraphQLInputObject)]
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#[graphql(description="A humanoid creature in the Star Wars universe")]
struct NewHuman {
name: String,
appears_in: Vec< Episode > ,
home_planet: String,
}
// Now, we create our root Query and Mutation types with resolvers by using the
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// object macro.
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// Objects can have contexts that allow accessing shared state like a database
// pool.
struct Context {
// Use your real database pool here.
pool: DatabasePool,
}
// To make our context usable by Juniper, we have to implement a marker trait.
impl juniper::Context for Context {}
struct Query;
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#[juniper::graphql_object(
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// Here we specify the context type for the object.
// We need to do this in every type that
// needs access to the context.
Context = Context,
)]
impl Query {
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fn apiVersion() -> & str {
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"1.0"
}
// Arguments to resolvers can either be simple types or input objects.
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// To gain access to the context, we specify a argument
// that is a reference to the Context type.
// Juniper automatically injects the correct context here.
fn human(context: & Context, id: String) -> FieldResult< Human > {
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// Get a db connection.
let connection = context.pool.get_connection()?;
// Execute a db query.
// Note the use of `?` to propagate errors.
let human = connection.find_human(&id)?;
// Return the result.
Ok(human)
}
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}
// Now, we do the same for our Mutation type.
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struct Mutation;
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#[juniper::graphql_object(
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Context = Context,
)]
impl Mutation {
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fn createHuman(context: & Context, new_human: NewHuman) -> FieldResult< Human > {
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let db = executor.context().pool.get_connection()?;
let human: Human = db.insert_human(&new_human)?;
Ok(human)
}
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}
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// A root schema consists of a query, a mutation, and a subscription.
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// Request queries can be executed against a RootNode.
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type Schema = juniper::RootNode< 'static, Query, Mutation, EmptySubscription< Context > >;
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# fn main() {
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# let _ = Schema::new(Query, Mutation{}, EmptySubscription::new());
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# }
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```
We now have a very simple but functional schema for a GraphQL server!
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To actually serve the schema, see the guides for our various [server integrations ](./servers/index.md ).
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Juniper is a library that can be used in many contexts--it does not require a server and it does not have a dependency on a particular transport or serialization format. You can invoke the executor directly to get a result for a query:
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## Executor
You can invoke `juniper::execute` directly to run a GraphQL query:
```rust
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# // Only needed due to 2018 edition because the macro is not accessible.
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# #[macro_use] extern crate juniper;
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use juniper::{FieldResult, Variables, EmptyMutation, EmptySubscription};
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#[derive(juniper::GraphQLEnum, Clone, Copy)]
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enum Episode {
NewHope,
Empire,
Jedi,
}
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// Arbitrary context data.
struct Ctx(Episode);
impl juniper::Context for Ctx {}
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struct Query;
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#[juniper::graphql_object(
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Context = Ctx,
)]
impl Query {
fn favoriteEpisode(context: & Ctx) -> FieldResult< Episode > {
Ok(context.0)
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}
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}
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// A root schema consists of a query, a mutation, and a subscription.
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// Request queries can be executed against a RootNode.
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type Schema = juniper::RootNode< 'static, Query, EmptyMutation< Ctx > , EmptySubscription< Ctx > >;
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fn main() {
// Create a context object.
let ctx = Ctx(Episode::NewHope);
// Run the executor.
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let (res, _errors) = juniper::execute_sync(
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"query { favoriteEpisode }",
None,
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& Schema::new(Query, EmptyMutation::new(), EmptySubscription::new()),
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& Variables::new(),
& ctx,
).unwrap();
// Ensure the value matches.
assert_eq!(
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res,
graphql_value!({
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"favoriteEpisode": "NEW_HOPE",
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})
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);
}
```
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[juniper-from-schema]: https://github.com/davidpdrsn/juniper-from-schema
[schema_approach]: https://blog.logrocket.com/code-first-vs-schema-first-development-graphql/
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[hyper]: servers/hyper.md
[warp]: servers/warp.md
[rocket]: servers/rocket.md
[iron]: servers/iron.md
[tutorial]: ./tutorial.html
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[graphql_object]: https://docs.rs/juniper/latest/juniper/macro.graphql_object.html