GraphQL is a different type of REST request you can use on FlexDeploy servers. It’s main advantage over traditional REST Endpoints is its ability for a user to define exactly the data they want in a request. The request will only retrieve the data selected in a request. This can lead to better response times and more customizable data retrieval from a server. To get started, a tool is needed in in order to send requests to your FlexDeploy server. Several options exist like curl or other REST clients, but we will be using Postman in order to send out GraphQL requests.
Making a Request
First, there are some steps in Postman that need to be done before writing a request.
Create an HTTP Request
Make sure the Request is a POST request
Set the URL to the format below, replacing the FLEXDEPLOY_SERVER_HOSTNAME and FLEXDEPLOY_SERVER_PORT with your FlexDeploy server’s hostname and port respectively
http(s)://{{FLEXDEPLOY_SERVER_HOSTNAME}}:{{FLEXDEPLOY_SERVER_PORT}}/flexdeploy/rest/v2/graphql
Set up security information under the “Authorization” tab. Either Basic Auth (username and password) or an API token can be used here
Under the “Body” tab of the request, switch the body format to GraphQL by clicking on the “GraphQL” radio button
Fetching Schema and Introspection
A GraphQL schema is a complete outline of what data is available when sending a query to the server. In order to learn what data is available when making a request, the schema can be fetched from the server. Once the URL and authentication are provided, Postman will automatically fetch the schema from the server and use it in autocomplete to help with writing queries. Otherwise, an Introspection Query can provide a list of queries accessible in our schema if this auto-fetch feature is unavailable .
To have Postman give suggestions for your query, press Ctrl + Space to bring up the autocomplete box.
Query
After you have created a request and loaded the schema, we can start to write our query. There are a few key parts to a query which we’ll dive into with the example below.
query envState($where: [WhereInput], $sort: [SortInput], $page: PageInput) { reportEnvironmentState(where: $where, sort: $sort, page: $page) { items { endTime environmentName executionStatus externalTicket instanceName objectPath packageName partialDeployments projectName projectVersionName projectWorkflowType relName relSnapshot scmRevision startTime streamName workflowExecutionId workflowRequestId } } }
We can see that we are running the reportEnvironmentState query (Environment State Report). This query has three variables (where, sort, and page) and is selecting quite a few fields in the “items” section to return when it executes.
Selection Set
The biggest difference between GraphQL and other, more traditional, REST requests are the optional selection of elements to be returned in a query. This can make queries return faster if only the information that is needed by the query is returned. This is called a subselection set. In our example we can see we have this block of text:
items { endTime environmentName executionStatus externalTicket instanceName objectPath packageName partialDeployments projectName projectVersionName projectWorkflowType relName relSnapshot scmRevision startTime streamName workflowExecutionId workflowRequestId }
Here is where we can control what is being returned in the query. GraphQL will only return fields present in the subselection. For example, if I only wanted Package Name, Project Name, and Project Version Name to be returned, I could alter our previous example to something like this:
query envState($where: [WhereInput], $sort: [SortInput], $page: PageInput) { reportEnvironmentState(where: $where, sort: $sort, page: $page) { items { packageName projectName projectVersionName } } }
Variables
There are three main variables to use with FlexDeploy GraphQL queries: where, sort, and page.
Variable Name | Description | Object Definition |
---|---|---|
where: [WhereInput] | This allows you to filter the data like a where clause in an SQL query. Where is an array so multiple individual WhereInput objects can be linked together to filter the query. field: Name of the GraphQL field being filtered type: The comparison being performed eq - equal ne - not equal eqi - equal (Ignores Case) gt - greater than lt - less than inc - includes inci - includes (Ignores Case) ninc - does not include empty - empty nempty - not empty innerWhere: Similar to a subselect in SQL where prefiltering of a query could be done value: The value you are filtering by | input WhereInput { field: String! type: WhereTypeEnum! innerWhere: [WhereInput!] value: String } enum WhereTypeEnum { eq ne eqi gt lt inc inci ninc empty nempty } |
sort: [SortInput] | This allows you to sort the data like a order by clause in an SQL query. Sort is an array so multiple individual SortInput objects can be linked together to sort the query. field: GraphQL field being sorted direction: the direction of sort being preformed with asc meaing ascending order and desc meaning descending order. | input SortInput { field: String! direction: SortEnum } enum SortEnum { asc desc } |
page: PageInput | Page input contains extra options for the block of data that is returned by the query. limit: The number of items in the block being returned. By default, a limit of 50 items are returned by the query. This can be overridden by the page limit to return a different amount of items. offset: Offsets the block of data being returned by the set value. For example, a limit of 20 and an offset of 4 would return items 4 through 23. | input PageInput { limit: Int offset: Int } |
All of the above variables object above are then bundled together in one variable object. It is not required to always include all three variables in the object. For example, if you wanted to only filter and not sort, you would only need to include the where variable. Below is an example of the combined variable object with all three variables used.
{ "sort": [ { "field": "projectName", "direction": "asc" } ], "where": [ { "field": "environmentName", "type": "eqi", "value": "QA" }, { "field": "projectWorkflowType", "type": "eq", "value": "DEPLOY" } ], "page": { "limit": 20 } }
Executing A Query
Combining everything we talked about this far (creating a HTTP Request, queries, and variables), we are now able to execute a query.
Once a query is configured inside your software of choice to make HTTP requests, just press the “Send” or “Execute” button to send out your HTTP Request.
Response
{ "data": { "reportEnvironmentState": { "items": [ { "packageName": null, "projectName": "RESTDeployProject1", "projectVersionName": "1.0.30566" }, { "packageName": null, "projectName": "RESTDeployProject1", "projectVersionName": "1.0.30577" }, ] } } }
Example Queries
Here are are few more examples of GraphQL queries. See Fetching Schema and Introspection above for information on how to get our full schema.
Environment History Report With File Details
This is querying the history of an environment called “Build” with file details being returned. We have a where variable below being used to only filter for the Build environment.
query reportHistoryFiles($where: [WhereInput], $sort: [SortInput], $page: PageInput) { reportEnvironmentHistoryFileDetails(where: $where, sort: $sort, page: $page) { items { allFilesRequested cmsTicketIds endTime environmentId environmentName executionStatus folderId instanceId instanceName workItemIds objectPath packageName partialDeployments pkgStatus poScmRevision projectId projectName projectVersionName relDefinitionId relName relSnapshot relSnapshotId requestedBy requestedOn scmRevision sequenceNumber stageExecId startTime streamName workflowExecutionId workflowId workflowRequestId workflowType workflowVersion } } }
Variables
{ "where": [ { "field": "environmentName", "type": "eqi", "value": "build" } ], "page": { "limit": 2 } }
Response
{ "data": { "reportEnvironmentHistoryFileDetails": { "items": [ { "projectName": "RESTDeployProject1", "environmentName": "Build", "instanceName": "Project Rest Test Instance 1", "workflowExecutionId": 6114897, "executionStatus": "Success", "workflowType": "DEPLOY", "streamName": "trunk", "projectVersionName": "1.0.30577", "packageName": "", "objectPath": null, "objectType": null, "poScmRevision": null, "projectId": 759143, "subComponentName": null, "subComponentType": null, "requestedOn": 1683228165127, "pkgStatus": null, "partialDeployments": "N", "sequenceNumber": null, "stageExecId": null, "relName": null, "relSnapshot": null, "relStatus": null, "environmentId": 10050, "instanceId": 45664, "scmRevision": null, "workItemIds": null, "cmsTicketIds": null, "startTime": 1683228167140, "endTime": 1683228167234, "duration": 94, "folderId": 759142, "folderName": "SoapUI Testing", "workflowName": "Deploy No Action", "relDefinitionId": null, "relSnapshotId": null, "pipelineName": null, "workflowId": 83363, "workflowRequestId": 1190158, "workflowVersion": "1.2" }, { "projectName": "RESTDeployProject1", "environmentName": "Build", "instanceName": "Project Rest Test Instance 1", "workflowExecutionId": 6114898, "executionStatus": "Success", "workflowType": "DEPLOY", "streamName": "trunk", "projectVersionName": "1.0.30577", "packageName": "", "objectPath": null, "objectType": null, "poScmRevision": null, "projectId": 759143, "subComponentName": null, "subComponentType": null, "requestedOn": 1683228163189, "pkgStatus": null, "partialDeployments": "N", "sequenceNumber": null, "stageExecId": null, "relName": null, "relSnapshot": null, "relStatus": null, "environmentId": 10050, "instanceId": 45664, "scmRevision": null, "workItemIds": null, "cmsTicketIds": null, "startTime": 1683228167138, "endTime": 1683228167218, "duration": 80, "folderId": 759142, "folderName": "SoapUI Testing", "workflowName": "Deploy No Action", "relDefinitionId": null, "relSnapshotId": null, "pipelineName": null, "workflowId": 83363, "workflowRequestId": 1190157, "workflowVersion": "1.0" } ] } } }
Environment History Report Without File Details
This is querying the history of an environment called “Development” with file details not being returned.
query reportHistoryNoFiles($where: [WhereInput], $sort: [SortInput], $page: PageInput) { reportEnvironmentHistoryNoFileDetails(where: $where, sort: $sort, page: $page) { items { allFilesRequested cmsTicketIds endTime environmentId environmentName executionStatus folderId instanceId instanceName workItemIds objectPath packageName partialDeployments pkgStatus poScmRevision projectId projectName projectVersionName relDefinitionId relName relSnapshot relSnapshotId requestedBy requestedOn scmRevision sequenceNumber stageExecId startTime streamName workflowExecutionId workflowId workflowRequestId workflowType workflowVersion } } }
Variables
{ "where": [ { "field": "environmentName", "type": "eqi", "value": "development" } ], "page": { "limit": 2 } }
Response
{ "data": { "reportEnvironmentHistoryNoFileDetails": { "items": [ { "allFilesRequested": "N", "cmsTicketIds": null, "endTime": 1683228177100, "environmentId": 10051, "environmentName": "Development", "executionStatus": "Success", "folderId": 759142, "instanceId": 21888, "instanceName": "RESTServer", "workItemIds": null, "objectPath": null, "packageName": "", "partialDeployments": "N", "pkgStatus": null, "poScmRevision": null, "projectId": 759143, "projectName": "RESTDeployProject1", "projectVersionName": "1.0.30577", "relDefinitionId": 27201, "relName": "REST Release 1", "relSnapshot": "05-04-2023 14:22:47", "relSnapshotId": 939685, "requestedBy": "stepworker", "requestedOn": 1683228173402, "scmRevision": null, "sequenceNumber": null, "stageExecId": 939691, "startTime": 1683228177087, "streamName": "trunk", "workflowExecutionId": 6115046, "workflowId": 83363, "workflowRequestId": 1190160, "workflowType": "DEPLOY", "workflowVersion": "1.2" }, { "allFilesRequested": "N", "cmsTicketIds": null, "endTime": 1683228177233, "environmentId": 10051, "environmentName": "Development", "executionStatus": "Success", "folderId": 759142, "instanceId": 45664, "instanceName": "Project Rest Test Instance 1", "workItemIds": null, "objectPath": null, "packageName": "", "partialDeployments": "N", "pkgStatus": null, "poScmRevision": null, "projectId": 759143, "projectName": "RESTDeployProject1", "projectVersionName": "1.0.30577", "relDefinitionId": 27201, "relName": "REST Release 1", "relSnapshot": "05-04-2023 14:22:47", "relSnapshotId": 939685, "requestedBy": "stepworker", "requestedOn": 1683228173402, "scmRevision": null, "sequenceNumber": null, "stageExecId": 939691, "startTime": 1683228177188, "streamName": "trunk", "workflowExecutionId": 6115047, "workflowId": 83363, "workflowRequestId": 1190160, "workflowType": "DEPLOY", "workflowVersion": "1.2" } ] } } }