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