canvas-lms/app/graphql
Kai Bjorkman 4c1b963dad make tii graphql type aware of error/status keys
This tii graphql interface was first implemented 3 years ago and has
sat stale for a few years until recently when we allowed for
orignality reports to be viewed within assignment enhancements. It was
not written to be aware of either 'status' of 'student_error' as
possible keys set by the plagiarism service. (these are only set when
the turnitin product for this account has expired) This was causing us
to try to load an object via an asset string that did not exist.

flag=assignments_2_student
refs EVAL-2610

Test Plan:
    -specs pass

Change-Id: I7c9b622db9c3ea73c472f66bef26def044c9a37e
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.instructure.com/c/canvas-lms/+/301568
Tested-by: Service Cloud Jenkins <svc.cloudjenkins@instructure.com>
Reviewed-by: Christopher Soto <christopher.soto@instructure.com>
Reviewed-by: Eduardo Escobar <eduardo.escobar@instructure.com>
Reviewed-by: Spencer Olson <solson@instructure.com>
QA-Review: Spencer Olson <solson@instructure.com>
Product-Review: Spencer Olson <solson@instructure.com>
2022-09-21 21:31:13 +00:00
..
graphql_helpers RuboCop: Layout app 2021-09-22 19:35:01 +00:00
interfaces make tii graphql type aware of error/status keys 2022-09-21 21:31:13 +00:00
loaders Include indirect alignments in alignment summary stats 2022-09-16 16:59:56 +00:00
mutations complete peer review when a new comment is added 2022-09-21 19:39:57 +00:00
tracers RuboCop: Style/StringLiterals, Style/StringLiteralsInInterpolation 2021-11-25 14:03:06 +00:00
types Add indirect outcome alignments via question banks to graphql 2022-09-16 16:59:29 +00:00
README.md Read credentials from rails credentials for access token 2021-10-22 14:50:48 +00:00
audit_log_field_extension.rb Add API for managing "internal settings" (aka `Setting`s) 2022-04-28 15:10:33 +00:00
canvas_schema.rb get list of assessment requests via graphql 2022-08-17 19:46:34 +00:00
dynamo_connection.rb RuboCop: Style grab bag 2021-11-20 03:04:04 +00:00
dynamo_query.rb RuboCop: Style/ExplicitBlockArgument 2021-11-17 20:04:02 +00:00
graphql_helpers.rb RuboCop: Style/BlockDelimiters, Style/Lambda 2021-11-23 21:30:47 +00:00
graphql_node_loader.rb allow graphql internalSetting loader to take id or name 2022-05-12 17:10:24 +00:00
graphql_postgres_timeout.rb RuboCop: Style/StringLiterals, Style/StringLiteralsInInterpolation 2021-11-25 14:03:06 +00:00
patched_array_connection.rb RuboCop: Style/ClassCheck, Style/ClassEqualityComparison 2021-11-19 22:39:31 +00:00
types.rb add # frozen_string_literal: true for graphql 2020-10-27 15:56:39 +00:00

README.md

GraphQL in Canvas

Canvas has a "first-class" GraphQL data graph that is publicly exposed on an API endpoint. This is already well-documented.

Apollo Federation

In addition to the standard GraphQL endpoint, Canvas exposes a "subgraph" endpoint whose schema is suitable for use in an Apollo Federation. This is the same schema, but extended according to the Apollo Federation specification, and with some Federation directives applied to various fields and types.

The apollo-federation gem is used to add Federation directives to this subgraph. While it is important that the public-facing graph does not include Federation extensions, the gem's features can be used freely on any type or field. They are simply ignored in the public-facing graph, and do not show up in its schema.

Promoting an Object Type to a Federation Entity

A Federation entity is an object type whose definition spans multiple subgraphs. One subgraph provides its canonical definition, and others extend it.

To promote an existing type to an entity with its canonical definition in Canvas, declare one or more key fields and implement ::resolve_reference. E.g.:

module Types
  class CourseType < ApplicationObjectType
    key fields: "id"
    def self.resolve_reference(reference, context)
      legacy_id = GraphQLHelpers.parse_relay_id(reference[:id], "Course")
      GraphQLNodeLoader.load("Course", legacy_id, context)
    end
  end
end

We expect to promote many types in exactly this way, so we've built a helper for it. If a type's id field is a Relay-style "global" id (as most are), and you want to promote that type with only a single @key directive on the id field, i.e. @key(fields: "id"), you can just use key_field_id like so:

module Types
  class CourseType < ApplicationObjectType
    key_field_id
  end
end

See the gem usage docs for more examples and guidance on using Federation features, including how to extend entities whose canonical definition resides in an external subgraph.

Smoke Testing the Federation Subgraph

In deployed environments, only an Apollo API Gateway will be able to query the federation subgraph. However if you need to smoke test it locally, this is the way.

  1. Generate two RSA keypairs and designate one your signing key, the other your encryption key.

  2. Copy config/vault_contents.yml.example to config/vault_contents.yml, then replace the development.'app-canvas/data/secrets'.data.inst_access_signature.private_key with the base64-encoded representation of the private key of your signing keypair, and the development.'app-canvas/data/secrets'.data.inst_access_signature.encryption_public_key with the base64-encoded representation of the public key of your encryption keypair.

  3. Start up your Canvas server and get yourself an API access token, e.g. by following the "Manual Token Generation" section of the OAuth docs.

  4. Export that thing as API_TOKEN and use it to get yourself an unencrypted InstAccess token, e.g.:

   $ curl 'http://localhost:3000/api/v1/inst_access_tokens?unencrypted=1' \
     -X POST \
     -H 'Authorization: Bearer $API_TOKEN'
  1. Now export that thing as INST_ACCESS and use it to issue a query to the subgraph, e.g.:
   $ curl http://localhost:3000/api/graphql/subgraph \
   -X POST \
   -H "Accept: application/json" \
   -H "Content-type: application/json" \
   -H "Authorization: Bearer $INST_ACCESS" \
   --data '
   {
     "query": "query ($_representations: [_Any!]!) { _entities(representations: $_representations) { ... on Course { name } } }",
     "variables": {
       "_representations": [
         {
           "__typename": "Course",
           "id": "Q291cnNlLTE="
         }
       ]
     }
   }'

The above query should return a result that includes the name of Course 1, as long as it exists and the user you used to get the initial access token has permission to read it.