This package provides a generic lazy batching mechanism to avoid N+1 DB queries, HTTP queries, etc.
- Generic utility to avoid N+1 DB queries, HTTP requests, etc.
- Adapted Elixir implementation of the battle-tested tools like Haskell Haxl, JS DataLoader, Ruby BatchLoader.
- Convenient and flexible integration with Ecto Schemas.
- Allows inlining the code without defining extra named functions, unlike Absinthe Batch.
- Allows using batching with any data sources, not just DB, unlike Absinthe DataLoader.
Let's imagine that we have a Post
GraphQL type defined with Absinthe:
defmodule MyApp.PostType do
use Absinthe.Schema.Notation
alias MyApp.Repo
object :post_type do
field :title, :string
field :user, :user_type do
resolve(fn post, _, _ ->
user = post |> Ecto.assoc(:user) |> Repo.one() # N+1 DB requests
{:ok, user}
end)
end
end
end
This will produce N+1 DB requests if we send this GraphQL request:
query {
posts {
title
user { # N+1 request per each post
name
}
}
}
We can get rid of the N+1 DB requests by loading all Users
for all Posts
at once in.
All we have to do is to use resolve_assoc
function by passing the Ecto associations name:
import BatchLoader.Absinthe, only: [resolve_assoc: 1]
field :user, :user_type, resolve: resolve_assoc(:user)
Set the default repo
in your config.exs
file:
config :batch_loader, :default_repo, MyApp.Repo
And finally, add BatchLoader.Absinthe.Plugin
plugin to the GraphQL schema.
This will allow to lazily collect information about all users which need to be loaded and then batch them all together:
defmodule MyApp.Schema do
use Absinthe.Schema
import_types MyApp.PostType
def plugins do
[BatchLoader.Absinthe.Plugin] ++ Absinthe.Plugin.defaults()
end
end
You can use load_assoc
to load Ecto associations in the existing schema:
import BatchLoader.Absinthe, only: [load_assoc: 3]
field :author, :string do
resolve(fn post, _, _ ->
load_assoc(post, :user, fn user ->
{:ok, user.name}
end)
end)
end
You can use preload_assoc
to preload Ecto associations in the existing schema:
import BatchLoader.Absinthe, only: [preload_assoc: 3]
field :title, :string do
resolve(fn post, _, _ ->
preload_assoc(post, :user, fn post_with_user ->
{:ok, "#{post_with_user.title} - #{post_with_user.user.name}"}
end)
end)
end
You can also use BatchLoader
to batch in the resolve
function manually, for example, to fix N+1 HTTP requests:
field :user, :user_type do
resolve(fn post, _, _ ->
BatchLoader.Absinthe.for(post.user_id, &resolved_users_by_user_ids/1)
end)
end
def resolved_users_by_user_ids(user_ids) do
MyApp.HttpClient.users(user_ids) # load all users at once
|> Enum.map(fn user -> {user.id, {:ok, user}} end) # return "{user.id, result}" tuples
end
Alternatively, you can simply inline the batch function:
field :user, :user_type do
resolve(fn post, _, _ ->
BatchLoader.Absinthe.for(post.user_id, fn user_ids ->
MyApp.HttpClient.users(user_ids)
|> Enum.map(fn user -> {user.id, {:ok, user}} end)
end)
end)
end
- To specify default resolve Absinthe values:
BatchLoader.Absinthe.for(post.user_id, &resolved_users_by_user_ids/1, default_value: {:error, "NOT FOUND"})
- To use custom callback function:
BatchLoader.Absinthe.for(post.user_id, &users_by_user_ids/1, callback: fn user ->
{:ok, user.name}
end)
- To use custom Ecto repos:
BatchLoader.Absinthe.resolve_assoc(:user, repo: AnotherRepo)
BatchLoader.Absinthe.preload_assoc(post, :user, &callback/1, repo: AnotherRepo)
- To pass custom options to
Ecto.Repo.preload
:
BatchLoader.Absinthe.resolve_assoc(:user, preload_opts: [prefix: nil])
BatchLoader.Absinthe.preload_assoc(post, :user, &callback/1, preload_opts: [prefix: nil])
Add batch_loader
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:batch_loader, "~> 0.1.0-beta.6"}
]
end
make install
make test