A GraphQL client for Nuxt 3.
Documentation – npm – Version 2.x (for Nuxt 2)
- Exposes each query and mutation as an API route
- GraphQL requests are done only on the server side
- Includes composables to perform queries or mutations
- No GraphQL documents in client bundle
- Super fast TypeScript code generation using graphql-typescript-deluxe
- HMR for all GraphQL files
- Optional Client side caching for query operations
- Modify request headers, responses and handle errors
- Integration with Nuxt DevTools
npx nuxi@latest module add nuxt-graphql-middleware
Minimal configuration needed:
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: ['nuxt-graphql-middleware'],
graphqlMiddleware: {
graphqlEndpoint: 'https://example.com/graphql',
},
})
Write your first query, e.g. in pages/films.query.graphql:
query films {
allFilms {
films {
id
}
}
}
Your query is now available via the useGraphqlQuery() composable:
const { data, errors } = await useGraphqlQuery('films')
console.log(data.allFilms.films)
Or using the convenience wrapper for useAsyncData:
const { data } = await useAsyncGraphqlQuery('films')
console.log(data.value.allFilms.films)
Alternatively you can also directly call the API route to get the same result:
const response = await $fetch('/api/graphql_middleware/query/films')
Or using useFetch
:
const { data } = await useFetch('/api/graphql_middleware/query/films')
The 3.x releases are only compatible with Nuxt 3. The 2.x branch and releases on npm are compatible with Nuxt 2. However this version is not maintained anymore.
The module uses the default Nuxt module authoring setup where the module itself
is located in ./src
, with a playground located in ./playground/
.
Install the dependencies of the module and playground:
npm install
This will generate all the types needed to start developing:
npm run dev:prepare
The playground uses an Apollo server that needs to be built separately.
cd apollo
npm install
npm run compile
npm run start
npm run dev
You can now open http://localhost:3000 to start developing.
npm run lint
npm run prettier
Unit tests are done using Vitest.
npm run test:ci
We use Cypress to run some E2E tests. The tests are executed against the playground build:
npm run dev:build
npm run dev:start
npm run cypress