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Add GraphQL support to custom Field Types

If you want to use custom Field Types in GraphQL, you need to map them. Their values and field definition structure, need to be defined, to interact with them using GraphQL. For example:

Name Possible field value Resolver Field definition
Text Line string default TextLineFieldDefinition
Relation List Item ArticleItem ImageItem customized RelationListFieldDefinitio

Map a custom Field Type

There are two ways of mapping a custom Field Type:

  • configuration
  • custom FieldDefinitionMapper

You need to write a custom FieldDefinitionMapper if the field definition settings and constraints impact how it is mapped to GraphQL. For example, the selection Field Type has a "multiple" option. If set to false, it accepts and returns a single value, but if set to true, it accepts and returns an array of values.

If your field definition doesn't require additional clarifications, you can map it with configuration.

Map with configuration

To map a custom Field Type with configuration use a compiler pass to modify a container parameter, ibexa.graphql.schema.content.mapping.field_definition_type.

It is a hash that maps a Field Type identifier (ezstring) to the following entries:

  • value_type - the GraphQL type values of the custom field. It can be a native type (string, int), or a custom type. If none is specified, string will be used.
  • value_resolver - how values of this field are resolved and passed to the defined value type. If not specified, it will receive the Field object for the field type: field.
  • definition_type - the GraphQL type the field definitions is mapped to. If not specified, it will use FieldDefinition.

Compiler pass example that should be placed in src/DependencyInjection/Compiler:

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<?php declare(strict_types=1);

namespace App\DependencyInjection\Compiler;

use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Compiler\CompilerPassInterface;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder;

class MyCustomTypeGraphQLCompilerPass implements CompilerPassInterface
{
    public function process(ContainerBuilder $container)
    {
        if (!$container->hasParameter('ibexa.graphql.schema.content.mapping.field_definition_type')) {
            return;
        }

        $mapping = $container->getParameter('ibexa.graphql.schema.content.mapping.field_definition_type');
        $mapping['my_custom_fieldtype'] = [
            'value_type' => 'MyCustomFieldValue',
            'definition_type' => 'MyCustomFieldDefinition',
            'value_resolver' => 'field.someProperty',
        ];
    }
}

Map with a custom FieldDefinitionMapper

The FieldDefinitionMapper API uses service decorators. To register your own mapper, make it decorate the Ibexa\GraphQL\Schema\Domain\Content\Mapper\FieldDefinition\DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper service:

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services:
    App\GraphQL\Schema\MyCustomFieldDefinitionMapper:
        decorates: Ibexa\GraphQL\Schema\Domain\Content\Mapper\FieldDefinition\DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper
        arguments:
            $innerMapper: '@.inner'

The $innerMapper argument passes the decorated mapper to the constructor. You can use the DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper from the graphql package. It requires that you implement the getFieldTypeIdentifier method to tell which Field Type is covered by the mapper.

Add MyCustomFieldDefinitionMapper.php mapper to src/GraphQL/Schema:

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<?php declare(strict_types=1);

namespace App\GraphQL\Schema;

use Ibexa\Contracts\GraphQL\Schema\Domain\Content\Mapper\FieldDefinition\FieldDefinitionMapper;
use Ibexa\GraphQL\Schema\Domain\Content\Mapper\FieldDefinition\DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper;

class MyCustomFieldDefinitionMapper extends DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper implements FieldDefinitionMapper
{
    protected function getFieldTypeIdentifier(): string
    {
        return 'my_custom_field_type';
    }
}

The FieldDefinitionMapper interface defines following methods:

  • mapToFieldValueType - returns the GraphQL type value for the defined field
  • mapToFieldValueInputType - returns the GraphQL type value for the field input value
  • mapToFieldValueResolver - returns the resolver, as an expression language string, values are resolved with
  • mapToFieldDefinitionType- returns the GraphQL type field definitions of the mapped type

Only implement methods that you need, the rest will be handled by other mappers (configuration or default). When a mapper method is decorated, you need to call the decorated service method for unsupported types. To do that, you need to replace mapXXX by the method it is in:

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        if (!$this->canMap($fieldDefinition)) {
             return parent::mapToFieldValueType($fieldDefinition);
         }

It is required for every implemented method, so that other mappers are called for the other Field Types.

The RelationFieldDefinitionMapper example:

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class RelationFieldDefinitionMapper extends DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper implements FieldDefinitionMapper
{
    public function mapToFieldValueType(FieldDefinition $fieldDefinition): ?string
    {
        if (!$this->canMap($fieldDefinition)) {
            return parent::mapToFieldValueType($fieldDefinition);
        }
        $settings = $fieldDefinition->getFieldSettings();

        if (count($settings['selectionContentTypes']) === 1) {
            $contentType = $this->contentTypeService->loadContentTypeByIdentifier($settings['selectionContentTypes'][0]);
            $type = $this->nameHelper->itemName($contentType);
        } else {
            $type = 'Item';
        }

        if (this->isMultiple(fieldDefinition)) {
            type = "[type]";
        }

        return $type;
    }

    public function mapToFieldValueResolver(FieldDefinition $fieldDefinition): ?string
    {
        if (!$this->canMap($fieldDefinition)) {
            return parent::mapToFieldValueResolver($fieldDefinition);
        }

        isMultiple = this->isMultiple($fieldDefinition) ? 'true' : 'false';

        return sprintf('@=resolver("DomainRelationFieldValue", [field, %s])', $isMultiple);
    }

    private function isMultiple(FieldDefinition $fieldDefinition)
    {
        $constraints = $fieldDefinition->getValidatorConfiguration();

        return isset(constraints['RelationListValueValidator'])
            && constraints'RelationListValueValidator' !== 1;
  }
}

The value type depends on the field definition allowed Content Types setting:

  • for types that return Content items if there are no restrictions, or several types are allowed, the value will be an Item

The cardinality (single or collection) depends on the selection limit setting:

  • if only one item is allowed, the value is unique: ArticleItem, FolderItem
  • if there are no limits, or the limit is larger than 1, the value is a collection: "[ArticleItem]", "[FolderItem]".

Field input mapping

The mapToFieldValueInputType method is used to document what input type is expected by Field Types that require a more complex input value. For example, ezmatrix generates its own input types depending on the configured columns.

Example of a MyCustomFieldDefinitionMapper mapper for a complex Field Type:

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class MyFieldDefinitionMapper extends DecoratingFieldDefinitionMapper implements FieldDefinitionMapper
{
    public function mapToFieldValueInputType(ContentType contentType, FieldDefinition fieldDefinition): ?string
    {
        if (!this->canMap(fieldDefinition)) {
            return parent::mapToFieldValueInputType($fieldDefinition);
        }

        return this->nameMyFieldType(fieldDefinition);
    }
}

Resolver expressions

The following variables are available in the resolver's expression:

  • field is the current field, as an extension of the API's Field object that proxies properties requests to the Field Value
  • content is the resolved Content item's Content
  • location is the Content item's resolved location, for more information, see Querying Locations
  • item is the content together with its location \Ibexa\GraphQL\Value\Item

RelationFieldValueBuilder or SelectionFieldValueBuilder can be used as examples.