postgraphile-plugin-connection-filter
v3.0.0
Published
Filtering on PostGraphile connections
Readme
postgraphile-plugin-connection-filter
Adds a powerful suite of filtering capabilities to a PostGraphile schema.
[!WARNING] Use of this plugin with the default options may make it astoundingly trivial for a malicious actor (or a well-intentioned application that generates complex GraphQL queries) to overwhelm your database with expensive queries. See the Performance and Security section below for details.
Usage
Install with:
yarn add postgraphile postgraphile-plugin-connection-filterAdd to your graphile.config.ts configuration:
import { makePgService } from "postgraphile/adaptors/pg";
import { PostGraphileAmberPreset } from "postgraphile/presets/amber";
import { PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset } from "postgraphile-plugin-connection-filter";
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileAmberPreset, PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
pgServices: [
makePgService({
connectionString: process.env.DATABASE_URL!,
schemas: ["app_public"],
}),
],
};
export default preset;Performance and Security
By default, this plugin:
- Exposes a large number of filter operators, including some that can perform expensive pattern matching.
- Allows filtering on computed columns, which can result in expensive operations.
- Allows filtering on functions that return
setof, which can result in expensive operations. - Allows filtering on List fields (Postgres arrays), which can result in expensive operations.
To protect your server, you can:
- Use the
connectionFilterAllowedFieldTypesandconnectionFilterAllowedOperatorsoptions to limit the filterable fields and operators exposed through GraphQL. - Set
connectionFilterComputedColumns: falseto prevent filtering on computed columns. - Set
connectionFilterSetofFunctions: falseto prevent filtering on functions that returnsetof. - Set
connectionFilterArrays: falseto prevent filtering on List fields (Postgres arrays).
Also see the Production Considerations page of the official PostGraphile docs, which discusses query whitelisting.
Features
This plugin supports filtering on almost all PostgreSQL types, including complex types such as domains, ranges, arrays, and composite types. For details on the specific operators supported for each type, see docs/operators.md.
See also:
- @graphile/pg-aggregates - integrates with this plugin to enable powerful aggregate filtering
- postgraphile-plugin-connection-filter-postgis - adds PostGIS functions and operators for filtering on
geography/geometrycolumns - postgraphile-plugin-fulltext-filter - adds a full text search operator for filtering on
tsvectorcolumns - postgraphile-plugin-unaccented-text-search-filter - adds unaccent text search operators
Handling null and empty objects
By default, this plugin will throw an error when null literals or empty objects ({}) are included in filter input objects. This prevents queries with ambiguous semantics such as filter: { field: null } and filter: { field: { equalTo: null } } from returning unexpected results. For background on this decision, see https://github.com/graphile-contrib/postgraphile-plugin-connection-filter/issues/58.
To allow null and {} in inputs, use the connectionFilterAllowNullInput and connectionFilterAllowEmptyObjectInput options documented under Plugin Options. Please note that even with connectionFilterAllowNullInput enabled, null is never interpreted as a SQL NULL; fields with null values are simply ignored when resolving the query.
Plugin Options
These options live in the schema section of your Graphile config:
connectionFilterAllowedOperators
Restrict filtering to specific operators:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterAllowedOperators: [
"isNull",
"equalTo",
"notEqualTo",
"distinctFrom",
"notDistinctFrom",
"lessThan",
"lessThanOrEqualTo",
"greaterThan",
"greaterThanOrEqualTo",
"in",
"notIn",
],
},
};connectionFilterAllowedFieldTypes
Restrict filtering to specific field types:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterAllowedFieldTypes: ["String", "Int"],
},
};The available field types will depend on your database schema.
connectionFilterArrays
Enable/disable filtering on PostgreSQL arrays:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterArrays: false, // default: true
},
};connectionFilterComputedColumns
Enable/disable filtering by computed columns:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterComputedColumns: false, // default: true
},
};Consider setting this to false and using @filterable smart comments to selectively enable filtering:
create function app_public.foo_computed(foo app_public.foo)
returns ... as $$ ... $$ language sql stable;
comment on function app_public.foo_computed(foo app_public.foo) is E'@filterable';connectionFilterOperatorNames
Use alternative names (e.g. eq, ne) for operators:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterOperatorNames: {
equalTo: "eq",
notEqualTo: "ne",
},
},
};connectionFilterRelations
Enable/disable filtering on related fields:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterRelations: true, // default: false
},
};connectionFilterSetofFunctions
Enable/disable filtering on functions that return setof:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterSetofFunctions: false, // default: true
},
};Consider setting this to false and using @filterable smart comments to selectively enable filtering:
create function app_public.some_foos()
returns setof ... as $$ ... $$ language sql stable;
comment on function app_public.some_foos() is E'@filterable';connectionFilterLogicalOperators
Enable/disable filtering with logical operators (and/or/not):
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterLogicalOperators: false, // default: true
},
};connectionFilterAllowNullInput
Allow/forbid null literals in input:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterAllowNullInput: true, // default: false
},
};When false, passing null as a field value will throw an error.
When true, passing null as a field value is equivalent to omitting the field.
connectionFilterAllowEmptyObjectInput
Allow/forbid empty objects ({}) in input:
const preset: GraphileConfig.Preset = {
extends: [PostGraphileConnectionFilterPreset],
schema: {
connectionFilterAllowEmptyObjectInput: true, // default: false
},
};When false, passing {} as a field value will throw an error.
When true, passing {} as a field value is equivalent to omitting the field.
Examples
query {
allPosts(filter: {
createdAt: { greaterThan: "2021-01-01" }
}) {
...
}
}For an extensive set of examples, see docs/examples.md.
Development
To establish a test environment, create an empty PostgreSQL database with C collation (required for consistent ordering of strings) and set a TEST_DATABASE_URL environment variable with your database connection string.
createdb graphile_test_c --template template0 --lc-collate C
export TEST_DATABASE_URL=postgres://localhost:5432/graphile_test_c
yarn
yarn test