HTTP is a protocol, or a definite set of rules, for accessing resources on the web. Resources could mean anything from HTML files to data from a database, photos, text, and so on.
These resources are made available to us via an Application Programming Interface (API) and we make requests to these APIs via the HTTP protocol. It is the mechanism that allows developers to request resources.
Read more about HTTP methods, client-server architecture, and why you need APIs here .
Note: This section goes over how GraphQL works under the hood, but it is not necessary to know this as a developer building on Fuel. Schema definition, resolver logic, etc. are all written and maintained by the contributors at Fuel Labs.
GraphQL is a query language and specification that describes how you can communicate with your API. GraphQL is not constrained by programming languages, backend frameworks, and databases. GraphQL uses the HTTP protocol under the hood, so you can map GraphQL operations back to simple GET
, POST
, PUT
, or DELETE
operations. You can view the GraphQL documentation here: https://graphql.org/ .
A GraphQL API works by defining types and the properties available on those types, also known as the schema, and defining functions that specify the logic for how to resolve those types. A resolver is a function that's responsible for populating the data for a single field in your schema. Whenever a client queries for a particular field, the resolver for that field fetches the requested data from the appropriate data source.
For example, as an API developer you could define a type, Car
and define the properties that will be query-able on that type such as below:
type Car {
id: ID
color: String
year: Int
isNew: Boolean
}
Fuel Labs created a GraphQL API endpoint for the Fuel Network, allowing developers to make complex queries for data on the blockchain. You can leverage these queries to populate a frontend application with details that your users might be interested in like the history of their transactions, their balance of a specific token, etc.
Queries in GraphQL allow you to read data. GraphQL lets you ask for specific data and returns exactly what you asked for. It also lets you request multiple resources in a single query instead of writing a separate 'GET' request for each resource as with REST APIs.
GraphQL also facilitates more complex queries and operations such as pagination, sort, filter, full-text search, and more.
Sample query:
query Actor {
actor {
name {
appearIn
}
}
}
The above query gives you a response with the name of the actor along with the name of the movie(s) they appear in.
Mutations in GraphQL are write operations that update the chain's state. In addition to being able to traverse objects and their fields, GraphQL gives developers the ability to pass arguments to fields in order to filter out responses. Every field and nested object can have its own set of arguments.
Sample mutation:
mutation CreateReviewForEpisode($ep: Episode!, $review: ReviewInput!) {
createReview(episode: $ep, review: $review) {
stars
commentary
}
}
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