2.6 KiB
2.6 KiB
Postgraphile
You can expose VulcanizeDB data via Postgraphile. Check out their documentation for the most up-to-date instructions on installing, running, and customizing Postgraphile.
Simple Setup
As of April 30, 2019, you can run Postgraphile pointed at the default vulcanize_public
database with the following commands:
npm install -g postgraphile
postgraphile --connection postgres://localhost/vulcanize_public --schema=public,custom --disable-default-mutations --no-ignore-rbac
Arguments:
--connection
specifies the database. The above command connects to the defaultvulcanize_public
database defined in the example config.--schema
defines what schema(s) to expose. The above exposes thepublic
schema (for core VulcanizeDB data) as well as acustom
schema (wherecustom
is the name of a schema defined in executed transformers).--disable-default-mutations
prevents Postgraphile from exposing create, update, and delete operations on your data, which are otherwise enabled by default.--no-ignore-rbac
ensures that Postgraphile will only expose the tables, columns, fields, and query functions that the user has explicit access to.
Customizing Postgraphile
By default, Postgraphile will expose queries for all tables defined in your chosen database/schema(s), including filtering and auto-discovered relations.
If you'd like to expose more customized windows into your data, there are some techniques you can apply when writing migrations:
- Computed columns enable you to derive additional fields from types defined in your database.
For example, you could write a function to expose a block header's state root over Postgraphile with a computed column - without modifying the
public.headers
table. - Custom queries enable you to provide on-demand access to more complex data (e.g. the product of joining and filtering several tables' data based on a passed argument). For example, you could write a custom query to get the block timestamp for every transaction originating from a given address.
- Subscriptions enable you to publish data as it is coming into your database.
The above list is not exhaustive - please see the Postgraphile documentation for a more comprehensive and up-to-date description of available features.