Mocking GraphQL Requests
Testing and building components without having to rely on the API is a good best practice. Redwood makes this possible via mockGraphQLQuery
and mockGraphQLMutation
.
The argument signatures of these functions are identical. Internally, they target different operation types based on their suffix.
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (variables, { ctx, req }) => {
ctx.delay(1500) // pause for 1.5 seconds
return {
userProfile: {
id: 42,
name: 'peterp',
}
}
})
The operation name
The first argument is the operation name; it's used to associate mock-data with a query or a mutation:
query UserProfileQuery { /*...*/ }
mockGraphQLQuery('UserProfileQuery', { /*... */ })
mutation SetUserProfile { /*...*/ }
mockGraphQLMutation('SetUserProfile', { /*... */ })
Operation names should be unique.
The mock-data
The second argument can be an object or a function:
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.delay(1500) // pause for 1.5 seconds
return {
userProfile: {
id: 42,
name: 'peterp',
}
}
})
If it's a function, it'll receive two arguments: variables
and { ctx }
. The ctx
object allows you to make adjustments to the response with the following functions:
ctx.status(code: number, text?: string)
: set a http response code:
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (_variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.status(404)
})
ctx.delay(numOfMS)
: delay the response
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (_variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.delay(1500) // pause for 1.5 seconds
return { id: 42 }
})
ctx.errors(e: GraphQLError[])
: return an error object in the response:
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (_variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.errors([{ message: 'Uh, oh!' }])
})
TypeScript
You can get stricter types by passing types when mocking the query, mutation and its variables:
import type { UserProfileQuery, UserProfileQueryVariables } from 'types/graphql'
mockGraphQLQuery<UserProfileQuery, UserProfileQueryVariables>('UserProfileQuery', { /*... */ })
or, you can manually pass your own types:
mockGraphQLQuery<{
userProfile: {
id: number,
name: string,
}
}>('UserProfileQuery', { /*... */ })
Global mock-requests vs local mock-requests
Placing your mock-requests in "<name>.mock.js"
will cause them to be globally scoped in Storybook, making them available to all stories.
All stories?
In React, it's often the case that a single component will have a deeply nested component that perform a GraphQL query or mutation. Having to mock those requests for every story can be painful and tedious.
Using mockGraphQLQuery
or mockGraphQLMutation
inside a story is locally scoped and will overwrite a globally-scoped mock-request.
We suggest always starting with globally-scoped mocks.
Mocking a Cell's QUERY
To mock a Cell's QUERY
, find the file ending with with .mock.js
in your Cell's directory. This file exports a value named standard
, which is the mock-data that will be returned for your Cell's QUERY
.
export const QUERY = gql`
query UserProfileQuery {
userProfile {
id
}
}
`
// UserProfileCell/UserProfileCell.mock.js
export const standard = {
userProfile: {
id: 42
}
}
Since the value assigned to standard
is the mock-data associated with the QUERY
, modifying the QUERY
means you also need to modify the mock-data.
export const QUERY = gql`
query UserProfileQuery {
userProfile {
id
+ name
}
}
`
// UserProfileCell/UserProfileCell.mock.js
export const standard = {
userProfile: {
id: 42,
+ name: 'peterp',
}
}
Behind the scenes
Redwood uses the value associated with
standard
as the second argument tomockGraphQLQuery
.