Learn how to authenticate to the GraphQL API, then learn how to create and run queries and mutations.
Authenticating with GraphQLYou can authenticate to the GraphQL API using a personal access token, GitHub App, or OAuth app.
Authenticating with a personal access tokenTo authenticate with a personal access token, follow the steps in Managing your personal access tokens. The data that you are requesting will dictate which scopes or permissions you will need.
For example, select the "issues:read" permission to read all of the issues in the repositories your token has access to.
All fine-grained personal access tokens include read access to public repositories. To access public repositories with a personal access token (classic), select the "public_repo" scope.
If your token does not have the required scopes or permissions to access a resource, the API will return an error message that states the scopes or permissions your token needs.
Authenticating with a GitHub AppIf you want to use the API on behalf of an organization or another user, GitHub recommends that you use a GitHub App. In order to attribute activity to your app, you can make your app authenticate as an app installation. In order to attribute app activity to a user, you can make your app authenticate on behalf of a user. In both cases, you will generate a token that you can use to authenticate to the GraphQL API. For more information, see Registering a GitHub App and About authentication with a GitHub App.
Authenticating with a OAuth appTo authenticate with an OAuth token from an OAuth app, you must first authorize your OAuth app using either a web application flow or device flow. Then, you can use the access token that you received to access the API. For more information, see Creating an OAuth app and Authorizing OAuth apps.
The GraphQL endpointThe REST API has numerous endpoints. With the GraphQL API, the endpoint remains constant, no matter what operation you perform. For GitHub.com, that endpoint is:
https://api.github.com/graphqlCommunicating with GraphQL
Because GraphQL operations consist of multiline JSON, GitHub recommends using the Explorer to make GraphQL calls. You can also use curl
or any other HTTP-speaking library.
In REST, HTTP verbs determine the operation performed. In GraphQL, you'll provide a JSON-encoded body whether you're performing a query or a mutation, so the HTTP verb is POST
. The exception is an introspection query, which is a simple GET
to the endpoint. For more information on GraphQL versus REST, see Migrating from REST to GraphQL.
To query GraphQL in a curl
command, make a POST
request with a JSON payload. The payload must contain a string called query
:
curl -H "Authorization: bearer TOKEN" -X POST -d " \
{ \
\"query\": \"query { viewer { login }}\" \
} \
" https://api.github.com/graphql
Note
The string value of "query"
must escape newline characters or the schema will not parse it correctly. For the POST
body, use outer double quotes and escaped inner double quotes.
The two types of allowed operations in GitHub's GraphQL API are queries and mutations. Comparing GraphQL to REST, queries operate like GET
requests, while mutations operate like POST
/PATCH
/DELETE
. The mutation name determines which modification is executed.
For information about rate limiting, see Rate limits and node limits for the GraphQL API.
Queries and mutations share similar forms, with some important differences.
About queriesGraphQL queries return only the data you specify. To form a query, you must specify fields within fields (also known as nested subfields) until you return only scalars.
Queries are structured like this:
query { JSON-OBJECT-TO-RETURN }
For a real-world example, see Example query.
About mutationsTo form a mutation, you must specify three things:
Mutations are structured like this:
mutation { MUTATION-NAME(input: {MUTATION-NAME-INPUT!}) { MUTATION-NAME-PAYLOAD } }
The input object in this example is MutationNameInput
, and the payload object is MutationNamePayload
.
In the mutations reference, the listed input fields are what you pass as the input object. The listed return fields are what you pass as the payload object.
For a real-world example, see Example mutation.
Working with variablesVariables can make queries more dynamic and powerful, and they can reduce complexity when passing mutation input objects.
Note
If you're using the Explorer, make sure to enter variables in the separate Query Variables pane, and do not include the word variables
before the JSON object.
Here's an example query with a single variable:
query($number_of_repos:Int!) {
viewer {
name
repositories(last: $number_of_repos) {
nodes {
name
}
}
}
}
variables {
"number_of_repos": 3
}
There are three steps to using variables:
Define the variable outside the operation in a variables
object:
variables {
"number_of_repos": 3
}
The object must be valid JSON. This example shows a simple Int
variable type, but it's possible to define more complex variable types, such as input objects. You can also define multiple variables here.
Pass the variable to the operation as an argument:
query($number_of_repos:Int!){
The argument is a key-value pair, where the key is the name starting with $
(e.g., $number_of_repos
), and the value is the type (e.g., Int
). Add a !
to indicate whether the type is required. If you've defined multiple variables, include them here as multiple arguments.
Use the variable within the operation:
repositories(last: $number_of_repos) {
In this example, we substitute the variable for the number of repositories to retrieve. We specify a type in step 2 because GraphQL enforces strong typing.
This process makes the query argument dynamic. We can now simply change the value in the variables
object and keep the rest of the query the same.
Using variables as arguments lets you dynamically update values in the variables
object without changing the query.
Let's walk through a more complex query and put this information in context.
The following query looks up the octocat/Hello-World
repository, finds the 20 most recent closed issues, and returns each issue's title, URL, and first 5 labels:
query {
repository(owner:"octocat", name:"Hello-World") {
issues(last:20, states:CLOSED) {
edges {
node {
title
url
labels(first:5) {
edges {
node {
name
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
Looking at the composition line by line:
query {
Because we want to read data from the server, not modify it, query
is the root operation. (If you don't specify an operation, query
is also the default.)
repository(owner:"octocat", name:"Hello-World") {
To begin the query, we want to find a repository
object. The schema validation indicates this object requires an owner
and a name
argument.
issues(last:20, states:CLOSED) {
To account for all issues in the repository, we call the issues
object. (We could query a single issue
on a repository
, but that would require us to know the number of the issue we want to return and provide it as an argument.)
Some details about the issues
object:
IssueConnection
.last
or first
number of results as an argument, so we provide 20
.states
argument, which is an IssueState
enum that accepts OPEN
or CLOSED
values. To find only closed issues, we give the states
key a value of CLOSED
.edges {
We know issues
is a connection because it has the IssueConnection
type. To retrieve data about individual issues, we have to access the node via edges
.
node {
Here we retrieve the node at the end of the edge. The IssueConnection
docs indicate the node at the end of the IssueConnection
type is an Issue
object.
Now that we know we're retrieving an Issue
object, we can look at the docs and specify the fields we want to return:
title
url
labels(first:5) {
edges {
node {
name
}
}
}
Here we specify the title
, url
, and labels
fields of the Issue
object.
The labels
field has the type LabelConnection
. As with the issues
object, because labels
is a connection, we must travel its edges to a connected node: the label
object. At the node, we can specify the label
object fields we want to return, in this case, name
.
You may notice that running this query on the Octocat's public Hello-World
repository won't return many labels. Try running it on one of your own repositories that does use labels, and you'll likely see a difference.
Mutations often require information that you can only find out by performing a query first. This example shows two operations:
query FindIssueID {
repository(owner:"octocat", name:"Hello-World") {
issue(number:349) {
id
}
}
}
mutation AddReactionToIssue {
addReaction(input:{subjectId:"MDU6SXNzdWUyMzEzOTE1NTE=",content:HOORAY}) {
reaction {
content
}
subject {
id
}
}
}
Tip
Although you can include a query and a mutation in the same Explorer window if you give them names (FindIssueID
and AddReactionToIssue
in this example), the operations will be executed as separate calls to the GraphQL endpoint. It's not possible to perform a query at the same time as a mutation, or vice versa.
Let's walk through the example. The task sounds simple: add an emoji reaction to an issue.
So how do we know to begin with a query? We don't, yet.
Because we want to modify data on the server (attach an emoji to an issue), we begin by searching the schema for a helpful mutation. The reference docs show the addReaction
mutation, with this description: Adds a reaction to a subject.
Perfect!
The docs for the mutation list three input fields:
clientMutationId
(String
)subjectId
(ID!
)content
(ReactionContent!
)The !
s indicate that subjectId
and content
are required fields. A required content
makes sense: we want to add a reaction, so we'll need to specify which emoji to use.
But why is subjectId
required? It's because the subjectId
is the only way to identify which issue in which repository to react to.
This is why we start this example with a query: to get the ID
.
Let's examine the query line by line:
query FindIssueID {
Here we're performing a query, and we name it FindIssueID
. Note that naming a query is optional; we give it a name here so that we can include it in same Explorer window as the mutation.
repository(owner:"octocat", name:"Hello-World") {
We specify the repository by querying the repository
object and passing owner
and name
arguments.
issue(number:349) {
We specify the issue to react to by querying the issue
object and passing a number
argument.
id
This is where we retrieve the id
of https://github.com/octocat/Hello-World/issues/349
to pass as the subjectId
.
When we run the query, we get the id
: MDU6SXNzdWUyMzEzOTE1NTE=
Note
The id
returned in the query is the value we'll pass as the subjectID
in the mutation. Neither the docs nor schema introspection will indicate this relationship; you'll need to understand the concepts behind the names to figure this out.
With the ID known, we can proceed with the mutation:
mutation AddReactionToIssue {
Here we're performing a mutation, and we name it AddReactionToIssue
. As with queries, naming a mutation is optional; we give it a name here so we can include it in the same Explorer window as the query.
addReaction(input:{subjectId:"MDU6SXNzdWUyMzEzOTE1NTE=",content:HOORAY}) {
Let's examine this line:
addReaction
is the name of the mutation.input
is the required argument key. This will always be input
for a mutation.{subjectId:"MDU6SXNzdWUyMzEzOTE1NTE=",content:HOORAY}
is the required argument value. This will always be an input object (hence the curly braces) composed of input fields (subjectId
and content
in this case) for a mutation.How do we know which value to use for the content? The addReaction
docs tell us the content
field has the type ReactionContent
, which is an enum because only certain emoji reactions are supported on GitHub issues. These are the allowed values for reactions (note some values differ from their corresponding emoji names):
+1
👍 -1
👎 laugh
😄 confused
😕 heart
❤️ hooray
🎉 rocket
🚀 eyes
👀The rest of the call is composed of the payload object. This is where we specify the data we want the server to return after we've performed the mutation. These lines come from the addReaction
docs, which three possible return fields:
clientMutationId
(String
)reaction
(Reaction!
)subject
(Reactable!
)In this example, we return the two required fields (reaction
and subject
), both of which have required subfields (respectively, content
and id
).
When we run the mutation, this is the response:
{
"data": {
"addReaction": {
"reaction": {
"content": "HOORAY"
},
"subject": {
"id": "MDU6SXNzdWUyMTc5NTQ0OTc="
}
}
}
}
That's it! Check out your reaction to the issue by hovering over the 🎉 to find your username.
One final note: when you pass multiple fields in an input object, the syntax can get unwieldy. Moving the fields into a variable can help. Here's how you could rewrite the original mutation using a variable:
mutation($myVar:AddReactionInput!) {
addReaction(input:$myVar) {
reaction {
content
}
subject {
id
}
}
}
variables {
"myVar": {
"subjectId":"MDU6SXNzdWUyMTc5NTQ0OTc=",
"content":"HOORAY"
}
}
Note
You may notice that the content
field value in the earlier example (where it's used directly in the mutation) does not have quotes around HOORAY
, but it does have quotes when used in the variable. There's a reason for this:
content
directly in the mutation, the schema expects the value to be of type ReactionContent
, which is an enum, not a string. Schema validation will throw an error if you add quotes around the enum value, as quotes are reserved for strings.content
in a variable, the variables section must be valid JSON, so the quotes are required. Schema validation correctly interprets the ReactionContent
type when the variable is passed into the mutation during execution.For more information on the difference between enums and strings, see the official GraphQL spec.
Further readingThere is a lot more you can do when forming GraphQL calls. Here are some places to look next:
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