Postgres: Remote source relationships¶
Table of contents
Introduction¶
Remote source relationships extend the concept of joining data between tables within a single database, to joining across tables between separate databases. Once you create relationships between types from your source database to types from your target database, you can then “join” them by running GraphQL queries.
Supported from
Remote source relationships are supported from versions v2.1.0
and above.
Create remote source relationships¶
Step 0: Add two database sources¶
Add a database source as described here and track the required tables. Then, repeat the process to add your target database source.
Step 1: Define and create the relationship¶
A remote source relationship is defined alongside the source database table (that is, the source side of the join). The following data is required to define a remote source relationship:
- Name: A name for the relationship.
- Remote Source: The name of the target database source (that is, the target side of the join)
- Remote Table: The table in the target database source that should be joined with the source table
- Relationship type: Either
object
orarray
- just as for normal relationships, Hasura supports both many-to-one (object) and one-to-many (array) relationships. - Field Mapping: A mapping between fields in the source table and their corresponding fields in the target table, just as a foreign key relationship would be defined by such a mapping within a single database.
For this example, we assume that our source orders_db
database has an orders
table with the fields id
and ordered_by_user_id
, and
that the target users_db
database has a users
table with the fields id
and name
.
POST /v1/query HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/json
X-Hasura-Role: admin
{
"type": "create_remote_relationship",
"args": {
"name": "ordered_by_user",
"source": "orders_db",
"table": "orders",
"remote_source": {
"relationship_type": "object",
"field_mapping": {
"ordered_by_user_id": "id"
},
"source": "users_db",
"table": "users"
}
}
}
In this example, we’ve added a target database which contains our user information, and then joined that with order information in our source database.
- We name the relationship
ordered_by_user
. - We select the
users_db
database as the target (or remote source) - We set up the config to join the
id
input argument of our remote source field to theordered_by_user_id
column of this table (in this case, theorders
table).
Step 2: Explore with GraphiQL¶
In the GraphiQL tab, test out your remote source relationship.
query {
orders {
id
ordered_by_user {
id
name
}
}
}