Get Started with Hasura DDN and MySQL
Overview
This tutorial takes about twenty minutes to complete. You'll learn how to:
- Set up a new Hasura DDN project
- Connect it to a MySQL database
- Generate Hasura metadata
- Create a build
- Run your first query
- Create relationships
Additionally, we'll familiarize you with the steps and workflows necessary to iterate on your API.
This tutorial assumes you're starting from scratch; you'll connect a locally-running MySQL instance to Hasura, but you can easily follow the steps if you already have data seeded. Hasura will never modify your source schema.
Prerequisites
Install the DDN CLI
- macOS and Linux
- Windows
Simply run the installer script in your terminal:
curl -L https://graphql-engine-cdn.hasura.io/ddn/cli/v4/get.sh | bash
Currently, the CLI does not support installation on ARM-based Linux systems.
- Download the latest DDN CLI installer for Windows.
- Run the
DDN_CLI_Setup.exe
installer file and follow the instructions. This will only take a minute. - By default, the DDN CLI is installed under
C:\Users\{Username}\AppData\Local\Programs\DDN_CLI
- The DDN CLI is added to your
%PATH%
environment variable so that you can use theddn
command from your terminal.
Install Docker
The Docker based workflow helps you iterate and develop locally without deploying any changes to Hasura DDN, making the
development experience faster and your feedback loops shorter. You'll need Docker Compose v2.20
or later.
Validate the installation
You can verify that the DDN CLI is installed correctly by running:
ddn doctor
Tutorial
Step 1. Authenticate your CLI
ddn auth login
This will launch a browser window prompting you to log in or sign up for Hasura DDN. After you log in, the CLI will acknowledge your login, giving you access to Hasura Cloud resources.
Step 2. Scaffold out a new local project
ddn supergraph init my-project && cd my-project
Once you move into this directory, you'll see your project scaffolded out for you. You can view the structure by either
running ls
in your terminal, or by opening the directory in your preferred editor.
Step 3. Initialize your MySQL connector
ddn connector init my_mysql -i
From the dropdown, select /hasura/mysql
(you can type to filter the list). Then, enter the following JDBC URL:
jdbc:mysql://user:[email protected]:3306/mydb
Step 4. Start the local MySQL container and Adminer
touch app/connector/my_mysql/compose.mysql.yaml
services:
mysql:
image: mysql:8.0
container_name: mysql-db
restart: always
environment:
MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: rootpassword
MYSQL_DATABASE: mydb
MYSQL_USER: user
MYSQL_PASSWORD: password
ports:
- "3306:3306"
volumes:
- mysql-data:/var/lib/mysql
command:
- --character-set-server=utf8mb4
- --collation-server=utf8mb4_unicode_ci
- --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
adminer:
image: adminer:latest
container_name: adminer
restart: always
ports:
- "8080:8080"
environment:
ADMINER_DEFAULT_SERVER: mysql
volumes:
mysql-data:
docker compose -f app/connector/my_mysql/compose.mysql.yaml up -d
You can open Adminer by visiting: http://localhost:8080
You'll be prompted for the username, password, and database name. Use the values from the compose.mysql.yaml
above.
Step 5. Create a table in your MySQL database
-- Create the table
CREATE TABLE users (
id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
age INT NOT NULL
);
-- Insert some data
INSERT INTO users (name, age) VALUES ('Alice', 25);
INSERT INTO users (name, age) VALUES ('Bob', 30);
INSERT INTO users (name, age) VALUES ('Charlie', 35);
You can verify this worked by using Adminer to query all records from the users
table:
SELECT * FROM users;
Step 6. Introspect your MySQL database
ddn connector introspect my_mysql
After running this, you should see a representation of your database's schema in the
app/connector/my_mysql/configuration.json
file; you can view this using cat
or open the file in your editor.
ddn connector show-resources my_mysql
Step 7. Add your model
ddn models add my_mysql "mydb.users"
Open the app/metadata
directory and you'll find a newly-generated file: MydbUsers.hml
. The DDN CLI will use this
Hasura Metadata Language file to represent the users
table from MySQL in your API as a
model.
Step 8. Create a new build
ddn supergraph build local
The build is stored as a set of JSON files in engine/build
.
Step 9. Start your local services
ddn run docker-start
Your terminal will be taken over by logs for the different services.
Step 10. Run your first query
ddn console --local
query {
mydbUsers {
id
name
age
}
}
{
"data": {
"mydbUsers": [
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"age": 25
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Bob",
"age": 30
},
{
"id": 3,
"name": "Charlie",
"age": 35
}
]
}
}
Step 11. Iterate on your MySQL schema
-- Create the posts table
CREATE TABLE posts (
id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
user_id INT NOT NULL,
title VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
content TEXT NOT NULL,
created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE
);
-- Insert some seed data
INSERT INTO posts (user_id, title, content) VALUES
(1, 'My First Post', 'This is Alice\'s first post.'),
(1, 'Another Post', 'Alice writes again!'),
(2, 'Bob\'s Post', 'Bob shares his thoughts.'),
(3, 'Hello World', 'Charlie joins the conversation.');
-- Fetch all posts with user information
SELECT
posts.id AS post_id,
posts.title,
posts.content,
posts.created_at,
users.name AS author
FROM
posts
JOIN
users ON posts.user_id = users.id;
You should see a list of posts returned with the author's information joined from the users
table
Step 12. Refresh your metadata and rebuild your project
The following steps are necessary each time you make changes to your source schema. This includes, adding, modifying, or dropping tables.
Step 12.1. Re-introspect your data source
CTRL + C
ddn connector introspect my_mysql
In app/connector/my_mysql/configuration.json
, you'll see schema updated to include operations for the posts
table.
In app/metadata/my_mysql.hml
, you'll see mydb.posts
present in the metadata as well.
Step 12.2. Update your metadata
ddn model add my_mysql "mydb.posts"
Step 12.3. Create a new build
ddn supergraph build local
Step 12.4. Restart your services
ddn run docker-start
Step 13. Query your new build
query GetPosts {
mydbPosts {
id
title
content
}
}
{
"data": {
"mydbPosts": [
{
"id": 1,
"title": "My First Post",
"content": "This is Alice's first post."
},
{
"id": 2,
"title": "Another Post",
"content": "Alice writes again!"
},
{
"id": 3,
"title": "Bob's Post",
"content": "Bob shares his thoughts."
},
{
"id": 4,
"title": "Hello World",
"content": "Charlie joins the conversation."
}
]
}
}
Step 14. Create a relationship
ddn relationship add my_mysql "mydb.posts"
You'll see a new metadata object added to the app/metadata/MydbPosts.hml
file of kind Relationship
explaining the
relationship between posts
and users
.
Step 15. Rebuild your project
ddn supergraph build local
ddn run docker-start
Step 16. Query using your relationship
query GetPosts {
mydbPosts {
id
title
content
mydbUser {
id
name
age
}
}
}
{
"data": {
"mydbPosts": [
{
"id": 1,
"title": "My First Post",
"content": "This is Alice's first post.",
"mydbUser": {
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"age": 25
}
},
{
"id": 2,
"title": "Another Post",
"content": "Alice writes again!",
"mydbUser": {
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"age": 25
}
},
{
"id": 3,
"title": "Bob's Post",
"content": "Bob shares his thoughts.",
"mydbUser": {
"id": 2,
"name": "Bob",
"age": 30
}
},
{
"id": 4,
"title": "Hello World",
"content": "Charlie joins the conversation.",
"mydbUser": {
"id": 3,
"name": "Charlie",
"age": 35
}
}
]
}
}
Next steps
Congratulations on completing your first Hasura DDN project with MySQL! 🎉
Here's what you just accomplished:
- You started with a fresh project and connected it to a local MySQL database.
- You set up metadata to represent your tables and relationships, which acts as the blueprint for your API.
- Then, you created a build — essentially compiling everything into a ready-to-use API — and successfully ran your first GraphQL queries to fetch data.
- Along the way, you learned how to iterate on your schema and refresh your metadata to reflect changes.
Now, you're equipped to connect and expose your data, empowering you to iterate and scale with confidence. Great work!
Take a look at our MySQL docs to learn more about how to use Hasura DDN with MySQL. Or, if you're ready, get started with adding permissions to control access to your API.