Skip to main content
Version: v2.x

MS SQL Server: GraphQL Subscriptions

Introduction

A GraphQL subscription is essentially a query where the client receives an update whenever the value of any field changes upstream.

Subscriptions are supported for all kinds of queries. All the concepts of queries hold true for subscriptions as well.

Implementation

The Hasura GraphQL Engine subscriptions are actually live queries, i.e. a subscription will return the latest result of the query being made and not necessarily all the individual events leading up to the result. By default, updates are delivered to clients every 1 sec.

Convert a query to a subscription

You can turn any query into a subscription by simply replacing query with subscription as the operation type.

Single subscription in each query caveat

Hasura follows the GraphQL spec which allows for only one root field in a subscription. You also cannot execute multiple separate subscriptions in one query. To have multiple subscriptions running at the same time they must be in separate queries.

Use cases

Communication protocol

Hasura GraphQL Engine uses the GraphQL over WebSocket Protocol by the apollographql/subscriptions-transport-ws library and the GraphQL over WebSocket Protocol by the graphql-ws library for sending and receiving events. The GraphQL Engine uses the Sec-WebSocket-Protocol header to determine the communication protocol that'll be used. By default, the GraphQL engine will use the apollographql/subscriptions-transport-ws protocol.

Setting headers for subscriptions with Apollo client

If you are using Apollo Client, headers can be passed to a subscription by setting connectionParams while creating the wsLink:

// Create a WebSocket link:
const wsLink = new WebSocketLink({
uri: `<graphql-endpoint>`,
options: {
reconnect: true,
connectionParams: {
headers: {headers-object}
}
}
});

See this for more info on using connectionParams.

Cookies and WebSockets

The Hasura GraphQL Engine will read cookies sent by the browser when initiating a WebSocket connection. The browser will send the cookie only if it is a secure cookie (secure flag in the cookie) and if the cookie has a HttpOnly flag.

Hasura will read this cookie and use it as headers when resolving authorization (i.e. when resolving the auth webhook).

Cookies, WebSockets and CORS

As browsers don't enforce Same Origin Policy (SOP) for websockets, the Hasura server enforces the CORS rules when accepting the websocket connection.

It uses the provided CORS configuration (as per Configure Cors).

  1. When it is *, the cookie is read and the CORS check is not enforced.
  2. When there are explicit domains, the cookie will only be read if the request originates from one of the listed domains.
  3. If CORS is disabled, the default behavior is that the cookie won't be read (because of potential security issues). To override the behavior, you can use the flag --ws-read-cookie or the environment variable HASURA_GRAPHQL_WS_READ_COOKIE. See GraphQL Engine server config reference for the setting.