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Extending Filtering

Work in progress: This documentation is not yet complete.

The HotChocolate.Data package works with all databases that support IQueryable. Included in the default settings, are all filter operations that work over IQueryable on all databases. Sometimes this is not enough. Some databases might not support IQueryable. Some other databases may have technology-specific operations (e.g. SQL Like). Filtering was designed with extensibility in mind.

Filtering can be broken down into two basic parts. Schema building and execution. In schema building, the input types are created. In execution, the data passed by the user is analyzed and translated to a database query. Both parts can be configured over a convention.

In theory, you are free to design the structure of filters as it suits you best. Usually, it makes sense to divide the structure into two parts. The field and the operation.

The query below returns all movies where the franchise is equal to "Star Wars". The field franchise where the filter is applied to and the operation equals (eq) that should operate on this field.

GraphQL
{
movies(where: { franchise: { eq: "Star Wars" } }) {
name
}
}

Fields can also form paths. In the query below there are two fields genre and totalMovieCount and one operation equals eq

GraphQL
{
movies(where: { genre: { totalMovieCount: { eq: 100 } } }) {
name
}
}

The two queries above show the difference between fields and operations well. A field is always context-specific. Even when two fields have the same name, like the description of a movie and the description of a genre, they have different meanings. One field refers to the description of a movie and the other description refers to the description of a genre. Same name, different meanings. An operation on the other hand, has always the same meaning. The equals operation (eq) do always mean that the value of the selected field, should be equals to the value that was provided in the query. Operations can be applied in different contexts, but the operation itself, stays the same. The name of the operation should be consistent. There should only be one operation that checks for equality. This operation should always have the same name.

With this in mind, we can have a deeper dive into filtering. Buckle up, this might get exciting.

How everything fits together

At the core of the configuration API of filtering there sits a convention. The convention holds the whole configuration that filtering needs to create filter types and to translate them to the database. During schema creation, the schema builder asks the convention how the schema should look like. The convention defines the names and descriptions of types and fields and also what the type should be used for properties The convention also defines what provider should be used to translate a GraphQL query to a database query. The provider is the only thing that is used after the schema is built. Every field or operation in a filter type has a handler annotated.
During schema initialization, these handlers are bound, to the GraphQL fields. The provider can specify which handler should be bound to which field. During execution, the provider visits the incoming value node and executes the handler on the fields. This loose coupling allows defining the provider independently of the convention.

Filter Convention

A filter convention is a dotnet class that has to implement the interface IFilterConvention. Instead of writing a convention completely new, it is recommended to extend the base convention FilterConvention This convention is also configurable with a fluent interface, so in most cases you can probably just use the descriptor API.

Descriptor

Most of the capabilities of the descriptor are already documented under Fetching Data -> Filtering. If you have not done this already, it is now the right time to head over to Filtering and read the parts about the FilterConventions

There are two things on this descriptor that are not documented in Fetching Data:

Operation

C#
IFilterOperationConventionDescriptor Operation(int operationId);

Operations are configured globally. Each operation has a unique identifier. You can find the build-in identifiers in DefaultFilterOperations. This identifier is used in the FilterInputType<T>'s to bind operations on a type. Filter operations can also be configured with a fluent interface. You can specify the name and the description of the operation. This configuration is applied to all operation fields a FilterInputType<T> defines.

C#
conventionDescriptor
.Operation(DefaultFilterOperations.Equals)
.Name("equals")
.Description("Compares the value of the input to the value of the field");

With this configuration, all equals operations are now no longer names eq but equals and have a description.

If you want to create your own operations, you have to choose an identifier. To make sure to not collide with the framework, choose a number that is higher than 1024. If you are a framework developer and want to create an extension for HotChocolate, talk to us. We can assign you a range of operations so you do not collide with the operations defined by users.

You will need this identifier later, so it probably makes sense to store it somewhere on a class

C#
public static class CustomOperations
{
public const int Like = 1025;
}
public static class CustomerFilterConventionExtensions
{
public static IFilterConventionDescriptor AddInvariantComparison(
this IFilterConventionDescriptor conventionDescriptor) =>
conventionDescriptor
.Operation(CustomOperations.Like)
.Name("like");
}

To apply this configuration to operations types, you can use the Configure method

C#
conventionDescriptor.Configure<StringOperationInputType>(
x => x.Operation(CustomOperations.Like))

Provider

C#
IFilterConventionDescriptor Provider<TProvider>()
where TProvider : class, IFilterProvider;
IFilterConventionDescriptor Provider<TProvider>(TProvider provider)
where TProvider : class, IFilterProvider;
IFilterConventionDescriptor Provider(Type provider);

On the convention, you can also specify what provider should be used. For now you need just to know that you can configure the provider here. We will have a closer look at the provider later.

C#
conventionDescriptor.Provider<CustomProvider>();

Custom Conventions

Most of the time the descriptor API should satisfy your needs. It is recommended to build extensions based on the descriptor API, rather than creating a custom convention. However, if you want to have full control over naming and type creation, you can also override the methods you need on the FilterConvention.

You can also override the configure method to have a (probably) familiar API experience.

C#
public class CustomConvention : FilterConvention
{
protected override void Configure(IFilterConventionDescriptor descriptor)
{
desciptor.AddDefaults();
}
public override NameString GetTypeName(Type runtimeType) =>
base.GetTypeName(runtimeType) + "Suffix";
}

Providers

Like the convention, a provider can be configured over a fluent interface. Every filter field or operation has a specific handler defined. The handler translates the operation to the database. These handlers are stored on the provider. After the schema is initialized, an interceptor visits the filter types and requests a handler from the provider. The handler is annotated directly on the field. The provider translates an incoming query into a database query by traversing an input object and executing the handlers on the fields.

The output of a translation is always some kind of filter definition. In case, of IQueryable this is an expression. In case, of MongoDB this is a FilterDefinition. Provider, visitor context and handler, operate on and produce this filter definition.

To inspect and analyze the input object, the provider uses a visitor.

What a visitor is and how you can write you own visitor is explained here

Visitors are a powerful yet complex concept, we tried our best to abstract it away. For most cases, you will not need to create a custom visitor.

Provider Descriptor

The descriptor of a provider is simple. It only has one method:

C#
IFilterProviderDescriptor<TContext> AddFieldHandler<TFieldHandler>()
where TFieldHandler : IFilterFieldHandler<TContext>;

With this method you can register field handlers on the provider.

Field Handler

Every field or operation is annotated with an instance of a FilterFieldHandler<TContext, T>. When the provider is asked for a handler for a field, it iterates sequentially through the list of existing field handlers and calls the CanHandle method. The first field handler that can handle the field, is annotated on the field. As the visitor traverses the input object, it calls TryHandleEnter as it enters the input field and TryHandleLeave as it leaves it.

A field handler supports constructor injection and is a singleton. Do not store data on the field handler. use the context of the visitor for state management.

CanHandle

C#
bool CanHandle(
ITypeCompletionContext context,
IFilterInputTypeDefinition typeDefinition,
IFilterFieldDefinition fieldDefinition);

Tests if this field handler can handle a field. If it can handle the field it will be attached to it.

TryHandleEnter

C#
bool TryHandleEnter(
TContext context,
IFilterField field,
ObjectFieldNode node,
[NotNullWhen(true)] out ISyntaxVisitorAction? action);

This method is called when the visitor encounters a field.

  • context is the context of the visitor
  • field is the instance of the field that is currently visited
  • node is the field node of the input object. node.Value contains the value of the field.
  • action If TryHandleEnter returns true, the action is used for further processing by the visitor.

TryHandleLeave

C#
bool TryHandleLeave(
TContext context,
IFilterField field,
ObjectFieldNode node,
[NotNullWhen(true)] out ISyntaxVisitorAction? action);

This method is called when the visitor leave the field it previously entered.

  • context is the context of the visitor
  • field is the instance of the field that is currently visited
  • node is the field node of the input object. node.Value contains the value of the field.
  • action If TryHandleLeave returns true, the action is used for further processing by the visitor.

Filter Operation Handlers

There is only one kind of field handler. To make it easier to handle operations, there also exists FilterOperationHandler<TContext, T>, a more specific abstraction. You can override TryHandleOperation to handle operations.

The Context

As the visitor and the field handlers are singletons, a context object is passed along with the traversation of input objects. Field handlers can push data on this context, to make it available for other handlers further down in the tree.

The context contains Types, Operations, Errors and Scopes. It is very provider-specific what data you need to store in the context. In the case of the IQueryable provider, it also contains RuntimeTypes and knows if the source is InMemory or a database call.

With Scopes it is possible to add multiple logical layers to a context. In the case of IQuerable this is needed, whenever a new closure starts

C#
// /------------------------ SCOPE 1 -----------------------------\
// /----------- SCOPE 2 -------------\
users.Where(x => x.Company.Addresses.Any(y => y.Street == "221B Baker Street"))

A filter statement that produces the expression above would look like this

GraphQL
{
users(
where: {
company: { addresses: { any: { street: { eq: "221B Baker Street" } } } }
}
) {
name
}
}

A little simplified this is what happens during visitation:

GraphQL
{
users(
# level[0] = []
# instance[0] = x
# Create SCOPE 1 with parameter x of type User
where: {
# Push property User.Company onto the scope
# instance[1] = x.Company
# level[1] = []
company: {
# Push property Company.Addresses onto the scope
# instance[2] x.Company.Addresses
# level[2] = []
addresses: {
# Create SCOPE 2 with parameter y of type Address
# instance[0] = y
# level[0] = []
any: {
# Push poperty Address.Street onto the scope
# instance[1] = y.Street
# level[1] = []
street: {
# Create and push the operation onto the scope
# instance[2] = y.Street
# level[2] = [y.Street == "221B Baker Street"]
eq: "221B Baker Street"
}
# Combine everything of the current level and pop the porperty street from the instance
# instance[1] = y.Street
# level[1] = [y.Street == "221B Baker Street"]
}
# Combine everything of the current level, create the any operation and exit SCOPE 2
# instance[2] = x.Company.Addresses
# level[2] = [x.Company.Addresses.Any(y => y.Street == "221B Baker Street")]
}
# Combine everything of the current level and pop the porperty street from the instance
# instance[1] = x.Company
# level[1] = [x.Company.Addresses.Any(y => y.Street == "221B Baker Street")]
}
# Combine everything of the current level and pop the porperty street from the instance
# instance[0] = x
# level[0] = [x.Company.Addresses.Any(y => y.Street == "221B Baker Street")]
}
) {
name
}
}

Extending IQueryable

The default filtering implementation uses IQueryable under the hood. You can customize the translation of queries by registering handlers on the QueryableFilterProvider.

The following example creates a StringOperationHandler that supports case insensitive filtering:

C#
// The QueryableStringOperationHandler already has an implemenation of CanHandle
// It checks if the field is declared in a string operation type and also checks if
// the operation of this field uses the `Operation` specified in the override property further
// below
public class QueryableStringInvariantEqualsHandler : QueryableStringOperationHandler
{
// For creating a expression tree we need the `MethodInfo` of the `ToLower` method of string
private static readonly MethodInfo _toLower = typeof(string)
.GetMethods()
.Single(
x => x.Name == nameof(string.ToLower) &&
x.GetParameters().Length == 0);
// This is used to match the handler to all `eq` fields
protected override int Operation => DefaultFilterOperations.Equals;
public override Expression HandleOperation(
QueryableFilterContext context,
IFilterOperationField field,
IValueNode value,
object parsedValue)
{
// We get the instance of the context. This is the expression path to the propert
// e.g. ~> y.Street
Expression property = context.GetInstance();
// the parsed value is what was specified in the query
// e.g. ~> eq: "221B Baker Street"
if (parsedValue is string str)
{
// Creates and returnes the operation
// e.g. ~> y.Street.ToLower() == "221b baker street"
return Expression.Equal(
Expression.Call(property, _toLower),
Expression.Constant(str.ToLower()));
}
// Something went wrong 😱
throw new InvalidOperationException();
}
}

This operation handler can be registered on the convention:

C#
public class CustomFilteringConvention : FilterConvention
{
protected override void Configure(IFilterConventionDescriptor descriptor)
{
descriptor.AddDefaults();
descriptor.Provider(
new QueryableFilterProvider(
x => x
.AddDefaultFieldHandlers()
.AddFieldHandler<QueryableStringInvariantEqualsHandler>()));
}
}
// and then
services.AddGraphQLServer()
.AddFiltering<CustomFilteringConvention>();

To make this registration easier, Hot Chocolate also supports convention and provider extensions. Instead of creating a custom FilterConvention, you can also do the following:

C#
services
.AddGraphQLServer()
.AddFiltering()
.AddConvention<IFilterConvention>(
new FilterConventionExtension(
x => x.AddProviderExtension(
new QueryableFilterProviderExtension(
y => y.AddFieldHandler<QueryableStringInvariantEqualsHandler>()))));