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A drop-in replacement for GraphQL ActionCable subscriptions. Works with AnyCable.

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GraphQL subscriptions for AnyCable

A (mostly) drop-in replacement for default ActionCable subscriptions adapter shipped with graphql gem but works with AnyCable!

Gem Version Tests

Sponsored by Evil Martians

Why?

AnyCable is fast because it does not execute any Ruby code. But default subscription implementation shipped with graphql gem requires to do exactly that: re-evaluate GraphQL queries in Action Cable process. AnyCable doesn't support this (it's possible but hard to implement).

See https://github.com/anycable/anycable-rails/issues/40 for more details and discussion.

Differences

  • Subscription information is stored in a Redis database. By default, we use AnyCable Redis configuration. Expiration or data cleanup should be configured separately (see below).
  • GraphQL queries for all subscriptions are re-executed in the process that triggers event (it may be web server, async jobs, rake tasks or whatever)

Compatibility

  • Works with Action Cable (e.g., in development/test)
  • Works without Rails (e.g., via LiteCable)

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem "graphql-anycable", "~> 1.0"

And then execute:

bundle install

Usage

  1. Plug it into the schema (replace the Action Cable adapter if you have one):

    class MySchema < GraphQL::Schema
      use GraphQL::AnyCable, broadcast: true
    
      subscription SubscriptionType
    end
  2. Execute a query within an Action Cable/LiteCable channel.

    class GraphqlChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
      def execute(data)
        result =
          MySchema.execute(
            query: data["query"],
            context: context,
            variables: Hash(data["variables"]),
            operation_name: data["operationName"],
          )
    
        transmit(
          result: result.subscription? ? { data: nil } : result.to_h,
          more: result.subscription?,
        )
      end
    
      def unsubscribed
        MySchema.subscriptions.delete_channel_subscriptions(self)
      end
    
      private
    
      def context
        {
          account_id: account&.id,
          channel: self,
        }
      end
    end

    Make sure that you're passing channel instance as channel key to the context.

  3. Trigger events as usual:

    MySchema.subscriptions.trigger(:product_updated, {}, Product.first!, scope: account.id)
  4. (Optional) When using other AnyCable broadcasting adapters than Redis, you MUST configure Redis for graphql-anycable yourself:

    GraphQL::AnyCable.redis = Redis.new(url: ENV["REDIS_URL"])
    
    # you can also use a Proc (e.g., if you want to use a connection pool)
    redis_pool = ConnectionPool.new(size: 10) { Redis.new(url: ENV["REDIS_URL"]) }
    
    GraphQL::AnyCable.redis = ->(&block) { redis_pool.with { |conn| block.call(conn) } }

Broadcasting

By default, graphql-anycable evaluates queries and transmits results for every subscription client individually. Of course, it is a waste of resources if you have hundreds or thousands clients subscribed to the same data (and has huge negative impact on performance).

Thankfully, GraphQL-Ruby has added Subscriptions Broadcast feature that allows to group exact same subscriptions, execute them and transmit results only once.

To enable this feature, pass the broadcast option set to true to graphql-anycable.

By default all fields are marked as not safe for broadcasting. If a subscription has at least one non-broadcastable field in its query, GraphQL-Ruby will execute every subscription for every client independently. If you sure that all your fields are safe to be broadcasted, you can pass default_broadcastable option set to true (but be aware that it can have security impllications!)

class MySchema < GraphQL::Schema
  use GraphQL::AnyCable, broadcast: true, default_broadcastable: true

  subscription SubscriptionType
end

See GraphQL-Ruby broadcasting docs for more details.

Operations

To avoid filling Redis storage with stale subscription data:

  1. Set subscription_expiration_seconds setting to number of seconds (e.g. 604800 for 1 week). See configuration section below for details.

  2. Execute rake graphql:anycable:clean once in a while to clean up stale subscription data.

    Heroku users should set up use_redis_object_on_cleanup setting to false due to limitations in Heroku Redis.

Configuration

GraphQL-AnyCable uses anyway_config to configure itself. There are several possibilities to configure this gem:

  1. Environment variables:

    GRAPHQL_ANYCABLE_SUBSCRIPTION_EXPIRATION_SECONDS=604800
    GRAPHQL_ANYCABLE_USE_REDIS_OBJECT_ON_CLEANUP=true
    GRAPHQL_ANYCABLE_REDIS_PREFIX=graphql
  2. YAML configuration files (note that this is config/graphql_anycable.yml, not config/anycable.yml):

    # config/graphql_anycable.yml
    production:
      subscription_expiration_seconds: 300 # 5 minutes
      use_redis_object_on_cleanup: false # For restricted redis installations
      redis_prefix: graphql # You can configure redis_prefix for anycable-graphql subscription prefixes. Default value "graphql"
  3. Configuration from your application code:

    GraphQL::AnyCable.configure do |config|
      config.subscription_expiration_seconds = 3600 # 1 hour
      config.redis_prefix = "graphql" # on our side, we add `-` ourselves after the redis_prefix
    end

And any other way provided by anyway_config. Check its documentation!

Emergency actions

In situations when you don't set subscription_expiration_seconds, have a lot of inactive subscriptions, and GraphQL::AnyCable::Cleaner does`t help in that, you can do the following actions for clearing subscriptions

  1. Set config.subscription_expiration_seconds. After that, the new subscriptions will have TTL

  2. Run the script

config = GraphQL::AnyCable.config

GraphQL::AnyCable.with_redis do |redis|
  # do it for subscriptions
  redis.scan_each("graphql-subscription:*") do |key|
    redis.expire(key, config.subscription_expiration_seconds) if redis.ttl(key) < 0
    # or you can just remove it immediately
    # redis.del(key) if redis.ttl(key) < 0
  end

  # do it for channels
  redis.scan_each("graphql-channel:*") do |key|
    redis.expire(key, config.subscription_expiration_seconds) if redis.ttl(key) < 0
    # or you can just remove it immediately
    # redis.del(key) if redis.ttl(key) < 0
  end
end

Or you can change the redis_prefix in the configuration and then remove all records with the old_prefix. For instance:

  1. Change the redis_prefix. The default redis_prefix is graphql.

  2. Run the ruby script, which remove all records with old prefix:

GraphQL::AnyCable.with_redis do |redis|
  redis.scan_each("graphql-*") do |key|
    redis.del(key)
  end
end

Data model

As in AnyCable there is no place to store subscription data in-memory, it should be persisted somewhere to be retrieved on GraphQLSchema.subscriptions.trigger and sent to subscribed clients. graphql-anycable uses the same Redis database as AnyCable itself.

  1. Grouped event subscriptions: graphql-fingerprints:#{event.topic} sorted set. Used to find all subscriptions on GraphQLSchema.subscriptions.trigger.

    ZREVRANGE graphql-fingerprints:1:myStats: 0 -1
    => 1:myStats:/MyStats/fBDZmJU1UGTorQWvOyUeaHVwUxJ3T9SEqnetj6SKGXc=/0/RBNvo1WzZ4oRRq0W9-hknpT7T8If536DEMBg9hyq_4o=
  2. Event subscriptions: graphql-subscriptions:#{event.fingerptint} set containing identifiers for all subscriptions for given operation with certain context and arguments (serialized in topic). Fingerprints are already scoped by topic.

    SMEMBERS graphql-subscriptions:1:myStats:/MyStats/fBDZmJU1UGTorQWvOyUeaHVwUxJ3T9SEqnetj6SKGXc=/0/RBNvo1WzZ4oRRq0W9-hknpT7T8If536DEMBg9hyq_4o=
    => 52ee8d65-275e-4d22-94af-313129116388
  3. Subscription data: graphql-subscription:#{subscription_id} hash contains everything required to evaluate subscription on trigger and create data for client.

    HGETALL graphql-subscription:52ee8d65-275e-4d22-94af-313129116388
    => {
      context:        '{"user_id":1,"user":{"__gid__":"Z2lkOi8vZWJheS1tYWcyL1VzZXIvMQ"}}',
      variables:      '{}',
      operation_name: 'MyStats'
      query_string:   'subscription MyStats { myStatsUpdated { completed total processed __typename } }',
    }
  4. Channel subscriptions: graphql-channel:#{subscription_id} set containing identifiers for subscriptions created in ActionCable channel to delete them on client disconnect.

    SMEMBERS graphql-channel:17420c6ed9e
    => 52ee8d65-275e-4d22-94af-313129116388

Stats

You can grab Redis subscription statistics by calling:

GraphQL::AnyCable.stats

It will return a total of the amount of the key with the following prefixes:

graphql-subscription
graphql-fingerprints
graphql-subscriptions
graphql-channel

The response will look like this:

  {
    "total": {
      "subscription":22646,
      "fingerprints":3200,
      "subscriptions":20101,
      "channel": 4900
    }
  }

You can also grab the number of subscribers grouped by subscriptions:

GraphQL::AnyCable.stats(include_subscriptions: true)

It will return the response that contains subscriptions:

  {
    "total": {
      "subscription":22646,
      "fingerprints":3200,
      "subscriptions":20101,
      "channel": 4900
    },
    "subscriptions": {
      "productCreated": 11323,
      "productUpdated": 11323
    }
  }

Also, you can set another scan_count, if needed. The default value is 1_000:

GraphQL::AnyCable.stats(scan_count: 100)

We can set statistics data to Yabeda for tracking amount of subscriptions:

# config/initializers/metrics.rb
Yabeda.configure do
  group :graphql_anycable_statistics do
    gauge :subscriptions_count,  comment: "Number of graphql-anycable subscriptions"
  end
end
# in your app
statistics = GraphQL::AnyCable.stats[:total]

statistics.each do |key , value|
  Yabeda.graphql_anycable_statistics.subscriptions_count.set({name: key}, value)
end

Or you can use collect:

# config/initializers/metrics.rb
Yabeda.configure do
  group :graphql_anycable_statistics do
    gauge :subscriptions_count,  comment: "Number of graphql-anycable subscriptions"
  end

  collect do
    statistics = GraphQL::AnyCable.stats[:total]

    statistics.each do |redis_prefix, value|
      graphql_anycable_statistics.subscriptions_count.set({name: redis_prefix}, value)
    end
  end
end

Testing applications which use graphql-anycable

You can pass custom redis-server URL to AnyCable using ENV variable.

REDIS_URL=redis://localhost:6379/5 bundle exec rspec

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Releasing new versions

  1. Bump version number in lib/graphql/anycable/version.rb

    In case of pre-releases keep in mind rubygems/rubygems#3086 and check version with command like Gem::Version.new(AfterCommitEverywhere::VERSION).to_s

  2. Fill CHANGELOG.md with missing changes, add header with version and date.

  3. Make a commit:

    git add lib/graphql/anycable/version.rb CHANGELOG.md
    version=$(ruby -r ./lib/graphql/anycable/version.rb -e "puts Gem::Version.new(GraphQL::AnyCable::VERSION)")
    git commit --message="${version}: " --edit
  4. Create annotated tag:

    git tag v${version} --annotate --message="${version}: " --edit --sign
  5. Fill version name into subject line and (optionally) some description (list of changes will be taken from CHANGELOG.md and appended automatically)

  6. Push it:

    git push --follow-tags
  7. GitHub Actions will create a new release, build and push gem into rubygems.org! You're done!

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/Envek/graphql-anycable.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.