新しいプラグインの作成
Amplify CLI は、プラグイン開発用に amplify plugin init コマンド(別名 amplify plugin new)を提供します。このコマンドは最初に要件を収集し、その後プラグインパッケージのスケルトンを作成して開発を開始できます。新しく作成されたプラグインはローカル Amplify CLI プラグインプラットフォームに追加されるため、開発中に機能を簡単にテストできます。amplify plugin remove コマンドでローカルプラグインプラットフォームから簡単に削除でき、amplify plugin add コマンドで再度追加できます。
ステップ 1: Amplify CLI をインストール
npm install -g @aws-amplify/clicurl -sL https://aws-amplify.github.io/amplify-cli/install | bash && $SHELLcurl -sL https://aws-amplify.github.io/amplify-cli/install-win -o install.cmd && install.cmdステップ 2: プラグインを初期化
amplify plugin initプラグイン名を入力するよう促され、その後プラグインタイプとイベント購読を選択します。CLI はプラグインパッケージを作成し、ローカル Amplify CLI プラグインプラットフォームに追加します。
ステップ 3: プラグインをテスト
新しく作成されたプラグインパッケージはすでにローカル Amplify CLI に追加されているため、すぐにテストを開始できます。
デフォルトプラグイン名 my-amplify-plugin を使用することにしたとしましょう。
$ amplify my-amplify-plugin helphelp command to be implemented.デフォルトのヘルプメッセージが出力されます。
この時点では、プラグインパッケージには help と version の 2 つのサブコマンドのみあり、ダミー実装を持っています。他のコマンドを実行しようとすると、Amplify CLI プラグインプラットフォームが新規スキャンを実行し、コマンドが見つからない場合はデフォルトのヘルプメッセージを出力します。
ここからプラグインパッケージの開発を開始できます。パッケージ構造の詳細については、下記を参照してください。
ステップ 4: npm に公開
開発サイクルが完了し、プラグインを公開する準備ができたら、npm に公開できます: https://docs.npmjs.com/getting-started/publishing-npm-packages
ステップ 5: インストールして使用
プラグインが npm に公開されたら、他の開発者がそれをインストールして使用できます
npm install -g my-amplify-pluginamplify plugin add my-amplify-pluginamplify my-amplify-plugin helpプラグインパッケージ構造
プラグインパッケージのディレクトリ構造は以下の通りです
|_my-amplify-plugin/ |_commands/ | |_ help.js | |_ version.js | |_event-handlers | |_handle-PostInit.js | |_handle-PostPush.js | |_handle-PreInit.js | |_handle-PrePush.js | |_amplify-plugin.json |_index.js |_package.jsonamplify-plugin.json
amplify-plugin.json ファイルはプラグインのマニフェストファイルで、プラグインの名前、タイプ、コマンド、イベントハンドラーを指定します。Amplify CLI はそれを使用してプラグインパッケージを確認し、プラグインプラットフォームに追加します。
util プラグインの amplify plugin init コマンドで初めて生成されたときのファイル内容は以下の通りです。
{ "name": "my-amplify-plugin", "type": "util", "commands": [ "version", "help" ], "eventHandlers": [ "PreInit", "PostInit", "PrePush", "PostPush" ]}index.js
package.json で指定された "main" ファイルは、マニフェストファイル amplify-plugin.json で指定されたプラグインの機能を呼び出すための Amplify CLI のエントリポイントです。
util プラグインの amplify plugin init コマンドで初めて生成されたときのファイル内容は以下の通りです。
const path = require('path');
async function executeAmplifyCommand(context) { const commandsDirPath = path.normalize(path.join(__dirname, 'commands')); const commandPath = path.join(commandsDirPath, context.input.command); const commandModule = require(commandPath); await commandModule.run(context);}
async function handleAmplifyEvent(context, args) { const eventHandlersDirPath = path.normalize(path.join(__dirname, 'event-handlers')); const eventHandlerPath = path.join(eventHandlersDirPath, `handle-${args.event}`); const eventHandlerModule = require(eventHandlerPath); await eventHandlerModule.run(context, args);}
module.exports = { executeAmplifyCommand, handleAmplifyEvent,};commands
commands フォルダには、マニフェストファイル amplify-plugin.json で指定された commands を実装するファイルが含まれています。
event-handlers
event-handlers フォルダには、マニフェストファイル amplify-plugin.json で指定された eventHandlers を実装するファイルが含まれています。
Authoring custom GraphQL transformers & directives
This section outlines the process of writing custom GraphQL transformers. The @aws-amplify/graphql-transformer-core package serves as a lightweight framework that takes as input a GraphQL SDL document and a list of GraphQL Transformers and returns a set of deployment resources that fully implements the data model defined by the input schema. A GraphQL Transformer is a class that defines a directive and a set of functions that manipulate a context and are called whenever that directive is found in an input schema.
For example, the AWS Amplify CLI calls the GraphQL Transform like this:
import { GraphQLTransform } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-transformer-core';import { FeatureFlagProvider, TransformerPluginProvider } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-transformer-interfaces';import { AuthTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-auth-transformer';import { BelongsToTransformer, HasManyTransformer, HasOneTransformer, ManyToManyTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-relational-transformer';import { DefaultValueTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-default-value-transformer';import { FunctionTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-function-transformer';import { HttpTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-http-transformer';import { IndexTransformer, PrimaryKeyTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-index-transformer';import { ModelTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-model-transformer';import { PredictionsTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-predictions-transformer';import { SearchableModelTransformer } from '@aws-amplify/graphql-searchable-transformer';
// This adapter class supports the propagation of feature flag values from the CLI to the transformersclass TransformerFeatureFlagAdapter implements FeatureFlagProvider { getBoolean(featureName: string, defaultValue?: boolean): boolean { throw new Error('Method not implemented.'); } getString(featureName: string, defaultValue?: string): string { throw new Error('Method not implemented.'); } getNumber(featureName: string, defaultValue?: number): number { throw new Error('Method not implemented.'); } getObject(featureName: string, defaultValue?: object): object { throw new Error('Method not implemented.'); }}
const modelTransformer = new ModelTransformer();const indexTransformer = new IndexTransformer();const hasOneTransformer = new HasOneTransformer();const authTransformer = new AuthTransformer({ authConfig: { defaultAuthentication: { authenticationType: 'API_KEY', }, additionalAuthenticationProviders: [ { authenticationType: 'AMAZON_COGNITO_USER_POOLS', userPoolConfig: { userPoolId: 'us-east-1_abcdefghi', } } ] }, addAwsIamAuthInOutputSchema: true,});
const transformers: TransformerPluginProvider[] = [ modelTransformer, new FunctionTransformer(), new HttpTransformer(), new PredictionsTransformer(), new PrimaryKeyTransformer(), indexTransformer, new BelongsToTransformer(), new HasManyTransformer(), hasOneTransformer, new ManyToManyTransformer(modelTransformer, indexTransformer, hasOneTransformer, authTransformer), new DefaultValueTransformer(), authTransformer, new SearchableModelTransformer(),];
const graphQLTransform = new GraphQLTransform ({ transformers, featureFlags: new TransformerFeatureFlagAdapter(), sandboxModeEnabled: false,});
const schema = `type Post @model { id: ID! title: String! comments: [Comment] @hasMany}type Comment @model { id: ID! content: String! post: Post @belongsTo}`;
const { rootStack, stacks, schema } = graphQLTransform.transform(schema);
console.log('Schema compiled successfully.')As shown above the GraphQLTransform class takes a list of transformers and later is able to transform
GraphQL SDL documents into deployment resources, this includes the transformed GraphQL schema, CloudFormation templates, AppSync service resolvers, etc.
The Transform Lifecycle
At a high level the GraphQLTransform takes the input SDL, parses it, and validates the schema is complete and satisfies the directive definitions. It then iterates through the list of transformers passed to the transform when it was created.
In order to support inter communication/dependency between these classes of transformers, the transformation will be done in phases. The table below shows the lifecycle methods that a transformer plugin can implement to handle different phases in the execution of the transformer:
| Lifecycle method | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| before | initialization of the transformer | |
| GraphQL visitor pattern functions | object | for each type that has the directive defined by the transformer |
| interface | for each interface that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| field | for each field that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| argument | for each argument that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| union | for each union that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| enum | for each enum that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| enumValue | for each enumValue that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| scalar | for each scalar that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| input | for each input that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| inputValue | for each inputValue that has the directive defined by the transformer | |
| prepare | transformer register themselves in the TransformerContext (as data provider or data enhancer) | |
| validate | transformer validates the directive arguments | |
| transformSchema | transformer updates/augments the output schema | |
| generateResolvers | transformer generates resources such as resolvers, IAM policies, Tables, etc. | |
| after | cleanup, this lifecycle method is invoked in reverse order for the registered transformers | |
Here is pseudo code for how const { rootStack, stacks, schema } = graphQLTransform.transform(schema); works.
public transform(schema: string): DeploymentResources {
// ...
for (const transformer of this.transformers) { // Run the prepare function one time per transformer. if (isFunction(transformer.before)) { transformer.before(context); }
// Transform each definition in the input document. for (const def of context.inputDocument.definitions as TypeDefinitionNode[]) { switch (def.kind) { case 'ObjectTypeDefinition': this.transformObject(transformer, def, context); // Walk the fields and call field transformers. break; case 'InterfaceTypeDefinition': this.transformInterface(transformer, def, context); // Walk the fields and call field transformers. break; case 'ScalarTypeDefinition': this.transformScalar(transformer, def, context); break; case 'UnionTypeDefinition': this.transformUnion(transformer, def, context); break; case 'EnumTypeDefinition': this.transformEnum(transformer, def, context); break; case 'InputObjectTypeDefinition': this.transformInputObject(transformer, def, context); break; // Note: Extension and operation definition nodes are not supported. default: continue; } } } }
// Validate for (const transformer of this.transformers) { if (isFunction(transformer.validate)) { transformer.validate(context); } }
// Prepare for (const transformer of this.transformers) { if (isFunction(transformer.prepare)) { transformer.prepare(context); } }
// Transform Schema for (const transformer of this.transformers) { if (isFunction(transformer.transformSchema)) { transformer.transformSchema(context); } }
// After is called in the reverse order as if they were popping off a stack. let reverseThroughTransformers = this.transformers.length - 1; while (reverseThroughTransformers >= 0) { const transformer = this.transformers[reverseThroughTransformers]; if (isFunction(transformer.after)) { transformer.after(context); }
reverseThroughTransformers -= 1; }
// ...
// Return the deployment resources. // In the future there will likely be a formatter concept here. return this.synthesize(context);}The Transformer Context
The transformer context serves like an accumulator that is manipulated by transformers. See the code to see what methods are available to you.
For now, the transformer only support CloudFormation and uses AWS CDK to create CloudFormation resources in code.
Adding Custom GraphQL Transformers to the Project
To add a custom GraphQL transformer to the list of transformers, they need to be registered within the project. This registration can be done by adding an entry to transform.conf.json file which can be found in the amplify/backend/api/<api-name> folder. A transformer can be registered by adding a file URI to the JavaScript file that implements the transformer or by specifying the npm package name. The transformer modules will be dynamically imported during the transform process.
Example transform.conf.json file
{ "transformers":[ "some-transformer-via-npm", "file:///some/absolute/local/module" ]}Example
As an example let's walk through how we implemented the @model transformer. The first thing to do is to define a directive for your transformer.
Note: Some parts of the code will not be shown for brevity.
export const directiveDefinition = /* GraphQL */ ` directive @model( queries: ModelQueryMap mutations: ModelMutationMap subscriptions: ModelSubscriptionMap timestamps: TimestampConfiguration ) on OBJECT`;Our @model directive can be applied to OBJECT type definitions and automatically adds CRUD functionality, timestamp fields to an API. For example, we might write:
type Post @model { id: ID! title: String!}The next step after defining the directive is to implement the transformer's business logic. The @aws-amplify/graphql-transformer-core package makes this a little easier
by exporting a common class through which we may define transformers. Users extend the TransformerPluginBase class and implement the required functions.
Note: In this example
@modelextended from a higher level class,TransformerModelBase.
export class ModelTransformer extends TransformerModelBase implements TransformerModelProvider { // ...}Since your directiveDefinition only specifies OBJECT in its on condition, we have to implement the object method and some other
lifecycle methods like validate, prepare and transformSchema to have a fully functioning transformer. You may implement before and after methods which will be called once at the beginning and end respectively of the transformation process.
/** * Users extend the TransformerPluginBase class and implement the relevant functions. */export class ModelTransformer extends TransformerModelBase implements TransformerModelProvider { constructor(options: ModelTransformerOptions = {}) { super('amplify-model-transformer', directiveDefinition); }
// ...}The following snippet shows the prepare method implementation which takes all the type from the GraphQL schema and registers the transformer as a data source provider. Data source providers are used by transformers that are creating persistent resources like DynamoDB tables in this case. prepare is the place to register data enhancers as well. Data enhancers are used by transformers that enriching existing types or operations by adding or modifying fields, arguments, etc.
prepare = (context: TransformerPrepareStepContextProvider) => { for (const modelTypeName of this.typesWithModelDirective) { const type = context.output.getObject(modelTypeName); context.providerRegistry.registerDataSourceProvider(type!, this); } };For the full source code of the @model transformer, go here.
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