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NestJS - GraphQL - Prisma

Nest Logo Nest Logo Nest Logo
Example backend NestJS - GraphQL project using Prisma 2 & PostgreSQL

Table of contents

Click here to expand

Features

I create this repo for learning, practicing and understanding how to work NestJS, GraphQL & Prisma together. Project also how to build a clean architecture scalable & testable.

Project inspired from Nestjs-prisma-starter of fivethree-team.

Features of project:

  • GraphQL with apollo-server-express, solution code first and using GraphQL play ground
  • Using PostgreQL for database and Prisma 2 as ORM
  • CRUD operations, database relationship, pagination
  • NestJS Authentication with Redis JWT
  • Refresh token solution
  • Role base system: Admin & User
  • Database seeding
  • Multi-languages with I18n
  • Rating limit API with express-rate-limit
  • Email verification
  • Using custom exceptions filter, custom decorators
  • Docker solution for PostgreSQL, PGAdmin, Prisma
  • Testing: Unit testing, Integration testing, End to End testing (working in progress)
  • CI-CD with Travis-ci, Github actions
  • Solve N+1 problem graphql (using @paljs/plugin)

Prerequisites

If you want to develop project only on your local, your need have:

If you don't want to install all these tools, you can check the docker solution below.

Getting started

Installation

  • Clone project from this repository

  • Create and update .env file for variables environment

    $ cp .env.example .env

    Then modify the variables as you want.

    Example of .env files:

    SERVER_PORT=1776
    DB_CONNECTOR=postgres
    DB_HOST=postgres
    DB_USER=postgres
    DB_PASSWORD=postgres
    DB_DATABASE=nest_graphql
    DB_PORT=5432
    PGADMIN_DEFAULT_EMAIL=[email protected]
    PGADMIN_DEFAULT_PASSWORD=admin
    
    
    DATABASE_URL=postgresql://${DB_USER}:${DB_PASSWORD}@${DB_HOST}:${DB_PORT}/${DB_DATABASE}?schema=public
  • Install dependencies

    $ yarn
    # or npm install
  • Generate prisma schema Make sure you generate prisma schema before run server:

    $ yarn prisma generate

    Check Prisma Client for more details how prisma generate works

  • Run server locally

    $ yarn start:dev
    # or npm run start:dev

Command lines

Other useful commands to work with project:

  • Run production

    $ yarn start:prod
  • Run testing:

    $ yarn test # for running the the Unit $ integration testing
    $ yarn test:e2e  # for running end to end testing
  • Prisma migrate Prisma migrate is an imperative database schema migration tool that enables you to make changes to your database schema.

    Migrate auto your schema:

    $ yarn prisma migrate dev --preview-feature

    Migrate with the name schema:

    $ yarn prisma migrate dev --name initDb --preview-feature

    When we run prisma generate or prisma migrate, prisma/cli will try connect with your database first. So you need to connect successfully with your database through your variable DATABASE_URL given in prisma.schema:

    For example, you have configuration in your prisma.schema like below:

    // prisma.schema
    datasource db {
      provider = "postgresql"
      url      = env("DATABASE_URL")
    }

    So you need to provide this value in .env file:

    DB_HOST=postgres
    DB_USER=postgres
    DB_PASSWORD=postgres
    DB_DATABASE=nest_graphql
    DB_PORT=5432
    DATABASE_URL="postgresql://${DB_USER}:${DB_PASSWORD}@${DB_HOST}:${DB_PORT}/${DB_DATABASE}?schema=public"
    
    

    Check more information at Prisma migrate

  • Seeding database(optional)

    $ yarn seed
  • Prisma studio A Visual Interface for Your Database Prisma Studio helps developers manage their application data. We're excited to share that it is now part of the stable Prisma release. Try out the online demo or connect it to your existing database.

    So with Prisma studio, you maybe don't need pgAdmin anymore.

    prisma-studio

    Ton run Prisma studio:

    $ yarn prisma:studio
    # or npx prisma studio
    # or yarn prisma studio

    Then check out at http://localhost:5555

  • Precommit with husky & lint-staged Two awesome packages help us to improve our git commits. We can run linters and check test before commit changed files.

    So now, each time when we make a commit:

    $ git add .
    # or git add files
    $ git commit -m "Message commit"

    All files in your projects will be check and fix automatically with Eslint, Prettier. You can also add run test in precommit command to check test before commit.

    Hint: Sometime, if you need to commit your code and you don't want to verify them. You can do with flag --no-verify:

    $ git commit - "Message commit" --no-verify

    You can check more other commands in section scripts of package.json.

Project structure

Tree project

Click to expand sections
.
├── docker
│   ├── Dockerfile
│   ├── Dockerfile.prod
│   └── nginx
│       ├── Dockerfile.nginx
│       └── nginx.conf
├── docker-compose.production.yml
├── docker-compose.test.yml
├── docker-compose.yml
├── graphql
├── jest.config.js
├── LICENSE
├── nest-cli.json
├── package.json
├── prisma
│   ├── migrations
│   ├── schema.prisma
│   └── seed.ts
├── README.md
├── src
│   ├── app
│   │   ├── app.controller.ts
│   │   ├── app.module.ts
│   │   ├── app.resolver.ts
│   │   ├── app.service.ts
│   ├── common
│   │   ├── abstract-model
│   │   ├── configs
│   │   ├── @generated
│   │   │   ├── category
│   │   │   ├── post
│   │   │   ├── prisma
│   │   │   ├── profile
│   │   │   └── user
│   │   └── types
│   │       └── node.d.ts
│   ├── main.ts
│   ├── modules
│   │   ├── category
│   │   ├── email
│   │   ├── post
│   │   ├── prisma
│   │   ├── profile
│   │   └── user
│   └── schema.gql
├── test
│   ├── app.e2e-spec.ts
│   └── jest-e2e.json
├── tsconfig.build.json
├── tsconfig.json
└── yarn.lock

Structure details

Click here to expand section
  • src:
    • app: contains NestJS app files
    • common: contains shared or general files, type, model, config ... of application
    • modules: contain modules (NestJS) of projects. We separate module for each unit. Each module contains its own data like: model, interface, dto, service, controller, resolver, repository, types...
      • model
      • service
      • resolver
      • controller
      • module
      • interfaces
      • dto
      • types
      • test
      • decorator
      • args
    • main.ts: main file to run server
  • .vscode: debug configuration in vscode
  • docker: contains all files related Docker as Dockerfile, nginx (except docker-compose)
  • prisma: contains prisma.shema, migrations, and seeding
  • graphql: contains example queries & mutations of graphql for project
  • test: for end to end testing
  • docker-compose*.yml: docker compose files to run different environment docker
  • .env*: different environment variables files
  • .eslint*, prettier*, .editorconfig: Style & format code
  • jest.config.js: configuration for testing with jest
  • package.json
  • tsconfig.json: configuration for TypeScript
  • .circle-ci.yml, .travis.yml, .github/workflows: CI-CD

Resolvers of Project (Endpoints)

  • Todo

Working in progress: Resolvers or Endpoints of project


Docker

To start working with Docker, you need have Docker installed locally and also the package manage as npm ro yarn

In the development mode, we have already PostgreSQL and PgAdmin4 in our docker-compose file. You can use the same values environment in your .env like before.

Command line

I think all of you know already how to run docker with docker-compose: We have some simple commands:

$ docker-compose build # Build all services in docker-compose.yml file
$ docker-compose up # Run all services in docker-compose.yml
$ docker-compose down # Stop all services
$ docker-compose up nest-api # Run only a  service

But that is not the think I want to say here, we need work with docker like we work locally as prisma generate, prisma migration, seeding, run test ... In that case how it work?

Well we will run directly docker-compose file for our service nest-api and with yarn or npm we use as when we work locally.

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run --rm nest-api yarn prisma:generate
  • -f: file --> using with the name docker-compose.***.yml file
  • --rm: flag to stop automatically docker service after executing.
  • nest-api: name service of our server (specify in docker-compose file)
  • yarn prisma:generate: command that we want to execute

But if you always write command like that, it will be take a lot of time and difficult to remember. So we will prepare theme in section scripts of package.json.

Scripts of package.json

{
  "script":{
    // .....
    "docker:build": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml build --no-cache",
    "docker:prisma:generate": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run --rm nest-api yarn prisma:generate",
    "docker:migrate": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run --rm nest-api yarn migrate:dev",
    "docker:seed": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run --rm nest-api yarn seed",
    "docker:prisma:studio": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run nest-api -d yarn prisma:studio",
    "docker:start:dev": "docker-compose up",
    "docker:test:seed": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.test.yml run --rm nest-api yarn seed",
    "docker:test:migrate": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.test.yml run --rm nest-api yarn migrate:dev",
    "docker:test:build": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.test.yml build --no-cache",
    "docker:test:run": "docker-compose -f docker-compose.test.yml run --rm nest-api yarn test"

  }
}

--> You can write your own scripts to work better with docker.

Hint: For this moment integration testing or end to end testing with Prisma is not flexible. Because env(DATABASE_URI) take the variable only in .env file. I don't want to change manually it when I want to run integration test and e2e test, so I think Docker is very good solution to solve this issue.

Hint: You can check Portainer tool to manage easier multiple docker services. I think you will find it useful too.

PgAdmin4

A little information to start with docker PgAdmin.

PgAdmin4 is database management tool for PostgreSQL. Because it is a web application based, so PgAdmin is work really well with docker. We can access directly from our browser.

After running successfully server with docker, we will open http://localhost:8080 (Port 8080 is port specified for PgAdmin in docker-compose file).

If you remember, in .env file, we have the variables of PgAdmin:

[email protected]
PGADMIN_DEFAULT_PASSWORD=admin

We will use these credentials to connect our PgAdmin.

pgadmin pgadmin

Todo

  • CI-CD
  • Update Auth
  • Multi-language with i18n options
  • Solve N+1 problem graphql (using @paljs/plugin) (make sure use prisma @id as @cuid(), not @uuid()). @uuid() does not work when we query with Prisma select with join table
  • Mailer service
  • Integrate with AWS service (S3, RDS)
  • Update In-memory caching or caching with Redis ?
  • Integration & end to end testing
  • Enhanced docker, build images ?
  • Add Event/Subscribers module ?
  • Integrate with REST API ? --> create controllers
  • ...

Thanks