Shopify Graphql
Less painful way to work with Shopify Graphql API in Ruby. This library is a tiny wrapper on top of shopify_api gem. It provides a simple API for Graphql calls, better error handling, and Graphql webhooks integration.
Features
- Simple API for Graphql queries and mutations
- Conventions for organizing Graphql code
- ActiveResource-like error handling
- Graphql and user error handlers
- Auto-conversion of responses to OpenStruct
- Graphql webhooks integration for Rails
- Wrappers for Graphql rate limit extensions
- Built-in calls for common Graphql calls
Dependencies
shopify_apiv10+shopify_appv19+
For
shopify_api< v10 use0-4-stablebranch.
Installation
Add shopify_graphql to your Gemfile:
bundle add shopify_graphql
This gem relies on shopify_app for authentication so no extra setup is required. But you still need to wrap your Graphql calls with shop.with_shopify_session:
shop.with_shopify_session do
# your calls to graphql
end
Conventions
To better organize your Graphql code use the following conventions:
- Create wrappers for all of your queries and mutations to isolate them
- Put all Graphql-related code into
app/graphqlfolder - Use
Fieldssuffix to name fields (egAppSubscriptionFields) - Use
Getprefix to name queries (egGetProductsorGetAppSubscription) - Use imperative to name mutations (eg
CreateUsageSubscriptionorBulkUpdateVariants)
Usage examples
Simple query
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/get_product.rb
class GetProduct
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
query($id: ID!) {
product(id: $id) {
handle
title
description
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call(id:)
response = execute(QUERY, id: id)
response.data = response.data.product
response
end
end
Usage:
product = GetProduct.call(id: "gid://shopify/Product/12345").data
puts product.handle
puts product.title
Query with custom headers
Click to expand
You can pass custom headers to any GraphQL query or mutation by using the `headers` parameter. A common use case is setting the `Accept-Language` header to retrieve content in specific languages:# Pass custom headers to a direct GraphQL call to get French content
response = ShopifyGraphql.execute(QUERY, headers: { "Accept-Language" => "fr" })
# Or create a language-aware query wrapper
class GetProduct
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
query($id: ID!) {
product(id: $id) {
id
title
description
seo {
title
description
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call(id:, language: nil)
headers = language ? { "Accept-Language" => language } : nil
response = execute(QUERY, headers: headers, id: id)
response.data = response.data.product
response
end
end
# Then use it to get content in different languages
french_product = GetProduct.call(
id: "gid://shopify/Product/12345",
language: "fr"
).data
puts french_product.title # => "Le Produit"
puts french_product.description # => "Description en français"
# Get content in Japanese
japanese_product = GetProduct.call(
id: "gid://shopify/Product/12345",
language: "ja"
).data
puts japanese_product.title # => "商品名"
puts japanese_product.description # => "商品の説明"
The Accept-Language header tells Shopify which language to return the content in. This is particularly useful for:
- Retrieving translated content for products, collections, and pages
- Building multi-language storefronts
- Showing localized SEO content
You can also use custom headers for other purposes like passing metadata or context with your GraphQL requests.
Query with data parsing
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/get_product.rb
class GetProduct
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
query($id: ID!) {
product(id: $id) {
id
title
featuredImage {
source: url
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call(id:)
response = execute(QUERY, id: id)
response.data = parse_data(response.data.product)
response
end
private
def parse_data(data)
OpenStruct.new(
id: data.id,
title: data.title,
featured_image: data.featuredImage&.source
)
end
end
Usage:
product = GetProduct.call(id: "gid://shopify/Product/12345").data
puts product.id
puts product.title
puts product.featured_image
Query with fields
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/product_fields.rb
class ProductFields
FRAGMENT = <<~GRAPHQL
fragment ProductFields on Product {
id
title
featuredImage {
source: url
}
}
GRAPHQL
def self.parse(data)
OpenStruct.new(
id: data.id,
title: data.title,
featured_image: data.featuredImage&.source
)
end
end
# app/graphql/get_product.rb
class GetProduct
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
#{ProductFields::FRAGMENT}
query($id: ID!) {
product(id: $id) {
... ProductFields
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call(id:)
response = execute(QUERY, id: id)
response.data = ProductFields.parse(response.data.product)
response
end
end
Usage:
product = GetProduct.call(id: "gid://shopify/Product/12345").data
puts product.id
puts product.title
puts product.featured_image
Simple collection query
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/get_products.rb
class GetProducts
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
query {
products(first: 5) {
edges {
node {
id
title
featuredImage {
source: url
}
}
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call
response = execute(QUERY)
response.data = parse_data(response.data.products.edges)
response
end
private
def parse_data(data)
return [] if data.blank?
data.compact.map do |edge|
OpenStruct.new(
id: edge.node.id,
title: edge.node.title,
featured_image: edge.node.featuredImage&.source
)
end
end
end
Usage:
products = GetProducts.call.data
products.each do |product|
puts product.id
puts product.title
puts product.featured_image
end
Collection query with fields
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/product_fields.rb
class ProductFields
FRAGMENT = <<~GRAPHQL
fragment ProductFields on Product {
id
title
featuredImage {
source: url
}
}
GRAPHQL
def self.parse(data)
OpenStruct.new(
id: data.id,
title: data.title,
featured_image: data.featuredImage&.source
)
end
end
# app/graphql/get_products.rb
class GetProducts
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
#{ProductFields::FRAGMENT}
query {
products(first: 5) {
edges {
cursor
node {
... ProductFields
}
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call
response = execute(QUERY)
response.data = parse_data(response.data.products.edges)
response
end
private
def parse_data(data)
return [] if data.blank?
data.compact.map do |edge|
OpenStruct.new(
cursor: edge.cursor,
node: ProductFields.parse(edge.node)
)
end
end
end
Usage:
products = GetProducts.call.data
products.each do |edge|
puts edge.cursor
puts edge.node.id
puts edge.node.title
puts edge.node.featured_image
end
Collection query with pagination
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/product_fields.rb
class ProductFields
FRAGMENT = <<~GRAPHQL
fragment ProductFields on Product {
id
title
featuredImage {
source: url
}
}
GRAPHQL
def self.parse(data)
OpenStruct.new(
id: data.id,
title: data.title,
featured_image: data.featuredImage&.source
)
end
end
# app/graphql/get_products.rb
class GetProducts
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
LIMIT = 5
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
#{ProductFields::FRAGMENT}
query($cursor: String) {
products(first: #{LIMIT}, after: $cursor) {
edges {
node {
... ProductFields
}
}
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
endCursor
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call
response = execute(QUERY)
data = parse_data(response.data.products.edges)
while response.data.products.pageInfo.hasNextPage
response = execute(QUERY, cursor: response.data.products.pageInfo.endCursor)
data += parse_data(response.data.products.edges)
end
response.data = data
response
end
private
def parse_data(data)
return [] if data.blank?
data.compact.map do |edge|
ProductFields.parse(edge.node)
end
end
end
Usage:
products = GetProducts.call.data
products.each do |product|
puts product.id
puts product.title
puts product.featured_image
end
Collection query with block
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/product_fields.rb
class ProductFields
FRAGMENT = <<~GRAPHQL
fragment ProductFields on Product {
id
title
featuredImage {
source: url
}
}
GRAPHQL
def self.parse(data)
OpenStruct.new(
id: data.id,
title: data.title,
featured_image: data.featuredImage&.source
)
end
end
# app/graphql/get_products.rb
class GetProducts
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
LIMIT = 5
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
#{ProductFields::FRAGMENT}
query($cursor: String) {
products(first: #{LIMIT}, after: $cursor) {
edges {
node {
... ProductFields
}
}
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
endCursor
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call(&block)
response = execute(QUERY)
response.data.products.edges.each do |edge|
block.call ProductFields.parse(edge.node)
end
while response.data.products.pageInfo.hasNextPage
response = execute(QUERY, cursor: response.data.products.pageInfo.endCursor)
response.data.products.edges.each do |edge|
block.call ProductFields.parse(edge.node)
end
end
response
end
end
Usage:
GetProducts.call do |product|
puts product.id
puts product.title
puts product.featured_image
end
Collection query with nested pagination
Click to expand
Definition:# app/graphql/get_collections_with_products.rb
class GetCollectionsWithProducts
include ShopifyGraphql::Query
COLLECTIONS_LIMIT = 1
PRODUCTS_LIMIT = 25
QUERY = <<~GRAPHQL
query ($cursor: String) {
collections(first: #{COLLECTIONS_LIMIT}, after: $cursor) {
edges {
node {
id
title
products(first: #{PRODUCTS_LIMIT}) {
edges {
node {
id
}
}
}
}
}
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
endCursor
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call
response = execute(QUERY)
data = parse_data(response.data.collections.edges)
while response.data.collections.pageInfo.hasNextPage
response = execute(QUERY, cursor: response.data.collections.pageInfo.endCursor)
data += parse_data(response.data.collections.edges)
end
response.data = data
response
end
private
def parse_data(data)
return [] if data.blank?
data.compact.map do |edge|
OpenStruct.new(
id: edge.node.id,
title: edge.node.title,
products: edge.node.products.edges.map do |product_edge|
OpenStruct.new(id: product_edge.node.id)
end
)
end
end
end
Usage:
collections = GetCollectionsWithProducts.call.data
collections.each do |collection|
puts collection.id
puts collection.title
collection.products.each do |product|
puts product.id
end
end
Mutation
Click to expand
Definition:
# app/graphql/update_product.rb
class UpdateProduct
include ShopifyGraphql::Mutation
MUTATION = <<~GRAPHQL
mutation($input: ProductInput!) {
productUpdate(input: $input) {
product {
id
title
}
userErrors {
field
message
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
def call(input:)
response = execute(MUTATION, input: input)
response.data = response.data.productUpdate
handle_user_errors(response.data)
response
end
end
Usage:
response = UpdateProduct.call(input: { id: "gid://shopify/Product/123", title: "New title" })
puts response.data.product.title
Graphql call without wrapper
Click to expand
PRODUCT_UPDATE_MUTATION = <<~GRAPHQL
mutation($input: ProductInput!) {
productUpdate(input: $input) {
product {
id
title
}
userErrors {
field
message
}
}
}
GRAPHQL
response = ShopifyGraphql.execute(
PRODUCT_UPDATE_MUTATION,
input: { id: "gid://shopify/Product/12345", title: "New title" }
)
response = response.data.productUpdate
ShopifyGraphql.handle_user_errors(response)
Built-in Graphql calls
-
ShopifyGraphql::CurrentShop:Equivalent to
ShopifyAPI::Shop.current. Usage example:shop = ShopifyGraphql::CurrentShop.call puts shop.nameOr with locales (requires
read_localesscope):shop = ShopifyGraphql::CurrentShop.call(with_locales: true) puts shop.primary_locale puts shop.shop_locales -
ShopifyGraphql::CancelSubscription -
ShopifyGraphql::CreateRecurringSubscription -
ShopifyGraphql::CreateUsageSubscription -
ShopifyGraphql::GetAppSubscription -
ShopifyGraphql::UpsertPrivateMetafield -
ShopifyGraphql::DeletePrivateMetafield -
ShopifyGraphql::CreateBulkMutation -
ShopifyGraphql::CreateBulkQuery -
ShopifyGraphql::CreateStagedUploads -
ShopifyGraphql::GetBulkOperation
Built-in wrappers are located in app/graphql/shopify_graphql folder. You can use them directly in your apps or as an example to create your own wrappers.
Rate limits
The gem exposes Graphql rate limit extensions in response object:
points_leftpoints_limitpoints_restore_ratequery_cost
And adds a helper to check if available points lower than threshold (useful for implementing API backoff):
points_maxed?(threshold: 100)
Usage example:
response = GetProduct.call(id: "gid://shopify/Product/PRODUCT_GID")
response.points_left # => 1999
response.points_limit # => 2000.0
response.points_restore_rate # => 100.0
response.query_cost # => 1
response.points_maxed?(threshold: 100) # => false
Custom apps
In custom apps, if you're using shopify_app gem, then the setup is similar public apps. Except Shop model which must include class method to make queries to your store:
# app/models/shop.rb
class Shop < ActiveRecord::Base
include ShopifyApp::ShopSessionStorageWithScopes
def self.system
new(
shopify_domain: "MYSHOPIFY_DOMAIN",
shopify_token: "API_ACCESS_TOKEN_FOR_CUSTOM_APP"
)
end
end
Using this method, you should be able to make API calls like this:
Shop.system.with_shopify_session do
GetOrder.call(id: order.shopify_gid)
end
If you're not using shopify_app gem, then you need to setup ShopifyAPI::Context manually:
# config/initializers/shopify_api.rb
ShopifyAPI::Context.setup(
api_key: "XXX",
api_secret_key: "XXXX",
scope: "read_orders,read_products",
is_embedded: false,
api_version: "2024-07",
is_private: true,
)
And create another method in Shop model to make queries to your store:
# app/models/shop.rb
def Shop
def self.with_shopify_session(&block)
ShopifyAPI::Auth::Session.temp(
shop: "MYSHOPIFY_DOMAIN",
access_token: "API_ACCESS_TOKEN_FOR_CUSTOM_APP",
&block
)
end
end
Using this method, you should be able to make API calls like this:
Shop.with_shopify_session do
GetOrder.call(id: order.shopify_gid)
end
Graphql webhooks (deprecated)
[!WARNING] ShopifyGraphql webhooks are deprecated and will be removed in v3.0. Please use
shopify_appgem for handling webhooks. Seeshopify_appdocumentation for more details.
The gem has built-in support for Graphql webhooks (similar to shopify_app). To enable it add the following config to config/initializers/shopify_app.rb:
ShopifyGraphql.configure do |config|
# Webhooks
webhooks_prefix = "https://#{Rails.configuration.app_host}/graphql_webhooks"
config.webhook_jobs_namespace = 'shopify/webhooks'
config.webhook_enabled_environments = ['development', 'staging', 'production']
config.webhooks = [
{ topic: 'SHOP_UPDATE', address: "#{webhooks_prefix}/shop_update" },
{ topic: 'APP_SUBSCRIPTIONS_UPDATE', address: "#{webhooks_prefix}/app_subscriptions_update" },
{ topic: 'APP_UNINSTALLED', address: "#{webhooks_prefix}/app_uninstalled" },
]
end
And add the following routes to config/routes.rb:
mount ShopifyGraphql::Engine, at: '/'
To register defined webhooks you need to call ShopifyGraphql::UpdateWebhooksJob. You can call it manually or use AfterAuthenticateJob from shopify_app:
# config/initializers/shopify_app.rb
ShopifyApp.configure do |config|
# ...
config.after_authenticate_job = {job: "AfterAuthenticateJob", inline: true}
end
# app/jobs/after_install_job.rb
class AfterInstallJob < ApplicationJob
def perform(shop)
# ...
update_webhooks(shop)
end
def update_webhooks(shop)
ShopifyGraphql::UpdateWebhooksJob.perform_later(
shop_domain: shop.shopify_domain,
shop_token: shop.shopify_token
)
end
end
To handle webhooks create jobs in app/jobs/webhooks folder. The gem will automatically call them when new webhooks are received. The job name should match the webhook topic name. For example, to handle APP_UNINSTALLED webhook create app/jobs/webhooks/app_uninstalled_job.rb:
class Webhooks::AppUninstalledJob < ApplicationJob
queue_as :default
def perform(shop_domain:, webhook:)
shop = Shop.find_by!(shopify_domain: shop_domain)
# handle shop uninstall
end
end
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.