Skip to main content
Version: 2.x

Mocking GraphQL Requests

Testing and building components without having to rely on the API is a good best practice. Redwood makes this possible via mockGraphQLQuery and mockGraphQLMutation.

The argument signatures of these functions are identical. Internally, they target different operation types based on their suffix.

mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (variables, { ctx, req }) => {
ctx.delay(1500) // pause for 1.5 seconds
return {
userProfile: {
id: 42,
name: 'peterp',
}
}
})

The operation name

The first argument is the operation name; it's used to associate mock-data with a query or a mutation:

query UserProfileQuery { /*...*/ }
mockGraphQLQuery('UserProfileQuery', { /*... */ })
mutation SetUserProfile { /*...*/ }
mockGraphQLMutation('SetUserProfile', { /*... */ })

Operation names should be unique.

The mock-data

The second argument can be an object or a function:

mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.delay(1500) // pause for 1.5 seconds
return {
userProfile: {
id: 42,
name: 'peterp',
}
}
})

If it's a function, it'll receive two arguments: variables and { ctx }. The ctx object allows you to make adjustments to the response with the following functions:

  • ctx.status(code: number, text?: string): set a http response code:
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (_variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.status(404)
})

  • ctx.delay(numOfMS): delay the response
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (_variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.delay(1500) // pause for 1.5 seconds
return { id: 42 }
})

  • ctx.errors(e: GraphQLError[]): return an error object in the response:
mockGraphQLQuery('OperationName', (_variables, { ctx }) => {
ctx.errors([{ message: 'Uh, oh!' }])
})

TypeScript

You can get stricter types by passing types when mocking the query, mutation and its variables:

import type { UserProfileQuery, UserProfileQueryVariables } from 'types/graphql'

mockGraphQLQuery<UserProfileQuery, UserProfileQueryVariables>('UserProfileQuery', { /*... */ })

or, you can manually pass your own types:

mockGraphQLQuery<{
userProfile: {
id: number,
name: string,
}
}>('UserProfileQuery', { /*... */ })

Global mock-requests vs local mock-requests

Placing your mock-requests in "<name>.mock.js" will cause them to be globally scoped in Storybook, making them available to all stories.

All stories?

In React, it's often the case that a single component will have a deeply nested component that perform a GraphQL query or mutation. Having to mock those requests for every story can be painful and tedious.

Using mockGraphQLQuery or mockGraphQLMutation inside a story is locally scoped and will overwrite a globally-scoped mock-request.

We suggest always starting with globally-scoped mocks.

Mocking a Cell's QUERY

To mock a Cell's QUERY, find the file ending with with .mock.js in your Cell's directory. This file exports a value named standard, which is the mock-data that will be returned for your Cell's QUERY.

UserProfileCell/UserProfileCell.js
export const QUERY = gql`
query UserProfileQuery {
userProfile {
id
}
}
`

// UserProfileCell/UserProfileCell.mock.js
export const standard = {
userProfile: {
id: 42
}
}

Since the value assigned to standard is the mock-data associated with the QUERY, modifying the QUERY means you also need to modify the mock-data.

UserProfileCell/UserProfileCell.js
export const QUERY = gql`
query UserProfileQuery {
userProfile {
id
+ name
}
}
`

// UserProfileCell/UserProfileCell.mock.js
export const standard = {
userProfile: {
id: 42,
+ name: 'peterp',
}
}

Behind the scenes

Redwood uses the value associated with standard as the second argument to mockGraphQLQuery.