4

I was wondering if there's an elegant way to trigger the refetch of a query in react-apollo when a subscription receives new data (The data is not important here and will be the same as previous one). I just use subscription here as a notification trigger that tells Query to refetch.

I tried both using Subscription component and subscribeToMore to call "refetch" method in Query's child component but both methods cause infinite re-fetches.

NOTE: I'm using react-apollo v2.1.3 and apollo-client v2.3.5

here's the simplified version of code

<Query
  query={GET_QUERY}
  variables={{ blah: 'test' }}
>
  {({ data, refetch }) => (
    <CustomComponent data={data} />
    //put subscription here? It'll cause infinite re-rendering/refetch loop
  )}
<Query>

2 Answers 2

3

Finally I figured it out myself with the inspiration from Pedro's answer.

Thoughts: the problem I'm facing is that I want to call Query's refetch method in Subscription, however, both Query and Subscription components can only be accessed in render method. That is the root cause of infinite refetch/re-rendering. To solve the problem, we need to move the subscription logic out of render method and put it somewhere in a lifecycle method (i.e. componentDidMount) where it won't be called again after a refetch is triggered. Then I decided to use graphql hoc instead of Query component so that I can inject props like refetch, subscribeToMore at the top level of my component, which makes them accessible from any life cycle methods.

Code sample (simplified version):

class CustomComponent extends React.Component {
  componentDidMount() {
    const { data: { refetch, subscribeToMore }} = this.props;

    this.unsubscribe = subscribeToMore({
      document: <SUBSCRIBE_GRAPHQL>,
      variables: { test: 'blah' },
      updateQuery: (prev) => {
        refetch();
        return prev;
      },     
    });
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    this.unsubscribe();
  }

  render() {
    const { data: queryResults, loading, error } } = this.props;

    if (loading || error) return null;

    return <WhatEverYouWant with={queryResults} />
  }
}

export default graphql(GET_QUERY)(CustomComponent);
2
  • Can you describe what is happening on that last export default graphql(GET_QUERY)(CustomComponent); line
    – Jonathan
    Aug 15, 2018 at 12:14
  • @Jonathan Sure, graphql() creates a high-order component (HOC) that wraps the original CustomComponet and injects a couple props (e.g. data, loading, error, etc) into it. You can consider it as a shorthand for using <Query> component in render method in my original question. Here's the apollo's doc about how to use method graphql: apollographql.com/docs/react/api/react-apollo.html#graphql
    – wei
    Aug 15, 2018 at 22:02
2

It's possible if you use componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate in the component rendered by the Subscription render props function.

The example uses recompose higher order components to avoid too much boilerplating. Would look something like:

 /*
 * Component rendered when there's data from subscription
 */
export const SubscriptionHandler = compose(
  // This would be the query you want to refetch
  graphql(QUERY_GQL, { 
    name: 'queryName'
  }),
  lifecycle({

    refetchQuery() {
      // condition to refetch based on subscription data received
      if (this.props.data) {  
        this.props.queryName.refetch()
      }
    },

    componentDidMount() {
      this.refetchQuery();
    },

    componentDidUpdate() {
      this.refetchQuery();
    }
  })
)(UIComponent);


/*
 * Component that creates the subscription operation
 */
const Subscriber = ({ username }) => {
  return (
    <Subscription
      subscription={SUBSCRIPTION_GQL}
      variables={{ ...variables }}
    >
      {({ data, loading, error }) => {
        if (loading || error) {
          return null;
        }
        return <SubscriptionHandler data={data} />;
      }}
    </Subscription>
  );
});

Another way of accomplishing this while totally separating Query and Subscription components, avoiding loops on re-rendering is using Apollo Automatic Cache updates:

                 +------------------------------------------+
                 |                                          |
    +----------->|  Apollo Store                            |
    |            |                                          |
    |            +------------------------------+-----------+
    +                                           |
client.query                                    |
    ^            +-----------------+  +---------v-----------+
    |            |                 |  |                     |
    |            | Subscription    |  | Query               |
    |            |                 |  |                     |
    |            |                 |  | +-----------------+ |
    |            |  renderNothing  |  | |                 | |
    +------------+                 |  | | Component       | |
                 |                 |  | |                 | |
                 |                 |  | +-----------------+ |
                 |                 |  |                     |
                 +-----------------+  +---------------------+
const Component =() => (
  <div>
    <Subscriber />
    <QueryComponent />
  </div>
)

/*
 * Component that only renders Query data 
 * updated automatically on query cache updates thanks to 
 * apollo automatic cache updates
 */
const QueryComponent = graphql(QUERY_GQL, { 
  name: 'queryName'
})(() => {  
  return (
    <JSX />
  );
});

/*
 * Component that creates the subscription operation
 */
const Subscriber = ({ username }) => {
  return (
    <Subscription
      subscription={SUBSCRIPTION_GQL}
      variables={{ ...variables }}
    >
      {({ data, loading, error }) => {
        if (loading || error) {
          return null;
        }
        return <SubscriptionHandler data={data} />;
      }}
    </Subscription>
  );
});

/*
* Component rendered when there's data from subscription
*/
const SubscriptionHandler = compose(

  // This would be the query you want to refetch
  lifecycle({

    refetchQuery() {
      // condition to refetch based on subscription data received
      if (this.props.data) {  
        var variables = {
            ...this.props.data // if you need subscription data for the variables
        };

        // Fetch the query, will automatically update the cache
        // and cause QueryComponent re-render
        this.client.query(QUERY_GQL, {
          variables: {
            ...variables
          }
        });
      }
    },

    componentDidMount() {
      this.refetchQuery();
    },

    componentDidUpdate() {
      this.refetchQuery();
    }
  }),        
  renderNothing
)();


/*
* Component that creates the subscription operation
*/
const Subscriber = ({ username }) => {
    return (
        <Subscription
        subscription={SUBSCRIPTION_GQL}
        variables={{ ...variables }}
        >
        {({ data, loading, error }) => {
            if (loading || error) {
            return null;
            }
            return <SubscriptionHandler data={data} />;
        }}
        </Subscription>
    );
});

Note: compose and lifecycle are recompose methods that enable easier a cleaner higher order composition.

3
  • Thanks Pedro! I've updated my answer and provide a simplified code snippet. I think your suggestion is to wrap Query component into Subscription which will make the first rendering of UIComponent empty. Also, if the data received from subscription stays the same, I don't think SubscriptionHandler will update.
    – wei
    Jul 24, 2018 at 14:31
  • Do you still want it to update even if the subscription data is the same? You can still render UIComponent on Subscription loading or error states. For a more refined control on re-rendering, you will want to look at networkStatus. Jul 24, 2018 at 15:22
  • yes, I want the component to re-render even subscription data is the same because refetched data can be different. I'm using subscription as a notification trigger, so it only notifies if there's new data. If there is, a refetch should be called to get new data. I posted an answer inspired by your answers. Thanks!
    – wei
    Jul 24, 2018 at 18:52

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