github.com/maeglindeveloper/gqlgen@v0.13.1-0.20210413081235-57808b12a0a0/docs/content/recipes/gin.md (about) 1 --- 2 title: "Using Gin to setup HTTP handlers" 3 description: Setting up HTTP handlers using Gin, a HTTP web framework written in Go. 4 linkTitle: Gin 5 menu: { main: { parent: 'recipes' } } 6 --- 7 8 Gin is an excellent alternative for the `net/http` router. From their official [GitHub page](https://github.com/gin-gonic/gin): 9 10 > Gin is a web framework written in Go (Golang). It features a martini-like API with much better performance, up to 40 times faster thanks to httprouter. If you need performance and good productivity, you will love Gin. 11 12 Here are the steps to setup Gin and gqlgen together: 13 14 Install Gin: 15 ```bash 16 $ go get github.com/gin-gonic/gin 17 ``` 18 19 In your router file, define the handlers for the GraphQL and Playground endpoints in two different methods and tie them together in the Gin router: 20 21 ```go 22 import ( 23 "github.com/gin-gonic/gin" 24 25 "github.com/99designs/gqlgen/graphql/handler" 26 "github.com/99designs/gqlgen/graphql/playground" 27 ) 28 29 // Defining the Graphql handler 30 func graphqlHandler() gin.HandlerFunc { 31 // NewExecutableSchema and Config are in the generated.go file 32 // Resolver is in the resolver.go file 33 h := handler.NewDefaultServer(NewExecutableSchema(Config{Resolvers: &Resolver{}})) 34 35 return func(c *gin.Context) { 36 h.ServeHTTP(c.Writer, c.Request) 37 } 38 } 39 40 // Defining the Playground handler 41 func playgroundHandler() gin.HandlerFunc { 42 h := playground.Handler("GraphQL", "/query") 43 44 return func(c *gin.Context) { 45 h.ServeHTTP(c.Writer, c.Request) 46 } 47 } 48 49 func main() { 50 // Setting up Gin 51 r := gin.Default() 52 r.POST("/query", graphqlHandler()) 53 r.GET("/", playgroundHandler()) 54 r.Run() 55 } 56 57 ``` 58 59 ## Accessing gin.Context 60 At the Resolver level, `gqlgen` gives you access to the `context.Context` object. One way to access the `gin.Context` is to add it to the context and retrieve it again. 61 62 First, create a `gin` middleware to add its context to the `context.Context`: 63 ```go 64 func GinContextToContextMiddleware() gin.HandlerFunc { 65 return func(c *gin.Context) { 66 ctx := context.WithValue(c.Request.Context(), "GinContextKey", c) 67 c.Request = c.Request.WithContext(ctx) 68 c.Next() 69 } 70 } 71 ``` 72 73 In the router definition, use the middleware: 74 ```go 75 r.Use(GinContextToContextMiddleware()) 76 ``` 77 78 Define a function to recover the `gin.Context` from the `context.Context` struct: 79 ```go 80 func GinContextFromContext(ctx context.Context) (*gin.Context, error) { 81 ginContext := ctx.Value("GinContextKey") 82 if ginContext == nil { 83 err := fmt.Errorf("could not retrieve gin.Context") 84 return nil, err 85 } 86 87 gc, ok := ginContext.(*gin.Context) 88 if !ok { 89 err := fmt.Errorf("gin.Context has wrong type") 90 return nil, err 91 } 92 return gc, nil 93 } 94 ``` 95 96 Lastly, in the Resolver, retrieve the `gin.Context` with the previous defined function: 97 ```go 98 func (r *resolver) Todo(ctx context.Context) (*Todo, error) { 99 gc, err := GinContextFromContext(ctx) 100 if err != nil { 101 return nil, err 102 } 103 104 // ... 105 } 106 ```