Inheritance Examples

Create interfaces from inheritance relationships

Note

If you’re using AsyncSession, please check the chapter Eager Loading & Using with AsyncSession.

SQLAlchemy has excellent support for class inheritance hierarchies. These hierarchies can be represented in your GraphQL schema by means of interfaces. Much like ObjectTypes, Interfaces in Graphene-SQLAlchemy are able to infer their fields and relationships from the attributes of their underlying SQLAlchemy model:

from sqlalchemy import Column, Date, Integer, String
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base

import graphene
from graphene import relay
from graphene_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemyInterface, SQLAlchemyObjectType

Base = declarative_base()

class Person(Base):
    id = Column(Integer(), primary_key=True)
    type = Column(String())
    name = Column(String())
    birth_date = Column(Date())

    __tablename__ = "person"
    __mapper_args__ = {
        "polymorphic_on": type,
    }

class Employee(Person):
    hire_date = Column(Date())

    __mapper_args__ = {
        "polymorphic_identity": "employee",
    }

class Customer(Person):
    first_purchase_date = Column(Date())

    __mapper_args__ = {
        "polymorphic_identity": "customer",
    }

class PersonType(SQLAlchemyInterface):
    class Meta:
        model = Person

class EmployeeType(SQLAlchemyObjectType):
    class Meta:
        model = Employee
        interfaces = (relay.Node, PersonType)

class CustomerType(SQLAlchemyObjectType):
    class Meta:
        model = Customer
        interfaces = (relay.Node, PersonType)

Keep in mind that PersonType is a SQLAlchemyInterface. Interfaces must be linked to an abstract Model that does not specify a polymorphic_identity, because we cannot return instances of interfaces from a GraphQL query. If Person specified a polymorphic_identity, instances of Person could be inserted into and returned by the database, potentially causing Persons to be returned to the resolvers.

When querying on the base type, you can refer directly to common fields, and fields on concrete implementations using the … on syntax:

people {
    name
    birthDate
    ... on EmployeeType {
        hireDate
    }
    ... on CustomerType {
        firstPurchaseDate
    }
}

Danger

When using joined table inheritance, this style of querying may lead to unbatched implicit IO with negative performance implications. See the chapter Eager Loading & Using with AsyncSession for more information on eager loading all possible types of a SQLAlchemyInterface.

Please note that by default, the “polymorphic_on” column is not generated as a field on types that use polymorphic inheritance, as this is considered an implementation detail. The idiomatic way to retrieve the concrete GraphQL type of an object is to query for the __typename field. To override this behavior, an ORMField needs to be created for the custom type field on the corresponding SQLAlchemyInterface. This is not recommended as it promotes abiguous schema design

If your SQLAlchemy model only specifies a relationship to the base type, you will need to explicitly pass your concrete implementation class to the Schema constructor via the types= argument:

schema = graphene.Schema(..., types=[PersonType, EmployeeType, CustomerType])

See also: Graphene Interfaces

Eager Loading & Using with AsyncSession

When querying the base type in multi-table inheritance or joined table inheritance, you can only directly refer to polymorphic fields when they are loaded eagerly. This restricting is in place because AsyncSessions don’t allow implicit async operations such as the loads of the joined tables. To load the polymorphic fields eagerly, you can use the with_polymorphic attribute of the mapper args in the base model:

class Person(Base):
    id = Column(Integer(), primary_key=True)
    type = Column(String())
    name = Column(String())
    birth_date = Column(Date())

    __tablename__ = "person"
    __mapper_args__ = {
        "polymorphic_on": type,
        "with_polymorphic": "*", # needed for eager loading in async session
    }

Alternatively, the specific polymorphic fields can be loaded explicitly in resolvers:

class Query(graphene.ObjectType):
    people = graphene.Field(graphene.List(PersonType))

    async def resolve_people(self, _info):
        return (await session.scalars(with_polymorphic(Person, [Engineer, Customer]))).all()

Dynamic batching of the types based on the query to avoid eager is currently not supported, but could be implemented in a future PR.

For more information on loading techniques for polymorphic models, please check out the SQLAlchemy docs.