Ask a Question Mutations Overview Mutations allow you to modify server-side data, and it also returns an object based on the operation performed. It can be used to insert, update, or delete data. Dgraph automatically generates GraphQL mutations for each type that you define in your schema. The mutation field returns an object type that allows you to query for nested fields. This can be useful for fetching an object’s new state after an add/update, or to get the old state of an object before a delete. Example type Author { id: ID! name: String! @search(by: [hash]) dob: DateTime posts: [Post] } type Post { postID: ID! title: String! @search(by: [term, fulltext]) text: String @search(by: [fulltext, term]) datePublished: DateTime } The following mutations would be generated from the above schema. type Mutation { addAuthor(input: [AddAuthorInput!]!): AddAuthorPayload updateAuthor(input: UpdateAuthorInput!): UpdateAuthorPayload deleteAuthor(filter: AuthorFilter!): DeleteAuthorPayload addPost(input: [AddPostInput!]!): AddPostPayload updatePost(input: UpdatePostInput!): UpdatePostPayload deletePost(filter: PostFilter!): DeletePostPayload } type AddAuthorPayload { author(filter: AuthorFilter, order: AuthorOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Author] numUids: Int } type AddPostPayload { post(filter: PostFilter, order: PostOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Post] numUids: Int } type DeleteAuthorPayload { author(filter: AuthorFilter, order: AuthorOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Author] msg: String numUids: Int } type DeletePostPayload { post(filter: PostFilter, order: PostOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Post] msg: String numUids: Int } type UpdateAuthorPayload { author(filter: AuthorFilter, order: AuthorOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Author] numUids: Int } type UpdatePostPayload { post(filter: PostFilter, order: PostOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Post] numUids: Int } Input objects Mutations require input data, such as the data, to create a new object or an object’s ID to delete. Dgraph auto-generates the input object type for every type in the schema. input AddAuthorInput { name: String! dob: DateTime posts: [PostRef] } mutation { addAuthor( input: { name: "A.N. Author", lastName: "2000-01-01", } ) { ... } } Return fields Each mutation provides a set of fields that can be returned in the response. Dgraph auto-generates the return payload object type for every type in the schema. type AddAuthorPayload { author(filter: AuthorFilter, order: AuthorOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Author] numUids: Int } Multiple fields in mutations A mutation can contain multiple fields, just like a query. While query fields are executed in parallel, mutation fields run in series, one after the other. This means that if we send two updateAuthor mutations in one request, the first is guaranteed to finish before the second begins. This ensures that we don’t end up with a race condition with ourselves. If one of the mutations is aborted due error like transaction conflict, we continue performing the next mutations. Example: Mutation on multiple types mutation ($post: AddPostInput!, $author: AddAuthorInput!) { addAuthor(input: [$author]) { author { name } } addPost(input: [$post]) { post { postID title text } } } Variables: { "author": { "name": "A.N. Author", "dob": "2000-01-01", "posts": [] }, "post": { "title": "Exciting post", "text": "A really good post", "author": { "name": "A.N. Author" } } } Union mutations Mutations can be used to add a node to a union field in a type. For the following schema, enum Category { Fish Amphibian Reptile Bird Mammal InVertebrate } interface Animal { id: ID! category: Category @search } type Dog implements Animal { breed: String @search } type Parrot implements Animal { repeatsWords: [String] } type Human { name: String! pets: [Animal!]! } union HomeMember = Dog | Parrot | Human type Home { id: ID! address: String members: [HomeMember] } This is the mutation for adding members to the Home type: mutation { addHome(input: [ { "address": "United Street", "members": [ { "dogRef": { "category": Mammal, "breed": "German Shephard"} }, { "parrotRef": { "category": Bird, "repeatsWords": ["squawk"]} }, { "humanRef": { "name": "Han Solo"} } ] } ]) { home { address members { ... on Dog { breed } ... on Parrot { repeatsWords } ... on Human { name } } } } } Examples You can refer to the following link for more examples. Add Mutations in GraphQL →