#### Overview
This PR introduces a new API for dynamically registering and executing
pre and post query hooks in the Workspace Query Hook system using the
`@WorkspaceQueryHook` decorator. This approach eliminates the need for
manual provider registration, and fix the issue of `undefined` or `null`
repository using `@InjectWorkspaceRepository`.
#### New API
**Define a Hook**
Use the `@WorkspaceQueryHook` decorator to define pre or post hooks:
```typescript
@WorkspaceQueryHook({
key: `calendarEvent.findMany`,
scope: Scope.REQUEST,
})
export class CalendarEventFindManyPreQueryHook implements WorkspaceQueryHookInstance {
async execute(userId: string, workspaceId: string, payload: FindManyResolverArgs): Promise<void> {
if (!payload?.filter?.id?.eq) {
throw new BadRequestException('id filter is required');
}
// Implement hook logic here
}
}
```
This API simplifies the registration and execution of query hooks,
providing a more flexible and maintainable approach.
---------
Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>
## Context
@lucasbordeau introduced a new Yoga plugin that allows us to cache our
requests (👏), see https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/pull/5189
I'm simply updating the implementation to allow us to use different
cache storage types such as redis
Also adding a check so it does not use cache for other operations than
ObjectMetadataItems
## Test
locally, first call takes 340ms, 2nd takes 30ms with 'redis' and 13ms
with 'memory'
In this PR I'm introducing a simple custom graphql-yoga plugin to create
a caching mechanism specific to our metadata.
The cache key is made of : workspace id + workspace cache version, with
this the cache is automatically invalidated each time a change is made
on the workspace metadata.
In this PR:
- Follow up on #5170 as we did not take into account not logged in users
- only apply throttler on root fields to avoid performance overhead