Fixes https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/issues/8300
## Context
API events were created too late and were already formatted as Gql
responses (including nesting with edges/node/type + formatting that
should not exist in an event payload). This PR moves the emit logic to
the resolver where we actually do the DB query
Note: Also added RESTORED events
First step of #https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/issues/3298.
Here we update the search endpoint to allow for a filter argument, which
we currently use in the relation pickers to restrict or exclude ids from
search.
In a future PR we will try to simplify the search logic in the FE
Add support for indexes on composite fields and unicity constraint on
indexes
This pull request includes several changes across multiple files to
improve error handling, enforce unique constraints, and update database
migrations. The most important changes include updating error messages
for snack bars, adding a new command to enforce unique constraints, and
updating database migrations to include new fields and constraints.
### Error Handling Improvements:
*
[`packages/twenty-front/src/modules/error-handler/components/PromiseRejectionEffect.tsx`](diffhunk://#diff-e7dc05ced8e4730430f5c7fcd0c75b3aa723da438c26e0bef8130b614427dd9aL23-R23):
Updated error messages in `enqueueSnackBar` to use `error.message`
directly.
*
[`packages/twenty-front/src/modules/object-metadata/hooks/useFindManyObjectMetadataItems.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-74c126d6bc7a5ed6b63be994d298df6669058034bfbc367b11045f9f31a3abe6L44-R46):
Simplified error messages in `enqueueSnackBar`.
*
[`packages/twenty-front/src/modules/object-record/hooks/useFindDuplicateRecords.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-af23a1d99639a66c251f87473e63e2b7bceaa4ee4f70fedfa0fcffe5c7d79181L56-R58):
Simplified error messages in `enqueueSnackBar`.
*
[`packages/twenty-front/src/modules/object-record/hooks/useHandleFindManyRecordsError.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-da04296cbe280202a1eaf6b1244a30490d4f400411bee139651172c59719088eL22-R24):
Simplified error messages in `enqueueSnackBar`.
### New Command for Unique Constraints:
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/commands/upgrade-version/0-31/0-31-enforce-unique-constraints.command.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-8337096c8c80dd2619a5ba691ae5145101f8ae0368a75192a050047e8c6ab7cbR1-R159):
Added a new command to enforce unique constraints on company domain
names and person emails.
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/commands/upgrade-version/0-31/0-31-upgrade-version.command.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-20215e9981a53c7566e9cbff96715685125878f5bcb84fe461a7440f2e68f6fcR13-R14):
Integrated the new `EnforceUniqueConstraintsCommand` into the upgrade
process.
[[1]](diffhunk://#diff-20215e9981a53c7566e9cbff96715685125878f5bcb84fe461a7440f2e68f6fcR13-R14)
[[2]](diffhunk://#diff-20215e9981a53c7566e9cbff96715685125878f5bcb84fe461a7440f2e68f6fcR31)
[[3]](diffhunk://#diff-20215e9981a53c7566e9cbff96715685125878f5bcb84fe461a7440f2e68f6fcR64-R68)
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/commands/upgrade-version/0-31/0-31-upgrade-version.module.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-da52814efc674c25ed55645f8ee2561013641a407f88423e705dd6c77b405527R7):
Registered the new `EnforceUniqueConstraintsCommand` in the module.
[[1]](diffhunk://#diff-da52814efc674c25ed55645f8ee2561013641a407f88423e705dd6c77b405527R7)
[[2]](diffhunk://#diff-da52814efc674c25ed55645f8ee2561013641a407f88423e705dd6c77b405527R24)
### Database Migrations:
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/typeorm/metadata/migrations/1726757368824-migrationDebt.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-c450aeae7bc0ef4416a0ade2dc613ca3f688629f35d2a32f90a09c3f494febdcR1-R53):
Added a migration to update the `relationMetadata_ondeleteaction_enum`
and set default values.
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/typeorm/metadata/migrations/1726757368825-addIsUniqueToIndexMetadata.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-8f1e14bd7f6835ec2c3bb39bcc51e3c318a3008d576a981e682f4c985e746fbfR1-R19):
Added a migration to include the `isUnique` field in `indexMetadata`.
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/typeorm/metadata/migrations/1726762935841-addCompostiveColumnToIndexFieldMetadata.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-7c96b7276c7722d41ff31de23b2de4d6e09adfdc74815356ba63bc96a2669440R1-R19):
Added a migration to include the `compositeColumn` field in
`indexFieldMetadata`.
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/database/typeorm/metadata/migrations/1726766871572-addWhereToIndexMetadata.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-26651295a975eb50e672dce0e4e274e861f66feb1b68105eee5a04df32796190R1-R14):
Added a migration to include the `indexWhereClause` field in
`indexMetadata`.
### GraphQL Exception Handling:
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/engine/api/graphql/workspace-query-runner/utils/workspace-query-runner-graphql-api-exception-handler.util.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-58445eb362dc89e31107777d39b592d7842d2ab09a223012ccd055da325270a8R1-R4):
Enhanced exception handling for `QueryFailedError` to provide more
specific error messages for unique constraint violations.
[[1]](diffhunk://#diff-58445eb362dc89e31107777d39b592d7842d2ab09a223012ccd055da325270a8R1-R4)
[[2]](diffhunk://#diff-58445eb362dc89e31107777d39b592d7842d2ab09a223012ccd055da325270a8R23-R59)
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/engine/api/graphql/workspace-resolver-builder/factories/create-many-resolver.factory.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-233d58ab2333586dd45e46e33d4f07e04a4b8adde4a11a48e25d86985e5a7943L58-R58):
Updated the `workspaceQueryRunnerGraphqlApiExceptionHandler` call to
include context.
*
[`packages/twenty-server/src/engine/api/graphql/workspace-resolver-builder/factories/create-one-resolver.factory.ts`](diffhunk://#diff-68b803f0762c407f5d2d1f5f8d389655a60654a2dd2394a81318655dcd44dc43L58-R58):
Updated the `workspaceQueryRunnerGraphqlApiExceptionHandler` call to
include context.
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bochet <charles@twenty.com>
In this PR:
- remove deprecated EMAIL, PHONE, LINK field types (except for Zapier
package as there is another work ongoing)
- remove composite currency filter on currencyCode, actor filter on name
and workspaceMember as the UX is not great yet
Fixes https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/issues/6859
This PR adds all the remaining resolvers for
- updateOne/updateMany
- createOne/createMany
- deleteOne/deleteMany
- destroyOne
- restoreMany
Also
- refactored the graphql-query-runner to be able to add other resolvers
without too much boilerplate.
- add missing events that were not sent anymore as well as webhooks
- make resolver injectable so they can inject other services as well
- use objectMetadataMap from cache instead of computing it multiple time
- various fixes (mutation not correctly parsing JSON, relationHelper
fetching data with empty ids set, ...)
Next steps:
- Wrapping query builder to handle DB events properly
- Move webhook emitters to db event listener
- Add pagination where it's missing (findDuplicates, nested relations,
etc...)
Steps to test
1. Run metadata migrations
2. Run sync-metadata on your workspace
3. Enable the following feature flags:
IS_SEARCH_ENABLED
IS_QUERY_RUNNER_TWENTY_ORM_ENABLED
IS_WORKSPACE_MIGRATED_FOR_SEARCH
4. Type Cmd + K and search anything
The code removed in the PR was flagged as unused by the JetBrains
inspector.
I did a QA on the dev environment but other checks are highly
recommended.
There is one commit by scope to make the review easier.
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bochet <charles@twenty.com>
At field creation we are checking the availability of the name by
comparing it to the other fields' names' on the object; but for
composite fields the fields' names' as indicated in the repository do
not exactly match the column names' on the tables (e.g "createdBy" field
is actually represented by columns createdByName, createdBySource etc.).
In this PR we prevent the conflict with the standard composite fields'
names.
There is still room for errors with the custom composite fields: for
example a custom composite field "address" of type address on a custom
object "listing" will introduce the columns addressAddressStreet1,
addressAddressStreet2 etc. while we won't prevent the user from later
creating a custom field named "addressAddressStreet1".
For now I decided not to tackle this as this seem extremely edgy + would
impact performance on creation of all fields while never actually useful
(I think).
Implement soft delete on standards and custom objects.
This is a temporary solution, when we drop `pg_graphql` we should rely
on the `softDelete` functions of TypeORM.
---------
Co-authored-by: Félix Malfait <felix.malfait@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lucas Bordeau <bordeau.lucas@gmail.com>
This pull request introduces a new `FieldMetadataType` called `ACTOR`.
The primary objective of this new type is to add an extra column to the
following objects: `person`, `company`, `opportunity`, `note`, `task`,
and all custom objects.
This composite type contains three properties:
- `source`
```typescript
export enum FieldActorSource {
EMAIL = 'EMAIL',
CALENDAR = 'CALENDAR',
API = 'API',
IMPORT = 'IMPORT',
MANUAL = 'MANUAL',
}
```
- `workspaceMemberId`
- This property can be `undefined` in some cases and refers to the
member who created the record.
- `name`
- Serves as a fallback if the `workspaceMember` is deleted and is used
for other source types like `API`.
### Functionality
The pre-hook system has been updated to allow real-time argument
updates. When a record is created, a pre-hook can now compute and update
the arguments accordingly. This enhancement enables the `createdBy`
field to be populated with the correct values based on the
`authContext`.
The `authContext` now includes:
- An optional User entity
- An optional ApiKey entity
- The workspace entity
This provides access to the necessary data for the `createdBy` field.
In the GraphQL API, only the `source` can be specified in the
`createdBy` input. This allows the front-end to specify the source when
creating records from a CSV file.
### Front-End Handling
On the front-end, `orderBy` and `filter` are only applied to the name
property of the `ACTOR` composite type. Currently, we are unable to
apply these operations to the workspace member relation. This means that
if a workspace member changes their first name or last name, there may
be a mismatch because the name will differ from the new one. The name
displayed on the screen is based on the workspace member entity when
available.
### Missing Components
Currently, this PR does not include a `createdBy` value for the `MAIL`
and `CALENDAR` sources. These records are created in a job, and at
present, we only have access to the workspaceId within the job. To
address this, we should use a function similar to
`loadServiceWithContext`, which was recently removed from `TwentyORM`.
This function would allow us to pass the `authContext` to the jobs
without disrupting existing jobs.
Another PR will be created to handle these cases.
### Related Issues
Fixes issue #5155.
### Additional Notes
This PR doesn't include the migrations of the current records and views.
Everything works properly when the database is reset but this part is
still missing for now. We'll add that in another PR.
- There is a minor issue: front-end tests are broken since this commit:
[80c0fc7ff1).
---------
Co-authored-by: Lucas Bordeau <bordeau.lucas@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Charles Bochet <charles@twenty.com>
This PR introduces an `upsert` parameter (along the existing `data`
param) for `createOne` and `createMany` mutations.
When upsert is set to `true`, the function will look for records with
the same id if an id was passed. If not id was passed, it will leverage
the existing duplicate check mechanism to find a duplicate. If a record
is found, then the function will perform an update instead of a create.
Unfortunately I had to remove some nice tests that existing on the args
factory. Those tests where mostly testing the duplication rule
generation logic but through a GraphQL angle. Since I moved the
duplication rule logic to a dedicated service, if I kept the tests but
mocked the service we wouldn't really be testing anything useful. The
right path would be to create new tests for this service that compare
the JSON output and not the GraphQL output but I chose not to work on
this as it's equivalent to rewriting the tests from scratch and I have
other competing priorities.
For remotes, we will only create the foreign key, without the relation
metadata. Expected behavior will be:
- possible to create an activity. But the remote object will not be
displayed in the relations of the activity
- the remote objects should not be available in the search for relations
Also switched the number settings to an enum, since we now have to
handle `BigInt` case.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thomas Trompette <thomast@twenty.com>
New strategy:
- add settings field on FieldMetadata. Contains a boolean isIdField and
for numbers, a precision
- if idField, the graphql scalar returned will be a GraphQL id. This
will allow the app to work even for ids that are not uuid
- remove globals dateScalar and numberScalar modes. These were not used
- set limit as Integer
- check manually in query runner mutations that we send a valid id
Todo left:
- remove WorkspaceBuildSchemaOptions since this is not used anymore.
Will do in another PR
---------
Co-authored-by: Thomas Trompette <thomast@twenty.com>
Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>
Experiment using swc instead of tsc (as we did the switch on
twenty-front)
It's **much** faster (at least 5x) but has stricter requirements.
I fixed the build but there's still an error while starting the server,
opening this PR for discussion.
Checkout the branch and try `nx build:swc twenty-server`
Read: https://docs.nestjs.com/recipes/swc#common-pitfalls
We have discovered that GraphQL inputs for fields of type ids in create
/ update input where using a more permissive ID type than the type used
in FilterInput in queries.
This PRs fixes it and make sure that all Input are using UUID graphql
scalar types
This PR is dropping the column `targetColumnMap` of fieldMetadata
entities.
The goal of this column was to properly map field to their respecting
column in the table.
We decide to drop it and instead compute the column name on the fly when
we need it, as it's more easier to support.
Some parts of the code has been refactored to try making implementation
of composite type more easier to understand and maintain.
Fix#3760
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bochet <charles@twenty.com>
When writing to the normalized cache (record), it's crucial to use _refs
for relationships to avoid many problems. Essentially, we only deal with
level 0 and generate all fields to be comfortable with their defaults.
When writing in queries (which should be very rare, the only cases are
prefetch and the case of activities due to the nested query; I've
reduced this to a single file for activities
usePrepareFindManyActivitiesQuery 🙂), it's important to use queryFields
to avoid bugs. I've implemented them on the side of query generation and
record generation.
When doing an updateOne / createOne, etc., it's necessary to distinguish
between optimistic writing (which we actually want to do with _refs) and
the server response without refs. This allows for a clean write in the
optimistic cache without worrying about nesting (as the first point).
To simplify the whole activities part, write to the normalized cache
first. Then, base queries on it in an idempotent manner. This way,
there's no need to worry about the current page or action. The
normalized cache is up-to-date, so I update the queries. Same idea as
for optimisticEffects, actually.
Finally, I've triggered optimisticEffects rather than the manual update
of many queries.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lucas Bordeau <bordeau.lucas@gmail.com>
* Being implementing events on the frontend
* Rename JSON to RAW JSON
* Fix handling of json field on frontend
* Log user id
* Add frontend tests
* Update packages/twenty-server/src/engine/api/graphql/workspace-query-runner/jobs/save-event-to-db.job.ts
Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>
* Move db calls to a dedicated repository
* Add server-side tests
---------
Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>