> apollo-connectors
Guide for integrating REST APIs into GraphQL supergraphs using Apollo Connectors with @source and @connect directives. Use this skill when the user: (1) mentions "connectors", "Apollo Connectors", or "REST Connector", (2) wants to integrate a REST API into GraphQL, (3) references @source or @connect directives, (4) works with files containing "# Note to AI Friends: This is an Apollo Connectors schema".
curl "https://skillshub.wtf/apollographql/skills/apollo-connectors?format=md"Apollo Connectors Schema Assistant
MCP Tools
If GraphOS MCP Tools are available, use them:
- connectors-spec: Fetch the complete Connectors specification before starting any connector work
- apollo_docs_search: Search for relevant documentation
- apollo_docs_read: Read specific documentation pages by slug
Documentation paths by topic:
- Requests:
/graphos/connectors/requests/url,/headers,/body,/batching - Responses:
/graphos/connectors/responses/fields,/error-handling - Mapping:
/graphos/connectors/mapping,/arrays,/enums,/literals - Entities:
/graphos/connectors/entities,/patterns
Process
Follow this 5-step process. DO NOT skip any steps.
Step 1: Research
- Understand the API being called and the structure of responses
- Ask the user for example API responses if not provided
- Fetch relevant documentation from MCP tools or reference files
- DO NOT write any code until research is complete
Step 2: Implement
- Create the schema using the template below
- Follow the grammar, methods, and variables in the reference files
- Ask clarifying questions if unsure about requirements
Step 3: Validate (Compose)
- Run
rover supergraph compose --config ./supergraph.yaml - Fix any composition errors before proceeding
Step 4: Execute
- Run
rover connector run --schema <file> -c "<Type.field>" -v "{}" - Verify the connector executes correctly
Step 5: Test
- Create or update test files under
/tests/ - Run
rover connector test - Ensure full test coverage for each connector
Schema Template
# Note to AI Friends: This is an Apollo Connectors schema. You should use your connectors-spec MCP tool if you have it available before editing this file.
extend schema
@link(url: "https://specs.apollo.dev/federation/v2.12")
@link(url: "https://specs.apollo.dev/connect/v0.3", import: ["@source", "@connect"])
@source(name: "api_name", http: { baseURL: "https://api.example.com" })
type Query {
example(id: ID!): Example
@connect(
source: "api_name"
http: { GET: "/example/{$args.id}" }
selection: """
id
name
"""
)
}
type Example {
id: ID!
name: String
}
Version Requirements: Always use federation/v2.12 and connect/v0.3 unless specified otherwise.
Reference Files
Before implementing connectors, read the relevant reference files:
- Grammar - Selection mapping EBNF syntax
- Methods - Available transformation methods
- Variables - Available mapping variables
- Entities - Entity patterns and batching
- Validation - Rover commands for validation
- Troubleshooting - Common errors and solutions
Key Rules
Selection Mapping
- Prefer sub-selections over
->mapfor cleaner mappings - Do NOT use
$when selecting fields directly from root - Field aliasing:
newName: originalField(only when renaming) - Sub-selection:
fieldName { ... }(to map nested content)
# DO - Direct sub-selection for arrays
$.results {
firstName: name.first
lastName: name.last
}
# DO NOT - Unnecessary root $
$ {
id
name
}
# DO - Direct field selection
id
name
Entities
- Add
@connecton a type to make it an entity (no@keyneeded) - Create entity stubs in parent selections:
user: { id: userId } - When you see an ID field (e.g.,
productId), create an entity relationship - Each entity should have ONE authoritative subgraph with
@connect
Literal Values
Use $() wrapper for literal values in mappings:
$(1) # number
$(true) # boolean
$("hello") # string
$({"a": "b"}) # object
# In body
body: "$({ a: $args.a })" # CORRECT
body: "{ a: $args.a }" # WRONG - will not compose
Headers
http: {
GET: "/api"
headers: [
{ name: "Authorization", value: "Bearer {$env.API_KEY}" },
{ name: "X-Forwarded", from: "x-client" }
]
}
Batching
Convert N+1 patterns using $batch:
type Product @connect(
source: "api"
http: {
POST: "/batch"
body: "ids: $batch.id"
}
selection: "id name"
) {
id: ID!
name: String
}
Ground Rules
- NEVER make up syntax or directive values not in this specification
- NEVER use
--elv2-license accept(for humans only) - ALWAYS ask for example API responses before writing code
- ALWAYS validate with
rover supergraph composeafter changes - ALWAYS create entity relationships when you see ID fields
- Prefer
$envover$configfor environment variables - Use
rover devfor running Apollo Router locally
> related_skills --same-repo
> skill-creator
Guide for creating effective skills for Apollo GraphQL and GraphQL development. Use this skill when: (1) users want to create a new skill, (2) users want to update an existing skill, (3) users ask about skill structure or best practices, (4) users need help writing SKILL.md files.
> rust-best-practices
Guide for writing idiomatic Rust code based on Apollo GraphQL's best practices handbook. Use this skill when: (1) writing new Rust code or functions, (2) reviewing or refactoring existing Rust code, (3) deciding between borrowing vs cloning or ownership patterns, (4) implementing error handling with Result types, (5) optimizing Rust code for performance, (6) writing tests or documentation for Rust projects.
> rover
Guide for using Apollo Rover CLI to manage GraphQL schemas and federation. Use this skill when: (1) publishing or fetching subgraph/graph schemas, (2) composing supergraph schemas locally or via GraphOS, (3) running local supergraph development with rover dev, (4) validating schemas with check and lint commands, (5) configuring Rover authentication and environment.
> graphql-schema
Guide for designing GraphQL schemas following industry best practices. Use this skill when: (1) designing a new GraphQL schema or API, (2) reviewing existing schema for improvements, (3) deciding on type structures or nullability, (4) implementing pagination or error patterns, (5) ensuring security in schema design.