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Artikelversion: Enterprise Server 2.18

Resource limitations

The GitHub GraphQL API has limitations in place to protect against excessive or abusive calls to GitHub's servers.

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Node limit

To pass schema validation, all GraphQL API v4 calls must meet these standards:

  • Clients must supply a first or last argument on any connection.
  • Values of first and last must be within 1-100.
  • Individual calls cannot request more than 500,000 total nodes.

Calculating nodes in a call

These two examples show how to calculate the total nodes in a call.

  1. Simple query:

    query {
    viewer {
    repositories(first: 50) {
    edges {
    repository:node {
    name

          issues(first: <span class="greenbox">10</span>) {
            totalCount
            edges {
              node {
                title
                bodyHTML
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
    

    } }

    Calculation:

    50         = 50 repositories

    • 50 x 10 = 500 repository issues

              = 550 total nodes</pre>
      
  2. Complex query:

    query {
    viewer {
    repositories(first: 50) {
    edges {
    repository:node {
    name

          pullRequests(first: <span class="greenbox">20</span>) {
            edges {
              pullRequest:node {
                title
    
                comments(first: <span class="bluebox">10</span>) {
                  edges {
                    comment:node {
                      bodyHTML
                    }
                  }
                }
              }
            }
          }
    
          issues(first: <span class="greenbox">20</span>) {
            totalCount
            edges {
              issue:node {
                title
                bodyHTML
    
                comments(first: <span class="bluebox">10</span>) {
                  edges {
                    comment:node {
                      bodyHTML
                    }
                  }
                }
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
    
    followers(first: <span class="bluebox">10</span>) {
      edges {
        follower:node {
          login
        }
      }
    }
    

    } }

    Calculation:

    50              = 50 repositories

    • 50 x 20 = 1,000 pullRequests

    • 50 x 20 x 10 = 10,000 pullRequest comments

    • 50 x 20 = 1,000 issues

    • 50 x 20 x 10 = 10,000 issue comments

    • 10 = 10 followers

                   = 22,060 total nodes</pre>
      

Rate limit

The GraphQL API v4 limit is different from the REST API v3's limit of 5,000 requests per hour for authenticated requests.

Why are the API rate limits different? With GraphQL, one GraphQL call can replace multiple REST calls. A single complex GraphQL call could be the equivalent of thousands of REST requests. While a single GraphQL call would fall well below the 5,000/hour REST API v3 limit, the query might be just as expensive for GitHub's servers to compute.

To accurately represent the server cost of a query, the GraphQL API v4 calculates a call's rate limit score based on a normalized scale of points. A query's score factors in first and last arguments on a parent connection and its children.

  • The formula uses the first and last arguments on a parent connection and its children to pre-calculate the potential load on GitHub's systems, such as MySQL, ElasticSearch, and Git.
  • Each new connection has its own point value. Points are combined with other points from the call into an overall rate limit score.

The GraphQL API v4 rate limit is 5,000 points per hour. Note that 5,000 points per hour is not the same as 5,000 calls per hour: the GraphQL API v4 and REST API v3 use different rate limits.

Note: The current formula and rate limit are subject to change as we observe how developers use the GraphQL API v4.

Returning a call's rate limit status

With the REST API v3, you can check the rate limit status by inspecting the returned HTTP headers.

With the GraphQL API v4, you can check the rate limit status by querying fields on the rateLimit object:

query {
  viewer {
    login
  }
  rateLimit {
    limit
    cost
    remaining
    resetAt
  }
}
  • The limit field returns the maximum number of points the client is permitted to consume in a 60-minute window.

  • The cost field returns the point cost for the current call that counts against the rate limit.

  • The remaining field returns the number of points remaining in the current rate limit window.)

  • The resetAt field returns the time at which the current rate limit window resets in UTC epoch seconds.

Calculating a rate limit score before running the call

Querying the rateLimit object returns a call's score, but running the call counts against the limit. To avoid this dilemma, you can calculate the score of a call before you run it. The following calculation works out to roughly the same cost that rateLimit { cost } returns.

  1. Add up the number of requests needed to fulfill each unique connection in the call. Assume every request will reach the first or last argument limits.
  2. Divide the number by 100 and round the result to get the final aggregate cost. This step normalizes large numbers.

Note: The minimum cost of a call to the GraphQL API v4 is 1, representing a single request.

Here's an example query and score calculation:

query {
  viewer {
    login
    repositories(first: 100) {
      edges {
        node {
          id

          issues(first: 50) {
            edges {
              node {
                id

                labels(first: 60) {
                  edges {
                    node {
                      id
                      name
                    }
                  }
                }
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

This query requires 5,101 requests to fulfill:

  • Although we're returning 100 repositories, the API has to connect to the viewer's account once to get the list of repositories. So, requests for repositories = 1
  • Although we're returning 50 issues, the API has to connect to each of the 100 repositories to get the list of issues. So, requests for issues = 100
  • Although we're returning 60 labels, the API has to connect to each of the 5,000 potential total issues to get the list of labels. So, requests for labels = 5,000
  • Total = 5,101

Dividing by 100 and rounding gives us the final score of the query: 51

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