GraphJin - A Compiler to Connect AI to Your Databases

Point GraphJin at any database and AI assistants can query it instantly. Auto-discovers your schema, understands relationships, compiles to optimized SQL. No configuration required.
Works with PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, SQLite, Oracle, MSSQL - and models from Claude/GPT-4 to local 7B models.
Installation
npm (all platforms)
npm install -g graphjin
macOS (Homebrew)
brew install dosco/graphjin/graphjin
Windows (Scoop)
scoop bucket add graphjin https://github.com/dosco/graphjin-scoop
scoop install graphjin
Linux
Download .deb/.rpm from releases
Docker
docker pull dosco/graphjin
Try It Now
This is a quick way to try out GraphJin we'll use the --demo command which automatically
starts a database using docker and loads it with demo data.
Download the source which contains the webshop demo
git clone https://github.com/dosco/graphjin
cd graphjin
Now launch the Graphjin service that you installed using the install options above
graphjin serve --demo --path examples/webshop
You'll see output like this:
GraphJin started
───────────────────────
Web UI: http://localhost:8080/
GraphQL: http://localhost:8080/api/v1/graphql
REST API: http://localhost:8080/api/v1/rest/
MCP: http://localhost:8080/api/v1/mcp
Claude Desktop Configuration
────────────────────────────
Add to claude_desktop_config.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"Webshop Development": {
"command": "/path/to/graphjin",
"args": ["mcp", "--server", "http://localhost:8080"]
}
}
}
Copy the JSON config shown and add it to your Claude Desktop config file (see below for file location). You can also click File > Settings > Developer to get to it in Claude Desktop. You will also need to Restart Claude Desktop
| OS |
Possible config file locations |
| macOS |
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json |
| Windows |
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json |
MCP install for OpenAI Codex + Claude Code
GraphJin includes a guided installer that configures MCP for OpenAI Codex, Claude Code, or both.
# Guided mode (asks target client, scope, and mode)
graphjin mcp install
OpenAI Codex
graphjin mcp install --client codex --scope project --yes
Claude Code
graphjin mcp install --client claude --scope project --yes
Backwards compatibility alias:
graphjin mcp plugin install
Troubleshooting
graphjin mcp install uses your --path value for stdio mode (graphjin mcp --path <config-path>).
- If Codex CLI does not support
codex mcp add --scope (older versions), GraphJin automatically falls back to updating:
- global scope:
~/.codex/config.toml
- local scope:
.codex/config.toml
Getting started
To use GraphJin with your own databases you have to first create a new GraphJin app, then configure it using its config files and then launch GraphJin.
Step 1: Create New GraphJin App
graphjin new my-app
Step 2: Start the GraphJin Service
graphjin serve --path ./my-app
Step 3: Add to Claude Desktop config file
Copy paste the Claude Desktop Config provided by graphjin serve into the Claude Desktop MCP config file. How to do this has been defined clearly above in the Try it Now section.
Step 4: Restart Claude Desktop
Step 5: Ask Claude questions like:
- "What tables are in the database?"
- "Show me all products under $50"
- "List customers and their purchases"
- "What's the total revenue by product?"
- "Find products with 'wireless' in the name"
- "Add a new product called 'USB-C Cable' for $19.99"
How It Works
- Connects to database - Reads your schema automatically
- Discovers relationships - Foreign keys become navigable joins
- Exposes MCP tools - Teach any LLM the query syntax
- Compiles to SQL - Every request becomes a single optimized query
No resolvers. No ORM. No N+1 queries. Just point and query.
What AI Can Do
Simple queries with filters:
{ products(where: { price: { gt: 50 } }, limit: 10) { id name price } }
Nested relationships:
{
orders(limit: 5) {
id total
customer { name email }
items { quantity product { name category { name } } }
}
}
Aggregations:
{ products { count_id sum_price avg_price } }
Mutations:
mutation {
products(insert: { name: "New Product", price: 29.99 }) { id }
}
Spatial queries:
{
stores(where: { location: { st_dwithin: { point: [-122.4, 37.7], distance: 1000 } } }) {
name address
}
}
Real-time Subscriptions
Get live updates when your data changes. GraphJin handles thousands of concurrent subscribers with a single database query - not one per subscriber.
subscription {
orders(where: { user_id: { eq: $user_id } }) {
id total status
items { product { name } }
}
}
Why it's efficient:
- Traditional approach: 1,000 subscribers = 1,000 database queries
- GraphJin: 1,000 subscribers = 1 optimized batch query
- Automatic change detection - updates only sent when data actually changes
- Built-in cursor pagination for feeds and infinite scroll
Works from Node.js, Go, or any WebSocket client.
GraphJin exposes several tools that guide AI models to write valid queries. Key tools: list_tables and describe_table for schema discovery, get_query_syntax for learning the DSL, execute_graphql for running queries, and execute_saved_query for production-approved queries. Prompts like write_query and fix_query_error help models construct and debug queries.
Chat Walkthroughs
Real conversations showing how an AI assistant uses GraphJin MCP tools to help you go from zero to running queries.
"I have databases running but don't know the details"
You: I have some databases running locally but I'm not sure about the ports or connection details. Can you help me set up GraphJin?
Claude: Let me scan your system to find running databases.
calls discover_databases
I found 2 databases on your system:
- PostgreSQL on localhost:5432 (TCP) — listening, auth: ok (user: postgres), databases:
myapp, myapp_test
- MySQL on localhost:3306 (TCP) — listening, auth: auth_failed — default credentials failed, provide username and password
The PostgreSQL instance has databases myapp and myapp_test. Which one would you like to configure GraphJin with?
You: Let's go with the "myapp" database on Postgres.
Claude: I'll configure GraphJin to connect to your PostgreSQL database.
calls update_current_config with databases: {"main": {type: "postgres", host: "localhost", port: 5432, user: "postgres", dbname: "myapp"}}
Connected successfully! Let me see what tables you have.
calls list_tables
Your database has these tables: users, orders, products, reviews. Want me to write a query?
You: Show me users with their orders.
Claude: calls get_query_syntax then execute_graphql
{ users { id name email orders { id total status } } }
Here are the results — 24 users returned, each with their associated orders.
"I have a Docker Compose project with MySQL"
You: I'm running a Docker Compose stack with MySQL. Help me connect GraphJin to it.
Claude: Let me check what database containers you have running.
calls discover_databases
Found a MySQL Docker container:
- MySQL via Docker — container
myapp-db-1, image mysql:8.0, port mapped to localhost:13306
I'll configure GraphJin with the discovered connection details.
calls update_current_config with databases: {"main": {type: "mysql", host: "localhost", port: 13306, user: "root", dbname: ""}}
What's the database name and password for your MySQL instance?
You: Database is "shop_db", password is "secret123".
Claude: calls update_current_config with the full credentials
Connected! Let me explore the schema.
calls list_tables
Tables found: customers, products, orders, order_items, categories. Let me check how they relate.
calls explore_relationships with table: "orders"
orders connects to customers (via customer_id) and order_items (via order_id), and order_items links to products. Here's a nested query:
{ orders { id total customer { name email } order_items { quantity product { name price } } } }
"I want to query my SQLite app database"
You: I have a SQLite database file in my project. Can GraphJin work with it?
Claude: Absolutely! Let me scan your project directory for SQLite files.
calls discover_databases with scan_dir: "."
Found 1 SQLite database:
- data/app.sqlite3 — file found
I'll configure GraphJin to use it.
calls update_current_config with databases: {"main": {type: "sqlite", path: "data/app.sqlite3"}}
Connected! Let me see your tables.
calls list_tables
Tables: tasks, projects, tags, task_tags. Want to query something?
You: Show me all tasks with their project name, sorted by due date.
Claude: calls execute_graphql
{ tasks(order_by: {due_date: asc}) { id title due_date completed project { name } } }
Here are your 12 tasks sorted by due date, each showing the parent project name.
Database Support
| Database |
Queries |
Mutations |
Subscriptions |
Full-Text |
GIS |
| PostgreSQL |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
PostGIS |
| MySQL |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
8.0+ |
| MariaDB |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
| MSSQL |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
| Oracle |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
| SQLite |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
FTS5 |
SpatiaLite |
| MongoDB |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
| CockroachDB |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
Also works with AWS Aurora/RDS, Google Cloud SQL, and YugabyteDB.
Production Security
Query allow-lists - In production, only saved queries can run. AI models call execute_saved_query with pre-approved queries. No arbitrary SQL injection possible.
Role-based access - Different roles see different data:
roles:
user:
tables:
- name: orders
query:
filters: ["{ user_id: { eq: $user_id } }"]
JWT authentication - Supports Auth0, Firebase, JWKS endpoints.
Response caching - Redis with in-memory fallback. Automatic cache invalidation.
Also a GraphQL API
GraphJin works as a traditional API too - use it from Go or as a standalone service.
Go
go get github.com/dosco/graphjin/core/v3
db, _ := sql.Open("pgx", "postgres://localhost/myapp")
gj, _ := core.NewGraphJin(nil, db)
res, _ := gj.GraphQL(ctx, `{ users { id email } }`, nil, nil)
Standalone Service
brew install dosco/graphjin/graphjin # Mac
graphjin new myapp && cd myapp
graphjin serve
Built-in web UI at http://localhost:8080 for query development.
Documentation
Get in Touch
Twitter @dosco | Discord
License
Apache Public License 2.0