---
title: Running an Express GraphQL Server
sidebarTitle: Running Express + GraphQL
---
# Running an Express GraphQL Server
import { Tabs } from 'nextra/components';
The simplest way to run a GraphQL API server is to use [Express](https://expressjs.com), a popular web application framework for Node.js. You will need to install two additional dependencies:
```sh npm2yarn
npm install express graphql-http graphql --save
```
Let's modify our "hello world" example so that it's an API server rather than a script that runs a single query. We can use the 'express' module to run a webserver, and instead of executing a query directly with the `graphql` function, we can use the `graphql-http` library to mount a GraphQL API server on the "/graphql" HTTP endpoint:
<Tabs items={['SDL', 'Code']}>
<Tabs.Tab>
```javascript
import { buildSchema } from 'graphql';
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/express';
import express from 'express';
// Construct a schema, using GraphQL schema language
const schema = buildSchema(`type Query { hello: String } `);
// The root provides a resolver function for each API endpoint
const root = {
hello() {
return 'Hello world!';
},
};
const app = express();
// Create and use the GraphQL handler.
app.all(
'/graphql',
createHandler({
schema: schema,
rootValue: root,
}),
);
// Start the server at port
app.listen(4000);
console.log('Running a GraphQL API server at http://localhost:4000/graphql');
```
</Tabs.Tab>
<Tabs.Tab>
```javascript
import { GraphQLObjectType, GraphQLSchema, GraphQLString } from 'graphql';
import { createHandler } from 'graphql-http/lib/use/express';
import express from 'express';
// Construct a schema
const schema = new GraphQLSchema({
query: new GraphQLObjectType({
name: 'Query',
fields: {
hello: {
type: GraphQLString,
resolve: () => 'Hello world!'
},
},
}),
});
const app = express();
// Create and use the GraphQL handler.
app.all(
'/graphql',
createHandler({
schema: schema,
}),
);
// Start the server at port
app.listen(4000);
console.log('Running a GraphQL API server at http://localhost:4000/graphql');
```
</Tabs.Tab>
</Tabs>
You can run this GraphQL server with:
```sh
node server.js
```
At this point you will have a running GraphQL API; but you can't just visit it in your web browser to use it - you need a GraphQL client to issue GraphQL queries to the API. Let's take a look at how to add the GraphiQL (GraphQL with an `i` in the middle) integrated development environment to your server.
## Using GraphiQL
[GraphiQL](https://github.com/graphql/graphiql) is GraphQL's IDE; a great way of querying and exploring your GraphQL API.
One easy way to add it to your server is via the MIT-licensed [ruru](https://github.com/graphile/crystal/blob/main/grafast/ruru/README.md) package which bundles a prebuilt GraphiQL with some popular enhancements.
To do so, install the `ruru` module with `npm install --save ruru` and then add the following to your `server.js` file, then restart the `node server.js` command:
```js
import { ruruHTML } from 'ruru/server';
// Serve the GraphiQL IDE.
app.get('/', (_req, res) => {
res.type('html');
res.end(ruruHTML({ endpoint: '/graphql' }));
});
```
If you navigate to [http://localhost:4000](http://localhost:4000), you should see an interface that lets you enter queries;
now you can use the GraphiQL IDE tool to issue GraphQL queries directly in the browser.
At this point you have learned how to run a GraphQL server. The next step is to learn how to [issue GraphQL queries from client code](./graphql-clients).