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Version: 0.12.0

Use Webhooks

This tutorial assumes that fluvio is installed, and logged-in to InfinyOn Cloud. Follow the Quick Start to get set up.

Webhooks are special connectors with an associated external url. Users can send data to their topics via a HTTP POST request.

Webhook Configuration

The webhook configuration file has the following structure:

meta:
name: my-webhook # required
topic: my-webhook # required
logLevel: debug # default: info, options: [trace, debug, info, warn, error]
secrets:
- name: my-key
producer:
linger: 100ms
batch-size: 1mb
compression: snappy # default: none, options: [none, gzip, snappy, lz4, zstd]
webhook:
outputParts: full # default: body, options: [full, body]
outputType: json # default: text, options: [text, json]
outputUri: full # default: none, options: [full, none, path, query]
transforms:
- uses: infinyon/jolt@x.y.z
with:
key: ${{ secrets.my_key }}

The minimum configuration has needs the top 2 required fields: name and topic. The name is the name of the webhook, and the topic is the topic that the webhook will publish to.

Create a simple Webhook

Let's create an example configuration file

# example-webhook.yaml
meta:
name: my-webhook
topic: my-webhook-topic

Add a webhook to InfinyOn Cloud

$ fluvio cloud webhook create --config example-webhook.yaml

Your output should look similar to this. We'll cover sending data to this url.

Webhook "my-webhook" created with url: https://infinyon.cloud/webhooks/v1/[random string]

If you need this url again, you can run this command to list your webhooks, and their urls.

$ fluvio cloud webhook list

Example output

 NAME        TOPIC             URL
my-webhook my-webhook-topic https://infinyon.cloud/webhooks/v1/[random string]

Send data to webhook

We'll be sending json data {"key": "value"} to our webhook using curl. Replace the url so [random string] matches your unique url. Keep this command close because we'll refer to this example curl command later.

$ curl -v -X POST -d 'Hello World!' https://infinyon.cloud/webhooks/v1/[uri-key]

In another terminal, star a consumer that reads form the beginning:

$ fluvio consume my-webhook-topic -B

We should see the following output:

Hello World!

Create a JSON Webhook and embed HTTP parts

Next we'll send json records, but before we do that we'll modify outputParts, outputType, and outputUri in the example-webhook.yaml configuration file:

# example-webhook.yaml
meta:
name: my-webhook
topic: my-webhook-topic

webhook:
outputParts: full
outputType: json
outputUri: full

Run this command to update your webhook.

$ fluvio cloud webhook update --config example-webhook.yaml
Webhook "my-webhook" updated

Let's restart the consumer to a JSON formatter:

$ fluvio consume my-webhook-topic -O json

Run another curl with a json payload:

$ curl -v -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"key": "value"}' https://infinyon.cloud/webhooks/v1/[uri-key]

The consumer should now show the following output:

{
"body": {
"key": "value"
},
"headers": {
"accept": "*/*",
"accept-encoding": "gzip, br",
"content-length": "16",
"content-type": "application/json",
"host": "infinyon.cloud",
"user-agent": "curl/x.y.z",
"x-forwarded-for": "..."
},
"path": "",
"query": ""
}

Conclusion

You now know how to create and configure the output of Webhooks. Check out the Webhook Config reference to see how to configure other transformations.