Anything you can do with Node.js, you can do in a Pipedream workflow. This includes using most of npm's 400,000+ packages.
Emit new event when you add or modify a new row in a table. See the docs here
Emit new event when new rows are returned from a custom query. See the docs here
Emit new event when a new table is added to a database. See the docs here
Write custom Node.js code and use any of the 400k+ npm packages available. Refer to the Pipedream Node docs to learn more.
Develop, run and deploy your Node.js code in Pipedream workflows, using it between no-code steps, with connected accounts, or integrate Data Stores and File Stores.
This includes installing NPM packages, within your code without having to manage a package.json
file or running npm install
.
Below is an example of installing the axios
package in a Pipedream Node.js code step. Pipedream imports the axios
package, performs the API request, and shares the response with subsequent workflow steps:
// To use previous step data, pass the `steps` object to the run() function
export default defineComponent({
async run({ steps, $ }) {
// Return data to use it in future steps
return steps.trigger.event
},
})
The MySQL application on Pipedream enables direct interaction with your MySQL databases, allowing you to perform CRUD operations—create, read, update, delete—on your data with ease. You can leverage these capabilities to automate data synchronization, report generation, and event-based triggers that kick off workflows in other apps. With Pipedream's serverless platform, you can connect MySQL to hundreds of other services without managing infrastructure, crafting complex code, or handling authentication.
import mysql from '@pipedream/mysql';
export default defineComponent({
props: {
mysql,
},
async run({steps, $}) {
// Component source code:
// https://github.com/PipedreamHQ/pipedream/tree/master/components/mysql
const queryObj = {
sql: "SELECT NOW()",
values: [], // Ignored since query does not contain placeholders
};
return await this.mysql.executeQuery(queryObj);
},
});