Twilio is a cloud communications platform for building SMS, Voice & Messaging applications on an API built for global scale.
Emit new event every time an SMS is sent to the phone number set. Configures a webhook in Twilio, tied to an incoming phone number.
Emit new event each time a call to the phone number is completed. Configures a webhook in Twilio, tied to a phone number.
Make a phone call passing text, a URL, or an application that Twilio will use to handle the call. See the documentation
Write custom Node.js code and use any of the 400k+ npm packages available. Refer to the Pipedream Node docs to learn more.
Check if user-provided token is correct. See the documentation
Create a verification service for sending SMS verifications. See the documentation
Twilio's API on Pipedream opens up a multitude of communication capabilities, allowing you to build robust, scalable, and automated workflows. With Twilio, you can send and receive SMS and MMS messages, make voice calls, and perform other communication functions programmatically. Leveraging Pipedream's seamless integration, you can connect these communications features with hundreds of other services to automate notifications, streamline customer interactions, and enhance operational efficiency.
import { axios } from "@pipedream/platform"
export default defineComponent({
props: {
twilio: {
type: "app",
app: "twilio",
}
},
async run({steps, $}) {
return await axios($, {
url: `https://api.twilio.com/2010-04-01/Accounts.json`,
auth: {
username: `${this.twilio.$auth.AccountSid}`,
password: `${this.twilio.$auth.AuthToken}`,
},
})
},
})
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
},
})