Event trigger payload¶
Table of contents
Introduction¶
The following is the payload and delivery mechanism of an event to the webhook when an event trigger is invoked.
HTTP request method¶
Delivered over HTTP POST with the following headers:
Content-Type: application/json
JSON payload¶
{
  "event": {
      "session_variables": <session-variables>,
      "op": "<op-name>",
      "data": {
          "old": <column-values>,
          "new": <column-values>
      }
  },
  "created_at": "<timestamp>",
  "id": "<uuid>",
  "trigger": {
      "name": "<name-of-trigger>"
  },
  "table":  {
      "schema": "<schema-name>",
      "name": "<table-name>"
  }
}
| Key | Type | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| session-variables | Object or NULL | Key-value pairs of session variables (i.e. “x-hasura-*” variables) and their values (NULL if no session variables found) | 
| op-name | OpName | Name of the operation. Can only be “INSERT”, “UPDATE”, “DELETE”, “MANUAL” | 
| column-values | Object | Key-value pairs of column name and their values of the table | 
| timestamp | String | Timestamp at which event was created | 
| uuid | String | UUID identifier for the event | 
| name-of-trigger | String | Name of the trigger | 
| schema-name | String | Name of the schema for the table | 
| table-name | String | Name of the table | 
In case of:
- INSERT- event.data.oldwill be- null
- event.data.newwill contain the insert row
 
- UPDATE- event.data.oldwill be values before the update
- event.data.newwill contain the values after the update
 
- DELETE- event.data.oldwill contain the row that is deleted
- event.data.newwill be- null
 
- MANUAL- event.data.oldwill be- null
- event.data.newwill contain the current row
 
Note
In case of UPDATE, the events are delivered only if new data is distinct from
old data. The composite type comparison
is used to compare the old and new rows. If rows contain columns, which cannot be
compared using <> operator, then internal binary representation of rows by Postgres is compared.
For example:
{
  "id": "85558393-c75d-4d2f-9c15-e80591b83894",
  "created_at": "2018-09-05T07:14:21.601701Z",
  "trigger": {
      "name": "test_trigger"
  },
  "table": {
      "schema": "public",
      "name": "users"
  },
  "event": {
      "session_variables": {
          "x-hasura-role": "admin",
          "x-hasura-allowed-roles": "['user', 'boo', 'admin']",
          "x-hasura-user-id": "1"
      },
      "op": "INSERT",
      "data": {
        "old": null,
        "new": {
            "id":"42",
            "name": "john doe"
        }
      }
  }
}
Syntax definitions¶
Object¶
{
  "column1": "value1",
  "column2": "value2",
  ..
}
OpName¶
"INSERT" | "UPDATE" | "DELETE" | "MANUAL"
Webhook response structure¶
A 2xx response status code is deemed to be a successful invocation of the webhook. Any other response status will be
deemed as an unsuccessful invocation which will cause retries as per the retry configuration.
It is also recommended that you return a JSON object in your webhook response.
Retry-After header¶
If the webhook response contains a Retry-After header, then the event will be redelivered once more after the duration (in seconds) found in the header. Note that the header will be respected only if the response status code is non-2xx.
The Retry-After header can be used for retrying/rate-limiting/debouncing your webhook triggers.
