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Triggering Flows

Flows can be triggered in 8 ways.

On-demand triggers:

Triggers from external events:

On-demand Triggers

Auto-generated UIs

Windmill automatically generates user interfaces (UIs) for scripts and flows based on their parameters.

By analyzing the main function parameters, it creates an input specification in the JSON Schema format, which is then used to render the UI. Users do not need to interact with the JSON Schema directly, as Windmill simplifies the process and allows for optional UI customization.


This feature is also usable directly in the script editor to test a flow in the making:


Customized UIs with the App Editor

Windmill provides a WYSIWYG app editor. It allows you to build your own UI with drag-and-drop components and to connect your data to scripts and flows in minutes.


You can also automatically generate a dedicated app to execute your flow.

Schedule the Execution of a Flow

Windmill allows you to schedule scripts using a user-friendly interface and control panels, similar to cron but with more features.

You can create schedules by specifying a script or flow, its arguments, and a CRON expression to control the execution frequency, ensuring that your tasks run automatically at the desired intervals.


CLI (Command Line Interface)

The wmill CLI allows you to interact with Windmill instances right from your terminal.


Trigger a Flow from another Flow

Windmill supports inner flows. This allows you to call a flow from another workflow.

Inner Flows

Triggers from External Events

Trigger from API

Windmill provides a RESTful API that allows you to interact with your Windmill instance programmatically.

In particular, the operation run flow by path and run flow by path and wait until completion are designed to trigger a flow by its path, passing the required arguments.

Webhooks

In Windmill, webhooks are autogenerated for each Script and Flow, providing either asynchronous or synchronous execution modes.

These webhooks accept incoming HTTP requests, allowing users to easily trigger their Windmill scripts and flows from external services by simply sending a POST request to the appropriate authentified webhook URL (requires passing a token as Bearer or query arg). Their purpose is to have the flow run when it receives an input from its associated webhook.

Using webhooks, you could also trigger a flow from scripts.

Webhooks: Trigger Flows from Slack

One use case of webhooks is building a Slackbot with Windmill.


Windmill uses Slack to trigger scripts and flows by establishing Slackbots and creating specific commands. By connecting Slack with Windmill, parsing incoming Slack commands, and leveraging Windmill workflows, operational teams can trigger complex automations directly from Slack.

Webhooks: Trigger Flows from Emails

One use case of webhooks is triggering scripts via inbound emails using Mailchimp.


You can leverage Mailchimp Mandrill's capabilities to initiate scripts and flows via email-triggered events. By parsing inbound emails and routing the content to Windmill through webhooks, scripts or flows are activated, enabling automation based on email content or just their arrival.

Emails

Scripts and flows can be triggered by email messages sent to a specific email address, leveraging SMTP.

Scheduling + Trigger Scripts

A particular use case for schedules are Trigger Scripts.

Trigger scripts are designed to pull data from an external source and return all of the new items since the last run, without resorting to external webhooks. A trigger script is intended to be used with schedules and states (rich objects in JSON, persistent from one run to another) in order to compare the execution to the previous one and process each new item in a for loop. If there are no new items, the flow will be skipped.

By default, adding a trigger will set the schedule to 15 minutes.