| name | building-apis |
| description | Build Celigo APIs -- custom HTTP endpoints that let external systems push or query data synchronously through Celigo integrations. Use when creating APIs, proxying authenticated requests, or exposing lookup/write operations as a REST interface that returns a structured response. |
Building APIs
An API is a RESTful endpoint that exposes integration logic for external consumption. External systems call the API over HTTP; the API processes the request through lookups and imports, then returns a structured response. Concerns when building an API:
- Mode selection -- builder (visual configuration) vs script (full JavaScript control)
- Request definition -- HTTP method, URI path, parameters, body schema, request transformation
- Processing pipeline -- routers and page processors (lookups + imports) that execute business logic
- Response routing -- directing processed data to the correct response definition based on success/failure or custom conditions
- Response shaping -- status codes, field mappings, body schema, hooks (preMap, postMap) on each response
- Response mapping -- extracting fields from each page processor's response back into the record for downstream steps. Configured on each
pageProcessors[] entry, same as in flows. For lookup exports the response has data[] and errors[] (use data[0].fieldName for single results). For imports the response is via _json (use _json.fieldName)
- postResponseMap hook -- JavaScript processing after response mapping, configured on
pageProcessors[] entries
Used across integrations alongside flows and tools. APIs do not have their own authentication -- incoming requests authenticate via the Celigo API token; outbound calls to external systems use the connections referenced by exports/imports in the pipeline.
API Modes
Builder Mode (type: "builder")
Visual configuration with discrete components:
API (type: "builder")
+-- request -- method, relativeURI, params, bodySchema, mockRequest, transform
+-- routers[] -- processing pipeline (same structure as flow routers)
| +-- branches[]
| +-- inputFilter -- when to use this branch (s-expression rules)
| +-- pageProcessors[] -- lookups (exports) and imports
| +-- nextRouterId -- chain to next router, or "apiRouter" to finish
+-- responseRouter -- id="apiRouter", routes processed data to a response
+-- responses[] -- success, fail, custom -- each with statusCode, inputFilter, mappings
The incoming HTTP request replaces the export as data source. Routers and page processors work identically to flows.
API Execution Pipeline (Builder Mode)
When an API receives a request:
- Request received -- method + path matched against the API endpoint definition
- Request transform (optional) -- reshapes the incoming request body before routing
- Router evaluation --
routeRecordsUsing evaluates branch input filter conditions
- Branch selection -- first matching branch processes the request
- Page processors -- each processor in the branch executes sequentially (export lookups, import writes)
- Response mapping --
responseMapping on each processor carries data forward to the next processor
- Response router --
responseRouter (id="apiRouter") selects which response template to use based on response input filters
- Response -- selected response template returned to the caller with its statusCode, headers, and body
Script Mode (type: "script")
A single handleRequest JavaScript function receives the request object (method, headers, queryParams, body, pathParams) and returns {statusCode, headers, body}. Complete control with no visual configuration.
Legacy APIs (no type field, top-level _scriptId + function) exist in production but are not represented in the current spec. Distinguish by: if type is absent/null and _scriptId is present, it's legacy.
Quick Reference
Decision Matrix
| Scenario | Mode | Why |
|---|
| Standard lookup/write with structured response | Builder | Visual debugging, test runs, structured responses |
| Multiple response shapes based on success/failure | Builder | Response router + inputFilter handles this declaratively |
| Complex conditional logic or custom auth validation | Script | Full JavaScript control over request/response |
| Dynamic routing that can't be expressed as input filters | Script | handleRequest can implement arbitrary logic |
| Proxy through an authenticated connection | Builder | Wire the connection's export/import as a page processor |
| Simple webhook receiver that transforms and forwards | Builder | Single router, single branch, one import |
Minimum Required Fields
| Mode | Required Fields |
|---|
| Builder | name, type: "builder", builder.request (method + relativeURI) |
| Script | name, type: "script", script._scriptId, script.function |
| Legacy | name, _scriptId, function (no type field) |
Schema Index
All schemas are in references/schemas/:
| Schema | What it defines |
|---|
| request.yml | Top-level API fields (name, type, version, disabled, builder/script refs) |
| response.yml | API response shape |
| builder.yml | Builder configuration (request, routers, responseRouter, responses refs) |
| api-request.yml | Request config (method, relativeURI, params, bodySchema, mockRequest, transform) |
| api-response.yml | Response definitions (id, name, type, statusCode, inputFilter, mappings, hooks) |
| response-router.yml | Response router (id="apiRouter", routeRecordsUsing) |
| router.yml | Routers (branches, inputFilter, pageProcessors) |
| script.yml | Script config (_scriptId, function) |
| apim.yml | APIM metadata (publication status) |
| shipworks.yml | Legacy ShipWorks auth |
Related Skills
How to Build an API
1. Plan what the API needs to do
Before creating anything, understand the requirements: what endpoint the caller needs, what data it sends, what systems are involved, what the response should look like. This determines everything -- mode, pipeline shape, which connections/exports/imports are needed.
2. Decide the mode
Use builder for most APIs -- it provides visual debugging, test runs, and structured responses. Use script only when the processing logic is too dynamic for the visual pipeline (e.g., complex conditional responses, custom auth validation, dynamic routing).
3. Check for existing resources
Look for connections, exports, and imports that can be reused before creating new ones.
celigo account search "<keyword>"
celigo account dependencies api <id>
celigo account lint
celigo apis list | grep -i "<keyword>"
celigo exports list | grep -i "<system-name>"
celigo imports list | grep -i "<system-name>"
celigo templates marketplace
The account index auto-refreshes when stale (>4 hours). Force a fresh snapshot with celigo account snapshot.
4. Create the supporting resources (bottom-up)
APIs reference exports and imports as page processors -- these must exist before you can attach them. Build order:
- Connections -- create or reuse connections to the target systems
- Exports -- for lookups that query external systems (use
configuring-exports skill)
- Imports -- for writes to external systems (use
configuring-imports skill)
5. Define the request (builder mode)
Choose the HTTP method and URI path. GET and POST are most common; PUT and PATCH are rare.
- Path parameters use colon notation:
/customers/:id
- Document query parameters, path parameters, headers, and body schema
- Add a
mockRequest for testing the pipeline without live calls
- Optionally add a request
transform (expression-based or script-based) to reshape incoming data before processing
6. Build the processing pipeline
The pipeline is made of routers, branches, and page processors. See router.yml for the full schema.
Every builder API needs at least one router -- it's the container that holds branches, and branches hold the page processors that do the actual work. Use multiple branches when different request conditions need different processing paths (e.g., branch by HTTP method, request field value, or record type). Use multiple routers when you need sequential stages of processing where each stage can branch independently.
For pass-through routers (single branch, no filters, just linear steps before a branching router), omit routeRecordsTo and routeRecordsUsing -- including them makes it appear as a filter-based branch in the UI. The API defaults are sufficient.
Input filters use s-expression syntax: ["operator", ["type", ["extract", "field"]], value]. Type wrappers (string, number, boolean) are required around extract and context accessors. Logical combinators: ["and", cond1, cond2], ["or", cond1, cond2].
The last branch in the chain must set nextRouterId: "apiRouter" to reach the response router.
7. Configure responses
Every builder API needs exactly one success response and one fail response. Add custom responses for specific scenarios (e.g., 404 not found, 422 validation error).
Each response has:
statusCode (HTTP status code)
inputFilter to determine when it's selected (typically ["equals", ["boolean", ["context", "success"]], true] for success)
mappings to shape the response body from the processed record
- Optional
bodySchema for documentation, headers, lookups, and hooks (preMap, postMap)
8. Configure the response router
Set id: "apiRouter" and choose routing method:
input_filters (default) -- evaluates each response's inputFilter
script -- custom JavaScript returns the response id to use
9. Build the JSON
Reference the Schema Index above for exact field schemas.
Every API needs at minimum: name, type, and either builder (with request) or script (with _scriptId and function).
CLI Commands
celigo apis list
celigo apis get <id>
celigo apis create < api.json
celigo apis update <id> < api.json
celigo apis set <id> key=value [key2=value2 ...]
celigo apis delete <id>
celigo apis clone <id> --api-version <version> [--name <name>] [--description <desc>] [--environment <envId>]
celigo apis add-processor <id> <exportOrImportId> [--router <routerId>] [--branch <branchName>]
celigo apis remove-processor <id> <exportOrImportId> [--router <routerId>] [--branch <branchName>]
celigo apis logs <id>
celigo apis log-detail <id> <key>
celigo apis test-run <id>
celigo apis test-run-step-results <id> <runId> <exportOrImportId>
celigo apis test-run-step-logs <id> <runId> <exportOrImportId>
celigo apis debug-requests <id> <exportOrImportId> [--since <minutes>]
celigo apis debug-request-detail <id> <exportOrImportId> <key>
celigo account search "<keyword>"
celigo templates marketplace
Pre-Submit Checklist
Before creating or updating an API, verify:
Gotchas
- PUT erases omitted fields. Always GET first, modify, then PUT. The
set command handles this automatically.
- APIs only support
first_matching_branch routing. Unlike flows which also support all_matching_branches, API routers always stop at the first matching branch.
- Omitting
inputFilter type wrappers silently fails. Use ["boolean", ["context", "success"]], not bare ["context", "success"] -- the filter will never match without the wrapper.
- Clone only works for builder-mode APIs. Script and legacy APIs cannot be cloned via the CLI.
- Missing a success or fail response causes undefined behavior. The response router won't know where to route.
**version becomes part of the URL path.** The full endpoint is /{version}{relativeURI}. Changing the version changes the URL that callers must use.
Common Errors
| Error | Cause | Fix |
|---|
404 on API endpoint | Wrong version or relativeURI in the request | Verify the full URL is /{version}{relativeURI} and both match the API definition |
422 validation error on create/update | Missing required fields or invalid field values | Check the Pre-Submit Checklist; verify type is set |
Response always returns the fail response | Success inputFilter is malformed or missing type wrapper | Use ["equals", ["boolean", ["context", "success"]], true] exactly |
| Response body is empty | Response mappings not configured or field paths don't match | Verify mapping extract paths match the actual processed record structure |
| Pipeline step silently skipped | inputFilter on a branch evaluates to false for all records | Debug with celigo apis test-run-step-results to see each step's input/output |
Clone failed error | Attempting to clone a script-mode or legacy API | Clone is builder-mode only; recreate script APIs manually |
| Page processor returns no data | Export/import _id reference is wrong or resource is disabled | Verify the referenced resource exists and is enabled with celigo exports get / celigo imports get |
Router ID not found error | nextRouterId references a non-existent router ID | Ensure all nextRouterId values match a real router id or "apiRouter" |