| name | convex-create-component |
| description | Designs and builds Convex components with isolated tables, clear boundaries, and app-facing wrappers. Use this skill when creating a new Convex component, extracting reusable backend logic into a component, building a third-party integration that owns its own tables, packaging Convex functionality for reuse, or when the user mentions defineComponent, app.use, ComponentApi, ctx.runQuery/runMutation across component boundaries, or wants to separate concerns into isolated Convex modules. |
Convex Create Component
Create reusable Convex components with clear boundaries and a small app-facing
API.
When to Use
- Creating a new Convex component in an existing app
- Extracting reusable backend logic into a component
- Building a third-party integration that should own its own tables and
workflows
- Packaging Convex functionality for reuse across multiple apps
When Not to Use
- One-off business logic that belongs in the main app
- Thin utilities that do not need Convex tables or functions
- App-level orchestration that should stay in
convex/
- Cases where a normal TypeScript library is enough
Workflow
- Ask the user what they are building and what the end goal is. If the repo
already makes the answer obvious, say so and confirm before proceeding.
- Choose the shape using the decision tree below and read the matching
reference file.
- Decide whether a component is justified. Prefer normal app code or a regular
library if the feature does not need isolated tables, backend functions, or
reusable persistent state.
- Make a short plan for:
- what tables the component owns
- what public functions it exposes
- what data must be passed in from the app (auth, env vars, parent IDs)
- what stays in the app as wrappers or HTTP mounts
- Create the component structure with
convex.config.ts, schema.ts, and
function files.
- Implement functions using the component's own
./_generated/server imports,
not the app's generated files.
- Wire the component into the app with
app.use(...). If the app does not
already have convex/convex.config.ts, create it.
- Call the component from the app through
components.<name> using
ctx.runQuery, ctx.runMutation, or ctx.runAction.
- If React clients, HTTP callers, or public APIs need access, create wrapper
functions in the app instead of exposing component functions directly.
- Run
npx convex dev and fix codegen, type, or boundary issues before
finishing.
Choose the Shape
Ask the user, then pick one path:
| Goal | Shape | Reference |
|---|
| Component for this app only | Local | references/local-components.md |
| Publish or share across apps | Packaged | references/packaged-components.md |
| User explicitly needs local + shared library code | Hybrid | references/hybrid-components.md |
| Not sure | Default to local | references/local-components.md |
Read exactly one reference file before proceeding.
Default Approach
Unless the user explicitly wants an npm package, default to a local component:
- Put it under
convex/components/<componentName>/
- Define it with
defineComponent(...) in its own convex.config.ts
- Install it from the app's
convex/convex.config.ts with app.use(...)
- Let
npx convex dev generate the component's own _generated/ files
Component Skeleton
A minimal local component with a table and two functions, plus the app wiring.
import { defineComponent } from "convex/server";
export default defineComponent("notifications");
import { defineSchema, defineTable } from "convex/server";
import { v } from "convex/values";
export default defineSchema({
notifications: defineTable({
userId: v.string(),
message: v.string(),
read: v.boolean(),
}).index("by_user", ["userId"]),
});
import { v } from "convex/values";
import { mutation, query } from "./_generated/server.js";
export const send = mutation({
args: { userId: v.string(), message: v.string() },
returns: v.id("notifications"),
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
return await ctx.db.insert("notifications", {
userId: args.userId,
message: args.message,
read: false,
});
},
});
export const listUnread = query({
args: { userId: v.string() },
returns: v.array(
v.object({
_id: v.id("notifications"),
_creationTime: v.number(),
userId: v.string(),
message: v.string(),
read: v.boolean(),
}),
),
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
return await ctx.db
.query("notifications")
.withIndex("by_user", (q) => q.eq("userId", args.userId))
.filter((q) => q.eq(q.field("read"), false))
.collect();
},
});
import { defineApp } from "convex/server";
import notifications from "./components/notifications/convex.config.js";
const app = defineApp();
app.use(notifications);
export default app;
import { v } from "convex/values";
import { mutation, query } from "./_generated/server";
import { components } from "./_generated/api";
import { getAuthUserId } from "@convex-dev/auth/server";
export const sendNotification = mutation({
args: { message: v.string() },
returns: v.null(),
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
const userId = await getAuthUserId(ctx);
if (!userId) throw new Error("Not authenticated");
await ctx.runMutation(components.notifications.lib.send, {
userId,
message: args.message,
});
return null;
},
});
export const myUnread = query({
args: {},
handler: async (ctx) => {
const userId = await getAuthUserId(ctx);
if (!userId) throw new Error("Not authenticated");
return await ctx.runQuery(components.notifications.lib.listUnread, {
userId,
});
},
});
Note the reference path shape: a function in
convex/components/notifications/lib.ts is called as
components.notifications.lib.send from the app.
Critical Rules
- Keep authentication in the app, because
ctx.auth is not available inside
components.
- Keep environment access in the app, because component functions cannot read
process.env.
- Pass parent app IDs across the boundary as strings, because
Id types become
plain strings in the app-facing ComponentApi.
- Do not use
v.id("parentTable") for app-owned tables inside component args or
schema, because the component has no access to the app's table namespace.
- Import
query, mutation, and action from the component's own
./_generated/server, not the app's generated files.
- Do not expose component functions directly to clients. Create app wrappers
when client access is needed, because components are internal and need
auth/env wiring the app provides.
- If the component defines HTTP handlers, mount the routes in the app's
convex/http.ts, because components cannot register their own HTTP routes.
- If the component needs pagination, use
paginator from convex-helpers
instead of built-in .paginate(), because .paginate() does not work across
the component boundary.
- Add
args and returns validators to all public component functions, because
the component boundary requires explicit type contracts.
Patterns
Authentication and environment access
const identity = await ctx.auth.getUserIdentity();
const apiKey = process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY;
const userId = await getAuthUserId(ctx);
if (!userId) throw new Error("Not authenticated");
await ctx.runAction(components.translator.translate, {
userId,
apiKey: process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY,
text: args.text,
});
Client-facing API
export const send = components.notifications.send;
export const sendNotification = mutation({
args: { message: v.string() },
returns: v.null(),
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
const userId = await getAuthUserId(ctx);
if (!userId) throw new Error("Not authenticated");
await ctx.runMutation(components.notifications.lib.send, {
userId,
message: args.message,
});
return null;
},
});
IDs across the boundary
args: {
userId: v.id("users");
}
args: {
userId: v.string();
}
Advanced Patterns
For additional patterns including function handles for callbacks, deriving
validators from schema, static configuration with a globals table, and
class-based client wrappers, see references/advanced-patterns.md.
Validation
Try validation in this order:
npx convex codegen --component-dir convex/components/<name>
npx convex codegen
npx convex dev
Important:
- Fresh repos may fail these commands until
CONVEX_DEPLOYMENT is configured.
- Until codegen runs, component-local
./_generated/* imports and app-side
components.<name>... references will not typecheck.
- If validation blocks on Convex login or deployment setup, stop and ask the
user for that exact step instead of guessing.
Reference Files
Read exactly one of these after the user confirms the goal:
references/local-components.md
references/packaged-components.md
references/hybrid-components.md
Official docs:
Authoring Components
Checklist