| name | output-error-missing-schemas |
| description | Fix missing schema definitions in Output SDK steps. Use when seeing type errors, undefined properties at step boundaries, validation failures, or when step inputs/outputs aren't being properly typed. |
| allowed-tools | ["Bash","Read"] |
Fix Missing Schema Definitions
Overview
This skill helps diagnose and fix issues caused by steps that lack explicit inputSchema or outputSchema definitions. Schemas are essential for type safety, validation, and proper data serialization between steps.
When to Use This Skill
You're seeing:
- Type errors at step boundaries
- Undefined properties in step inputs/outputs
- Validation failures when passing data between steps
- TypeScript errors about incompatible types
- Runtime errors about unexpected data shapes
Root Cause
Steps without explicit schemas:
- Don't validate input data at runtime
- Don't provide TypeScript type inference
- May serialize/deserialize data incorrectly
- Can pass undefined or malformed data silently
Symptoms
Missing Input Schema
export const processData = step({
name: 'processData',
outputSchema: z.object({ result: z.string() }),
fn: async (input) => {
return { result: input.value };
}
});
Missing Output Schema
export const fetchData = step({
name: 'fetchData',
inputSchema: z.object({ id: z.string() }),
fn: async (input) => {
return { data: await getFromApi(input.id) };
}
});
Both Schemas Missing
export const transformData = step({
name: 'transformData',
fn: async (input) => {
return transform(input);
}
});
Solution
Always define both inputSchema and outputSchema for every step:
Complete Step Definition
import { z, step } from '@outputai/core';
export const processData = step({
name: 'processData',
inputSchema: z.object({
id: z.string(),
value: z.number(),
optional: z.string().optional(),
}),
outputSchema: z.object({
result: z.string(),
processedAt: z.number(),
}),
fn: async (input) => {
return {
result: `Processed ${input.id}`,
processedAt: Date.now(),
};
},
});
Schema Definition Best Practices
Use Descriptive Schemas
inputSchema: z.object({
userId: z.string().uuid(),
email: z.string().email(),
age: z.number().int().positive(),
})
Handle Optional Fields
inputSchema: z.object({
required: z.string(),
optional: z.string().optional(),
withDefault: z.string().default('fallback'),
})
Use Schema Composition
const userSchema = z.object({
id: z.string(),
name: z.string(),
});
const addressSchema = z.object({
street: z.string(),
city: z.string(),
});
inputSchema: z.object({
user: userSchema,
address: addressSchema,
})
Handle Arrays and Nested Objects
inputSchema: z.object({
items: z.array(z.object({
id: z.string(),
quantity: z.number(),
})),
metadata: z.record(z.string()),
})
Finding Steps Without Schemas
Search your codebase:
grep -rn "step({" src/workflows/
grep -A5 "step({" src/workflows/ | grep -B2 "fn:"
grep -rn "inputSchema:" src/workflows/
grep -rn "outputSchema:" src/workflows/
Review each step definition to ensure both schemas are present.
Benefits of Explicit Schemas
- Runtime Validation: Catches data errors early
- Type Safety: Full TypeScript inference in step functions
- Documentation: Schemas document expected data shapes
- Serialization: Ensures proper data serialization between steps
- Error Messages: Clear validation errors when data is wrong
Common Schema Patterns
API Response Steps
export const fetchUser = step({
name: 'fetchUser',
inputSchema: z.object({
userId: z.string(),
}),
outputSchema: z.object({
user: z.object({
id: z.string(),
name: z.string(),
email: z.string(),
}).nullable(),
found: z.boolean(),
}),
fn: async (input) => {
const user = await api.getUser(input.userId);
return { user, found: user !== null };
},
});
Transformation Steps
export const transformData = step({
name: 'transformData',
inputSchema: z.object({
raw: z.array(z.unknown()),
}),
outputSchema: z.object({
processed: z.array(z.object({
id: z.string(),
value: z.number(),
})),
count: z.number(),
}),
fn: async (input) => {
const processed = input.raw.map(transformItem);
return { processed, count: processed.length };
},
});
Void Output Steps
For steps that don't return meaningful data:
export const logEvent = step({
name: 'logEvent',
inputSchema: z.object({
event: z.string(),
data: z.record(z.unknown()),
}),
outputSchema: z.object({
logged: z.literal(true),
}),
fn: async (input) => {
await logger.log(input.event, input.data);
return { logged: true };
},
});
Verification
After adding schemas:
- TypeScript check:
npm run output:workflow:build should pass without type errors
- Runtime test:
npx output workflow run <name> '<input>' should validate correctly
- Invalid input test: Pass invalid data and verify validation errors appear
Related Issues
- For Zod import issues, see
output-error-zod-import
- For type mismatches despite schemas, verify schema matches actual data