| name | iii-architecture-patterns |
| description | Use when composing iii primitives into backend architectures: durable workflows, reactive backends, agentic pipelines, event-driven CQRS, effect pipelines, and trigger-transform-action automation. |
Architecture Patterns
Use this skill when the task is larger than one function or trigger. Pick the pattern from the
requirement, then implement it with Function, Trigger, Worker, state, queues, streams, and
pub/sub.
Pattern Map
| Requirement | Pattern | iii shape |
|---|
| Sequential work with retries, DLQ, step tracking | Durable workflow | Functions chained through named queues, progress in state |
| Keep views, metrics, cache, or clients in sync | Reactive backend | State triggers plus stream/pubsub side effects |
| Specialized AI agents hand work to each other | Agentic backend | One function per agent, queue handoffs, shared state |
| Commands publish events and projections update independently | Event-driven CQRS | Command functions, event log in state, subscribe triggers |
| Pure, traceable composition | Effect pipeline | Small functions composed synchronously with trigger() |
| Webhook/cron automation chains | Low-code automation | Trigger, transform, action nodes chained by enqueue |
Durable Workflow
Use named queues when steps need different retry, FIFO, or concurrency policy.
TypeScript
import { registerWorker, TriggerAction } from "iii-sdk";
const iii = registerWorker("ws://localhost:49134", { workerName: "order-workflow" });
async function track(orderId: string, step: string, status: string) {
await iii.trigger({
function_id: "state::update",
payload: { scope: "orders", key: orderId, ops: [{ op: "set", path: `/steps/${step}`, value: status }] },
});
}
iii.registerFunction("orders::validate", async (order) => {
await track(order.id, "validate", "done");
return iii.trigger({
function_id: "orders::charge",
payload: order,
action: TriggerAction.Enqueue({ queue: "order-payment" }),
});
});
iii.registerFunction("orders::charge", async (order) => {
await track(order.id, "payment", "done");
return iii.trigger({
function_id: "orders::ship",
payload: order,
action: TriggerAction.Enqueue({ queue: "order-ship" }),
});
});
Python
from iii import register_worker
iii = register_worker("ws://localhost:49134")
def track(order_id, step, status):
iii.trigger({
"function_id": "state::update",
"payload": {
"scope": "orders",
"key": order_id,
"ops": [{"op": "set", "path": f"/steps/{step}", "value": status}],
},
})
def validate(order):
track(order["id"], "validate", "done")
return iii.trigger({
"function_id": "orders::charge",
"payload": order,
"action": {"type": "enqueue", "queue": "order-payment"},
})
iii.register_function("orders::validate", validate)
Rust
use iii_sdk::TriggerAction;
use iii_sdk::protocol::TriggerRequest;
use serde_json::json;
async fn enqueue_charge(iii: iii_sdk::IIIClient, order: serde_json::Value) -> Result<serde_json::Value, iii_sdk::Error> {
iii.trigger(TriggerRequest {
function_id: "state::update".into(),
payload: json!({
"scope": "orders",
"key": order["id"],
"ops": [{ "op": "set", "path": "/steps/validate", "value": "done" }]
}),
action: None,
timeout_ms: None,
}).await?;
iii.trigger(TriggerRequest {
function_id: "orders::charge".into(),
payload: order,
action: Some(TriggerAction::Enqueue { queue: "order-payment".into() }),
timeout_ms: None,
}).await
}
Reactive Backend
Use state triggers when the requirement says "after create/update, do this", "avoid polling", or
"push live updates".
iii.registerFunction("todos::on-change", async (event) => {
await iii.trigger({
function_id: "stream::send",
payload: { stream_name: "todos-live", group_id: "default", data: event.new_value },
action: TriggerAction.Void(),
});
});
iii.registerTrigger({
type: "state",
function_id: "todos::on-change",
config: { scope: "todos" },
});
Agentic Backend
Model each agent as a function with one responsibility. Store shared context in state and hand off
work through named queues.
iii.registerFunction("agents::researcher", async (task) => {
await iii.trigger({
function_id: "state::set",
payload: { scope: "research", key: task.id, value: { findings: [] } },
});
return iii.trigger({
function_id: "agents::critic",
payload: task,
action: TriggerAction.Enqueue({ queue: "agent-tasks" }),
});
});
Event-Driven CQRS
Commands validate and publish domain events. Projections subscribe independently and write
query-optimized state.
iii.registerFunction("cmd::add-inventory-item", async (input) => {
const event = { type: "inventory.item-added", itemId: input.itemId, quantity: input.quantity };
await iii.trigger({
function_id: "state::set",
payload: { scope: "inventory-events", key: `${Date.now()}-${input.itemId}`, value: event },
});
await iii.trigger({ function_id: "publish", payload: { topic: event.type, data: event } });
return { accepted: true };
});
iii.registerTrigger({
type: "subscribe",
function_id: "proj::inventory-list",
config: { topic: "inventory.item-added" },
});
Selection Rules
- Use sync composition for short effect pipelines where the caller needs the final result.
- Use enqueue for unreliable, slow, or must-complete steps.
- Use pub/sub for independent fan-out where each subscriber can tolerate event-style delivery.
- Use state triggers for derived views and side effects that should run automatically after writes.
- Use cron triggers for scheduled maintenance and periodic starts.
- Keep each function small enough to test independently.
When to Use
- Use this skill for complete backend patterns: workflows, agentic systems, reactive apps, CQRS,
effect pipelines, and automation chains.
- Use this when the request describes product behavior rather than a single SDK API call.
Boundaries
- For exact trigger config, function registration syntax, custom triggers, channels, and
HTTP-invoked functions, use
iii-core-primitives.
- For queue retry, FIFO, adapter, port, and worker-manager config, use
iii-engine-config.
- For package-specific SDK syntax, use
iii-sdk-reference.
- Worker-backed capability details live with the worker docs, not as top-level iii skills.