n8n-workflow-patterns
npx skills add https://github.com/czlonkowski/n8n-skills --skill n8n-workflow-patterns
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Skill 文档
n8n Workflow Patterns
Proven architectural patterns for building n8n workflows.
The 5 Core Patterns
Based on analysis of real workflow usage:
-
Webhook Processing (Most Common)
- Receive HTTP requests â Process â Output
- Pattern: Webhook â Validate â Transform â Respond/Notify
-
- Fetch from REST APIs â Transform â Store/Use
- Pattern: Trigger â HTTP Request â Transform â Action â Error Handler
-
- Read/Write/Sync database data
- Pattern: Schedule â Query â Transform â Write â Verify
-
- AI agents with tools and memory
- Pattern: Trigger â AI Agent (Model + Tools + Memory) â Output
-
- Recurring automation workflows
- Pattern: Schedule â Fetch â Process â Deliver â Log
Pattern Selection Guide
When to use each pattern:
Webhook Processing – Use when:
- Receiving data from external systems
- Building integrations (Slack commands, form submissions, GitHub webhooks)
- Need instant response to events
- Example: “Receive Stripe payment webhook â Update database â Send confirmation”
HTTP API Integration – Use when:
- Fetching data from external APIs
- Synchronizing with third-party services
- Building data pipelines
- Example: “Fetch GitHub issues â Transform â Create Jira tickets”
Database Operations – Use when:
- Syncing between databases
- Running database queries on schedule
- ETL workflows
- Example: “Read Postgres records â Transform â Write to MySQL”
AI Agent Workflow – Use when:
- Building conversational AI
- Need AI with tool access
- Multi-step reasoning tasks
- Example: “Chat with AI that can search docs, query database, send emails”
Scheduled Tasks – Use when:
- Recurring reports or summaries
- Periodic data fetching
- Maintenance tasks
- Example: “Daily: Fetch analytics â Generate report â Email team”
Common Workflow Components
All patterns share these building blocks:
1. Triggers
- Webhook – HTTP endpoint (instant)
- Schedule – Cron-based timing (periodic)
- Manual – Click to execute (testing)
- Polling – Check for changes (intervals)
2. Data Sources
- HTTP Request – REST APIs
- Database nodes – Postgres, MySQL, MongoDB
- Service nodes – Slack, Google Sheets, etc.
- Code – Custom JavaScript/Python
3. Transformation
- Set – Map/transform fields
- Code – Complex logic
- IF/Switch – Conditional routing
- Merge – Combine data streams
4. Outputs
- HTTP Request – Call APIs
- Database – Write data
- Communication – Email, Slack, Discord
- Storage – Files, cloud storage
5. Error Handling
- Error Trigger – Catch workflow errors
- IF – Check for error conditions
- Stop and Error – Explicit failure
- Continue On Fail – Per-node setting
Workflow Creation Checklist
When building ANY workflow, follow this checklist:
Planning Phase
- Identify the pattern (webhook, API, database, AI, scheduled)
- List required nodes (use search_nodes)
- Understand data flow (input â transform â output)
- Plan error handling strategy
Implementation Phase
- Create workflow with appropriate trigger
- Add data source nodes
- Configure authentication/credentials
- Add transformation nodes (Set, Code, IF)
- Add output/action nodes
- Configure error handling
Validation Phase
- Validate each node configuration (validate_node)
- Validate complete workflow (validate_workflow)
- Test with sample data
- Handle edge cases (empty data, errors)
Deployment Phase
- Review workflow settings (execution order, timeout, error handling)
- Activate workflow using
activateWorkflowoperation - Monitor first executions
- Document workflow purpose and data flow
Data Flow Patterns
Linear Flow
Trigger â Transform â Action â End
Use when: Simple workflows with single path
Branching Flow
Trigger â IF â [True Path]
ââ [False Path]
Use when: Different actions based on conditions
Parallel Processing
Trigger â [Branch 1] â Merge
ââ [Branch 2] â
Use when: Independent operations that can run simultaneously
Loop Pattern
Trigger â Split in Batches â Process â Loop (until done)
Use when: Processing large datasets in chunks
Error Handler Pattern
Main Flow â [Success Path]
ââ [Error Trigger â Error Handler]
Use when: Need separate error handling workflow
Common Gotchas
1. Webhook Data Structure
Problem: Can’t access webhook payload data
Solution: Data is nested under $json.body
â {{$json.email}}
â
{{$json.body.email}}
See: n8n Expression Syntax skill
2. Multiple Input Items
Problem: Node processes all input items, but I only want one
Solution: Use “Execute Once” mode or process first item only
{{$json[0].field}} // First item only
3. Authentication Issues
Problem: API calls failing with 401/403
Solution:
- Configure credentials properly
- Use the “Credentials” section, not parameters
- Test credentials before workflow activation
4. Node Execution Order
Problem: Nodes executing in unexpected order
Solution: Check workflow settings â Execution Order
- v0: Top-to-bottom (legacy)
- v1: Connection-based (recommended)
5. Expression Errors
Problem: Expressions showing as literal text
Solution: Use {{}} around expressions
- See n8n Expression Syntax skill for details
Integration with Other Skills
These skills work together with Workflow Patterns:
n8n MCP Tools Expert – Use to:
- Find nodes for your pattern (search_nodes)
- Understand node operations (get_node)
- Create workflows (n8n_create_workflow)
- Deploy templates (n8n_deploy_template)
- Use ai_agents_guide for AI pattern guidance
n8n Expression Syntax – Use to:
- Write expressions in transformation nodes
- Access webhook data correctly ({{$json.body.field}})
- Reference previous nodes ({{$node[“Node Name”].json.field}})
n8n Node Configuration – Use to:
- Configure specific operations for pattern nodes
- Understand node-specific requirements
n8n Validation Expert – Use to:
- Validate workflow structure
- Fix validation errors
- Ensure workflow correctness before deployment
Pattern Statistics
Common workflow patterns:
Most Common Triggers:
- Webhook – 35%
- Schedule (periodic tasks) – 28%
- Manual (testing/admin) – 22%
- Service triggers (Slack, email, etc.) – 15%
Most Common Transformations:
- Set (field mapping) – 68%
- Code (custom logic) – 42%
- IF (conditional routing) – 38%
- Switch (multi-condition) – 18%
Most Common Outputs:
- HTTP Request (APIs) – 45%
- Slack – 32%
- Database writes – 28%
- Email – 24%
Average Workflow Complexity:
- Simple (3-5 nodes): 42%
- Medium (6-10 nodes): 38%
- Complex (11+ nodes): 20%
Quick Start Examples
Example 1: Simple Webhook â Slack
1. Webhook (path: "form-submit", POST)
2. Set (map form fields)
3. Slack (post message to #notifications)
Example 2: Scheduled Report
1. Schedule (daily at 9 AM)
2. HTTP Request (fetch analytics)
3. Code (aggregate data)
4. Email (send formatted report)
5. Error Trigger â Slack (notify on failure)
Example 3: Database Sync
1. Schedule (every 15 minutes)
2. Postgres (query new records)
3. IF (check if records exist)
4. MySQL (insert records)
5. Postgres (update sync timestamp)
Example 4: AI Assistant
1. Webhook (receive chat message)
2. AI Agent
ââ OpenAI Chat Model (ai_languageModel)
ââ HTTP Request Tool (ai_tool)
ââ Database Tool (ai_tool)
ââ Window Buffer Memory (ai_memory)
3. Webhook Response (send AI reply)
Example 5: API Integration
1. Manual Trigger (for testing)
2. HTTP Request (GET /api/users)
3. Split In Batches (process 100 at a time)
4. Set (transform user data)
5. Postgres (upsert users)
6. Loop (back to step 3 until done)
Detailed Pattern Files
For comprehensive guidance on each pattern:
- webhook_processing.md – Webhook patterns, data structure, response handling
- http_api_integration.md – REST APIs, authentication, pagination, retries
- database_operations.md – Queries, sync, transactions, batch processing
- ai_agent_workflow.md – AI agents, tools, memory, langchain nodes
- scheduled_tasks.md – Cron schedules, reports, maintenance tasks
Real Template Examples
From n8n template library:
Template #2947: Weather to Slack
- Pattern: Scheduled Task
- Nodes: Schedule â HTTP Request (weather API) â Set â Slack
- Complexity: Simple (4 nodes)
Webhook Processing: Most common pattern
- Most common: Form submissions, payment webhooks, chat integrations
HTTP API: Common pattern
- Most common: Data fetching, third-party integrations
Database Operations: Common pattern
- Most common: ETL, data sync, backup workflows
AI Agents: Growing in usage
- Most common: Chatbots, content generation, data analysis
Use search_templates and get_template from n8n-mcp tools to find examples!
Best Practices
â Do
- Start with the simplest pattern that solves your problem
- Plan your workflow structure before building
- Use error handling on all workflows
- Test with sample data before activation
- Follow the workflow creation checklist
- Use descriptive node names
- Document complex workflows (notes field)
- Monitor workflow executions after deployment
â Don’t
- Build workflows in one shot (iterate! avg 56s between edits)
- Skip validation before activation
- Ignore error scenarios
- Use complex patterns when simple ones suffice
- Hardcode credentials in parameters
- Forget to handle empty data cases
- Mix multiple patterns without clear boundaries
- Deploy without testing
Summary
Key Points:
- 5 core patterns cover 90%+ of workflow use cases
- Webhook processing is the most common pattern
- Use the workflow creation checklist for every workflow
- Plan pattern â Select nodes â Build â Validate â Deploy
- Integrate with other skills for complete workflow development
Next Steps:
- Identify your use case pattern
- Read the detailed pattern file
- Use n8n MCP Tools Expert to find nodes
- Follow the workflow creation checklist
- Use n8n Validation Expert to validate
Related Skills:
- n8n MCP Tools Expert – Find and configure nodes
- n8n Expression Syntax – Write expressions correctly
- n8n Validation Expert – Validate and fix errors
- n8n Node Configuration – Configure specific operations