Back to Skills

n8n-node-configuration

davila7
Updated Today
38 views
15,516
1,344
15,516
View on GitHub
Designdesign

About

This Claude Skill provides operation-aware guidance for configuring n8n nodes, helping developers understand property dependencies and required fields. It offers practical advice on choosing between configuration methods like `get_node_essentials` and `get_node_info`, and teaches common configuration patterns by node type. Use it when setting up nodes to apply progressive disclosure principles and simplify complex configurations.

Documentation

n8n Node Configuration

Expert guidance for operation-aware node configuration with property dependencies.


Configuration Philosophy

Progressive disclosure: Start minimal, add complexity as needed

Configuration best practices:

  • get_node_essentials is the most used discovery pattern
  • 56 seconds average between configuration edits
  • 91.7% success rate with essentials-based configuration

Key insight: Most configurations need only essentials, not full schema!


Core Concepts

1. Operation-Aware Configuration

Not all fields are always required - it depends on operation!

Example: Slack node

// For operation='post'
{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "post",
  "channel": "#general",  // Required for post
  "text": "Hello!"        // Required for post
}

// For operation='update'
{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "update",
  "messageId": "123",     // Required for update (different!)
  "text": "Updated!"      // Required for update
  // channel NOT required for update
}

Key: Resource + operation determine which fields are required!

2. Property Dependencies

Fields appear/disappear based on other field values

Example: HTTP Request node

// When method='GET'
{
  "method": "GET",
  "url": "https://api.example.com"
  // sendBody not shown (GET doesn't have body)
}

// When method='POST'
{
  "method": "POST",
  "url": "https://api.example.com",
  "sendBody": true,       // Now visible!
  "body": {               // Required when sendBody=true
    "contentType": "json",
    "content": {...}
  }
}

Mechanism: displayOptions control field visibility

3. Progressive Discovery

Use the right tool for the right job:

  1. get_node_essentials (91.7% success rate)

    • Quick overview
    • Required fields
    • Common options
    • Use first - covers 90% of needs
  2. get_property_dependencies (for complex nodes)

    • Shows what fields depend on others
    • Reveals conditional requirements
    • Use when essentials isn't enough
  3. get_node_info (full schema)

    • Complete documentation
    • All possible fields
    • Use when essentials + dependencies insufficient

Configuration Workflow

Standard Process

1. Identify node type and operation
   ↓
2. Use get_node_essentials
   ↓
3. Configure required fields
   ↓
4. Validate configuration
   ↓
5. If dependencies unclear → get_property_dependencies
   ↓
6. Add optional fields as needed
   ↓
7. Validate again
   ↓
8. Deploy

Example: Configuring HTTP Request

Step 1: Identify what you need

// Goal: POST JSON to API

Step 2: Get essentials

const info = get_node_essentials({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.httpRequest"
});

// Returns: method, url, sendBody, body, authentication required/optional

Step 3: Minimal config

{
  "method": "POST",
  "url": "https://api.example.com/create",
  "authentication": "none"
}

Step 4: Validate

validate_node_operation({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.httpRequest",
  config,
  profile: "runtime"
});
// → Error: "sendBody required for POST"

Step 5: Add required field

{
  "method": "POST",
  "url": "https://api.example.com/create",
  "authentication": "none",
  "sendBody": true
}

Step 6: Validate again

validate_node_operation({...});
// → Error: "body required when sendBody=true"

Step 7: Complete configuration

{
  "method": "POST",
  "url": "https://api.example.com/create",
  "authentication": "none",
  "sendBody": true,
  "body": {
    "contentType": "json",
    "content": {
      "name": "={{$json.name}}",
      "email": "={{$json.email}}"
    }
  }
}

Step 8: Final validation

validate_node_operation({...});
// → Valid! ✅

get_node_essentials vs get_node_info

Use get_node_essentials When:

✅ Starting configuration (91.7% success rate)

get_node_essentials({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.slack"
});

Returns:

  • Required fields
  • Common options
  • Basic examples
  • Operation list

Fast: ~18 seconds average (from search → essentials)

Use get_node_info When:

✅ Essentials insufficient

get_node_info({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.slack"
});

Returns:

  • Full schema
  • All properties
  • Complete documentation
  • Advanced options

Slower: More data to process

Decision Tree

┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ Starting new node config?       │
├─────────────────────────────────┤
│ YES → get_node_essentials       │
└─────────────────────────────────┘
         ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ Essentials has what you need?   │
├─────────────────────────────────┤
│ YES → Configure with essentials │
│ NO  → Continue                  │
└─────────────────────────────────┘
         ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ Need dependency info?           │
├─────────────────────────────────┤
│ YES → get_property_dependencies │
│ NO  → Continue                  │
└─────────────────────────────────┘
         ↓
┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ Still need more details?        │
├─────────────────────────────────┤
│ YES → get_node_info             │
└─────────────────────────────────┘

Property Dependencies Deep Dive

displayOptions Mechanism

Fields have visibility rules:

{
  "name": "body",
  "displayOptions": {
    "show": {
      "sendBody": [true],
      "method": ["POST", "PUT", "PATCH"]
    }
  }
}

Translation: "body" field shows when:

  • sendBody = true AND
  • method = POST, PUT, or PATCH

Common Dependency Patterns

Pattern 1: Boolean Toggle

Example: HTTP Request sendBody

// sendBody controls body visibility
{
  "sendBody": true   // → body field appears
}

Pattern 2: Operation Switch

Example: Slack resource/operation

// Different operations → different fields
{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "post"
  // → Shows: channel, text, attachments, etc.
}

{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "update"
  // → Shows: messageId, text (different fields!)
}

Pattern 3: Type Selection

Example: IF node conditions

{
  "type": "string",
  "operation": "contains"
  // → Shows: value1, value2
}

{
  "type": "boolean",
  "operation": "equals"
  // → Shows: value1, value2, different operators
}

Using get_property_dependencies

Example:

const deps = get_property_dependencies({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.httpRequest"
});

// Returns dependency tree
{
  "dependencies": {
    "body": {
      "shows_when": {
        "sendBody": [true],
        "method": ["POST", "PUT", "PATCH", "DELETE"]
      }
    },
    "queryParameters": {
      "shows_when": {
        "sendQuery": [true]
      }
    }
  }
}

Use this when: Validation fails and you don't understand why field is missing/required


Common Node Patterns

Pattern 1: Resource/Operation Nodes

Examples: Slack, Google Sheets, Airtable

Structure:

{
  "resource": "<entity>",      // What type of thing
  "operation": "<action>",     // What to do with it
  // ... operation-specific fields
}

How to configure:

  1. Choose resource
  2. Choose operation
  3. Use get_node_essentials to see operation-specific requirements
  4. Configure required fields

Pattern 2: HTTP-Based Nodes

Examples: HTTP Request, Webhook

Structure:

{
  "method": "<HTTP_METHOD>",
  "url": "<endpoint>",
  "authentication": "<type>",
  // ... method-specific fields
}

Dependencies:

  • POST/PUT/PATCH → sendBody available
  • sendBody=true → body required
  • authentication != "none" → credentials required

Pattern 3: Database Nodes

Examples: Postgres, MySQL, MongoDB

Structure:

{
  "operation": "<query|insert|update|delete>",
  // ... operation-specific fields
}

Dependencies:

  • operation="executeQuery" → query required
  • operation="insert" → table + values required
  • operation="update" → table + values + where required

Pattern 4: Conditional Logic Nodes

Examples: IF, Switch, Merge

Structure:

{
  "conditions": {
    "<type>": [
      {
        "operation": "<operator>",
        "value1": "...",
        "value2": "..."  // Only for binary operators
      }
    ]
  }
}

Dependencies:

  • Binary operators (equals, contains, etc.) → value1 + value2
  • Unary operators (isEmpty, isNotEmpty) → value1 only + singleValue: true

Operation-Specific Configuration

Slack Node Examples

Post Message

{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "post",
  "channel": "#general",      // Required
  "text": "Hello!",           // Required
  "attachments": [],          // Optional
  "blocks": []                // Optional
}

Update Message

{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "update",
  "messageId": "1234567890",  // Required (different from post!)
  "text": "Updated!",         // Required
  "channel": "#general"       // Optional (can be inferred)
}

Create Channel

{
  "resource": "channel",
  "operation": "create",
  "name": "new-channel",      // Required
  "isPrivate": false          // Optional
  // Note: text NOT required for this operation
}

HTTP Request Node Examples

GET Request

{
  "method": "GET",
  "url": "https://api.example.com/users",
  "authentication": "predefinedCredentialType",
  "nodeCredentialType": "httpHeaderAuth",
  "sendQuery": true,                    // Optional
  "queryParameters": {                  // Shows when sendQuery=true
    "parameters": [
      {
        "name": "limit",
        "value": "100"
      }
    ]
  }
}

POST with JSON

{
  "method": "POST",
  "url": "https://api.example.com/users",
  "authentication": "none",
  "sendBody": true,                     // Required for POST
  "body": {                             // Required when sendBody=true
    "contentType": "json",
    "content": {
      "name": "John Doe",
      "email": "[email protected]"
    }
  }
}

IF Node Examples

String Comparison (Binary)

{
  "conditions": {
    "string": [
      {
        "value1": "={{$json.status}}",
        "operation": "equals",
        "value2": "active"              // Binary: needs value2
      }
    ]
  }
}

Empty Check (Unary)

{
  "conditions": {
    "string": [
      {
        "value1": "={{$json.email}}",
        "operation": "isEmpty",
        // No value2 - unary operator
        "singleValue": true             // Auto-added by sanitization
      }
    ]
  }
}

Handling Conditional Requirements

Example: HTTP Request Body

Scenario: body field required, but only sometimes

Rule:

body is required when:
  - sendBody = true AND
  - method IN (POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE)

How to discover:

// Option 1: Read validation error
validate_node_operation({...});
// Error: "body required when sendBody=true"

// Option 2: Check dependencies
get_property_dependencies({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.httpRequest"
});
// Shows: body → shows_when: sendBody=[true], method=[POST,PUT,PATCH,DELETE]

// Option 3: Try minimal config and iterate
// Start without body, validation will tell you if needed

Example: IF Node singleValue

Scenario: singleValue property appears for unary operators

Rule:

singleValue should be true when:
  - operation IN (isEmpty, isNotEmpty, true, false)

Good news: Auto-sanitization fixes this!

Manual check:

get_property_dependencies({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.if"
});
// Shows operator-specific dependencies

Configuration Anti-Patterns

❌ Don't: Over-configure Upfront

Bad:

// Adding every possible field
{
  "method": "GET",
  "url": "...",
  "sendQuery": false,
  "sendHeaders": false,
  "sendBody": false,
  "timeout": 10000,
  "ignoreResponseCode": false,
  // ... 20 more optional fields
}

Good:

// Start minimal
{
  "method": "GET",
  "url": "...",
  "authentication": "none"
}
// Add fields only when needed

❌ Don't: Skip Validation

Bad:

// Configure and deploy without validating
const config = {...};
n8n_update_partial_workflow({...});  // YOLO

Good:

// Validate before deploying
const config = {...};
const result = validate_node_operation({...});
if (result.valid) {
  n8n_update_partial_workflow({...});
}

❌ Don't: Ignore Operation Context

Bad:

// Same config for all Slack operations
{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "post",
  "channel": "#general",
  "text": "..."
}

// Then switching operation without updating config
{
  "resource": "message",
  "operation": "update",  // Changed
  "channel": "#general",  // Wrong field for update!
  "text": "..."
}

Good:

// Check requirements when changing operation
get_node_essentials({
  nodeType: "nodes-base.slack"
});
// See what update operation needs (messageId, not channel)

Best Practices

✅ Do

  1. Start with get_node_essentials

    • 91.7% success rate
    • Faster than get_node_info
    • Sufficient for most needs
  2. Validate iteratively

    • Configure → Validate → Fix → Repeat
    • Average 2-3 iterations is normal
    • Read validation errors carefully
  3. Use property dependencies when stuck

    • If field seems missing, check dependencies
    • Understand what controls field visibility
    • get_property_dependencies reveals rules
  4. Respect operation context

    • Different operations = different requirements
    • Always check essentials when changing operation
    • Don't assume configs are transferable
  5. Trust auto-sanitization

    • Operator structure fixed automatically
    • Don't manually add/remove singleValue
    • IF/Switch metadata added on save

❌ Don't

  1. Jump to get_node_info immediately

    • Try essentials first
    • Only escalate if needed
    • Full schema is overwhelming
  2. Configure blindly

    • Always validate before deploying
    • Understand why fields are required
    • Check dependencies for conditional fields
  3. Copy configs without understanding

    • Different operations need different fields
    • Validate after copying
    • Adjust for new context
  4. Manually fix auto-sanitization issues

    • Let auto-sanitization handle operator structure
    • Focus on business logic
    • Save and let system fix structure

Detailed References

For comprehensive guides on specific topics:


Summary

Configuration Strategy:

  1. Start with get_node_essentials (91.7% success)
  2. Configure required fields for operation
  3. Validate configuration
  4. Check dependencies if stuck
  5. Iterate until valid (avg 2-3 cycles)
  6. Deploy with confidence

Key Principles:

  • Operation-aware: Different operations = different requirements
  • Progressive disclosure: Start minimal, add as needed
  • Dependency-aware: Understand field visibility rules
  • Validation-driven: Let validation guide configuration

Related Skills:

  • n8n MCP Tools Expert - How to use discovery tools correctly
  • n8n Validation Expert - Interpret validation errors
  • n8n Expression Syntax - Configure expression fields
  • n8n Workflow Patterns - Apply patterns with proper configuration

Quick Install

/plugin add https://github.com/davila7/claude-code-templates/tree/main/n8n-node-configuration

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

GitHub 仓库

davila7/claude-code-templates
Path: cli-tool/components/skills/workflow-automation/n8n/n8n-node-configuration
anthropicanthropic-claudeclaudeclaude-code

Related Skills

langchain

Meta

LangChain is a framework for building LLM applications using agents, chains, and RAG pipelines. It supports multiple LLM providers, offers 500+ integrations, and includes features like tool calling and memory management. Use it for rapid prototyping and deploying production systems like chatbots, autonomous agents, and question-answering services.

View skill

Algorithmic Art Generation

Meta

This skill helps developers create algorithmic art using p5.js, focusing on generative art, computational aesthetics, and interactive visualizations. It automatically activates for topics like "generative art" or "p5.js visualization" and guides you through creating unique algorithms with features like seeded randomness, flow fields, and particle systems. Use it when you need to build reproducible, code-driven artistic patterns.

View skill

webapp-testing

Testing

This Claude Skill provides a Playwright-based toolkit for testing local web applications through Python scripts. It enables frontend verification, UI debugging, screenshot capture, and log viewing while managing server lifecycles. Use it for browser automation tasks but run scripts directly rather than reading their source code to avoid context pollution.

View skill

requesting-code-review

Design

This skill dispatches a code-reviewer subagent to analyze code changes against requirements before proceeding. It should be used after completing tasks, implementing major features, or before merging to main. The review helps catch issues early by comparing the current implementation with the original plan.

View skill