# Outgoing Webhooks Outgoing Webhooks allow you to build or set up Zulip integrations which are notified when certain types of messages are sent in Zulip. When one of those events is triggered, we'll send a HTTP POST payload to the webhook's configured URL. Webhooks can be used to power a wide range of Zulip integrations. For example, the [Zulip Botserver][zulip-botserver] is built on top of this API. Zulip supports outgoing webhooks both in a clean native Zulip format, as well as a format that's compatible with [Slack's outgoing webhook API][slack-outgoing-webhook], which can help with porting an existing Slack integration to work with Zulip. [zulip-botserver]: https://zulipchat.com/api/deploying-bots#zulip-botserver [slack-outgoing-webhook]: https://api.slack.com/custom-integrations/outgoing-webhooks To register an outgoing webhook: * Log in to the Zulip server. * Navigate to *Settings ()* -> *Your bots* -> *Add a new bot*. Select *Outgoing webhook* for bot type, the URL you'd like Zulip to post to as the **Endpoint URL**, the format you want, and click on *Create bot*. to submit the form/ * Your new bot user will appear in the *Active bots* panel, which you can use to edit the bot's settings. ## Triggering There are currently two ways to trigger an outgoing webhook: 1. **@-mention** the bot user in a stream. If the bot replies, its reply will be sent to that stream and topic. 2. **Send a private message** with the bot as one of the recipients. If the bot replies, its reply will be sent to that thread. ## Zulip message format The Zulip-format webhook messages post the following data, encoded as JSON: ``` data: content of message in a ready-to-use format (with the mention stripped) token: A string of alphanumeric characters you can use to authenticate the webhook request (each bot user uses a fixed token). message: the message which triggered outgoing webhook ├── id ├── sender_email ├── sender_full_name ├── sender_short_name ├── sender_realm_str ├── sender_id ├── type ├── display_recipient ├── recipient_id ├── subject ├── timestamp ├── avatar_url ├── client ``` A correctly implemented endpoint will do the following: * For a successful request, it should return receives either a json encoded dictionary, describing how to respond to the user. * If the dictionary contains `response_not_required` set to `True`, no response message is sent to the user. * If the dictionary contains `response_string` key, the corresponding value is used as the `content` for a Zulip message sent in response; otherwise, a generic default response message is sent. * For a failed request, the endpoint should return data on the error. ## Slack-format webhook format This interface translates the Zulip's outgoing webhook's request into Slack's outgoing webhook request. Hence the outgoing webhook bot would be able to post data to URLs which support Slack's outgoing webhooks. Here's how we fill in the fields that a Slack format webhook expects: ``` token: string of alphanumeric characters (similar to above) team_id: string id of the Zulip organization team_domain: domain of the Zulip organization channel_id: stream id channel_name: stream name timestamp: timestamp when message was sent user_id: id of user who sent the message user_name: full name of sender text: content of message in a more readable format trigger_word: trigger method service_id: id of bot user ``` The above data is posted as list of tuples (not JSON). * For successful request, if data is returned, it returns that data, else it returns a blank response. * For failed request, it returns the reason of failure, as returned by the server, or the exception message.