Description
n8n-nodes-directus
A comprehensive n8n community node package for integrating with Directus CMS.
n8n is a fair-code licensed workflow automation platform.
Installation
Follow the installation guide in the n8n community nodes documentation.
Package Name
The package is published as @directus/n8n-nodes-directus on npm.
From npm (when published)
npm install @directus/n8n-nodes-directus
Usage
Getting Started
1. Install the package (when published):
npm install @directus/n8n-nodes-directus # Or using pnpm
pnpm add @directus/n8n-nodes-directus
2. Configure credentials in n8n:
– Add your Directus URL (e.g., https://your-directus.app)
– Add your Directus API token with appropriate permissions
3. Use the nodes in your workflows:
– Directus Node: For CRUD operations on items, users, and files
– Directus Trigger Node: For webhook-based automation
Available Operations
#### Directus Node
- Items:
- Users:
- Files:
- Item Events: Trigger on create, update, delete operations in collections
- User Events: Trigger on user creation, updates, and deletions
- File Events: Trigger on file uploads and updates
- Dynamic Field Loading: Automatically loads available collections and fields from your Directus instance
- Smart Field Processing: Handles complex field types and relationships
- Simplify Option: Returns essential fields only for Users and Files “Get Many” operations
- Raw JSON Operations: Full support for raw JSON data/query parameters for advanced use cases (available for all CRUD operations)
- Robust Error Handling: Comprehensive error handling with detailed error messages
- Webhook Management: Automatic webhook creation and cleanup for trigger nodes
- Type Safety: Full TypeScript support with proper type definitions
- UX Compliance: Follows n8n community node UX guidelines with proper naming and placeholders
- Directus URL: Your Directus instance URL (e.g.,
https://your-directus.app) - Token: Your Directus API token with appropriate permissions
- Directus Cloud: Fully supported
- Self-hosted Directus: Fully supported
- Directus Versions: Compatible with Directus 10.0+
- Node.js 22+
- npm 10+
- Directus instance for testing (cloud or self-hosted)
- ngrok (for webhook testing) – install from ngrok.com
– Create, Create (Raw JSON)
– Get, Get (Raw JSON)
– Get Many, Get Many (Raw JSON)
– Update, Update (Raw JSON)
– Delete
– Invite
– Get, Get (Raw JSON)
– Get Many, Get Many (Raw JSON) with Simplify option
– Update, Update (Raw JSON)
– Delete
– Upload a File (using binary data from a previous node)
– Import a File (from a URL)
– Get, Get (Raw JSON)
– Get Many, Get Many (Raw JSON) with Simplify option
– Update, Update (Raw JSON)
– Delete
#### Directus Trigger Node
Features
Credentials
Directus API
Configure your Directus instance connection:
Compatibility
Development
This project uses the official n8n-node CLI tool for development and follows n8n community node standards.
Prerequisites
Setup
Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/directus/n8n-nodes-directus.git
cd n8n-nodes-directusInstall dependencies
npm installBuild the project
npm run build
Quick Start
1. Start n8n with your node loaded:
npm run dev:n8n
This will:
– Link your custom node to n8n
– Start n8n development server
– Make your Directus nodes available in n8n
2. Access n8n: Open http://localhost:5678 in your browser
3. Configure credentials:
– Add your Directus API credentials
– Test the connection
4. Create workflows: Use the Directus nodes in your workflows
Testing
#### Webhook Testing (Requires ngrok)
For testing the Directus Trigger node, you need to expose n8n via a public URL since Directus cannot reach localhost:
1. Install ngrok (if not already installed):
# macOS with Homebrew
brew install ngrok # Or download from https://ngrok.com/
2. Start n8n (in one terminal):
npm run dev:n8n
3. Start ngrok (in another terminal):
ngrok http 5678
This will give you a public URL like https://abc123.ngrok-free.dev
4. Create a webhook workflow:
– Add a Directus Trigger node
– Configure the trigger (resource, event, collection)
– Activate the workflow
– Copy the webhook URL from n8n
5. Update Directus webhook:
– In Directus, go to Settings → Flows
– Find the created flow and edit it
– Replace localhost:5678 with your ngrok URL
– Save the flow
6. Test the webhook:
– Create/update items in Directus
– Check if the webhook triggers in n8n
Note: The manual URL replacement step is required because Directus cannot reach localhost URLs directly.
Getting Help
pnpm test to verify everything workspnpm test:coverage to see test coverageContributing
We welcome feedback and suggestions! Please help us improve this community node:
Reporting Issues
Issue Guidelines
When reporting issues, please provide:
Code Contributions
While we appreciate community interest, we maintain this node internally to ensure:
If you have specific code improvements or bug fixes, please:
1. Open an issue first describing the problem or improvement
2. Wait for our team to review and potentially implement the change
3. Provide detailed information to help us understand the requirement
This approach ensures the node remains reliable, well-tested, and follows n8n community node verification guidelines.
Resources
License
MIT License – see LICENSE file for details.
Support
For issues and questions: