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npx versuz@latest install mouadja02-skills-skills-data-and-backend-flowstudio-power-automate-buildgit clone https://github.com/mouadja02/skills.gitcp skills/SKILL.MD ~/.claude/skills/mouadja02-skills-skills-data-and-backend-flowstudio-power-automate-build/SKILL.md---
name: flowstudio-power-automate-build
description: >-
Build, scaffold, and deploy Power Automate cloud flows using the FlowStudio
MCP server. Your agent constructs flow definitions, wires connections, deploys,
and tests — all via MCP without opening the portal.
Load this skill when asked to: create a flow, build a new flow,
deploy a flow definition, scaffold a Power Automate workflow, construct a flow
JSON, update an existing flow's actions, patch a flow definition, add actions
to a flow, wire up connections, or generate a workflow definition from scratch.
Requires a FlowStudio MCP subscription — see https://mcp.flowstudio.app
---
# Build & Deploy Power Automate Flows with FlowStudio MCP
Step-by-step guide for constructing and deploying Power Automate cloud flows
programmatically through the FlowStudio MCP server.
**Prerequisite**: A FlowStudio MCP server must be reachable with a valid JWT.
See the `flowstudio-power-automate-mcp` skill for connection setup.
Subscribe at https://mcp.flowstudio.app
Workflow:
1. Load current build tools.
2. Check for an existing flow.
3. Resolve connection references.
4. Build the definition.
5. Deploy.
6. Verify.
7. Test.
---
## Source of Truth
> **Always call `list_skills` / `tool_search` first** to confirm available tool
> names and parameter schemas. Tool names and parameters may change between
> server versions.
> This skill covers response shapes, behavioral notes, and build patterns —
> things tool schemas cannot tell you. If this document disagrees with
> `tool_search` or a real API response, the API wins.
---
## Python Helper
```python
import json, urllib.request
MCP_URL = "https://mcp.flowstudio.app/mcp"
MCP_TOKEN = "<YOUR_JWT_TOKEN>"
def mcp(tool, **kwargs):
payload = json.dumps({"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "method": "tools/call",
"params": {"name": tool, "arguments": kwargs}}).encode()
req = urllib.request.Request(MCP_URL, data=payload,
headers={"x-api-key": MCP_TOKEN, "Content-Type": "application/json",
"User-Agent": "FlowStudio-MCP/1.0"})
try:
resp = urllib.request.urlopen(req, timeout=120)
except urllib.error.HTTPError as e:
body = e.read().decode("utf-8", errors="replace")
raise RuntimeError(f"MCP HTTP {e.code}: {body[:200]}") from e
raw = json.loads(resp.read())
if "error" in raw:
raise RuntimeError(f"MCP error: {json.dumps(raw['error'])}")
return json.loads(raw["result"]["content"][0]["text"])
ENV = "<environment-id>" # e.g. Default-xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
```
---
## 0. Load the Current Build Tools
For a brand-new flow, load the server's `create-flow` bundle. For editing an
existing flow, load `build-flow`. This keeps the agent aligned with the MCP
server's current schema before constructing JSON.
```python
schemas = mcp("tool_search", query="skill:create-flow")
# Includes list_live_environments, list_live_connections,
# describe_live_connector, get_live_dynamic_options, update_live_flow.
```
If you need a tool outside the bundle, load it explicitly:
```python
mcp("tool_search", query="select:get_live_dynamic_properties")
```
---
## 1. Safety Check: Does the Flow Already Exist?
Always look before you build to avoid duplicates:
```python
results = mcp("list_live_flows",
environmentName=ENV,
mode="owner",
search="My New Flow",
top=20)
# list_live_flows returns { "flows": [...], "mode": "...", ... }
matches = [f for f in results["flows"]
if "My New Flow".lower() in f["displayName"].lower()]
if len(matches) > 0:
# Flow exists — modify rather than create
FLOW_ID = matches[0]["id"] # plain UUID from list_live_flows
print(f"Existing flow: {FLOW_ID}")
defn = mcp("get_live_flow", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID)
else:
print("Flow not found — building from scratch")
FLOW_ID = None
```
For very large environments, `list_live_flows` may return a continuation URL.
Pass it back as `continuationUrl` with the same `mode` to retrieve the next
batch. Use `mode="admin"` only when the user needs all environment flows and
the MCP identity has admin rights.
---
## 2. Obtain Connection References
Every connector action needs a `connectionName` that points to a key in the
flow's `connectionReferences` map. That key links to an authenticated connection
in the environment.
> **MANDATORY**: You MUST call `list_live_connections` first — do NOT ask the
> user for connection names or GUIDs. The API returns the exact values you need.
> Only prompt the user if the API confirms that required connections are missing.
### 2a — Find active connections
```python
conns = mcp("list_live_connections", environmentName=ENV)
active = [c for c in conns["connections"]
if c["statuses"][0]["status"] == "Connected"]
conn_map = {c["connectorName"]: c["id"] for c in active}
```
For a known connector, pass `search` to reduce output and get paste-ready
`connectionReferenceTemplate` and `hostTemplate` values:
```python
sp_conns = mcp("list_live_connections",
environmentName=ENV,
search="shared_sharepointonline")
```
### 2b — Determine which connectors the flow needs
Common connector API names: SharePoint `shared_sharepointonline`, Outlook
`shared_office365`, Teams `shared_teams`, Approvals `shared_approvals`,
OneDrive `shared_onedriveforbusiness`, Excel `shared_excelonlinebusiness`,
Dataverse `shared_commondataserviceforapps`, Forms `shared_microsoftforms`.
Flows that need no connectors, such as Recurrence + Compose + HTTP only, can
omit `connectionReferences`.
### 2c — If connections are missing, guide the user
```python
connectors_needed = ["shared_sharepointonline", "shared_office365"] # adjust per flow
missing = [c for c in connectors_needed if c not in conn_map]
if missing:
# STOP: connections require browser OAuth consent.
# Ask the user to create the missing connector connections in the
# selected environment, then re-run list_live_connections.
raise Exception(f"Missing active connections: {missing}")
```
### 2d — Build the connectionReferences block
```python
connection_references = {}
host_templates = {}
for connector in connectors_needed:
c = next(c for c in active if c["connectorName"] == connector)
connection_references[connector] = c.get("connectionReferenceTemplate") or {
"connectionName": c["id"], # the connection id from list_live_connections
"source": "Invoker",
"id": f"/providers/Microsoft.PowerApps/apis/{connector}"
}
host_templates[connector] = c.get("hostTemplate") or {
"connectionName": connector
}
```
In Step 3 action JSON, `inputs.host.connectionName` must be the map key such as
`shared_teams`, not the GUID. The GUID belongs only inside the
`connectionReferences[connector].connectionName` value. If an existing flow uses
the same connectors, you may also copy its `properties.connectionReferences`
from `get_live_flow`.
---
## 3. Build the Flow Definition
Construct the definition object. See [flow-schema.md](references/flow-schema.md)
for the full schema and these action pattern references for copy-paste templates:
- [action-patterns-core.md](references/action-patterns-core.md) — Variables, control flow, expressions
- [action-patterns-data.md](references/action-patterns-data.md) — Array transforms, HTTP, parsing
- [action-patterns-connectors.md](references/action-patterns-connectors.md) — SharePoint, Outlook, Teams, Approvals
```python
definition = {
"$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/providers/Microsoft.Logic/schemas/2016-06-01/workflowdefinition.json#",
"contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
"triggers": { ... }, # see trigger-types.md / build-patterns.md
"actions": { ... } # see ACTION-PATTERNS-*.md / build-patterns.md
}
```
> See [build-patterns.md](references/build-patterns.md) for complete, ready-to-use
> flow definitions covering Recurrence+SharePoint+Teams, HTTP triggers, and more.
### Discover connector operations before guessing JSON
For connector-backed triggers/actions, prefer the live connector describer over
hand-written shapes. It can return authored hints, canonical examples, variant
keys, inputs/outputs, and dynamic metadata pointers.
```python
# Search across connectors when you know the user's intent but not the API.
matches = mcp("describe_live_connector",
environmentName=ENV,
search="send email",
top=5)
# Describe a specific operation before copying an exampleDefinition.
op = mcp("describe_live_connector",
environmentName=ENV,
connectorName="shared_office365",
operationId="SendEmailV2")
print(op.get("hint"))
```
When an operation has multiple authored variants, request the variant the flow
needs:
```python
teams_chat = mcp("describe_live_connector",
environmentName=ENV,
connectorName="shared_teams",
operationId="PostMessageToConversation",
variant="flowbot_chat")
```
When the operation description says a parameter has dynamic options or dynamic
properties, call the indicated next tool:
```python
sp_op = mcp("describe_live_connector",
environmentName=ENV,
connectorName="shared_sharepointonline",
operationId="GetItems")
sites = mcp("get_live_dynamic_options",
environmentName=ENV,
connectorName="shared_sharepointonline",
connectionName=conn_map["shared_sharepointonline"],
operationId="GetItems",
parameterName="dataset",
dynamicMetadata=sp_op["dynamicParameters"]["dataset"])
fields = mcp("get_live_dynamic_properties",
environmentName=ENV,
connectorName="shared_sharepointonline",
connectionName=conn_map["shared_sharepointonline"],
operationId="GetItems",
parameterName="item",
parameters={"dataset": "<site-url>", "table": "<list-id>"},
dynamicMetadata=sp_op["dynamicProperties"]["item"])
```
Use dynamic options for dropdown IDs such as SharePoint sites/lists and Teams
teams/channels. Use dynamic properties for schema/field shapes such as
SharePoint list item columns.
---
## 4. Deploy (Create or Update)
`update_live_flow` handles both creation and updates in a single tool.
### Create a new flow (no existing flow)
Omit `flowName` — the server generates a new GUID and creates via PUT:
```python
definition["description"] = "Weekly SharePoint → Teams notification flow, built by agent"
result = mcp("update_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV,
# flowName omitted → creates a new flow
definition=definition,
connectionReferences=connection_references,
displayName="Overdue Invoice Notifications"
)
if result.get("error") is not None:
print("Create failed:", result["error"])
else:
# Capture the new flow ID for subsequent steps
FLOW_ID = result["created"]
print(f"✅ Flow created: {FLOW_ID}")
```
### Update an existing flow
Provide `flowName` to PATCH:
```python
definition["description"] = (
"Updated by agent on " + __import__('datetime').datetime.utcnow().isoformat()
)
result = mcp("update_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV,
flowName=FLOW_ID,
definition=definition,
connectionReferences=connection_references,
displayName="My Updated Flow"
)
if result.get("error") is not None:
print("Update failed:", result["error"])
else:
print("Update succeeded:", result)
```
> ⚠️ `update_live_flow` always returns an `error` key.
> `null` (Python `None`) means success — do not treat the presence of the key as failure.
>
> ⚠️ Flow description lives at `definition["description"]`. The current server
> appends `#flowstudio-mcp` for usage tracking. Do not pass a top-level
> `description` argument unless `tool_search` shows one in the active schema.
### Common deployment errors
| Error message (contains) | Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| `missing from connectionReferences` | An action's `host.connectionName` references a key that doesn't exist in the `connectionReferences` map | Ensure `host.connectionName` uses the **key** from `connectionReferences` (e.g. `shared_teams`), not the raw GUID |
| `ConnectionAuthorizationFailed` / 403 | The connection GUID belongs to another user or is not authorized | Re-run Step 2a and use a connection owned by the current `x-api-key` user |
| `InvalidTemplate` / `InvalidDefinition` | Syntax error in the definition JSON | Check `runAfter` chains, expression syntax, and action type spelling |
| `ConnectionNotConfigured` | A connector action exists but the connection GUID is invalid or expired | Re-check `list_live_connections` for a fresh GUID |
---
## 5. Verify the Deployment
```python
check = mcp("get_live_flow", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID)
# Confirm state
print("State:", check["properties"]["state"]) # Should be "Started"
# If state is "Stopped", use set_live_flow_state — NOT update_live_flow
# mcp("set_live_flow_state", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID, state="Started")
# Confirm the action we added is there
acts = check["properties"]["definition"]["actions"]
print("Actions:", list(acts.keys()))
```
---
## 6. Test the Flow
> **MANDATORY**: Before triggering any test run, **ask the user for confirmation**.
> Running a flow has real side effects — it may send emails, post Teams messages,
> write to SharePoint, start approvals, or call external APIs. Explain what the
> flow will do and wait for explicit approval before calling `trigger_live_flow`
> or `resubmit_live_flow_run`.
### Updated flows (have prior runs) — ANY trigger type
> **Use `resubmit_live_flow_run` first.** It works for EVERY trigger type —
> Recurrence, SharePoint, connector webhooks, Button, and HTTP. It replays
> the original trigger payload. Do NOT ask the user to manually trigger the
> flow or wait for the next scheduled run.
```python
runs = mcp("get_live_flow_runs", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID, top=1)
if runs:
# Works for Recurrence, SharePoint, connector triggers — not just HTTP
result = mcp("resubmit_live_flow_run",
environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID, runName=runs[0]["name"])
print(result) # {"resubmitted": true, "triggerName": "..."}
```
### HTTP-triggered flows — custom test payload
Only use `trigger_live_flow` when you need to send a **different** payload
than the original run. For verifying a fix, `resubmit_live_flow_run` is
better because it uses the exact data that caused the failure.
```python
defn = mcp("get_live_flow", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID)
triggers = defn["properties"]["definition"]["triggers"]
manual = next(iter(triggers.values()))
print("Expected body:", manual.get("inputs", {}).get("schema"))
result = mcp("trigger_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID,
body={"name": "Test", "value": 1})
print(f"Status: {result['responseStatus']}")
```
### Brand-new non-HTTP flows (Recurrence, connector triggers, etc.)
A brand-new Recurrence or connector-triggered flow has **no prior runs** to
resubmit and no HTTP endpoint to call. This is the ONLY scenario where you
need the temporary HTTP trigger approach below. **Deploy with a temporary
HTTP trigger first, test the actions, then swap to the production trigger.**
Compact recipe:
```python
production_trigger = definition["triggers"]
definition["triggers"] = {
"manual": {"type": "Request", "kind": "Http", "inputs": {"schema": {}}}
}
result = mcp("update_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV,
flowName=FLOW_ID, # omit if creating new
definition=definition,
connectionReferences=connection_references,
displayName="Overdue Invoice Notifications")
FLOW_ID = FLOW_ID or result["created"]
test = mcp("trigger_live_flow", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID,
body={"sample": "payload"})
runs = mcp("get_live_flow_runs", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID, top=1)
if runs[0]["status"] == "Failed":
err = mcp("get_live_flow_run_error",
environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_ID, runName=runs[0]["name"])
raise Exception(err["failedActions"][-1])
definition["triggers"] = production_trigger
mcp("update_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV,
flowName=FLOW_ID,
definition=definition,
connectionReferences=connection_references)
```
The trigger is only the entry point; testing through HTTP still exercises the
same actions. If actions use `triggerBody()` or `triggerOutputs()`, pass a
representative `trigger_live_flow.body` shaped like the production trigger
payload.
---
## Gotchas
| Mistake | Consequence | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Missing `connectionReferences` in deploy | 400 "Supply connectionReferences" | Always call `list_live_connections` first |
| `"operationOptions"` missing on Foreach | Parallel execution, race conditions on writes | Always add `"Sequential"` |
| `union(old_data, new_data)` | Old values override new (first-wins) | Use `union(new_data, old_data)` |
| `split()` on potentially-null string | `InvalidTemplate` crash | Wrap with `coalesce(field, '')` |
| Checking `result["error"]` exists | Always present; true error is `!= null` | Use `result.get("error") is not None` |
| Flow deployed but state is "Stopped" | Flow won't run on schedule | Call `set_live_flow_state` with `state: "Started"` — do **not** use `update_live_flow` for state changes |
| Teams "Chat with Flow bot" recipient as object | 400 `GraphUserDetailNotFound` | Use plain string with trailing semicolon (see below) |
| Copilot/Skills flow not in a solution | Copilot Studio may not discover it as an agent tool | After deploy, call `add_live_flow_to_solution` with the target `solutionId` |
| Button/Skills trigger used for MCP testing | MCP cannot directly fire the production trigger | Test the same actions through a temporary HTTP twin, then swap the trigger back |
| Connector action missing `metadata.operationMetadataId` | Designer/run-only UI can behave inconsistently | Preserve existing IDs; add stable GUIDs for new connector actions |
| Placeholder Excel `scriptId` | Dynamic validation fails at save time | Resolve the real Office Script ID before deploying |
| SharePoint `PatchItem` omits required fields | Save can fail even if the field is not changing | Echo unchanged required fields such as `item/Title` |
| Copilot Studio connector calls a draft agent | Connector invocation can fail or hit stale behavior | Publish the agent before testing/resubmitting the flow |
### Teams `PostMessageToConversation` — Recipient Formats
The `body/recipient` parameter format depends on the `location` value:
| Location | `body/recipient` format | Example |
|---|---|---|
| **Chat with Flow bot** | Plain email string with **trailing semicolon** | `"user@contoso.com;"` |
| **Channel** | Object with `groupId` and `channelId` | `{"groupId": "...", "channelId": "..."}` |
> **Common mistake**: passing `{"to": "user@contoso.com"}` for "Chat with Flow bot"
> returns a 400 `GraphUserDetailNotFound` error. The API expects a plain string.
---
## Reference Files
- [flow-schema.md](references/flow-schema.md) — Full flow definition JSON schema
- [trigger-types.md](references/trigger-types.md) — Trigger type templates
- [action-patterns-core.md](references/action-patterns-core.md) — Variables, control flow, expressions
- [action-patterns-data.md](references/action-patterns-data.md) — Array transforms, HTTP, parsing
- [action-patterns-connectors.md](references/action-patterns-connectors.md) — SharePoint, Outlook, Teams, Approvals
- [build-patterns.md](references/build-patterns.md) — Complete flow definition templates (Recurrence+SP+Teams, HTTP trigger)
## Related Skills
- `flowstudio-power-automate-mcp` — Core connection setup and tool reference
- `flowstudio-power-automate-debug` — Debug failing flows after deployment