flowstudio-power-automate-build
>-
Install
mkdir -p .claude/skills/flowstudio-power-automate-build-manoj27110696 && curl -L -o skill.zip "https://agentskills.codes/api/skills/download/15177" && unzip -o skill.zip -d .claude/skills/flowstudio-power-automate-build-manoj27110696 && rm skill.zipInstalls to .claude/skills/flowstudio-power-automate-build-manoj27110696
Activation
This is the description your AI agent reads to decide when to run this skill — the better it matches your request, the more reliably it fires.
Build, scaffold, and deploy Power Automate cloud flows using the FlowStudio MCP server. 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.appAbout this skill
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
Source of Truth
Always call
tools/listfirst to confirm available tool names and their parameter schemas. Tool names and parameters may change between server versions. This skill covers response shapes, behavioral notes, and build patterns — thingstools/listcannot tell you. If this document disagrees withtools/listor a real API response, the API wins.
Python Helper
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
Step 1 — Safety Check: Does the Flow Already Exist?
Always look before you build to avoid duplicates:
results = mcp("list_store_flows",
environmentName=ENV, searchTerm="My New Flow")
# list_store_flows returns a direct array (no wrapper object)
if len(results) > 0:
# Flow exists — modify rather than create
# id format is "envId.flowId" — split to get the flow UUID
FLOW_ID = results[0]["id"].split(".", 1)[1]
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
Step 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_connectionsfirst — 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 — Always call list_live_connections first
conns = mcp("list_live_connections", environmentName=ENV)
# Filter to connected (authenticated) connections only
active = [c for c in conns["connections"]
if c["statuses"][0]["status"] == "Connected"]
# Build a lookup: connectorName → connectionName (id)
conn_map = {}
for c in active:
conn_map[c["connectorName"]] = c["id"]
print(f"Found {len(active)} active connections")
print("Available connectors:", list(conn_map.keys()))
2b — Determine which connectors the flow needs
Based on the flow you are building, identify which connectors are required. Common connector API names:
| Connector | API name |
|---|---|
| SharePoint | shared_sharepointonline |
| Outlook / Office 365 | shared_office365 |
| Teams | shared_teams |
| Approvals | shared_approvals |
| OneDrive for Business | shared_onedriveforbusiness |
| Excel Online (Business) | shared_excelonlinebusiness |
| Dataverse | shared_commondataserviceforapps |
| Microsoft Forms | shared_microsoftforms |
Flows that need NO connections (e.g. Recurrence + Compose + HTTP only) can skip the rest of Step 2 — omit
connectionReferencesfrom the deploy call.
2c — If connections are missing, guide the user
connectors_needed = ["shared_sharepointonline", "shared_office365"] # adjust per flow
missing = [c for c in connectors_needed if c not in conn_map]
if not missing:
print("✅ All required connections are available — proceeding to build")
else:
# ── STOP: connections must be created interactively ──
# Connections require OAuth consent in a browser — no API can create them.
print("⚠️ The following connectors have no active connection in this environment:")
for c in missing:
friendly = c.replace("shared_", "").replace("onlinebusiness", " Online (Business)")
print(f" • {friendly} (API name: {c})")
print()
print("Please create the missing connections:")
print(" 1. Open https://make.powerautomate.com/connections")
print(" 2. Select the correct environment from the top-right picker")
print(" 3. Click '+ New connection' for each missing connector listed above")
print(" 4. Sign in and authorize when prompted")
print(" 5. Tell me when done — I will re-check and continue building")
# DO NOT proceed to Step 3 until the user confirms.
# After user confirms, re-run Step 2a to refresh conn_map.
2d — Build the connectionReferences block
Only execute this after 2c confirms no missing connectors:
connection_references = {}
for connector in connectors_needed:
connection_references[connector] = {
"connectionName": conn_map[connector], # the GUID from list_live_connections
"source": "Invoker",
"id": f"/providers/Microsoft.PowerApps/apis/{connector}"
}
IMPORTANT —
host.connectionNamein actions: When building actions in Step 3, sethost.connectionNameto the key from this map (e.g.shared_teams), NOT the connection GUID. The GUID only goes inside theconnectionReferencesentry. The engine matches the action'shost.connectionNameto the key to find the right connection.
Alternative — if you already have a flow using the same connectors, you can extract
connectionReferencesfrom its definition:ref_flow = mcp("get_live_flow", environmentName=ENV, flowName="<existing-flow-id>") connection_references = ref_flow["properties"]["connectionReferences"]
See the power-automate-mcp skill's connection-references.md reference
for the full connection reference structure.
Step 3 — Build the Flow Definition
Construct the definition object. See flow-schema.md for the full schema and these action pattern references for copy-paste templates:
- action-patterns-core.md — Variables, control flow, expressions
- action-patterns-data.md — Array transforms, HTTP, parsing
- action-patterns-connectors.md — SharePoint, Outlook, Teams, Approvals
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 for complete, ready-to-use flow definitions covering Recurrence+SharePoint+Teams, HTTP triggers, and more.
Step 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:
result = mcp("update_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV,
# flowName omitted → creates a new flow
definition=definition,
connectionReferences=connection_references,
displayName="Overdue Invoice Notifications",
description="Weekly SharePoint → Teams notification flow, built by agent"
)
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:
result = mcp("update_live_flow",
environmentName=ENV,
flowName=FLOW_ID,
definition=definition,
connectionReferences=connection_references,
displayName="My Updated Flow",
description="Updated by agent on " + __import__('datetime').datetime.utcnow().isoformat()
)
if result.get("error") is not None:
print("Update failed:", result["error"])
else:
print("Update succeeded:", result)
⚠️
update_live_flowalways returns anerrorkey.null(PythonNone) means success — do not treat the presence of the key as failure.⚠️
descriptionis required for both create and update.
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 |
Step 5 — Verify the Deployment
check = mcp("get_live_flow", environmentName=ENV, flowName=FLOW_
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