Building Node
Partially Supported
Limited to PebbleAI-approved nodes
Install Git
First, install Git and clone Flowise repository. You can follow the steps from the Get Started guide.
Structure
Flowise separate every node integration under the folder packages/components/nodes. Let’s try to create a simple Tool!
Create Calculator Tool
Create a new folder named Calculator under the packages/components/nodes/tools folder. Then create a new file named Calculator.ts. Inside the file, we will first write the base class.
import { INode } from '../../../src/Interface'
import { getBaseClasses } from '../../../src/utils'
class Calculator_Tools implements INode {
label: string
name: string
version: number
description: string
type: string
icon: string
category: string
author: string
baseClasses: string[]
constructor() {
this.label = 'Calculator'
this.name = 'calculator'
this.version = 1.0
this.type = 'Calculator'
this.icon = 'calculator.svg'
this.category = 'Tools'
this.author = 'Your Name'
this.description = 'Perform calculations on response'
this.baseClasses = [this.type, ...getBaseClasses(Calculator)]
}
}
module.exports = { nodeClass: Calculator_Tools }Every node will implements the INode base class. Breakdown of what each property means:
| Property | Description |
|---|---|
| label | The name of the node that appears on the UI |
| name | The name that is used by code. Must be camelCase |
| version | Version of the node |
| type | Usually the same as label. To define which node can be connected to this specific type on UI |
| icon | Icon of the node |
| category | Category of the node |
| author | Creator of the node |
| description | Node description |
| baseClasses | The base classes from the node, since a node can extends from a base component. Used to define which node can be connected to this node on UI |
Define Class
Now the component class is partially finished, we can go ahead to define the actual Tool class, in this case - Calculator.
Create a new file under the same Calculator folder, and named as core.ts
import { Parser } from "expr-eval"
import { Tool } from "@langchain/core/tools"
export class Calculator extends Tool {
name = "calculator"
description = `Useful for getting the result of a math expression. The input to this tool should be a valid mathematical expression that could be executed by a simple calculator.`
async _call(input: string) {
try {
return Parser.evaluate(input).toString()
} catch (error) {
return "I don't know how to do that."
}
}
}Finishing
Head back to the Calculator.ts file, we can finish this up by having the async init function. In this function, we will initialize the Calculator class we created above. When the flow is being executed, the init function in each node will be called, and the _call function will be executed when LLM decides to call this tool.
import { INode } from '../../../src/Interface'
import { getBaseClasses } from '../../../src/utils'
import { Calculator } from './core'
class Calculator_Tools implements INode {
label: string
name: string
version: number
description: string
type: string
icon: string
category: string
author: string
baseClasses: string[]
constructor() {
this.label = 'Calculator'
this.name = 'calculator'
this.version = 1.0
this.type = 'Calculator'
this.icon = 'calculator.svg'
this.category = 'Tools'
this.author = 'Your Name'
this.description = 'Perform calculations on response'
this.baseClasses = [this.type, ...getBaseClasses(Calculator)]
}
async init() {
return new Calculator()
}
}
module.exports = { nodeClass: Calculator_Tools }Build and Run
In the .env file inside packages/server, create a new env variable:
SHOW_COMMUNITY_NODES=trueNow we can use pnpm build and pnpm start to bring the component alive!
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