salesforce-webhooks-events
Implement Salesforce webhook signature validation and event handling. Use when setting up webhook endpoints, implementing signature verification, or handling Salesforce event notifications securely. Trigger with phrases like "salesforce webhook", "salesforce events", "salesforce webhook signature", "handle salesforce events", "salesforce notifications".
Allowed Tools
Provided by Plugin
salesforce-pack
Claude Code skill pack for Salesforce (30 skills)
Installation
This skill is included in the salesforce-pack plugin:
/plugin install salesforce-pack@claude-code-plugins-plus
Click to copy
Instructions
Salesforce Webhooks & Events
Overview
Securely handle Salesforce webhooks with signature validation and replay protection.
Prerequisites
- Salesforce webhook secret configured
- HTTPS endpoint accessible from internet
- Understanding of cryptographic signatures
- Redis or database for idempotency (optional)
Webhook Endpoint Setup
Express.js
import express from 'express';
import crypto from 'crypto';
const app = express();
// IMPORTANT: Raw body needed for signature verification
app.post('/webhooks/salesforce',
express.raw({ type: 'application/json' }),
async (req, res) => {
const signature = req.headers['x-salesforce-signature'] as string;
const timestamp = req.headers['x-salesforce-timestamp'] as string;
if (!verifySalesforceSignature(req.body, signature, timestamp)) {
return res.status(401).json({ error: 'Invalid signature' });
}
const event = JSON.parse(req.body.toString());
await handleSalesforceEvent(event);
res.status(200).json({ received: true });
}
);
Signature Verification
function verifySalesforceSignature(
payload: Buffer,
signature: string,
timestamp: string
): boolean {
const secret = process.env.SALESFORCE_WEBHOOK_SECRET!;
// Reject old timestamps (replay attack protection)
const timestampAge = Date.now() - parseInt(timestamp) * 1000;
if (timestampAge > 300000) { // 5 minutes
console.error('Webhook timestamp too old');
return false;
}
// Compute expected signature
const signedPayload = `${timestamp}.${payload.toString()}`;
const expectedSignature = crypto
.createHmac('sha256', secret)
.update(signedPayload)
.digest('hex');
// Timing-safe comparison
return crypto.timingSafeEqual(
Buffer.from(signature),
Buffer.from(expectedSignature)
);
}
Event Handler Pattern
type SalesforceEventType = 'resource.created' | 'resource.updated' | 'resource.deleted';
interface SalesforceEvent {
id: string;
type: SalesforceEventType;
data: Record<string, any>;
created: string;
}
const eventHandlers: Record<SalesforceEventType, (data: any) => Promise<void>> = {
'resource.created': async (data) => { /* handle */ },
'resource.updated': async (data) => { /* handle */ },
'resource.deleted': async (data) => { /* handle */ }
};
async function handleSalesforceEvent(event: SalesforceEvent): Promise<void> {
const handler = eventHandlers[event.type];
if (!handler) {
console.log(`Unhandled event type: ${event.type}`);
return;
}
try {
await handler(event.data);
console.log(`Processed ${event.type}: ${event.id}`);
} catch (error) {
console.error(`Failed to process ${event.type}: ${event.id}`, error);
throw error; // Rethrow to trigger retry
}
}
Idempotency Handling
import { Redis } from 'ioredis';
const redis = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL);
async function isEventProcessed(eventId: string): Promise<boolean> {
const key = `salesforce:event:${eventId}`;
const exists = await redis.exists(key);
return exists === 1;
}
async function markEventProcessed(eventId: string): Promise<void> {
const key = `salesforce:event:${eventId}`;
await redis.set(key, '1', 'EX', 86400 * 7); // 7 days TTL
}
Webhook Testing
# Use Salesforce CLI to send test events
salesforce webhooks trigger resource.created --url http://localhost:3000/webhooks/salesforce
# Or use webhook.site for debugging
curl -X POST https://webhook.site/your-uuid \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"type": "resource.created", "data": {}}'
Instructions
Step 1: Register Webhook Endpoint
Configure your webhook URL in the Salesforce dashboard.
Step 2: Implement Signature Verification
Use the signature verification code to validate incoming webhooks.
Step 3: Handle Events
Implement handlers for each event type your application needs.
Step 4: Add Idempotency
Prevent duplicate processing with event ID tracking.
Output
- Secure webhook endpoint
- Signature validation enabled
- Event handlers implemented
- Replay attack protection active
Error Handling
| Issue | Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Invalid signature | Wrong secret | Verify webhook secret |
| Timestamp rejected | Clock drift | Check server time sync |
| Duplicate events | Missing idempotency | Implement event ID tracking |
| Handler timeout | Slow processing | Use async queue |
Examples
Testing Webhooks Locally
# Use ngrok to expose local server
ngrok http 3000
# Send test webhook
curl -X POST https://your-ngrok-url/webhooks/salesforce \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"type": "test", "data": {}}'
Resources
Next Steps
For performance optimization, see salesforce-performance-tuning.