veeva-reference-architecture

Implement Veeva reference architecture with best-practice project layout. Use when designing new Veeva integrations, reviewing project structure, or establishing architecture standards for Veeva applications. Trigger with phrases like "veeva architecture", "veeva best practices", "veeva project structure", "how to organize veeva", "veeva layout".

claude-code
2 Tools
veeva-pack Plugin
saas packs Category

Allowed Tools

ReadGrep

Provided by Plugin

veeva-pack

Claude Code skill pack for Veeva (24 skills)

saas packs v1.0.0
View Plugin

Installation

This skill is included in the veeva-pack plugin:

/plugin install veeva-pack@claude-code-plugins-plus

Click to copy

Instructions

Veeva Reference Architecture

Overview

Production-ready architecture patterns for Veeva integrations.

Prerequisites

  • Understanding of layered architecture
  • Veeva SDK knowledge
  • TypeScript project setup
  • Testing framework configured

Project Structure


my-veeva-project/
├── src/
│   ├── veeva/
│   │   ├── client.ts           # Singleton client wrapper
│   │   ├── config.ts           # Environment configuration
│   │   ├── types.ts            # TypeScript types
│   │   ├── errors.ts           # Custom error classes
│   │   └── handlers/
│   │       ├── webhooks.ts     # Webhook handlers
│   │       └── events.ts       # Event processing
│   ├── services/
│   │   └── veeva/
│   │       ├── index.ts        # Service facade
│   │       ├── sync.ts         # Data synchronization
│   │       └── cache.ts        # Caching layer
│   ├── api/
│   │   └── veeva/
│   │       └── webhook.ts      # Webhook endpoint
│   └── jobs/
│       └── veeva/
│           └── sync.ts         # Background sync job
├── tests/
│   ├── unit/
│   │   └── veeva/
│   └── integration/
│       └── veeva/
├── config/
│   ├── veeva.development.json
│   ├── veeva.staging.json
│   └── veeva.production.json
└── docs/
    └── veeva/
        ├── SETUP.md
        └── RUNBOOK.md

Layer Architecture


┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│             API Layer                    │
│   (Controllers, Routes, Webhooks)        │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┤
│           Service Layer                  │
│  (Business Logic, Orchestration)         │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┤
│          Veeva Layer        │
│   (Client, Types, Error Handling)        │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┤
│         Infrastructure Layer             │
│    (Cache, Queue, Monitoring)            │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘

Key Components

Step 1: Client Wrapper


// src/veeva/client.ts
export class VeevaService {
  private client: VeevaClient;
  private cache: Cache;
  private monitor: Monitor;

  constructor(config: VeevaConfig) {
    this.client = new VeevaClient(config);
    this.cache = new Cache(config.cacheOptions);
    this.monitor = new Monitor('veeva');
  }

  async get(id: string): Promise<Resource> {
    return this.cache.getOrFetch(id, () =>
      this.monitor.track('get', () => this.client.get(id))
    );
  }
}

Step 2: Error Boundary


// src/veeva/errors.ts
export class VeevaServiceError extends Error {
  constructor(
    message: string,
    public readonly code: string,
    public readonly retryable: boolean,
    public readonly originalError?: Error
  ) {
    super(message);
    this.name = 'VeevaServiceError';
  }
}

export function wrapVeevaError(error: unknown): VeevaServiceError {
  // Transform SDK errors to application errors
}

Step 3: Health Check


// src/veeva/health.ts
export async function checkVeevaHealth(): Promise<HealthStatus> {
  try {
    const start = Date.now();
    await veevaClient.ping();
    return {
      status: 'healthy',
      latencyMs: Date.now() - start,
    };
  } catch (error) {
    return { status: 'unhealthy', error: error.message };
  }
}

Data Flow Diagram


User Request
     │
     ▼
┌─────────────┐
│   API       │
│   Gateway   │
└──────┬──────┘
       │
       ▼
┌─────────────┐    ┌─────────────┐
│   Service   │───▶│   Cache     │
│   Layer     │    │   (Redis)   │
└──────┬──────┘    └─────────────┘
       │
       ▼
┌─────────────┐
│ Veeva    │
│   Client    │
└──────┬──────┘
       │
       ▼
┌─────────────┐
│ Veeva    │
│   API       │
└─────────────┘

Configuration Management


// config/veeva.ts
export interface VeevaConfig {
  apiKey: string;
  environment: 'development' | 'staging' | 'production';
  timeout: number;
  retries: number;
  cache: {
    enabled: boolean;
    ttlSeconds: number;
  };
}

export function loadVeevaConfig(): VeevaConfig {
  const env = process.env.NODE_ENV || 'development';
  return require(`./veeva.${env}.json`);
}

Instructions

Step 1: Create Directory Structure

Set up the project layout following the reference structure above.

Step 2: Implement Client Wrapper

Create the singleton client with caching and monitoring.

Step 3: Add Error Handling

Implement custom error classes for Veeva operations.

Step 4: Configure Health Checks

Add health check endpoint for Veeva connectivity.

Output

  • Structured project layout
  • Client wrapper with caching
  • Error boundary implemented
  • Health checks configured

Error Handling

Issue Cause Solution
Circular dependencies Wrong layering Separate concerns by layer
Config not loading Wrong paths Verify config file locations
Type errors Missing types Add Veeva types
Test isolation Shared state Use dependency injection

Examples

Quick Setup Script


# Create reference structure
mkdir -p src/veeva/{handlers} src/services/veeva src/api/veeva
touch src/veeva/{client,config,types,errors}.ts
touch src/services/veeva/{index,sync,cache}.ts

Resources

Flagship Skills

For multi-environment setup, see veeva-multi-env-setup.

Ready to use veeva-pack?