---
title: "Triggering tasks from Supabase Database Webhooks"
sidebarTitle: "Database webhooks"
description: "This guide shows you how to trigger a transcribing task when a row is added to a table in a Supabase database, using a Database Webhook and Edge Function."
---
import Prerequisites from "/snippets/framework-prerequisites.mdx";
import SupabasePrerequisites from "/snippets/supabase-prerequisites.mdx";
import UsefulNextSteps from "/snippets/useful-next-steps.mdx";
import TriggerTaskNextjs from "/snippets/trigger-tasks-nextjs.mdx";
import NextjsTroubleshootingMissingApiKey from "/snippets/nextjs-missing-api-key.mdx";
import NextjsTroubleshootingButtonSyntax from "/snippets/nextjs-button-syntax.mdx";
import SupabaseDocsCards from "/snippets/supabase-docs-cards.mdx";
import SupabaseAuthInfo from "/snippets/supabase-auth-info.mdx";
## Overview
Supabase and Trigger.dev can be used together to create powerful workflows triggered by real-time changes in your database tables:
- A Supabase Database Webhook triggers an Edge Function when a row including a video URL is inserted into a table
- The Edge Function triggers a Trigger.dev task, passing the `video_url` column data from the new table row as the payload
- The Trigger.dev task then:
- Uses [FFmpeg](https://www.ffmpeg.org/) to extract the audio track from a video URL
- Uses [Deepgram](https://deepgram.com) to transcribe the extracted audio
- Updates the original table row using the `record.id` in Supabase with the new transcription using `update`
## Prerequisites
- Ensure you have the [Supabase CLI](https://supabase.com/docs/guides/cli/getting-started) installed
- Since Supabase CLI version 1.123.4, you must have [Docker Desktop installed](https://supabase.com/docs/guides/functions/deploy#deploy-your-edge-functions) to deploy Edge Functions
- Ensure TypeScript is installed
- [Create a Trigger.dev account](https://cloud.trigger.dev)
- Create a new Trigger.dev project
- [Create a new Deepgram account](https://deepgram.com/) and get your API key from the dashboard
## GitHub repo
Click here to view the full code for this project in our examples repository on GitHub. You can
fork it and use it as a starting point for your own project.
## Initial setup
The easiest way to get started is to use the CLI. It will add Trigger.dev to your existing project, create a `/trigger` folder and give you an example task.
Run this command in the root of your project to get started:
```bash npm
npx trigger.dev@latest init
```
```bash pnpm
pnpm dlx trigger.dev@latest init
```
```bash yarn
yarn dlx trigger.dev@latest init
```
It will do a few things:
1. Log you into the CLI if you're not already logged in.
2. Create a `trigger.config.ts` file in the root of your project.
3. Ask where you'd like to create the `/trigger` directory.
4. Create the `/trigger` directory with an example task, `/trigger/example.[ts/js]`.
Choose "None" when prompted to install an example task. We will create a new task for this guide.
## Create a new table in your Supabase database
First, in the Supabase project dashboard, you'll need to create a new table to store the video URL and transcription.
To do this, click on 'Table Editor' in the left-hand menu and create a new table.

Call your table `video_transcriptions`.
Add two new columns, one called `video_url` with the type `text` , and another called `transcription`, also with the type `text` .

## Create and deploy the Trigger.dev task
### Generate the Database type definitions
To allow you to use TypeScript to interact with your table, you need to [generate the type definitions](https://supabase.com/docs/guides/api/rest/generating-types) for your Supabase table using the Supabase CLI.
```bash
supabase gen types --lang=typescript --project-id --schema public > database.types.ts
```
Replace `` with your Supabase project reference ID. This can be found in your Supabase project settings under 'General'.
### Create the transcription task
Create a new task file in your `/trigger` folder. Call it `videoProcessAndUpdate.ts`.
This task takes a video from a public video url, extracts the audio using FFmpeg and transcribes the audio using Deepgram. The transcription summary will then be updated back to the original row in the `video_transcriptions` table in Supabase.
You will need to install some additional dependencies for this task:
```bash npm
npm install @deepgram/sdk @supabase/supabase-js fluent-ffmpeg
```
```bash pnpm
pnpm install @deepgram/sdk @supabase/supabase-js fluent-ffmpeg
```
```bash yarn
yarn install @deepgram/sdk @supabase/supabase-js fluent-ffmpeg
```
These dependencies will allow you to interact with the Deepgram and Supabase APIs and extract audio from a video using FFmpeg.
When updating your tables from a Trigger.dev task which has been triggered by a database change,
be extremely careful to not cause an infinite loop. Ensure you have the correct conditions in
place to prevent this.
```ts /trigger/videoProcessAndUpdate.ts
// Install any missing dependencies below
import { createClient as createDeepgramClient } from "@deepgram/sdk";
import { createClient as createSupabaseClient } from "@supabase/supabase-js";
import { logger, task } from "@trigger.dev/sdk";
import ffmpeg from "fluent-ffmpeg";
import fs from "fs";
import { Readable } from "node:stream";
import os from "os";
import path from "path";
import { Database } from "../../database.types";
// Create a single Supabase client for interacting with your database
// 'Database' supplies the type definitions to supabase-js
const supabase = createSupabaseClient(
// These details can be found in your Supabase project settings under `API`
process.env.SUPABASE_PROJECT_URL as string, // e.g. https://abc123.supabase.co - replace 'abc123' with your project ID
process.env.SUPABASE_SERVICE_ROLE_KEY as string // Your service role secret key
);
// Your DEEPGRAM_SECRET_KEY can be found in your Deepgram dashboard
const deepgram = createDeepgramClient(process.env.DEEPGRAM_SECRET_KEY);
export const videoProcessAndUpdate = task({
id: "video-process-and-update",
run: async (payload: { videoUrl: string; id: number }) => {
const { videoUrl, id } = payload;
logger.log(`Processing video at URL: ${videoUrl}`);
// Generate temporary file names
const tempDirectory = os.tmpdir();
const outputPath = path.join(tempDirectory, `audio_${Date.now()}.wav`);
const response = await fetch(videoUrl);
// Extract the audio using FFmpeg
await new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
if (!response.body) {
return reject(new Error("Failed to fetch video"));
}
ffmpeg(Readable.from(response.body))
.outputOptions([
"-vn", // Disable video output
"-acodec pcm_s16le", // Use PCM 16-bit little-endian encoding
"-ar 44100", // Set audio sample rate to 44.1 kHz
"-ac 2", // Set audio channels to stereo
])
.output(outputPath)
.on("end", resolve)
.on("error", reject)
.run();
});
logger.log(`Audio extracted from video`, { outputPath });
// Transcribe the audio using Deepgram
const { result, error } = await deepgram.listen.prerecorded.transcribeFile(
fs.readFileSync(outputPath),
{
model: "nova-2", // Use the Nova 2 model
smart_format: true, // Automatically format the transcription
diarize: true, // Enable speaker diarization
}
);
if (error) {
throw error;
}
const transcription = result.results.channels[0].alternatives[0].paragraphs?.transcript;
logger.log(`Transcription: ${transcription}`);
// Delete the temporary audio file
fs.unlinkSync(outputPath);
logger.log(`Temporary audio file deleted`, { outputPath });
const { error: updateError } = await supabase
.from("video_transcriptions")
// Update the transcription column
.update({ transcription: transcription })
// Find the row by its ID
.eq("id", id);
if (updateError) {
throw new Error(`Failed to update transcription: ${updateError.message}`);
}
return {
message: `Summary of the audio: ${transcription}`,
result,
};
},
});
```
This task uses your service role secret key to bypass Row Level Security. This is not recommended
for production use as it has unlimited access and bypasses all security checks.
### Adding the FFmpeg build extension
Before you can deploy the task, you'll need to add the FFmpeg build extension to your `trigger.config.ts` file.
```ts trigger.config.ts
// Add this import
import { ffmpeg } from "@trigger.dev/build/extensions/core";
import { defineConfig } from "@trigger.dev/sdk";
export default defineConfig({
project: "", // Replace with your project ref
// Your other config settings...
build: {
// Add the FFmpeg build extension
extensions: [ffmpeg()],
},
});
```
[Build extensions](/config/extensions/overview) allow you to hook into the build system and
customize the build process or the resulting bundle and container image (in the case of
deploying). You can use pre-built extensions or create your own.
You'll also need to add `@trigger.dev/build` to your `package.json` file under `devDependencies`
if you don't already have it there.
If you are modifying this example and using popular FFmpeg libraries like `fluent-ffmpeg` you'll also need to add them to [`external`](/config/config-file#external) in your `trigger.config.ts` file.
### Add your Deepgram and Supabase environment variables to your Trigger.dev project
You will need to add your `DEEPGRAM_SECRET_KEY`, `SUPABASE_PROJECT_URL` and `SUPABASE_SERVICE_ROLE_KEY` as environment variables in your Trigger.dev project. This can be done in the 'Environment Variables' page in your project dashboard.

### Deploying your task
Now you can now deploy your task using the following command:
```bash npm
npx trigger.dev@latest deploy
```
```bash pnpm
pnpm dlx trigger.dev@latest deploy
```
```bash yarn
yarn dlx trigger.dev@latest deploy
```
## Create and deploy the Supabase Edge Function
### Add your Trigger.dev prod secret key to the Supabase dashboard
Go to your Trigger.dev [project dashboard](https://cloud.trigger.dev) and copy the `prod` secret key from the API keys page.

Then, in [Supabase](https://supabase.com/dashboard/projects), select the project you want to use, navigate to 'Project settings' , click 'Edge Functions' in the configurations menu, and then click the 'Add new secret' button.
Add `TRIGGER_SECRET_KEY` with the pasted value of your Trigger.dev `prod` secret key.

### Create a new Edge Function using the Supabase CLI
Now create an Edge Function using the Supabase CLI. Call it `video-processing-handler`. This function will be triggered by the Database Webhook.
```bash
supabase functions new video-processing-handler
```
```ts functions/video-processing-handler/index.ts
// Setup type definitions for built-in Supabase Runtime APIs
import "jsr:@supabase/functions-js/edge-runtime.d.ts";
import { tasks } from "npm:@trigger.dev/sdk@latest";
// Import the videoProcessAndUpdate task from the trigger folder
import type { videoProcessAndUpdate } from "../../../src/trigger/videoProcessAndUpdate.ts";
// 👆 type only import
// Sets up a Deno server that listens for incoming JSON requests
Deno.serve(async (req) => {
const payload = await req.json();
// This payload will contain the video url and id from the new row in the table
const videoUrl = payload.record.video_url;
const id = payload.record.id;
// Trigger the videoProcessAndUpdate task with the videoUrl payload
await tasks.trigger("video-process-and-update", { videoUrl, id });
console.log(payload ?? "No name provided");
return new Response("ok");
});
```
Tasks in the `trigger` folder use Node, so they must stay in there or they will not run,
especially if you are using a different runtime like Deno. Also do not add "`npm:`" to imports
inside your task files, for the same reason.
### Deploy the Edge Function
Now deploy your new Edge Function with the following command:
```bash
supabase functions deploy video-processing-handler
```
Follow the CLI instructions, selecting the same project you added your `prod` secret key to, and once complete you should see your new Edge Function deployment in your Supabase Edge Functions dashboard.
There will be a link to the dashboard in your terminal output.
## Create the Database Webhook
In your Supabase project dashboard, click 'Project settings' , then the 'API' tab , and copy the `anon` `public` API key from the table .

Then, go to 'Database' click on 'Webhooks' , and then click 'Create a new hook' .

Call the hook `edge-function-hook`.
Select the new table you have created:
`public` `video_transcriptions`.
Choose the `insert` event.

Under 'Webhook configuration', select
'Supabase Edge Functions'{" "}
Under 'Edge Function', choose `POST`
and select the Edge Function you have created: `video-processing-handler`.{" "}
Under 'HTTP Headers', add a new header with the key `Authorization` and the value `Bearer ` (replace `` with the `anon` `public` API key you copied earlier).
Supabase Edge Functions require a JSON Web Token [JWT](https://supabase.com/docs/guides/auth/jwts)
in the authorization header. This is to ensure that only authorized users can access your edge
functions.
Click 'Create webhook'.{" "}

Your Database Webhook is now ready to use.
## Triggering the entire workflow
Your `video-processing-handler` Edge Function is now set up to trigger the `videoProcessAndUpdate` task every time a new row is inserted into your `video_transcriptions` table.
To do this, go back to your Supabase project dashboard, click on 'Table Editor' in the left-hand menu, click on the `video_transcriptions` table , and then click 'Insert', 'Insert Row' .

Add a new item under `video_url`, with a public video url. .
You can use the following public video URL for testing: `https://content.trigger.dev/Supabase%20Edge%20Functions%20Quickstart.mp4`.

Once the new table row has been inserted, check your [cloud.trigger.dev](https://cloud.trigger.dev) project 'Runs' list and you should see a processing `videoProcessAndUpdate` task which has been triggered when you added a new row with the video url to your `video_transcriptions` table.

Once the run has completed successfully, go back to your Supabase `video_transcriptions` table, and you should see that in the row containing the original video URL, the transcription has now been added to the `transcription` column.

**Congratulations! You have completed the full workflow from Supabase to Trigger.dev and back again.**