--- title: Multiple SDK clients sidebarTitle: Multiple SDK clients description: Use TriggerClient to talk to multiple Trigger.dev projects, environments, or preview branches from a single process. --- The global `configure()` API binds the SDK to one set of credentials per process. When a single process needs to talk to more than one Trigger.dev project, environment, or preview branch, use `new TriggerClient({...})` for each target instead. Each instance owns its own auth, baseURL, and preview branch, and concurrent calls across instances stay isolated. ```ts import { TriggerClient } from "@trigger.dev/sdk"; const prod = new TriggerClient({ accessToken: process.env.TRIGGER_PROD_KEY }); const preview = new TriggerClient({ accessToken: process.env.TRIGGER_PREVIEW_KEY, previewBranch: "signup-flow", }); const payload = { to: "user@example.com" }; await prod.tasks.trigger("send-email", payload); await preview.runs.list({ status: ["COMPLETED"] }); ``` ## Configuration `TriggerClient` accepts the same fields as `configure()`: | Field | Description | Env-var fallback | | --------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | | `accessToken` | Secret key (`tr_dev_*`, `tr_prod_*`, `tr_preview_*`) or personal access token (`tr_pat_*`). | `TRIGGER_SECRET_KEY`, then `TRIGGER_ACCESS_TOKEN` | | `previewBranch` | Preview branch name when using a `tr_preview_*` key. | `TRIGGER_PREVIEW_BRANCH`, then `VERCEL_GIT_COMMIT_REF` | | `baseURL` | Override the Trigger.dev API URL. Defaults to `https://api.trigger.dev`. | `TRIGGER_API_URL` | | `requestOptions`| Request-level options (retry policy, additional headers, etc.) — see the `ApiRequestOptions` type. | — | Fields not passed to the constructor fall back to the matching env var (and then to a sensible default for `baseURL`). Explicit constructor values always win, so you can mix env-var-backed clients and fully explicit clients in the same process. ```ts // Picks up TRIGGER_SECRET_KEY / TRIGGER_PREVIEW_BRANCH from env. const fromEnv = new TriggerClient(); // Explicit values override env entirely. const explicit = new TriggerClient({ accessToken: process.env.OTHER_PROJECT_KEY, previewBranch: "feature-x", }); ``` If no `accessToken` resolves from either the constructor or env vars, the first API call throws an `ApiClientMissingError` with a clear message. ## What's on a TriggerClient instance Each instance exposes the management surface as namespaced properties: `tasks`, `runs`, `batch`, `schedules`, `envvars`, `queues`, `deployments`, `prompts`, and `auth`. ```ts import type { emailTask } from "./trigger/email"; const client = new TriggerClient(); await client.tasks.trigger("send-email", { to: "user@example.com" }); await client.runs.list({ status: ["COMPLETED"], limit: 10 }); await client.schedules.create({ task: "daily-report", cron: "0 9 * * *" }); await client.envvars.update("proj_1234", "preview", "DATABASE_URL", { value: "..." }); ``` Methods that only make sense inside a running task are not on the instance surface: `tasks.triggerAndWait`, `tasks.batchTriggerAndWait`, `tasks.triggerAndSubscribe`, `batch.triggerAndWait`, `batch.triggerByTaskAndWait`, and the task-definition helpers (`schedules.task`, `prompts.define`). ## Isolation contract When you make a call through a `TriggerClient` instance, the SDK does not look at the process-wide global config, env vars (other than the constructor-time fallback), or the ambient task context. Two instances pointing at different projects can run in the same process — including in parallel under `Promise.all` — without interfering with each other. That isolation also means a call from inside a task does not automatically inherit the surrounding task's `parentRunId`, `lockToVersion`, or test flag. If you specifically want a call to inherit those (rare — usually you want a clean external trigger), opt in with `inheritContext: true`: ```ts const sameProject = new TriggerClient({ accessToken: process.env.TRIGGER_SECRET_KEY, inheritContext: true, }); ``` ## When to use what | Scenario | Recommended | | ------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------ | | Single process, single project/env | `configure()` (or env vars only) | | Single process talking to multiple projects, envs, or branches | `new TriggerClient({...})` per target | | Short, sequential override (e.g. one batch under a different token) | `auth.withAuth(config, fn)` | | Inside a task, trigger a run in a different project | `new TriggerClient({...})` | See [Authentication](/management/authentication) for the underlying token types and the `auth.withAuth` helper.