Prefect REST API Overview
Both Prefect Cloud and locally run Prefect servers host a REST API that gives you access to many observability, coordination, and account management functions of the platform.
Prefect Cloud REST API documentation is available at https://app.prefect.cloud/api/docs.
The Prefect REST API documentation for locally run open-source Prefect servers is available in the Prefect REST API Reference.
Prefect REST API interactive documentation
If you are running a local instance of the Prefect server with prefect server start
, the Prefect REST API documentation for your instance is available at http://localhost:4200/docs or the /docs
endpoint of the PREFECT_API_URL
you have configured to access the server.
REST Guidelines¶
The Prefect REST API adheres to the following guidelines:
- Collection names are pluralized (for example,
/flows
or/runs
). - We indicate variable placeholders with colons:
GET /flows/:id
. - We use snake case for route names:
GET /task_runs
. - We avoid nested resources unless there is no possibility of accessing the child resource outside the parent context. For example, we query
/task_runs
with a flow run filter instead of accessing/flow_runs/:id/task_runs
. - The API is hosted with an
/api/:version
prefix that (optionally) allows versioning in the future. By convention, we treat that as part of the base URL and do not include that in API examples. - Filtering, sorting, and pagination parameters are provided in the request body of
POST
requests where applicable.- Pagination parameters are
limit
andoffset
. - Sorting is specified with a single
sort
parameter. - See more information on filtering below.
- Pagination parameters are
HTTP verbs¶
GET
,PUT
andDELETE
requests are always idempotent.POST
andPATCH
are not guaranteed to be idempotent.GET
requests cannot receive information from the request body.POST
requests can receive information from the request body.POST /collection
creates a new member of the collection.GET /collection
lists all members of the collection.GET /collection/:id
gets a specific member of the collection by ID.DELETE /collection/:id
deletes a specific member of the collection.PUT /collection/:id
creates or replaces a specific member of the collection.PATCH /collection/:id
partially updates a specific member of the collection.POST /collection/action
is how we implement non-CRUD actions. For example, to set a flow run's state, we usePOST /flow_runs/:id/set_state
.POST /collection/action
may also be used for read-only queries. This is to allow us to send complex arguments as body arguments (which often cannot be done viaGET
). Examples includePOST /flow_runs/filter
,POST /flow_runs/count
, andPOST /flow_runs/history
.
Filtering¶
Objects can be filtered by providing filter criteria in the body of a POST
request. When multiple criteria are specified, logical AND will be applied to the criteria.
Filter criteria are structured as follows:
{
"objects": {
"object_field": {
"field_operator_": <field_value>
}
}
}
In this example, objects
is the name of the collection to filter over (for example, flows
). The collection can be either the object being queried for (flows
for POST /flows/filter
) or a related object (flow_runs
for POST /flows/filter
).
object_field
is the name of the field over which to filter (name
for flows
). Note that some objects may have nested object fields, such as {flow_run: {state: {type: {any_: []}}}}
.
field_operator_
is the operator to apply to a field when filtering. Common examples include:
any_
: return objects where this field matches any of the following values.is_null_
: return objects where this field is or is not null.eq_
: return objects where this field is equal to the following value.all_
: return objects where this field matches all of the following values.before_
: return objects where this datetime field is less than or equal to the following value.after_
: return objects where this datetime field is greater than or equal to the following value.
For example, to query for flows with the tag "database"
and failed flow runs, POST /flows/filter
with the following request body:
{
"flows": {
"tags": {
"all_": ["database"]
}
},
"flow_runs": {
"state": {
"type": {
"any_": ["FAILED"]
}
}
}
}
OpenAPI¶
The Prefect REST API can be fully described with an OpenAPI 3.0 compliant document. OpenAPI is a standard specification for describing REST APIs.
To generate Prefect's complete OpenAPI document, run the following commands in an interactive Python session:
from prefect.server.api.server import create_app
app = create_app()
openapi_doc = app.openapi()
This document allows you to generate your own API client, explore the API using an API inspection tool, or write tests to ensure API compliance.