In n8n, click the "Add workflow" button in the Workflows tab to create a new workflow. Add the starting point – a trigger on when your workflow should run: an app event, a schedule, a webhook call, another workflow, an AI chat, or a manual trigger. Sometimes, the HTTP Request node might already serve as your starting point.
Create custom Cisco Meraki and Databricks workflows by choosing triggers and actions. Nodes come with global operations and settings, as well as app-specific parameters that can be configured. You can also use the HTTP Request node to query data from any app or service with a REST API.
Get Organizations
List the organizations that the user has privileges on.
Create Organization
Create a new organization.
Get Organization
Return an organization.
Update Organization
Update an organization.
Delete Organization
Delete an organization.
Get Networks
List the networks in an organization.
Create Network
Create a new network.
Get Network
Return a network.
Update Network
Update a network.
Delete Network
Delete a network.
Get Devices
List the devices in a network.
Claim Device
Claim a device into a network.
Get Device
Return a device.
Update Device
Update the attributes of a device.
Remove Device
Remove a device from a network.
Get Clients
List the clients that have used this network in the timespan.
Get Client
Return the client associated with the given identifier.
Update Client Policy
Update the policy assigned to a client.
Provision Client
Provisions a client with a name and policy.
Get Client Usage History
Return the client's daily usage history.
To set up Cisco Meraki integration, add the HTTP Request node to your workflow canvas and authenticate it using a predefined credential type. This allows you to perform custom operations, without additional authentication setup. The HTTP Request node makes custom API calls to Cisco Meraki to query the data you need using the URLs you provide.
Take a look at the Cisco Meraki official documentation to get a full list of all API endpoints
List clusters
Retrieve a list of all the clusters in your Databricks workspace.
Create cluster
Creates a cluster with the specified Databricks Runtime version and cluster node type.
Delete cluster
Permanently deletes a cluster from your Databricks workspace.
Delete cluster
Permanently deletes the cluster with the specified cluster ID from the workspace.
Create cluster
Creates a new cluster in the Databricks workspace.
Create job
Creates a Databricks job that runs the specified notebook on the specified cluster.
Create directory
Creates an empty folder in a volume.
Upload file
Uploads a file to a volume.
List directory contents
Lists the contents of a volume.
Delete file
Deletes a file from a volume.
Delete directory
Deletes a folder from a volume.
List groups
Lists the display names for all of the available groups within the Databricks account.
To set up Databricks integration, add the HTTP Request node to your workflow canvas and authenticate it using a generic authentication method. The HTTP Request node makes custom API calls to Databricks to query the data you need using the API endpoint URLs you provide.
See the example hereThese API endpoints were generated using n8n
n8n AI workflow transforms web scraping into an intelligent, AI-powered knowledge extraction system that uses vector embeddings to semantically analyze, chunk, store, and retrieve the most relevant API documentation from web pages. Remember to check the Databricks official documentation to get a full list of all API endpoints and verify the scraped ones!
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