Connect Backendless to OpenClaw on Operator.io
Backendless is a backend-as-a-service platform for mobile and web apps, offering database, file storage, user authentication, and APIs. It helps developers ship scalable applications faster without managing server infrastructure.
Automate Backendless with AI
On Operator, an OpenClaw agent pilots Backendless for you. It reads your message, plans the steps, and runs them in Backendless, using actions like copy file, create directory, create backendless hive.
Your agent reaches Backendless directly or through connectors like Composio MCP and Pipedream MCP, which handle the sign in and token refresh for you, so there is nothing to wire up and no API keys to paste.
What your agent can do with Backendless
Your agent can call any of these Backendless actions by name as part of a larger task. Ask for the outcome you want and it picks the right ones.
Copy File
Tool to copy a file or directory within Backendless file storage. Use when duplicating files to a new location after verifying source and destination paths.
Create Directory
Tool to create a new directory at the specified path. Use when you need to organize files under a new folder structure.
Create Backendless Hive
Tool to create a new Hive. Use when you need to provision a new Hive resource before performing Hive operations. Example: Create a hive named 'groceryStore'.
Create Backendless Timer
Tool to create a new timer with schedule and code. Use when scheduling recurring or one-off tasks to run server-side logic after confirming parameters.
Delete Directory
Tool to delete a directory at the specified path in Backendless file storage. Use when you need to remove folders after confirming the path.
Delete File
Deletes a file from Backendless file storage at the specified path. Use this tool when you need to remove files from storage. The operation is permanent and cannot be undone. Ensure the file path is correct before deletion.
Delete Backendless Timer
Deletes a Backendless timer by its unique name. Use this tool to permanently remove a scheduled timer from your Backendless application. The timer must exist and you must provide its exact name. Once deleted, the timer's scheduled execut...
Directory Listing
Tool to retrieve a listing of files and directories at a given path. Use when browsing or filtering file storage directories.
General Object Retrieval
Tool to retrieve objects from a specified Backendless table with filtering, sorting, and pagination. Use after confirming the table name and query options. Example: "Get Users where age > 30 sorted by created desc".
Get All Values
Tool to retrieve all values from a map in a specified Hive. Use when you need to fetch the entire contents of a Hive map at once.
Get Counter Value
Tool to retrieve the current value of a Backendless counter. Use when you need to inspect an atomic counter's value.
Get File Count
Tool to get the count of files in a Backendless directory. Use when you need to determine how many items match a filter or include subdirectories.
Get Key Items
Tool to retrieve values for a specified key in a list (all, single, or range). Use when you need specific elements or the entire list from a Hive key. Supports single index retrieval, range retrieval, or full list.
Get Backendless Timer
Tool to retrieve information about a specific timer. Use when you need to inspect a timer's schedule and next run details by name.
Map Put
Tool to set or update key-value pairs in a Hive map. Use when you need to add or update multiple entries in a Hive map.
Move File
Tool to move a file or directory within Backendless file storage. Use when relocating resources to a new path after verifying source and destination.
Publish Message
Tool to publish a message to a specified messaging channel. Use when you need to send notifications or events to subscribers after confirming channel and payload.
Reset Counter
Tool to reset a Backendless counter back to zero. Use when you need to reinitialize a counter before starting a new sequence.
Set Counter Value
Tool to set a Backendless counter to a specific value conditionally. Use when you need to ensure the counter only updates if it currently matches an expected value.
Update Backendless Timer
Tool to update schedule or code of an existing timer. Use when you need to modify a timer's configuration after retrieval.
Delete User
Tool to delete a user by user ID. Use when removing a user account after confirming permissions.
Find User by ID
Tool to retrieve user information by ID. Use when you need to fetch details for a specific user after you have their objectId.
Grant Permission to User
Tool to grant a permission to a user on a specific data object. Use when precise access rights must be assigned after verifying the table and object IDs. Example: "Grant FIND permission to a user for a Person record".
User Login
Tool to log in a registered user with identity and password. Use when you need to authenticate a user before making subsequent requests. Example: "Login alice@wonderland.com with password wonderland".
User Logout
Tool to log out the currently authenticated user. Use when you need to terminate the user session after operations.
User Password Recovery
Tool to initiate password recovery for a user. Use when a user requests a password reset after forgetting their password. Triggers an email with recovery instructions.
User Registration
Tool to register a new user with email and password. Use when creating a user account or converting a guest account to a registered one after collecting credentials. Example: Register 'alice@wonderland.com' with password 'wonderland'.
Revoke Permission from User
Tool to revoke a permission from a specified user or role on a specific data object. Use when you need to deny a previously granted operation for a user or role on a data object after verifying the table and object IDs.
Update User
Tool to update properties of an existing Backendless user. Use when you need to modify user profile fields after login. Example: Update phoneNumber to "5551212".
Validate User Token
Tool to validate a user session token. Use after obtaining a token from login to confirm the session is active.
How to connect Backendless
You authorize Backendless once from your dashboard. Operator holds the connection and refreshes the access tokens on its own, so your agent keeps working with Backendless without you signing in again. The same setup unlocks every other app your agent can reach, so you only do it once.
When you are ready, the get started guide walks through standing up your OpenClaw agent.
Common questions about Backendless
- How do I connect Backendless to Operator?
- You authorize Backendless once from your Operator dashboard. Operator holds the connection and refreshes the access token for you, so your agent keeps working with Backendless without you signing in again.
- Can my agent work with issues and pull requests in Backendless?
- Yes. It can open and comment on issues, review pull requests, manage labels, and read project details when you ask. Teams use it to triage incoming work, draft release notes, and post a summary of what changed without leaving chat.
- Do I need to write code or manage Backendless API keys?
- No code and no API keys. You authorize Backendless through a normal sign in and Operator handles the connection, so there is nothing to wire up or host.
- Can my agent use Backendless together with my other apps?
- Yes. The same agent reaches every app you connect, so it can move between Backendless and tools like GitHub, Supabase, Pagerduty in one job, reading from one and acting in another without you wiring anything between them.
More apps to automate
Apps your agent runs alongside Backendless, or browse all integrations.
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