> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://trigger.dev/docs/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Input Streams

> Send data into running tasks from your backend code

The Input Streams API allows you to send data into running Trigger.dev tasks from your backend code. This enables bidirectional communication — while [output streams](/realtime/backend/streams) let you read data from tasks, input streams let you push data into them.

<Note>
  To learn how to receive input stream data inside your tasks, see [Input
  Streams](/tasks/streams#input-streams) in the Streams doc.
</Note>

<Tip>
  Input streams are keyed by `runId` — they're correct for sending data to a specific live run. If you need a bidirectional channel that survives run boundaries (e.g. a chat that resumes tomorrow, an agent coordinated across many runs), look at [`chat.agent`](/ai-chat/overview): it's built on a durable Session row that owns its runs and exposes the same consumer-side API (`on` / `once` / `wait` / `waitWithIdleTimeout`) on its `.in` channel.
</Tip>

## Sending data to a running task

### Using defined input streams (Recommended)

The recommended approach is to use [defined input streams](/tasks/streams#defining-input-streams) for full type safety:

```ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import { cancelSignal, approval } from "./trigger/streams";

// Cancel a running AI stream
await cancelSignal.send(runId, { reason: "User clicked stop" });

// Approve a draft
await approval.send(runId, { approved: true, reviewer: "alice@example.com" });
```

The `.send()` method is fully typed — the data parameter must match the generic type you defined on the input stream.

<Note>
  `.send()` works the same regardless of how the task is listening — whether it uses `.wait()`
  (suspending), `.once()` (non-suspending), or `.on()` (continuous). The sender doesn't need to know
  how the task is consuming the data. See [Input Streams](/tasks/streams#input-streams) for details on each
  receiving method.
</Note>

## Practical examples

### Cancel from a Next.js API route

```ts app/api/cancel/route.ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import { cancelStream } from "@/trigger/streams";

export async function POST(req: Request) {
  const { runId } = await req.json();

  await cancelStream.send(runId, { reason: "User clicked stop" });

  return Response.json({ cancelled: true });
}
```

### Approval workflow API

```ts app/api/approve/route.ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import { approval } from "@/trigger/streams";

export async function POST(req: Request) {
  const { runId, approved, reviewer } = await req.json();

  await approval.send(runId, {
    approved,
    reviewer,
  });

  return Response.json({ success: true });
}
```

### Remix action handler

```ts app/routes/api.approve.ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import { json, type ActionFunctionArgs } from "@remix-run/node";
import { approval } from "~/trigger/streams";

export async function action({ request }: ActionFunctionArgs) {
  const formData = await request.formData();
  const runId = formData.get("runId") as string;
  const approved = formData.get("approved") === "true";
  const reviewer = formData.get("reviewer") as string;

  await approval.send(runId, { approved, reviewer });

  return json({ success: true });
}
```

### Express handler

```ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import express from "express";
import { cancelSignal } from "./trigger/streams";

const app = express();
app.use(express.json());

app.post("/api/cancel", async (req, res) => {
  const { runId, reason } = req.body;

  await cancelSignal.send(runId, { reason });

  res.json({ cancelled: true });
});
```

### Sending from another task

You can send input stream data from one task to another running task:

```ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import { task } from "@trigger.dev/sdk";
import { approval } from "./streams";

export const reviewerTask = task({
  id: "auto-reviewer",
  run: async (payload: { targetRunId: string }) => {
    // Perform automated review logic...
    const isApproved = await performReview();

    // Send approval to the waiting task
    await approval.send(payload.targetRunId, {
      approved: isApproved,
      reviewer: "auto-reviewer",
    });
  },
});
```

## Error handling

The `.send()` method will throw if:

* The run has already completed, failed, or been canceled
* The payload exceeds the 1MB size limit
* The run ID is invalid

```ts theme={"theme":"css-variables"}
import { cancelSignal } from "./trigger/streams";

try {
  await cancelSignal.send(runId, { reason: "User clicked stop" });
} catch (error) {
  console.error("Failed to send:", error);
  // Handle the error — the run may have already completed
}
```

## Important notes

* Maximum payload size per `.send()` call is **1MB**
* You cannot send data to a completed, failed, or canceled run
* Data sent before a listener is registered inside the task is **buffered** and delivered when a listener attaches
* Input streams require the current streams implementation (v2 is the default in SDK 4.1.0+). See [Streams](/tasks/streams) for details.
