From saleor-configurator
Explains Saleor e-commerce entities (Channels, Products, Variants, Attributes, Categories), relationships, identifier rules (slug vs name), channels, and Configurator scope. Use for entity questions.
npx claudepluginhub saleor/configuratorThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Saleor is a headless e-commerce platform with a GraphQL API. This skill covers the core entities you'll work with in Configurator -- what they are, how they relate, and the rules that govern them.
Details Saleor entities (Products, Variants, Channels, Attributes), relationships, identifier rules (slug vs name), and Configurator scope. For entity structure and connection questions.
Manage Saleor catalog: products, variants, types, categories, collections, media, warehouse stock via GraphQL. Guides schema review, mutations, hierarchy for product data tasks.
Creates and manages Shopify products via GraphQL Admin API or CSV imports. Bulk import/update variants, inventory, images, assign to collections.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Saleor is a headless e-commerce platform with a GraphQL API. This skill covers the core entities you'll work with in Configurator -- what they are, how they relate, and the rules that govern them.
product-modeling insteadconfigurator-schema insteadSales channels represent storefronts, marketplaces, or regions. Each has its own currency, country, product visibility, and pricing.
Defines the structure for a group of products: which attributes are shared (product-level) and which create variants (variant-level), plus shipping and tax settings.
Products are the items you sell. Each belongs to one product type and one category. Variants are the purchasable SKUs -- each with a unique SKU, specific attribute values, channel-specific pricing, and inventory tracking.
Typed fields attached to product types. Product-level attributes (Brand, Material) are shared across variants. Variant-level attributes (Size, Color) create separate SKUs.
Hierarchical product organization (tree structure). Each product belongs to one category. Used for navigation and filtering.
Curated product groupings that can span categories. A product can belong to many collections. Used for promotions and merchandising.
Inventory locations with stock tracking per variant. Associated with shipping zones.
Geographic shipping regions with country-based targeting and multiple shipping methods.
Channel ─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
├── Product Listings (visibility, pricing) │
├── Variant Listings (price, availability) │
└── Checkout/Order settings │
│
ProductType ─────────────────────────────────────────┤
├── productAttributes ──> Attribute │
├── variantAttributes ──> Attribute │
└── taxClass ──> TaxClass │
│
Product ─────────────────────────────────────────────┤
├── productType ──> ProductType │
├── category ──> Category │
├── collections ──> Collection[] │
└── variants ──> ProductVariant[] │
├── warehouse ──> Warehouse │
└── channelListings ────────────┘
Category (tree) └── subcategories ──> Category[]
ShippingZone └── warehouses ──> Warehouse[]
Each entity is identified by either its slug or name. This is how Configurator matches your local config to remote entities.
| Entity | Identifier | Mutable? |
|---|---|---|
| Channel, Category, Collection, Product, Warehouse, Menu, Page | slug | No -- creates new |
| ProductType, PageType, Attribute, TaxClass, ShippingZone | name | No -- creates new |
Important: Changing an identifier creates a new entity and may orphan the old one. If you need to "rename" something, delete the old entity and create a new one.
Configurator manages your store's structure. Some things are runtime-only:
| Configurator Manages | Runtime Only |
|---|---|
| Product structure and pricing | Orders |
| Categories and collections | Customers |
| Attributes and channels | Checkouts |
| Warehouses and shipping zones | Payments |
| Tax classes | Webhooks |
Here are practical examples showing how entities reference each other:
# A product references its type (by name), category (by slug path),
# and channels (by slug) for pricing:
products:
- name: "Classic T-Shirt"
slug: "classic-t-shirt"
productType: "T-Shirt" # -> matches productTypes[].name
category: "clothing/t-shirts" # -> matches category slug path
variants:
- sku: "TSHIRT-S-RED"
channelListings:
- channel: "us-store" # -> matches channels[].slug
price: 29.99
stocks:
- warehouse: "main-wh" # -> matches warehouses[].slug
quantity: 100
# A shipping zone references warehouses and targets countries:
shippingZones:
- name: "US Shipping"
countries: [US]
warehouses:
- "main-wh" # -> matches warehouses[].slug
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Confusing slug-based vs name-based entities | Check the Identifier Rules table -- some use slug, others use name |
| Changing an identifier to "rename" | This creates a duplicate. Delete old + create new instead. |
| Creating products before their product type exists | Product types must be defined first. Configurator handles deploy order, but the type must be in your config. |
| Not understanding channel scope | Products aren't visible until they have a channel listing. Each channel has independent pricing. |
| Mixing up Categories (taxonomy) vs Collections (curation) | Categories = hierarchical, 1 per product, for navigation. Collections = flat, many per product, for merchandising. |
configurator-schema - Config.yml structure and validation rulesproduct-modeling - Product type design and attribute selectionconfigurator-cli - CLI commands for deploying configurations