Two-way sync
Changes in Gorgias or TiDB instantly reflect in both systems. No stale data, no manual imports.
Keep Gorgias and TiDB in sync without custom scripts. Cut weeks of integration work, eliminate silent data drift, and give your team a single, reliable source of truth.
Product and engineering teams constantly need CRM data, and the CRM API is a poor way to get it: rate limits, pagination, custom objects, and integration code that breaks when an admin renames a field. What they actually want is the data in TiDB, where it can be queried and joined like everything else.
Stacksync mirrors Messages, Customers, Users (agents), Tags from Gorgias into Databases, Tables, Views, Columns in TiDB with real-time, bi-directional sync. Read CRM records with plain queries; write updates from your application and they appear in Gorgias with validation intact. Go-to-market teams keep working in the CRM, engineers keep working in the database, and neither has to think about the other.
Back-office apps read and write the synced tables; Stacksync handles the Gorgias API, limits, and retries.
Field and stage updates in Gorgias arrive as row changes in TiDB, ready to drive jobs and notifications.
Accounts, contacts, and custom objects from Gorgias become tables in TiDB you can join with application data directly.
Representative objects on each side — any object or custom field can map to any target. Schemas are auto-detected; types are converted between the two systems.
| Gorgias objects | TiDB objects | |
|---|---|---|
| Custom fields Extend tickets with brand-specific attributes. | Tables Row data stored in TiKV; the primary unit for reads, writes, and CDC. | |
| Tickets The central support object, aggregating a conversation across channels. | Views Logical views for shaping reads before syncing outward. | |
| Messages Individual inbound and outbound messages attached to a ticket. | Columns MySQL-compatible types mapped to fields in the paired system. | |
| Customers Unified shopper profiles that merge identities across connected stores. | Indexes Secondary indexes that keep incremental sync queries efficient. | |
| Users (agents) Support staff records used for assignment and workload reporting. | Sequences Server-side ID generation relevant when external systems write rows. | |
| Tags Categorize tickets for routing and downstream analytics. | Databases MySQL-style schemas addressed by any MySQL-compatible client. |
Real-time sync, workflow automation, event queues, EDI, and monitoring, for every Gorgias–TiDB connection.
Changes in Gorgias or TiDB instantly reflect in both systems. No stale data, no manual imports.
Trigger automated workflows whenever Gorgias or TiDB data changes, update records, fire webhooks, or kick off sequences without brittle API scripts.
Handle millions of events per minute without losing a single Gorgias or TiDB record.
Track your Gorgias ⇄ TiDB sync health, view errors, and replay failed events in one click.
Transform legacy EDI complexity into simple database interactions between Gorgias and TiDB.
Configure and sync within minutes, no code. Whether you sync 50k or 100M+ records, Stacksync handles the queues, infra, and plumbing. Integrations are non-invasive and need zero setup on your systems.
Authenticate Gorgias and TiDB with each platform's native method — OAuth, API keys, or service accounts — plus secure options like SSH tunneling, IP whitelisting, and VPC peering.
Pick the Gorgias and TiDB objects to sync — Stacksync auto-detects both schemas, including custom fields where the platform exposes them. Sync to existing tables, or let Stacksync create new ones with ideal data types.
Fields map automatically even when names and types differ. Stacksync handles transformation and type casting for you, zero configuration required.
Yes. Stacksync provides a managed, real-time two-way integration between Gorgias and TiDB: authenticate both systems, choose the objects to sync (such as Gorgias's Custom fields and Tickets), map fields visually, and changes propagate both ways in milliseconds — no code required.
Common patterns for Gorgias and TiDB: Internal tools without API code; Trigger workflows from CRM changes; Query the CRM like a database. Back-office apps read and write the synced tables; Stacksync handles the Gorgias API, limits, and retries.
Gorgias: REST API. Authentication: API key paired with the account email over HTTP Basic auth; OAuth 2.0 for public apps. TiDB: MySQL wire protocol (SQL). Authentication: Database credentials (MySQL-compatible username/password). Stacksync manages authentication, retries, and rate limits on both sides.
Gorgias: Tickets aggregate messages from email, live chat, SMS, and social channels into a single object, so one synced record covers the full conversation. TiDB: TiFlash maintains columnar replicas of row data, letting analytical queries run on current data without a separate warehouse. Stacksync's field mapping accounts for these differences between Gorgias and TiDB without custom code.
Stacksync is SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001 certified with HIPAA BAA support. Data is encrypted in transit, and a zero-persistent-storage architecture means Gorgias and TiDB records are not retained after a sync operation.
Stacksync pricing is usage-based and starts at $1,000/month, including the managed Gorgias and TiDB connectors, real-time two-way sync, monitoring, and support. That replaces building and maintaining a custom Gorgias–TiDB integration in-house.
As a data company, we understand the importance of keeping your data secure. Stacksync is built with security best practices to keep your data safe at every layer, and is DPF-certified for US, EU, UK and CH data transfers.
Let your users access Stacksync from your centralized user management systems. Works with Okta, Azure, Google SSO and more.
Immediately get alerted about record syncing issues over email, Slack, PagerDuty and WhatsApp. Resolve issues from a centralized dashboard with retry and revert options.
Securely connects to your systems with:
Every pair below is a real-time, two-way sync. Search all 386 integrations available for Gorgias and TiDB.