DevOps
Webhook Cleanup: Remove Endpoints That No Longer Have Consumers
Webhook cleanup often begins after someone finds endpoints for retired products, deleted customers, test vendors, or callback URLs that no service appears to consume. The danger is low-frequency events: annual renewals, chargebacks, invoice corrections, compliance exports, and partner retries may stay quiet for weeks before one missed delivery becomes a business problem.
The useful output is an endpoint decision with event types, subscribers, last successful delivery, retry behavior, owner, staged disable date, and replacement channel. That lets teams reduce integration noise without silently dropping events.
Key takeaways
- Review event types, delivery logs, retry queues, subscriber ownership, and downstream acknowledgements.
- Disable or shadow-deliver before deleting an endpoint when event frequency is low.
- Do not rush billing, compliance, customer lifecycle, or vendor callback webhooks.
- Record the replacement path and the signal that would show a missed event.
- Prevent repeat clutter by requiring owner and expiry metadata for temporary webhooks.
Separate Dead Endpoints From Quiet Events
Start with one slice of integration platforms where the cleanup candidates are visible to both the owner and the person paying the operational cost. The best cleanup scope is small enough that owners can answer quickly but wide enough to include the attachments that make removal risky.
| Field | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Owner | Cleanup needs a person or team that can accept the decision |
| Current purpose | A short reason to keep the item, written in present tense |
| Last meaningful use | owners, callers, last change, runtime behavior, and deletion confidence |
| Dependency evidence | repository search, tests, logs, deploy history, and owner review |
| Risk if wrong | The outage, data loss, access failure, or rollback gap the review must avoid |
| Next action | Keep, reduce, archive, disable, remove, or investigate |
Do not make the inventory larger than the decision. A short list with owners and evidence beats a perfect spreadsheet that nobody is willing to act on.
Evidence Before the Change
The useful question is not “how old is it?” It is “what would break, become harder to recover, or lose accountability if this disappeared?” For webhook cleanup, collect enough evidence to answer that without relying on naming conventions.
| Check | What to look for | Cleanup signal |
|---|---|---|
| Owner trail | Tags, labels, CODEOWNERS, tickets, runbooks, and service catalog entries | No owner can explain the current purpose |
| Runtime use | Recent requests, writes, reads, executions, deploys, errors, or alerts | Activity is absent across the review window |
| Dependency path | DNS, queues, jobs, dashboards, policies, manifests, and downstream consumers | No dependent system still points at it |
| Recovery path | Backup, export, recreate command, rollback plan, or retained configuration | The team can recover if the decision is wrong |
Use several signals together. Activity can miss monthly jobs and incident-only paths. Ownership can be stale. Cost can distract from security or recovery risk. The strongest case combines runtime data, dependency checks, owner review, and a rollback plan.
If the evidence conflicts, label the item “investigate” with a named owner and review date. That is still progress because the next review starts with a narrower question.
Review delivery history by event type before disabling an endpoint:
SELECT endpoint_url, event_type, COUNT(*) AS deliveries, MAX(delivered_at) AS last_success
FROM webhook_deliveries
WHERE delivered_at >= CURRENT_DATE - INTERVAL '90 days'
GROUP BY endpoint_url, event_type
ORDER BY last_success ASC;
This shows quiet endpoints and low-frequency event types. It does not show whether a future billing, compliance, or customer lifecycle event will still need the endpoint.
Choose the Lowest-Risk Move
Use the least permanent move that proves the decision. In webhook cleanup, removal is only one possible outcome; reducing size, narrowing permission, shortening retention, archiving, or disabling a trigger may produce the same benefit with less risk.
- Add or repair ownership metadata before changing anything ambiguous.
- Reduce scope, size, retention, replicas, or permissions before permanent removal when the blast radius is uncertain.
- Disable or detach during a monitored window, then remove only after the owner accepts the evidence.
Track the cleanup candidate with a simple priority score:
| Score | Good sign | Bad sign |
|---|---|---|
| Impact | Meaningful spend, risk, toil, noise, or confusion disappears | The item is cheap and low-risk but politically distracting |
| Confidence | Owner, purpose, and dependency path are understood | The team is guessing from age or name |
| Reversibility | Restore, recreate, re-enable, or rollback path exists | Deletion would be the first real test |
| Prevention | A rule can stop recurrence | The same pattern will return next month |
Start with high-impact, high-confidence, reversible candidates. Defer confusing items only if they get an owner and a date; otherwise “defer” becomes another word for keeping waste permanently.
Cases That Need a Slower Path
Some cleanup candidates are supposed to look quiet. Do not rush these cases:
- Rare scheduled work that runs monthly, quarterly, or only during incidents.
- Customer-specific integrations that do not show up in average traffic charts.
- Recovery, audit, compliance, rollback, or legal-retention paths.
For these cases, use a longer observation window, explicit owner approval, and a staged reduction. The point is not to avoid cleanup; it is to avoid making the first proof of dependency an outage.
Run the Cleanup Review
Run webhook cleanup as a decision review, not an open-ended hygiene project.
- Pick the narrow scope and export the candidate list.
- Add owner, current purpose, last-use evidence, dependency checks, and risk if wrong.
- Remove obvious false positives, then ask owners to choose keep, reduce, archive, disable, remove, or investigate.
- Apply the least permanent useful change first.
- Watch the signals that would reveal a bad decision.
- Complete the final removal only after the review window closes.
- Save a short decision record with owner, evidence, change made, rollback path, and recurrence rule.
For broader cleanup planning, use the cleanup library to pair this guide with related notes. If the cleanup has infrastructure impact, pair it with a visible owner, a rollback path, and a measurable business case. For infrastructure cleanup, the main cloud cost optimization checklist is a useful companion.
Prevent the Repeat
Prevention should change the creation path, not just the cleanup path. For webhook cleanup, the useful prevention fields are owner, reason to exist, removal trigger, and verification notes. Make those fields part of normal creation and review.
- Require owner and review-date metadata at creation time.
- Put the cleanup decision near the system of record: infrastructure code, runbook, ticket, or service catalog.
- Review the top unresolved candidates on a recurring schedule instead of running one large cleanup project.
The recurring review should be short: sort by impact, pick the unclear items, assign owners, and close the loop on anything nobody claims. If the review keeps producing the same class of candidate, fix the creation path instead of celebrating repeated cleanup.
Example Decision Record
Use a compact record so the cleanup can be reviewed later without reconstructing the whole investigation.
| Field | Example entry for this cleanup |
|---|---|
| Candidate | Old webhooks in integration platforms |
| Why it looked stale | Low recent activity, unclear owner, or no current consumer after the first review |
| Evidence checked | Owner trail, Runtime use, and owner confirmation |
| First reversible move | Add or repair ownership metadata before changing anything ambiguous |
| Watch signal | The metric, alert, job, route, query, or owner complaint that would show the cleanup was wrong |
| Final action | Keep, reduce, archive, disable, or remove after a window long enough to include scheduled and low-frequency use, not just a quiet afternoon |
| Prevention rule | Require owner and review-date metadata at creation time |
This record is intentionally small. If the decision needs a long narrative, the candidate is probably not ready for removal yet. Keep investigating until the owner, evidence, reversible move, and prevention rule are clear.
FAQ
How often should teams do webhook cleanup?
Use a window long enough to include scheduled and low-frequency use, not just a quiet afternoon for the first decision, then set a recurring cadence based on change rate. Fast-moving non-production systems may need monthly review; slower systems can be quarterly if every unclear item has an owner and a review date.
What is the safest first action?
The safest first action is usually ownership repair plus evidence collection. After that, add or repair ownership metadata before changing anything ambiguous. That creates a visible test before permanent deletion.
What should not be removed quickly?
Do not rush anything connected to rare scheduled work that runs monthly, quarterly, or only during incidents. Also slow down when the cleanup affects recovery, compliance, customer-specific behavior, rare schedules, or security response.
How do you make the decision useful later?
Write the decision as a small operational record: candidate, owner, evidence, chosen action, watch signals, rollback path, final date, and prevention rule. That format helps future engineers, search engines, and AI assistants understand the cleanup without guessing.