Skip to content

m-k/ruby-rest-api

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

35 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

MessageBird's REST API for Ruby

This repository contains the open source Ruby client for MessageBird's REST API. Documentation can be found at: https://developers.messagebird.com/

Requirements

  • Sign up for a free MessageBird account
  • Create a new access_key in the developers sections
  • MessageBird's API client for Ruby requires Ruby >= 1.9

Installation

You can either include the following line in your Gemfile:

gem 'messagebird-rest', :require => 'messagebird'

Or you can just manually install it from the command line:

$ gem install messagebird-rest

Examples

We have put some self-explanatory examples in the examples directory, but here is a quick breakdown on how it works. First, you need to create an instance of MessageBird::Client. Be sure to replace YOUR_ACCESS_KEY with something real in the bottom example.

require 'pp'              # Only needed for this example
require 'messagebird'

client = MessageBird::Client.new(YOUR_ACCESS_KEY)

That's easy enough. Now we can query the server for information.

Balance

Lets start with out with an overview of our balance.

pp client.balance

#<MessageBird::Balance:0x007f8d5c83f478
 @amount=9,
 @payment="prepaid",
 @type="credits">
Messages

Chances are that the most common use you'll have for this API client is the ability to send out text messages. For that purpose we have created the message_create method, which takes the required originator, one or more recipients and a body text for parameters.

Optional parameters can be specified as a hash.

pp client.message_create('FromMe', '31612345678', 'Hello World', :reference => 'MyReference')

#<MessageBird::Message:0x007f8d5b883520
 @body="Hello World",
 @createdDatetime=2014-07-07 12:20:30 +0200,
 @datacoding="plain",
 @direction="mt",
 @gateway=239,
 @href=
  "https://rest.messagebird.com/messages/211e6280453ba746e8eeff7b12582146",
 @id="211e6280453ba746e8eeff7b12582146",
 @mclass=1,
 @originator="FromMe",
 @recipient=
  {"totalCount"=>1,
   "totalSentCount"=>1,
   "totalDeliveredCount"=>0,
   "totalDeliveryFailedCount"=>0,
   "items"=>
    [#<MessageBird::Recipient:0x007f8d5c058c00
      @recipient=31612345678,
      @status="sent",
      @statusDatetime=2014-07-07 12:20:30 +0200>]},
 @reference="MyReference",
 @scheduledDatetime=nil,
 @type="sms",
 @typeDetails={},
 @validity=nil>

As a possible follow-up, you can use the message method with the above mentioned batch-id to query the status of the message that you just created. It will return a similar Message object.

client.message('211e6280453ba746e8eeff7b12582146')
HLR

To perform HLR lookups we have created the hlr_create method, which takes a number and a reference for parameters.

pp client.hlr_create('31612345678', 'MyReference')

#<MessageBird::HLR:0x007f8d5b8dafc8
 @createdDatetime=2014-07-07 12:20:05 +0200,
 @href="https://rest.messagebird.com/hlr/4933bed0453ba7455031712h16830892",
 @id="4933bed0453ba7455031712h16830892",
 @msisdn=31612345678,
 @network=nil,
 @reference="MyReference",
 @status="sent",
 @statusDatetime=2014-07-07 12:20:05 +0200>

Similar to the message_create and message methods, the hlr_create method has an accompanying hlr method to poll the HLR object.

client.hlr('4933bed0453ba7455031712h16830892')
Verify (One-Time Password)

You can send and verify One-Time Passwords through the MessageBird API using the verify_create and verify_token methods.

# verify_create requires a recipient as a required parameter, and other optional paramaters
client.verify_create(31612345678, {:reference => "YourReference"})

#<MessageBird::Verify:0x007fb3c18c8148
 @id="080b7f804555213678f14f6o24607735",
 @recipient="31612345678",
 @reference="YourReference",
 @status="sent",
 @href={"message"=>"https://rest.messagebird.com/messages/67d42f004555213679416f0b13254392"},
 @createdDatetime=2015-05-12 16:51:19 +0200,
 @validUntilDatetime=2015-05-12 16:51:49 +0200>

This sends a token to the recipient, which can be verified with the verify_token method.

# verify_token requires the id of the verify request and a token as required parameters.
client.verify_token('080b7f804555213678f14f6o24607735', 123456)
Voice Message

MessageBird also offers the ability to send out a text message as a voice message, or text-to-speech. For that purpose we have created the voice_message_create method, which takes one or more required recipients and a body text for parameters.

Optional parameters can be specified as a hash.

pp client.voice_message_create('31612345678', 'Hello World', :reference => 'MyReference')

#<MessageBird::VoiceMessage:0x000001030101b8
 @body="Hello World",
 @createdDatetime=2014-07-09 12:17:50 +0200,
 @href=
  "https://rest.messagebird.com/voicemessages/a08e51a0353bd16cea7f298a37405850",
 @id="a08e51a0353bd16cea7f298a37405850",
 @ifMachine="continue",
 @language="en-gb",
 @recipients=
  {"totalCount"=>1,
   "totalSentCount"=>1,
   "totalDeliveredCount"=>0,
   "totalDeliveryFailedCount"=>0,
   "items"=>
    [#<MessageBird::Recipient:0x000001011d3178
      @recipient=31612345678,
      @status="calling",
      @statusDatetime=2014-07-09 12:17:50 +0200>]},
 @reference="MyReference",
 @repeat=1,
 @scheduledDatetime=nil,
 @voice="female">

Similar to regular messaging and HLR lookups, there is a method available to fetch the VoiceMessage object by using an id.

client.voice_message('a08e51a0353bd16cea7f298a37405850')

Documentation

Complete documentation, instructions, and examples are available at: https://developers.messagebird.com/.

License

The MessageBird REST Client for Ruby is licensed under The BSD 2-Clause License. Copyright (c) 2014, MessageBird

About

MessageBird's REST API for Ruby

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 100.0%