This is a generic Bolt for JavaScript template app used to build out Slack apps.
Before getting started, make sure you have a development workspace where you have permissions to install apps. If you don’t have one setup, go ahead and create one.
Join the Slack Developer Program for exclusive access to sandbox environments for building and testing your apps, tooling, and resources created to help you build and grow.
- Open https://api.slack.com/apps/new and choose "From an app manifest"
- Choose the workspace you want to install the application to
- Copy the contents of manifest.json into the text box that says
*Paste your manifest code here*
(within the JSON tab) and click Next - Review the configuration and click Create
- Click Install to Workspace and Allow on the screen that follows. You'll then be redirected to the App Configuration dashboard.
Before you can run the app, you'll need to store some environment variables.
- Rename
.env.sample
to.env
- Open your apps configuration page from this list, click OAuth & Permissions in the left hand menu, then copy the Bot User OAuth Token into your
.env
file underSLACK_BOT_TOKEN
- Click Basic Information from the left hand menu and follow the steps in the App-Level Tokens section to create an app-level token with the
connections:write
scope. Copy that token into your.env
asSLACK_APP_TOKEN
.
# Clone this project onto your machine
git clone https://github.com/slack-samples/bolt-js-starter-template.git
# Change into this project directory
cd bolt-js-starter-template
# Install dependencies
npm install
# Run Bolt server
npm start
# Run lint for code formatting and linting
npm run lint
manifest.json
is a configuration for Slack apps. With a manifest, you can create an app with a pre-defined configuration, or adjust the configuration of an existing app.
app.js
is the entry point for the application and is the file you'll run to start the server. This project aims to keep this file as thin as possible, primarily using it as a way to route inbound requests.
Every incoming request is routed to a "listener". Inside this directory, we group each listener based on the Slack Platform feature used, so /listeners/shortcuts
handles incoming Shortcuts requests, /listeners/views
handles View submissions and so on.
Only implement OAuth if you plan to distribute your application across multiple workspaces. A separate app-oauth.js
file can be found with relevant OAuth settings.
When using OAuth, Slack requires a public URL where it can send requests. In this template app, we've used ngrok
. Checkout this guide for setting it up.
Start ngrok
to access the app on an external network and create a redirect URL for OAuth.
ngrok http 3000
This output should include a forwarding address for http
and https
(we'll use https
). It should look something like the following:
Forwarding https://3cb89939.ngrok.io -> http://localhost:3000
Navigate to OAuth & Permissions in your app configuration and click Add a Redirect URL. The redirect URL should be set to your ngrok
forwarding address with the slack/oauth_redirect
path appended. For example:
https://3cb89939.ngrok.io/slack/oauth_redirect