A dead simple API wrapper.
Table of Contents
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'blanket_wrapper'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install blanket_wrapper
require 'blanket'
github = Blanket.wrap("https://api.github.com")
# Get some user's info
user = github.users('inf0rmer').get
user.login
# => "inf0rmer"
# Get a user's repos
github.users('inf0rmer').repos.get
# => [{
# "id": 20000073,
# "name": "BAPersistentOperationQueue",
# ...
# }]
Blanket uses some metaprogramming black magic to wrap an API. Everytime you call a method on a wrapped API, Blanket appends it as a part of the final URL:
github = Blanket.wrap("https://api.github.com")
github.users('inf0rmer').repos.get
Here's how the final URL is built, the step by step:
github = Blanket.wrap("https://api.github.com")
# => "https://api.github.com"
github.users
# => "https://api.github.com/users"
github.users('inf0rmer')
# => "https://api.github.com/users/inf0rmer"
github.users('inf0rmer').repos
# => "https://api.github.com/users/inf0rmer/repos"
The final get
method performs a GET HTTP request. You can also use it to append a final part to your request, so you can write something like:
As this magic works using method_missing
, you can send
slashed uri parts to the wrapper and it will play nicely. This is especially usefull when APIs give you URLs:
github.get('users/inf0rmer/repos')
# or, if you don't wnat to perform the request yet, or have to append more parts to the uri
github.send('users/inf0rmer').repos#.get
github = Blanket.wrap("https://api.github.com")
github.users.get('inf0rmer')
# => "https://api.github.com/users/inf0rmer"
At the moment Blanket only accepts JSON responses. Every request returns a Blanket::Response
instance, which parses the JSON internally and lets you access keys using dot syntax:
user = github.users('inf0rmer').get
user.login
# => "inf0rmer"
user.url
# => "https://api.github.com/users/inf0rmer"
# It even works on nested keys
repo = github.repos('inf0rmer').get('blanket')
repo.owner.login
# => "inf0rmer"
If the response is an array, all Enumerable
methods work as expected:
repos = github.users('inf0rmer').repos.get
repos.map(&:name)
# => ["analytics-ios", "aztec", "fusebox", ...]
### Request Body
You can make requests with body using the body
option:
api = Blanket::wrap("http://api.example.org")
api.messages.post(body: 'Hello')
Blanket supports appending parameters to your requests:
api.users(55).get(params: {foo: 'bar'})
# => "http://api.example.org/users/55?foo=bar"
You can also set default params for all your requests on initialization:
api = Blanket::wrap("http://api.example.org", params: {access_token: 'my secret token'})
HTTP Headers are always useful when accessing an API, so Blanket makes it easy for you to specify them, either globally or on a per-request basis:
# All requests will carry the `token` header
api = Blanket::wrap("http://api.example.org", headers: {token: 'my secret token'})
# This single request will carry the `foo` header
api.users(55).get(headers: {foo: 'bar'})
Some APIs require you to append an extension to your requests, such as .json
or .xml
. Blanket supports this use case, letting you define an extension for all your requests or override it for a single one:
# All request URLs are suffixed with ".json"
api = Blanket::wrap("http://api.example.org", extension: :json)
# Requests to "users_endpoint" are suffixed with ".xml" instead
users_endpoint = api.users(55)
users_endpoint.extension = :xml
Blanket will raise exceptions for HTTP errors encountered while making requests. Exception subclasses are raised for well known errors (404, 500, etc.) but for other status codes a default Blanket::Exception
will be raised instead.
begin
api.thingamajig.get
rescue Blanket::ResourceNotFound => e
e.code
# => 404
e.message
# => "404: Resource Not Found"
# The HTTP body, ie. the error message sent by the server
e.body
# => "Could not find this resource!"
end
- Fork it ( https://github.com/inf0rmer/blanket/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request