The Yammer Ruby gem
This README provides only a basic overview of how to use this gem.For more information about the API endpoints and helper methods available, look at the rdoc documentation.
http://rdoc.info/github/yammer/yam
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'yam'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install yam
The Yammer API requires authentication for access to certain endpoints. Below are the basic steps to get this done.
Setup a Yammer client application as described on the Yammer Developer site
- Construct the following GET request using the client_id you received ``
GET https://www.yammer.com/oauth2/authorize?client_id=[:client_id]&response_type=code
-
Have your users follow the URL you constructed above to allow your application to access their data
-
After allowing access, your users will be redirected to your callback URL
http://[:redirect_uri]?code=[:code]
-
Exchange the code for an access token by making a POST request to Yammer
POST /oauth2/access_token.json HTTP/1.1
Host: www.yammer.com
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
client_id=[:client_id]
client_secret=[:client_secret]
code=[:code]
redirect_uri=https://example.com/oauth2/callback
grant_type=authorization_code
- The authorization server will respond with an access token
"access_token": {
...
"token": "abcxyz12345",
...
}
This gem comes bundled with an OAuth2 wrapper that makes provides convenience methods for getting through the OAuth2 flow
require 'yammer'
yammer_client = Yammer::OAuth2Client.new('PRbTcg9qjgKsp4jjpm1pw', 'Xn7kp7Ly0TCY4GtZWkmSsqGEPg10DmMADyjWkf2U')
The client wraps around the creation of any given grant and passing in the parameters defined in the configuration
file. The supported grants include Authorization Code and Implicit. They are available via the authorization_code
and implicit
methods on a client object.
# generate authorization url
auth_url = yammer_client.webserver_authorization_url
# => https://www.yammer.com/oauth2/authorize?client_id=PRbTcg9qjgKsp4jjpm1pw&response_type=code
# exchange authorization code for access token. we will get back a Net::HTTPResponse
response = yammer_client.access_token_from_authorization_code('11a0b0b64db56c30e2ef', { :redirect_uri => 'https://localhost/callback'})
response.inspect
# => #<Net::HTTPOK:0x007ff8bc7c1200>
response.body
# => {
# "access_token" : {
# "token": "e409f4272fe539166a77c42479de030e7660812a",
# "token_type" : "bearer"
# }
# }"
authorization_url = yammer_client.webclient_authorization_url(:redirect_uri => 'http://localhost/oauth2/callback')
# => "https://www.yammer.com/oauth2/authorize/?client_id=PRbTcg9qjgKsp4jjpm1pw&redirect_uri=http%3A%2F%2Flocalhost%2Foauth%2Fcallback&response_type=token"
You can view the current state of the client using the Yammer#options
method
require 'yammer'
Yammer.options
#> {:site_url=>"https://www.yammer.com", :client_id=>nil, :client_secret=>nil, :access_token=>nil, :http_adapter=>Yammer::Connection, :connection_options=>{:max_redirects=>5, :use_ssl=>true}}
To change the configuration parameters use the configure
method
Yammer.configure do |c|
c.client_id = '[client_id]'
c.client_secret = '[client_secret]'
end
#> Yammer
At this point, your new settings will take effect.
Yammer.options
#> {:site_url=>"https://www.yammer.com", :client_id=>'[client_id]', :client_secret=>'[client_secret]', :access_token=>nil, :http_adapter=>Yammer::Connection, :connection_options=>{ :max_redirects=>5, :use_ssl=>true }}
Take note of the fact that the access_token
is nil. This will need to be set and, in the next section, we will see how to do this.
- This gem offers three ways to interact Yammer's API:
- Calling methods on the Yammer i.e
Yammer
- Calling methods on an instance of
Yammer::Client
. - Calling methods on the custom object models (Experimental)
- Calling methods on the Yammer i.e
In order for this to work, you will need to set up your access_token. This assumes that you already configured the client with your default options as was described above.
# set up your access token
Yammer.configure do |c|
c.access_token = '[access_token]'
end
#=> <Yammer: {:http_adapter=>Yammer::HttpAdapter, :client_secret=>"[client_secret]", :access_token=>"[access_token]", :site_url=>"https://www.yammer.com", :connection_options=>{:max_redirects=>5, :verify_ssl=>true}, :default_headers=>{"Accept"=>"application/json", "User-Agent"=>"Yammer Ruby Gem 0.1.8"}, :client_id=>"[client_id]"}>
# get the current user
Yammer.current_user
NOTE: Use this if you wish to create multiple client instances with diffrent client_id, client_secret and access token. If your application uses a single pair of client_id and client_secret credentials, you ONLY need to specify the access token
- Create an instance of the Yammer client
# create a client instance using the access token: HqsKG3ka9Uls2DxahNi78A
yamr = Yammer::Client.new(:access_token => 'HqsKG3ka9Uls2DxahNi78A')
# create multiple clients, each using a different access token
client1 = Yammer::Client.new(:access_token => 'fG4mhFDf2GUUptztU0Qo9g')
client2 = Yammer::Client.new(:access_token => 'ruZy4vFYyTWqnx7adO9ow')
-
Call methods on the instance:
-
User
- find a user by email
yamr.get_user_by_email('user@example.com') #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
- find a user by user id
yamr.get_user('1588') #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
- get the current user
yamr.current_user #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
-
Message
- post a update as the current user
yamr.create_message('status update') #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
- send a private message to another Yammer user
yamr.create_message('private message', :direct_to_id => 24) #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
- send a message with an Open Graph Object as an attachment
yamr.create_message('here is my open graph object', :og_url => "https://www.yammer.com/example/graph/31415926") #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
-
Search
- search for a term within the context of current user
yamr.search(:search => 'thekev', :model_types => 'users;groups') #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
-
Thread
- fetch a thread with a given id
yamr.get_thread(42) #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
-
Activity
- create and post an activity
yamr.create_activity( activity: { actor: { name: 'John Doe', email: 'jdoe@yammer-inc.com' }, action: 'create', object: { url: 'www.example.com', title: 'Example event name', }, message: 'Posting activity', users: [{ name: 'Example Invitee', email: 'example@yammer-inc.com' }] } ) #<Yammer::ApiResponse:0x007fb949434ec8 @headers=#<Net::HTTPOK 200 OK readbody=true>, @body="[JSON Response]", @code=200>
-
The object model is an abstraction that makes it easy to manipulate the JSON data return when accessing Yammer's API. Each model has accessor methods for all keys contained in the JSON response for a given model type.
-
User
- get the current user
u = Yammer::Resources::User.current #> <Yammer::Resources::User:0x007f9f4b0c39c8> u.full_name #> 'Kevin Mutyaba' u.update!(:job_title => 'k0dR')
-
Thread
- fetch a thread with a given id
t = Yammer::Resources::Thread.get(3)
View the participants in the thread
parts = t.participants #> [{:type=>"user", :id=>18}, {:type=>"user", :id=>64}]
View the participants in the thread as user object models
peepl = t.people #> [#<Yammer::Resources::User:0x007f9f4c086630 @modified_attributes={}, @attrs={}, @new_record=false, @id=18>, #<Yammer::Resources::User:0x007f9f4c086568 @modified_attributes={}, @attrs={}, @new_record=false, @id=64>]
Object models are lazyly loaded. Calling an accessor on a model will hydrate it
peepl[0] #> #<Yammer::Resources::User:0x007f9f4c086568 @modified_attributes={}, @attrs={}, @new_record=false, @id=18> peepl[0].permalink #> 'thekev' peepl[0] #=> #<Yammer::Resources::User:0x007f9f4c086568 @modified_attributes={}, @attrs={:last_name=>"Mutyaba", :network_id=>1, :first_name=>"Kevin", :id => 18, :permalink=>"thekev" }, @network_id=1, @first_name="Kev", @full_name="Tiaba", @permalink="thekev", @id=18 >
This library aims to support and is [tested against][travis] the following Ruby version:
- Ruby 1.9.2
- Ruby 1.9.3
- Ruby 2.0.0
This library may inadvertently work (or seem to work) on other Ruby implementations, however support will only be provided for the versions listed above.
Copyright (c) 2013 Microsoft Corporation See [LICENSE][license] for details. [license]: https://github.com/tiabas/yammer-client/blob/master/LICENSE.md