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GithubAPI

Build Status Dependency Status

Wiki | RDocs

A Ruby wrapper for the GitHub REST API v3.

Supports all the API methods(nearly 200). It's build in a modular way, that is, you can either instantiate the whole api wrapper Github.new or use parts of it e.i. Github::Repos.new if working solely with repositories is your main concern.

Important!!

Since version 0.5 the way the gem queries the GitHub api underwent important changes. It closely mirros the Github api hierarchy e.i. if you want to create a download resource, lookup the github api spec and issue the request as in github.repos.downloads.create

Old style: github.pull_requests.create_request
           github.pull_requests.pull_requests
           github.pull_requests.pull_request

New style: github.pull_requests.create
           github.pull_requests.all
           github.pull_requests.find

Installation

Install the gem by issuing

gem install github_api

or put it in your Gemfile and run bundle install

gem "github_api"

Usage

Create a new client instance

github = Github.new

At this stage you can also supply various configuration parameters, such as :user,:repo, :org, :oauth_token, :login, :password or :basic_auth which are used throughout the API

github = Github.new oauth_token: 'token'

You can authenticate either using OAuth authentication convenience methods(see section OAuth) or through basic authentication by passing your login and password credentials

github = Github.new login:'peter-murach', password:'...'

or use convenience method:

github = Github.new basic_auth: 'login:password'

You can interact with GitHub interface, for example repositories, by issuing following calls that correspond directly to the GitHub API hierarchy

github.repos.commits.all  'user-name', 'repo-name'
github.repos.hooks.create 'user-name', 'repo-name', name: "web", active: true
github.repos.keys.get     'user-name', 'repo-name'

The code base is modular and allows for you to work specifically with a given part of GitHub API e.g. blobs

blobs = Github::GitData::Blobs.new
blobs.create 'peter-murach', 'github', content: 'Blob content'

The response is of type [Hashie::Mash] and allows to traverse all the json response attributes like method calls e.i.

repos = Github::Repos.new :user => 'peter-murach', :repo => 'github'
repos.branches do |branch|
  puts branch.name
end

API

Main API methods are grouped into the following classes that can be instantiated on their own

Github         - full API access

Github::Gists           Github::GitData       Github::Repos
Github::Orgs            Github::Issues        Github::Authorizations
Github::PullRequests    Github::Users         Github::Events

Some parts of GitHub API v3 require you to be autheticated, for instance the following are examples of APIs only for the authenticated user

Github::Users::Emails
Github::Users::Keys

All method calls form ruby like sentences and allow for intuitive api navigation, for instance

github = Github.new :oauth_token => '...'
github.users.followers.following 'wycats'  # => returns users that 'wycats' is following
github.users.followers.following 'wycats' # => returns true if following, otherwise false

For specification on all available methods go to http://developer.github.com/v3/ or read the rdoc, all methods are documented there with examples of usage. Alternatively, you can find out about supported methods by issuing the following in your irb:

>> Github::Repos.actions
---
|--> branches
|--> contribs
|--> contributors
|--> create_repo
...

Inputs

Some API methods apart from required parameters such as username, repository name or organisation name, allow you to switch the way the data is returned to you, for instance

github = Github.new
github.git_data.trees.get 'peter-murach', 'github', 'c18647b75d72f19c1e0cc8af031e5d833b7f12ea'
# => gets a tree

github.git_data.trees.get 'peter-murach', 'github', 'c18647b75d72f19c1e0cc8af031e5d833b7f12ea',
  recursive: true # => gets a whole tree recursively

by passing a block you can iterate over the file tree

github.git_data.trees.get 'peter-murach', 'github', 'c18647b75d72f19c1e0cc8af031e5d833b7f12ea',
  recursive: true do |file|
    puts file.path
end

OAuth

In order to authenticate the user through OAuth2 on GitHub you need to

github = Github.new :client_id => '...', :client_secret => '...'
github.authorize_url :redirect_uri => 'http://localhost', :scope => 'repo'
# => "https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize?scope=repo&response_type=code&client_id='...'&redirect_uri=http%3A%2F%2Flocalhost"

After you get your authorization code, call to receive your access_token

token = github.get_token( authorization_code )

Once you have your access token, configure your github instance following instructions under Configuration.

Authorizations API

Alternatively you can use OAuth Authorizations API. For instance, to create access token through GitHub API do following

github = Github.new basic_auth: 'login:password'
github.oauth.create 'scopes' => ['repo']

You can add more than one scope from the user, public_repo, repo, gist or leave the scopes parameter out, in which case, the default read-only access will be assumed(includes public user profile info, public repo info, and gists).

MIME Types

Issues, PullRequests and few other API leverage custom mime types which are :json, :blob, :raw, :text, :html, :full. By default :raw is used.

In order to pass a mime type with your request do

github = Github.new
github.pull_requests.list 'peter-murach', 'github', :mime_type => :full

Your header will contain 'Accept: "application/vnd.github-pull.full+json"' which in turn returns raw, text and html representations in response body.

Configuration

Certain methods require authentication. To get your GitHub OAuth v2 credentials, register an app at https://github.com/settings/applications/ You will need to be logged in to register the application.

Github.configure do |config|
  config.oauth_token   = YOUR_OAUTH_ACCESS_TOKEN
  config.basic_auth    = 'login:password'
end

or

Github.new(:oauth_token => YOUR_OAUTH_TOKEN)
Github.new(:basic_auth => 'login:password')

All parameters can be overwirtten as per method call. By passing parameters hash...

Stack(work in progress)

By default the github_api gem will use the default middleware stack. However, a simple DSL is provided to create a custom stack, for instance:

github = Github.stack do
  request :filter
  request :normalizer
  request :validations

  response :cache do
    register :filestore
  end

  adapter :net_http
end

By default no caching will be performed. In order to set the cache do... If no cache type is provided a default memoization is done.

Pagination

Any request that returns multiple items will be paginated to 30 items by default. You can specify custom :page and :per_page query parameters to alter default behavior. For instance:

res = Github::Repos.new.repos user: 'wycats', per_page: 10

Then you can query pagination information included in the link header by:

res.links.first  # Shows the URL of the first page of results.
res.links.next   # Shows the URL of the immediate next page of results.
res.links.prev   # Shows the URL of the immediate previous page of results.
res.links.last   # Shows the URL of the last page of results.

In order to iterate through the entire result set page by page, you can use convenience methods:

res.each_page do |page|
  page.each do |repo|
    puts repo.name
  end
end

or use has_next_page? and next_page like in the following:

while res.has_next_page?
  ... process response ...
  res.next_page
end

One can also navigate straight to specific page by:

res.page 5     # Requests given page if it exists, nil otherwise
res.first_page
res.prev_page
res.last_page

Response Message

Each response comes packaged with methods allowing for inspection of HTTP start line and headers. For example to check for rate limits and status code issue

res = Github::Repos.new.branches 'peter-murach', 'github'
res.ratelimit_limit     # "5000"
res.ratelimit_remainig  # "4999"
res.status              # "200"
res.content_type        # "application/json; charset=utf-8"

Examples

Some api methods require input parameters, these are added simply as a hash properties, for instance

issues = Github::Issues.new user:'peter-murach', repo: 'github-api'
issues.milestones.list state: 'open', sort: 'due_date', direction: 'asc'

Other methods may require inputs as an array of strings

users = Github::Users.new oauth_token: 'token'
users.emails.add 'email1', 'email2', ..., 'emailn' # => Adds emails to the authenticated user

If a method returns a collection, you can iterator over it by supplying a block parameter,

events = Github::Events.new
events.public do |event|
  puts event.actor.login
end

Query requests instead of http responses return boolean values

github = Github.new
github.orgs.members.public_member? 'github', 'technoweenie' # => true

Rails Example

A Rails controller that allows a user to authorize their GitHub account and then perform request.

class GithubController < ApplicationController

  def authorize
    github = Github.new :client_id => '...', :client_secret => '...'
    address = github.authorize_url :redirect_uri => 'http://...', :scope => 'repo'
    redirect_to address
  end

  def callback
    authorization_code = params[:code]
    token = github.get_token authorization_code
    access_token = token.token
  end
end

Testing

The test suite is split into two groups live and mock.

The live tests are the ones in features folder and they simply exercise the GitHub API by making live requests and then being cached with VCR in directory named features\cassettes. For details on how to get setup please navigate to features folder.

The mock tests are in spec directory and their primary concern is to test the gem internals without the hindrance of external calls.

Development

Questions or problems? Please post them on the issue tracker. You can contribute changes by forking the project and submitting a pull request. You can ensure the tests are passing by running bundle and rake.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2011-2012 Piotr Murach. See LICENSE.txt for further details.

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