Product Promotion
0x5a.live
for different kinds of informations and explorations.
GitHub - danielberkompas/ex_twilio: Twilio API client for Elixir
Twilio API client for Elixir. Contribute to danielberkompas/ex_twilio development by creating an account on GitHub.
Visit SiteGitHub - danielberkompas/ex_twilio: Twilio API client for Elixir
Twilio API client for Elixir. Contribute to danielberkompas/ex_twilio development by creating an account on GitHub.
Powered by 0x5a.live 💗
ExTwilio
ExTwilio is a relatively full-featured API client for the Twilio API.
Installation
ExTwilio is currently beta software. You can install it from Hex:
def deps do
[
{:ex_twilio, "~> 0.10.0"}
]
end
Or from Github:
def deps do
[
{:ex_twilio, github: "danielberkompas/ex_twilio"}
]
end
and run mix deps.get
.
If using Elixir 1.3 or lower add :ex_twilio
as a application dependency:
def application do
[
applications: [:ex_twilio]
]
end
Configuration
You will need to set the following configuration variables in your
config/config.exs
file:
import Config
config :ex_twilio, account_sid: {:system, "TWILIO_ACCOUNT_SID"},
auth_token: {:system, "TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN"},
workspace_sid: {:system, "TWILIO_WORKSPACE_SID"} # optional
For security, I recommend that you use environment variables rather than hard
coding your account credentials. If you don't already have an environment
variable manager, you can create a .env
file in your project with the
following content:
export TWILIO_ACCOUNT_SID=<account sid here>
export TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN=<auth token>
export TWILIO_WORKSPACE_SID=<workspace sid here> #optional
Then, just be sure to run source .env
in your shell before compiling your
project.
Multiple Environments
If you want to use different Twilio credentials for different environments, then
create separate Mix configuration files for each environment. To do this, change
config/config.exs
to look like this:
# config/config.exs
import Config
# shared configuration for all environments here ...
import_config "#{Mix.env}.exs"
Then, create a config/#{environment_name}.exs
file for each environment. You
can then set the config :ex_twilio
variables differently in each file.
Usage
ExTwilio comes with a module for each supported Twilio API resource. For example,
the "Call" resource is accessible through the ExTwilio.Call
module. Depending
on what the underlying API supports, a resource module may have the following
methods:
Method | Description |
---|---|
all | Eager load all of the resource items on all pages. Use with care! |
stream | Create a Stream of all the items. Use like any Stream. |
find | Find a resource given its SID. |
create | Create a resource. |
update | Update a resource. |
destroy | Destroy a resource. |
Resource modules may contain their own custom methods. If the underlying API endpoint does not support an action, the related method will not be available on that module.
Supported Endpoints
ExTwilio currently supports the following Twilio endpoints:
- Account. Including SubAccounts.
- Address
- Application
- AuthorizedConnectApp
- AvailablePhoneNumber
- Call
- Conference
- ConnectApp
- IncomingPhoneNumber
- Message
- Notification
- OutgoingCallerId
- Queue
- Recording
- ShortCode
- Token
- Transcription
- SipCredentialList
- SipDomain
- SipIPAccessControlList
Twilio's Lookup Rest API:
Twilio's TaskRouter API:
Twilio's ProgrammableChat API:
Twilio Capability Tokens:
Twilio Access Token Grants:
Example
# Get all the calls in the Call endpoint. Be warned, this will block
# until all the pages of calls have been fetched.
calls = ExTwilio.Call.all
# Create a stream of all the calls
stream = ExTwilio.Call.stream
# Lazily filter calls by duration, then map to get only their SIDs
stream
|> Stream.filter(fn(call) -> call.duration > 120 end)
|> Stream.map(fn(call) -> call.sid end)
|> Enum.into([]) # Only here does any work happen.
# => ["CAc14d7...", "CA649ea861..."]
# Find a call
{:ok, call} = ExTwilio.Call.find("CA13a9c7f80c6f3761fabae43242b5b6c6")
inspect(call)
# %ExTwilio.Call{
# account_sid: "ACxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx",
# answered_by: nil, caller_name: "",
# date_created: "Sat, 14 Mar 2015 14:27:38 +0000",
# date_updated: "Sat, 14 Mar 2015 14:28:35 +0000",
# direction: "outbound-api",
# duration: "52",
# end_time: "Sat, 14 Mar 2015 14:28:35 +0000",
# forwarded_from: nil,
# from: "+1xxxxxxxxxx",
# parent_call_sid: nil,
# phone_number_sid: "",
# price: "-0.01500",
# price_unit: "USD",
# sid: "CA13a9c7f80c6f3761fabae43242b5b6c6",
# start_time: "Sat, 14 Mar 2015 14:27:43 +0000",
# status: "completed",
# to: "+1xxxxxxxxxx",
# uri: "/2010-04-01/Accounts/ACxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/Calls/CAxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.json"
# }
# Update a call
call = ExTwilio.Call.update(call, status: "canceled")
# Get a call's recordings. This pattern is repeated wherever you are
# getting a nested resource.
recordings = ExTwilio.Recording.all(call: call.sid)
# Destroy a call
ExTwilio.Call.destroy(call)
For more in-depth documentation, see the generated docs for each module.
Making and Receiving Calls
See the CALLING_TUTORIAL.md file for instructions on making and receiving calls from the browser with ExTwilio.
Sending SMS messages
Please look at ExTwilio.Message
Contributing
See the CONTRIBUTING.md file for contribution guidelines.
Copyright and License
Copyright (c) 2015 Daniel Berkompas
ExTwilio is licensed under the MIT license. For more details, see the LICENSE
file at the root of the repository. It depends on Elixir, which is under the
Apache 2 license.
Twilio™ is trademark of Twilio, Inc.
Elixir Resources
are all listed below.
Made with ❤️
to provide different kinds of informations and resources.