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Livefyre

Interface library for Livefyre's API. Currently a mishmash of the v2 and v3 APIs.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'livefyre'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install livefyre

Documentation

Full documentation is available on GitHub.

You can generate full documentation yourself from the source tree. Requires the yard-tomdoc plugin.

yard --plugin yard-tomdoc -o doc

Usage

You can set a default configuration object for Livefyre, which will prevent you from having to pass a client to all your object proxies manually.

Livefyre.config = {
  :network      => "foo.fyre.co",
  :network_key  => "blorgons",
  :site_id      => 1234,
  :site_key     => "minerva",
  :system_token => "your_long_lived_system_token",
  :domain       => "zor.t123.livefyre.com"
}

If you're using this gem from Rails, we recommend doing this from an initializer.

Once that's set, you're ready to start talking to Livefyre.

domain = Livefyre::Domain.new
domain.set_pull_url "http://foo.bar/users/{id}/pull/"

user = Livefyre::User.new("some_user_id")
user.refresh # Invoke ping-to-pull

Using with Rails

Integration with Rails is straightforward, but does require some setup.

Controller integration

You need to add a route to your routes file to handle profile pull requests from Livefyre. That'll look something like:

get "/livefyre/:id/pull", :to => "users#pull"

Of course, you need a matching controller action

def pull
  # Checks the validity of the JWT that Livefyre sends with pull requests. Throws an exception if it's no good.
  validate_livefyre_request!

  user = User.find(params[:id])

  # livefile_profile will attempt to generate valid Livefyre profile dump from the passed user record by guessing at field names.
  # You can pass overides in a hash as the second option, or you can always generate your own data structure.
  render :json => livefyre_profile(user, :image => user.profile_image_url).to_json
end

Finally, you'll need to set up a pull URL. Since this is done via the API, you are expected to do it manually. From a Rails console is fine, though you may do it any other way you please, too. Livefyre will substitute the string "{id}" for the user ID it wants data for.

Livefyre::Domain.new.set_pull_url "http://your.domain.com/livefyre/{id}/pull"

You may want to invoke user updates when you save the user record.

def update
  # ... user record updates here!
  Livefyre::User.new( user._id ).refresh
end

Or you can have the gem do it automatically from the model:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  # ...

  livefyre_user :update_on => [:email, :display_name]
end

You can provide your own update callback, in case you want to use something like Sidekiq to do the updates:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  # ...

  livefyre_user :update_on => [:email, :display_name] do |user, livefyre_id|
    Livefyre::User.delay.refresh livefyre_id
  end
end

This will enqueue a ping-to-pull job in the "livefyre" queue. Make sure you have a worker running that'll handle that queue!

Handling Postbacks

To handle postbacks, you'll need to set up a postback route:

match '/livefyre/postback',       to: 'comments#postback'

You'll also need to tell Livefyre about this URL (similar to the ping-to-pull URL, via a console or elsewhere)

Livefyre::Site.new.set_postback_url "http://foo.com/livefyre/postback"

Finally, the gem provides a helper for validating Livefyre postback requests.

class CommentsController < ApplicationController
  validate_postback_signature :only => [:postback], :key => "your_site_key"

  def postback
    # Handle the postback
  end
end

View integration

In the location that you want to use your comment form, include something like the following:

<%= livefyre_comments post.id, post.title, post_url(post), post.tags %>

You'll also need to boot Livefyre with Javascript. In your application.js, you'll want to include the Livefyre loader in your manifest:

//=require livefyre.js

And then somewhere in your application.js, you'll want to actually boot:

window.initLivefyre({
  login: function() {
      // Things to do when the user clicks the "sign in" link. You probably want to
      // take your user through a login cycle in a popup window, which includes calling
      // the livefyre_login(user_id, user_name) method.
      window.location = "/login";
    },
  logout: function() {
      // things to do when the user clicks the "sign out" link. You probably want to take
      // your user through the logout cycle, including a call to livefyre_logout.
      window.location = "/logout";
    },
  viewProfile: function(handlers, author) {
      // Handler for when a user's name is clicked in a comment
      window.location = "/" + author;
    },
  editProfile: function(handlers, author) {
      // Handler for when a user wants to edit their profile from the Livefyre user dropdown.
      window.location = "/" + author + "/edit";
    }
});

That's it!

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Added some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

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Ruby client library for the Livefyre API

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