This is a Slack Real Time Messaging API client for Elixir. You'll need a Slack API token which can be retrieved by following the Token Generation Instructions or by creating a new bot integration.
Add Slack to your mix.exs
dependencies
function.
def application do
[extra_applications: [:logger]]
end
def deps do
[{:slack, "~> 0.23.6"}]
end
The newest version of the Slack client introduces breaking changes with regards to starting and connecting to the Real Time Messaging API. rtm.start
is now deprecated and has since been replaced with rtm.connect
. This has removed the list of bots
, channels
, groups
, users
, and ims
that are normally returned from rtm.start
. Additionally, these lists are now rate-limited. In order to achieve relative parity to the old way of doing things, you'll need to make one change in your code:
Wherever you grab the passed in slack
state, add in additional calls to populate these lists:
slack
|> Map.put(:bots, Slack.Web.Bots.info(%{token: token}) |> Map.get("bot"))
|> Map.put(:channels, Slack.Web.Channels.list(%{token: token}) |> Map.get("channels"))
|> Map.put(:groups, Slack.Web.Groups.list(%{token: token}) |> Map.get("groups"))
|> Map.put(:ims, Slack.Web.Im.list(%{token: token}) |> Map.get("ims"))
|> Map.put(:users, Slack.Web.Users.list(%{token: token}) |> Map.get("members"))
Define a module that uses the Slack behaviour and defines the appropriate callback methods.
defmodule SlackRtm do
use Slack
def handle_connect(slack, state) do
IO.puts "Connected as #{slack.me.name}"
{:ok, state}
end
def handle_event(message = %{type: "message"}, slack, state) do
send_message("I got a message!", message.channel, slack)
{:ok, state}
end
def handle_event(_, _, state), do: {:ok, state}
def handle_info({:message, text, channel}, slack, state) do
IO.puts "Sending your message, captain!"
send_message(text, channel, slack)
{:ok, state}
end
def handle_info(_, _, state), do: {:ok, state}
end
To run this example, you'll want to call Slack.Bot.start_link(SlackRtm, [], "TOKEN_HERE")
and run the project with mix run --no-halt
.
You can send messages to channels using send_message/3
which takes the message
as the first argument, channel/user as the second, and the passed in slack
state as the third.
The passed in slack
state holds the current user properties as me
, team
properties as team
, and the current websocket connection as socket
.
If you want to do things like trigger the sending of messages outside of your
Slack handlers, you can leverage the handle_info/3
callback to implement an
external API.
This allows you to both respond to Slack RTM events and programmatically control your bot from external events.
{:ok, rtm} = Slack.Bot.start_link(SlackRtm, [], "token")
send rtm, {:message, "External message", "#general"}
#=> {:message, "External message", "#general"}
#==> Sending your message, captain!
Slack has a lot of message types so it's a good idea to define a callback like above where unhandled message types don't crash your application. You can find a list of message types and examples on the RTM API page.
You can find more detailed documentation on the Slack hexdocs page.
The complete Slack Web API is implemented by generating modules/functions from the JSON documentation. You can view this project's documentation for more details.
There are two ways to authenticate your API calls. You can configure api_token
on slack
that will authenticate all calls to the API automatically.
config :slack, api_token: "VALUE"
Alternatively you can pass in %{token: "VALUE"}
to any API call in
optional_params
. This also allows you to override the configured api_token
value if desired.
Quick example, getting the names of everyone on your team:
names = Slack.Web.Users.list(%{token: "TOKEN_HERE"})
|> Map.get("members")
|> Enum.map(fn(member) ->
member["real_name"]
end)
A custom client callback module can be configured for cases in which you need extra control over how calls to the web API are performed. This can be used to control timeouts, or to add additional custom error handling as needed.
config :slack, :web_http_client, YourApp.CustomClient
All Web API calls from documentation-generated modules/functions will call post!/2
with the generated url
and body passed as arguments.
In the case where you only need to control the options passed to HTTPoison/hackney, the default client accepts a keyword list as an additional configuration parameter. Note that this is ignored if configuring a custom client.
See HTTPoison docs for a list of available options.
config :slack, :web_http_client_opts, [timeout: 10_000, recv_timeout: 10_000]
For integration tests, you can change the default Slack URL to your fake Slack server:
config :slack, url: "http://localhost:8000"