Skip to content

stefanzvkvc/pigeon

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

logo

HTTP2-compliant wrapper for sending iOS and Android push notifications.

Build Status Coverage Status Hex.pm Hex.pm

Installation

Add pigeon and kadabra as mix.exs dependencies:

def deps do
  [
    {:pigeon, "~> 1.6.0"},
    {:kadabra, "~> 0.4.4"}
  ]
end

Quickstart Guides

Apple iOS (APNS)

  1. Add a default worker config to your mix config. See the detailed docs for setting up your certificate and key.

    config :pigeon, :apns,
      apns_default: %{
        cert: "cert.pem",
        key: "key_unencrypted.pem",
        mode: :dev
      }

    This config sets up a default connection to APNS servers. cert and key can be any of the following:

    • Static file path
    • Full-text string of the file contents
    • {:my_app, "certs/cert.pem"} (indicates path relative to the priv folder of the given application)

    Alternatively, you can use token based authentication:

    config :pigeon, :apns,
      apns_default: %{
        key: "AuthKey.p8",
        key_identifier: "ABC1234567",
        team_id: "DEF8901234",
        mode: :dev
      }
    • :key - Created and downloaded via your developer account. Like :cert this can be a file path, file contents string or tuple
    • :key_identifier - The 10-character key identifier associated with :key, obtained from your developer account
    • :team_id - Your 10-character Team ID, obtained from your developer account
  2. Create a notification packet. Note: Your push topic is generally the app's bundle identifier.

    iex> n = Pigeon.APNS.Notification.new("your message", "your device token", "your push topic (optional)")
  3. Send the packet. Pushes are synchronous and return the notification with an updated :response key.

    iex> Pigeon.APNS.push(n)
    %Pigeon.APNS.Notification{device_token: "your device token",
     expiration: nil, id: "963B9FDA-EA60-E869-AAB5-9C88C8E7396B",
     payload: %{"aps" => %{"alert" => "your message"}}, response: :success,
     topic: "your push topic"}
    
    # Add an `:on_response` callback for async pushes.
    iex> Pigeon.APNS.push(n, on_response: fn(x) -> IO.inspect(x) end)
    :ok

Additional documentation: APNS (Apple iOS)

Android (FCM)

Looking for GCM? Try v0.13 or earlier.

  1. Add a default worker config to your mix config.

    config :pigeon, :fcm,
      fcm_default: %{
        key: "your_fcm_key_here"
      }
  2. Create a notification packet. FCM notifications support

    iex> msg = %{ "body" => "your message" }
    iex> n = Pigeon.FCM.Notification.new("your device registration ID", msg)
  3. Send the packet. Pushes are synchronous and return the notification with updated :status and :response keys. If :status is success, :response will contain a keyword list of individual registration ID responses.

    iex> Pigeon.FCM.push(n)
    %Pigeon.FCM.Notification{message_id: "0:1512580747839227%8911a9178911a917",
     payload: %{"notification" => %{"body" => "your message"}}, priority: :normal,
     registration_id: "your device registration ID",
     response: [success: "your device registration ID"],
     status: :success}
    
    # Add an `:on_response` callback for async pushes.
    iex> Pigeon.FCM.push(n, on_response: fn(x) -> IO.inspect(x) end)
    :ok

Additional documentation: FCM (Android)

Amazon Android (ADM)

  1. Add a default worker config to your mix config.

    config :pigeon, :adm,
      adm_default: %{
        client_id: "your_oauth2_client_id_here",
        client_secret: "your_oauth2_client_secret_here"
      }
  2. Create a notification packet.

    iex> msg = %{ "body" => "your message" }
    iex> n = Pigeon.ADM.Notification.new("your device registration ID", msg)
  3. Send the packet.

    iex> Pigeon.ADM.push(n)
    %Pigeon.ADM.Notification{consolidation_key: nil,
     expires_after: 604800, md5: "M13RuG4uDWqajseQcCiyiw==",
     payload: %{"data" => %{"body" => "your message"}},
     registration_id: "your device registration ID",
     response: :success, updated_registration_id: nil}
    
    # Add an `:on_response` callback for async pushes.
    iex> Pigeon.ADM.push(n, on_response: fn(x) -> IO.inspect(x) end)
    :ok

Additional documentation: ADM (Amazon Android)

Startup Configuration of Push Workers

Workers may be specified at application startup by creating a module containing functions that return zero or more configuration structures appropriate to the push service being enabled.

Specify these in your config.exs as:

config :pigeon, workers: [
  {YourApp.Pigeon, :apns_config},
  {YourApp.Pigeon, :fcm_config},
  {YourApp.Pigeon, :adm_config}
]

These should be implemented as:

defmodule YourApp.Pigeon do
  @moduledoc false

  @push_mode if(Mix.env() == :production, do: :prod, else: :dev)

  def apns_config do
    Pigeon.APNS.ConfigParser.parse(
      key: System.get_env("APNS_KEY"),
      key_identifier: System.get_env("APNS_KEY_ID"),
      team_id: System.get_env("APNS_TEAM_ID"),
      mode: @push_mode,
      name: :apns_default
    )
  end

  def fcm_config do
    Pigeon.FCM.Config.new(name: :fcm_default, key: System.get_env("FCM_SERVER_KEY"))
  end
end

If your startup configuration requires reading your configuration from a database or using another dependency that needs a database, startup is a little more complex.

  1. Modify your mix.exs to not start pigeon by default:

    def deps do
      [
        {:pigeon, "~> 1.3.1", runtime: false},
        {:kadabra, "~> 0.4.4"},
        {:ecto, "~> 2.0 or ~> 3.0"}
      ]
    end
  2. Modify config.exs to specify a single worker function:

    config :pigeon, workers: [{YourApp.Pigeon, :config}]
  3. Modify your main application to start pigeon after your Repo has been started under your application’s supervision tree:

    def start(_type, _args) do
      children = [
        YourApp.Repo,
      ]
    
      opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: YourApp.Supervisor]
    
      with {:ok, sup} <- Supervisor.start_link(children, opts),
          {:ok, _} <- Application.ensure_all_started(:pigeon, :permanent) do
        {:ok, sup}
      end
    end
  4. Implement your database query as part of your Pigeon module:

    defmodule YourApp.Pigeon do
      @moduledoc false
    
      alias YourApp.{PushApplication, Repo}
    
      def config_workers do
        PushApplication
        |> Repo.all()
        |> Enum.map(&build_config/1)
      end
    
      defp build_config(%{type: "apns"} = config)
        Pigeon.APNS.ConfigParser.parse(
          key: config.key,
          key_identifier: config.key_identifier,
          team_id: config.team_id,
          mode: config.mode,
          name: Atom.to_string(config.name) # This is bad, but keep it simple!
        )
      end
    
      defp build_config(%{type: "fcm"} = config) do
        Pigeon.FCM.Config.new(
          name: Atom.to_string(config.name),
          key: config.key
        )
      end
    end

Contributing

Testing

Unit tests can be run with mix test or mix coveralls.html.

Formatting

This project uses Elixir's mix format for formatting. Add a hook in your editor of choice to run it after a save. Be sure it respects this project's .formatter.exs.

Commits

Git commit subjects use the Karma style.

About

iOS and Android push notifications for Elixir

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Elixir 99.8%
  • Lua 0.2%