require 'json' module Chatterbot # # routines for connecting to Twitter and validating the bot # module Client attr_accessor :screen_name, :client, :search_client # # the main interface to the Twitter API # def client @client ||= Twitter::Client.new( :endpoint => base_url, :consumer_key => client_params[:consumer_key], :consumer_secret => client_params[:consumer_secret], :oauth_token => client_params[:token], :oauth_token_secret => client_params[:secret] ) end # # client for running searches -- for some reason Twitter::Client was overwriting # the endpoint for searches in a destructive fashion, so I had two # clients. That appears to be fixed, but if not, this takes care of that problem # def search_client client # return client # @search_client ||= Twitter::Client.new( # :endpoint => base_url, # :consumer_key => client_params[:consumer_key], # :consumer_secret => client_params[:consumer_secret], # :oauth_token => client_params[:token], # :oauth_token_secret => client_params[:secret] # ) end # # reset the since_id for this bot to the highest since_id we can # get, by running a really open search and updating config with # the max_id # def reset_since_id result = search_client.search("a") update_since_id(result) end # # the URL we should use for api calls # def base_url "https://api.twitter.com" end # # default options when querying twitter -- this could be extended # with a language, etc. def default_opts opts = { :result_type => "recent" } opts[:since_id] = since_id if since_id > 0 opts end # # Initialize the Twitter client, and check to see if it has credentials or not # @return true/false depending on if client has OAuth credentials def init_client client.credentials? end # # Re-initialize with Twitter, handy during the auth process def reset_client @client = nil init_client end # # Call this before doing anything that requires an authorized Twitter # connection. def require_login(do_update_config=true) init_client login(do_update_config) end # # simple OAuth client for setting up with Twitter # def consumer @consumer ||= OAuth::Consumer.new( config[:consumer_key], config[:consumer_secret], :site => base_url ) end # # copied from t, the awesome twitter cli app # @see https://github.com/sferik/t/blob/master/lib/t/authorizable.rb # def generate_authorize_url(request_token) request = consumer.create_signed_request(:get, consumer.authorize_path, request_token, {:oauth_callback => 'oob'}) params = request['Authorization'].sub(/^OAuth\s+/, '').split(/,\s+/).map do |param| key, value = param.split('=') value =~ /"(.*?)"/ "#{key}=#{CGI::escape($1)}" end.join('&') "#{base_url}#{request.path}?#{params}" end def request_token @request_token ||= consumer.get_request_token end # # query twitter for the bots screen name. we do this during the bot registration process # def get_screen_name(t = @access_token) return unless @screen_name.nil? oauth_response = t.get('/1.1/account/verify_credentials.json') @screen_name = JSON.parse(oauth_response.body)["screen_name"] end # # handle oauth for this request. if the client isn't authorized, print # out the auth URL and get a pin code back from the user # If +do_update_config+ is false, don't udpate the bots config # file after authorization. This defaults to true but # chatterbot-register will pass in false because it does some # other work before saving. def login(do_update_config=true) if needs_api_key? get_api_key end if needs_auth_token? pin = get_oauth_verifier #(request_token) return false if pin.nil? begin # this will throw an error that we can try and catch @access_token = request_token.get_access_token(:oauth_verifier => pin.chomp) get_screen_name config[:token] = @access_token.token config[:secret] = @access_token.secret update_config unless ! do_update_config reset_client rescue OAuth::Unauthorized => e display_oauth_error return false end end return true end end end