= rAtom rAtom is a library for working with the Atom Syndication Format and the Atom Publishing Protocol (APP). * Built using nokogiri so it is _much_ faster than a REXML based library. * Uses the nokogiri reader parser so it has much lighter memory usage. * Supports {RFC 5005}[http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5005.txt] for feed pagination. rAtom was originally built to support the communication between a number of applications built by Peerworks[http://peerworks.org], via the Atom Publishing protocol. However, it supports, or aims to support, all the Atom Syndication Format and Publication Protocol and can be used to access Atom feeds or to script publishing entries to a blog supporting APP. {Build Status}[http://travis-ci.org/seangeo/ratom] API docs are {here}[http://rdoc.info/github/seangeo/ratom/frames]. == Prerequisites * nokogiri, >= 1.5.6 * rspec (Only required for tests) nokogiri in turn requires the libxml2 library to be installed. libxml2 can be downloaded from http://xmlsoft.org/downloads.html or installed using whatever tools are provided by your platform. At least version 2.6.31 is required. === Mac OSX Mac OSX by default comes with an old version of libxml2 that will not work with rAtom. You will need to install a more recent version. If you are using Macports: port install libxml2 Alternatively, using Homebrew: brew install libxml2 == Installation You can install via gem using: gem install ratom == Usage To fetch a parse an Atom Feed you can simply: require 'atom' feed = Atom::Feed.load_feed(URI.parse("http://example.com/feed.atom")) And then iterate over the entries in the feed using: feed.each_entry do |entry| # do cool stuff end To construct the following example Feed is from the Atom spec: Example Feed 2003-12-13T18:30:02Z John Doe urn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b93C-0003939e0af6 Atom-Powered Robots Run Amok urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a 2003-12-13T18:30:02Z Some text. To build this in rAtom we would do: feed = Atom::Feed.new do |f| f.title = "Example Feed" f.links << Atom::Link.new(:href => "http://example.org/") f.updated = Time.parse('2003-12-13T18:30:02Z') f.authors << Atom::Person.new(:name => 'John Doe') f.id = "urn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b93C-0003939e0af6" f.entries << Atom::Entry.new do |e| e.title = "Atom-Powered Robots Run Amok" e.links << Atom::Link.new(:href => "http://example.org/2003/12/13/atom03") e.id = "urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a" e.updated = Time.parse('2003-12-13T18:30:02Z') e.summary = "Some text." end end To output the Feed as XML use to_xml > puts feed.to_xml urn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b93C-0003939e0af6 Example Feed 2003-12-13T18:30:02Z John Doe Atom-Powered Robots Run Amok urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a Some text. 2003-12-13T18:30:02Z See Feed and Entry for details on the methods and attributes of those classes. === Publishing To publish to a remote feed using the Atom Publishing Protocol, first you need to create a collection to publish to: require 'atom/pub' collection = Atom::Pub::Collection.new(:href => 'http://example.org/myblog') Then create a new entry entry = Atom::Entry.new do |entry| entry.title = "I have discovered rAtom" entry.authors << Atom::Person.new(:name => 'A happy developer') entry.updated = Time.now entry.id = "http://example.org/myblog/newpost" entry.content = Atom::Content::Html.new("

rAtom lets me post to my blog using Ruby, how cool!

") end And publish it to the Collection: published_entry = collection.publish(entry) Publish returns an updated entry filled out with any attributes to server may have set, including information required to let us update to the entry. For example, lets change the content and republished: published_entry.content = Atom::Content::Html.new("

rAtom lets me post to and edit my blog using Ruby, how cool!

") published_entry.updated = Time.now published_entry.save! To update an existing Entry: existing_entry = Entry.load_entry(URI.parse("http://example.org/afeedentry.atom")) existing_entry.title = "I have discovered rAtom" existing_entry.updated = Time.now existing_entry.save! You can also delete an entry using the destroy! method, but we won't do that will we?. === Extension elements As of version 0.3.0, rAtom support simple extension elements on feeds and entries. As defined in the Atom Syndication Format, simple extension elements consist of XML elements from a non-Atom namespace that have no attributes or child elements, i.e. they are empty or only contain text content. These elements are treated as a name value pair where the element namespace and local name make up the key and the content of the element is the value, empty elements will be treated as an empty string. To access extension elements use the [] method on the Feed or Entry. For example, if we are parsing the follow Atom document with extensions: Feed with extensions Something important We could then access the extension element on the feed using: > feed["http://example.org", "myelement"] => ["Something important"] Note that the return value is an array. This is because XML allows multiple instances of the element. To set an extension element you append to the array: > feed['http://example.org', 'myelement'] << 'Something less important' => ["Something important", "Something less important"] You can then call to_xml and rAtom will serialize the extension elements into xml. > puts feed.to_xml Something important Something less important Notice that the output repeats the xmlns attribute for each of the extensions, this is semantically the same the input XML, just a bit ugly. It seems to be a limitation of the libxml-Ruby API. But if anyone knows a work around I'd gladly accept a patch (or even advice). ==== Custom Extension Classes As of version 0.5.0 you can also define your own classes for a extension elements. This is done by first creating an alias for the namespace for the class and then using the +element+ method on the Atom::Feed or Atom::Entry class to tell rAtom to use your custom class when it encounters the extension element. For example, say we have the following piece Atom XML with a structured extension element: https://custom.namespace/id/1 And we want the +custom:property+ elements to be parsed as our own custom class called Custom::Property that is defined like this: class Custom::Property attr_accessor :name, :value def initialize(xml) # Custom XML handling end end We can tell rAtom about our custom namespace and custom class using the following method calls: Atom::Entry.add_extension_namespace :custom, "http://custom.namespace" Atom::Entry.elements "custom:property", :class => Custom::Property The first method call registers an alias for the "http://custom.namespace" namespace and the second method call tell rAtom that when it encounters a custom:property element within a Feed it should create an instance of Custom::Property and pass the XML Reader to the constructor of the instance. It is then up to the constructor to populate the objects attributes from the XML. Note that the alias you create using +add_extension_namespace+ can be anything you want, it doesn't need to match the alias in the actual XML itself. The custom property will then be available as a method on the rAtom class. In the above example: @feed.custom_property.size == 2 @feed.custom_property.first.name == 'foo' @feed.custom_property.first.value == 'bar' There is one caveat to this. By using this type of extension support you are permanently modifying the rAtom classes. So if your application process one type of atom extension and you are happy with permanently modified rAtom classes, the extra extensibility might work for you. If on the other hand you process lots of different types of extension you might want to stick with simpler extension mechanism using the [namespace, element] method described above. (Thanks to nachokb for this feature!!) === Basic Authentication All methods that involve HTTP requests now support HTTP Basic Authentication. Authentication credentials are passed as :user and :pass parameters to the methods that invoke the request. For example you can load a feed with HTTP Basic Authentication using: Atom::Feed.load_entry(URI.parse("http://example.org/feed.atom"), :user => 'username', :pass => 'password') Likewise all the Atom Pub methods support similar parameters, for example you can publish an Entry to a Feed with authentication using: feed.publish(entry, :user => 'username', :pass => 'password') Or destroy an entry with: entry.destroy!(:user => 'username', :pass => 'password') rAtom doesn't store these credentials anywhere within the object model so you will need to pass them as arguments to every method call that requires them. This might be a bit of a pain but it does make things simpler and it means that I'm not responsible for protecting your credentials, although if you are using HTTP Basic Authentication there is a good chance your credentials aren't very well protected anyway. === AuthHMAC authentication As of version 0.5.1 rAtom also support authentication via HMAC request signing using the AuthHMAC[http://auth-hmac.rubyforge.org] gem. This is made available using the :hmac_access_id and :hmac_secret_key parameters which can be passed to the same methods as the HTTP Basic credentials support. === SSL As of version 0.6.9, rAtom supports fetching feeds via https. This is done by using URLs with the SSL protocol. Publishing support is still limited to http, but patches are welcome. == TODO * Support partial content responses from the server. * Support batching of protocol operations. * All my tests have been against internal systems, I'd really like feedback from those who have tried rAtom using existing blog software that supports APP. * Handle all base uri tests. * Add slug support. == Source Code The source repository is accessible via GitHub: git clone git://github.com/seangeo/ratom.git The project now uses Bundler for dependency management so, just do bundle install to get going. == Contact Information The project page is at http://github.com/seangeo/ratom. Please file any bugs or feedback using the trackers and forums there. == Authors and Contributors rAtom was developed by Peerworks[http://peerworks.org] and written by Sean Geoghegan.