Popularity
2.6
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Activity
0.0
Stable
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7
42

Description

This gem will help you to quickly setup a route in your Rails application which listens to a GitHub webhook

Programming language: Ruby
License: MIT License
Tags: Git Tools     Git     Hook Manager    
Latest version: v1.1.2

Github Webhook alternatives and similar gems

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Alternatively, view Github Webhook alternatives based on common mentions on social networks and blogs.

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README

Gem Version

Github Webhook for Rails

This gem will help you to quickly setup a route in your Rails application which listens to a GitHub webhook

Alternatives

If you want to use this logic outside of Rails, you should consider the following gems (cf #19):

If you are on Rails, please read on!

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'github_webhook', '~> 1.4'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Configuration

First, configure a route to receive the github webhook POST requests.

# config/routes.rb
resource :github_webhooks, only: :create, defaults: { formats: :json }

Then create a new controller:

# app/controllers/github_webhooks_controller.rb
class GithubWebhooksController < ActionController::Base
  include GithubWebhook::Processor

  # Handle push event
  def github_push(payload)
    # TODO: handle push webhook
  end

  # Handle create event
  def github_create(payload)
    # TODO: handle create webhook
  end

  private

  def webhook_secret(payload)
    ENV['GITHUB_WEBHOOK_SECRET']
  end
end

Add as many instance methods as events you want to handle in your controller.

All events are prefixed with github_. So, a push event can be handled by github_push(payload), or a create event can be handled by github_create(payload), etc.

You can read the full list of events GitHub can notify you about.

Adding the Webhook to your git repository:

First, install octokit, then run a rails console.

$ gem install octokit
$ rails console

In the rails console, add the WebHook to GitHub:

require "octokit"
client = Octokit::Client.new(:login => 'ssaunier', :password => 's3cr3t!!!')

repo = "ssaunier/github_webhook"
callback_url = "yourdomain.com/github_webhooks"
webhook_secret = "a_gr34t_s3cr3t"  # Must be set after that in ENV['GITHUB_WEBHOOK_SECRET']

# Create the WebHook
client.subscribe "https://github.com/#{repo}/events/push.json", callback_url, webhook_secret

The secret is set at the webhook creation. Store it in an environment variable, GITHUB_WEBHOOK_SECRET as per the example. It is important to have such a secret, as it will guarantee that your process legit webhooks requests, thus only from GitHub.

You can have an overview of your webhooks at the following URL:

https://github.com/:username/:repo/settings/hooks

Contributing

Specs

This project uses Appraisal to test against multiple versions of Rails.

On Travis, builds are also run on multiple versions of Ruby, each with multiple versions of Rails.

When you run bundle install, it will use the latest version of Rails. You can then run bundle exec rake spec to run the test with that version of Rails.

To run the specs against each version of Rails, use bundle exec appraisal rake spec.