A Ruby client for the 1.0 version of the Asana API.
Supported rubies:
- MRI 2.0.0 up to 2.2.x stable
Older versions of OpenSSL can cause a problem when using ruby-asana
In particular, at the time of this writing, at least MacOS X 10.11 and below ship with a very old version of OpenSSL:
$ openssl version
OpenSSL 0.9.8zh 14 Jan 2016
OpenSSL 0.9.8 was first released in 2005, and therefore only supports TLS (Transport Layer Security) version 1.0. Asana has deprecated and stopped accepting requests for clients which do not suport TLS 1.0 and above, which unfortunately includes any software linked against this version of the library - this includes both the MacOS X provided Ruby interpreter and any homebrew installed Ruby that is not specifically configured to link against a newer version.
To see if your Ruby version is affected, run
$ ruby -ropenssl -e 'puts OpenSSL::OPENSSL_VERSION'
If the version printed at the command line is older than 1.0.1
, when, in 2012, OpenSSL first supported TLS 1.1 and 1.2, you will not be able to use ruby-asana
to connect to Asana. Specifically, you will recieve 400 Bad Request
responses with an error message in the response body about the lack of support for TLS 1.1 and above.
Asana highly recommends using a Ruby installation manager, either RVM or rbenv
. Instructions on how to install an up-to-date ruby
for each of these are below.
RVM makes it easy to install both an updated OpenSSL and a Ruby interpreter that links to it. If you are using MacPorts or Homebrew, you're probably fine out of the box; RVM favors package management using either one of these to satisfy dependencies, and so can keep your ruby up to date automatically. If you are not using these, consider using them, as they're very simple to install and use.
If you don't use your package manager, you can use RVM's package manager to install from source.
If you want to build OpenSSL from source yourself, you have to specify how to link to this OpenSSL installation:
$ rvm install ruby-{version} --with-openssl-dir={ssl_dir}
# Specify your openssl path prefix, wherever openssl dirs
# "bin", "include", and "lib" are installed; usually
# "/usr" for system installs, or $PREFIX for configure/make locally.
$ ruby -ropenssl -e 'puts OpenSSL::OPENSSL_VERSION' # Verify inside Ruby
OpenSSL 1.0.2h 3 May 2016
If you see the version of OpenSSL greater than OpenSSL 1.0.1, then you're all set to start using ruby-asana
Similar to RVM, rbenv compiles rubies with knowledge of MacPorts and Homebrew libraries. When a newer version of OpenSSL is installed via the method above, all rubies built (after that time of course) will link to the newer version of OpenSSL.
If you don't use a package manager, as above, you can build by explicitly supplying the directory in which to find OpenSSL:
$ RUBY_CONFIGURE_OPTS=--with-openssl-dir=/opt/local rbenv install ruby-{version}
# Specify your openssl path prefix, wherever openssl dirs
# "bin", "include", and "lib" are installed; usually
# "/usr" for system installs, or $PREFIX for configure/make locally.
$ ruby -ropenssl -e 'puts OpenSSL::OPENSSL_VERSION' # Verify inside Ruby
OpenSSL 1.0.2h 3 May 2016
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'asana'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install asana
To do anything, you'll need always an instance of Asana::Client
configured
with your preferred authentication method (see the Authentication section below
for more complex scenarios) and other options.
The most minimal example would be as follows:
require 'asana'
client = Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :access_token, 'personal_access_token'
end
client.workspaces.find_all.first
A full-blown customized client using OAuth2 wih a previously obtained refresh token, Typhoeus as a Faraday adapter, a custom user agent and custom Faraday middleware:
require 'asana'
client = Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :oauth2,
refresh_token: 'abc',
client_id: 'bcd',
client_secret: 'cde',
redirect_uri: 'http://example.org/auth'
c.faraday_adapter :typhoeus
c.configure_faraday { |conn| conn.use SomeFaradayMiddleware }
end
workspace = client.workspaces.find_by_id(12)
workspace.users
# => #<Asana::Collection<User> ...>
client.tags.create_in_workspace(workspace: workspace.id, name: 'foo')
# => #<Asana::Tag id: ..., name: "foo">
All resources are exposed as methods on the Asana::Client
instance. Check out
the documentation for each of them.
This gem supports authenticating against the Asana API with either an API token or through OAuth2.
Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :access_token, 'personal_access_token'
end
Authenticating through OAuth2 is preferred. There are many ways you can do this.
If you have a plain bearer token obtained somewhere else and you don't mind not having your token auto-refresh, you can authenticate with it as follows:
Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :oauth2, bearer_token: 'my_bearer_token'
end
If you obtained a refresh token, you can use it together with your client credentials to authenticate:
Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :oauth2,
refresh_token: 'abc',
client_id: 'bcd',
client_secret: 'cde',
redirect_uri: 'http://example.org/auth'
end
If you use omniauth-asana
or a browser-based OAuth2 authentication strategy in
general, possibly because your application is a web application, you can reuse
those credentials to authenticate with this API client. Here's how to do it from
the callback method:
# assuming we're using Sinatra and omniauth-asana
get '/auth/:name/callback' do
creds = request.env["omniauth.auth"]["credentials"].tap { |h| h.delete('expires') }
strategy = request.env["omniauth.strategy"]
# We need to refresh the omniauth OAuth2 token
access_token = OAuth2::AccessToken.from_hash(strategy.client, creds).refresh!
$client = Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :oauth2, access_token
end
redirect '/'
end
See examples/omniauth_integration.rb
for a working example of this.
If your application can't receive HTTP requests and thus you can't use
omniauth-asana
, for example if it's a CLI application, you can authenticate as
follows:
access_token = Asana::Authentication::OAuth2.offline_flow(client_id: ...,
client_secret: ...)
client = Asana::Client.new do |c|
c.authentication :oauth2, access_token
end
client.tasks.find_by_id(12)
This will print an authorization URL on STDOUT, and block until you paste in the authorization code, which you can get by visiting that URL and granting the necessary permissions.
Whenever you ask for a collection of resources, you can provide a number of results per page to fetch, between 1 and 100. If you don't provide any, it defaults to 20.
my_tasks = client.tasks.find_by_tag(tag: tag_id, per_page: 5)
# => #<Asana::Collection<Task> ...>
An Asana::Collection
is a paginated collection -- it holds the first
per_page
results, and a reference to the next page if any.
When you iterate an Asana::Collection
, it'll transparently keep fetching all
the pages, and caching them along the way:
my_tasks.size # => 23, not 5
my_tasks.take(14)
# => [#<Asana::Task ...>, #<Asana::Task ...>, ... until 14]
If you only want to deal with one page at a time and manually paginate, you can
get the elements of the current page with #elements
and ask for the next page
with #next_page
, which will return an Asana::Collection
with the next page
of elements:
my_tasks.elements # => [#<Asana::Task ...>, #<Asana::Task ...>, ... until 5]
my_tasks.next_page # => #<Asana::Collection ...>
Because an Asana::Collection
represents the entire collection, it is often
handy to just take what you need from it, rather than let it fetch all its
contents from the network. You can accomplish this by turning it into a lazy
collection with #lazy
:
# let my_tasks be an Asana::Collection of 10 pages of 100 elements each
my_tasks.lazy.drop(120).take(15).to_a
# Fetches only 2 pages, enough to get elements 120 to 135
# => [#<Asana::Task ...>, #<Asana::Task ...>, ...]
In any request against the Asana API, there a number of errors that could
arise. Those are well documented in the Asana API Documentation, and
are represented as exceptions under the namespace Asana::Errors
.
All errors are subclasses of Asana::Errors::APIError
, so make sure to rescue
instances of this class if you want to handle them yourself.
All requests (except DELETE
) accept extra I/O options
as documented in the API docs. Just pass an extra options
hash to any
request:
client.tasks.find_by_id(12, options: { expand: ['workspace'] })
To attach a file to a task or a project, you just need its absolute path on your filesystem and its MIME type, and the file will be uploaded for you:
task = client.tasks.find_by_id(12)
attachment = task.attach(filename: '/absolute/path/to/my/file.png',
mime: 'image/png')
attachment.name # => 'file.png'
To subscribe to an event stream of a task or a project, just call #events
on
it:
task = client.tasks.find_by_id(12)
task.events # => #<Asana::Events ...>
# You can do the same with only the task id:
events = client.events.for(task.id)
An Asana::Events
object is an infinite collection of Asana::Event
instances. Be warned that if you call #each
on it, it will block forever!
Note that, by default, an event stream will wait at least 1 second between
polls, but that's configurable with the wait
parameter:
# wait at least 3 and a half seconds between each poll to the API
task.events(wait: 3.5) # => #<Asana::Events ...>
There are some interesting things you can do with an event stream, as it is a normal Ruby Enumerable. Read below to get some ideas.
# Run this in another thread so that we don't block forever
events = client.tasks.find_by_id(12).events(wait: 2)
Thread.new do
events.each do |event|
notify_someone "New event arrived! #{event}"
end
end
To do that we need to call #lazy
on the Events
instance, just like with any
other Enumerable
.
events = client.tasks.find_by_id(12).events
only_change_events = events.lazy.select { |event| event.action == 'changed' }
Thread.new do
only_change_events.each do |event|
notify_someone "New change event arrived! #{event}"
end
end
You'll need Ruby 2.1+ and Node v0.10.26+ / NPM 1.4.3+ installed.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run
bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
Run the build with rake
. This is equivalent to:
$ rake spec && rake rubocop && rake yard
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
To release a new version, run either of these commands:
rake bump:patch
rake bump:minor
rake bump:major
This will: update lib/asana/version.rb
, commit and tag the commit. Then you
just need to push --tags
to let Travis build and release the new version to
Rubygems:
git push --tags
The specific Asana resource classes (Tag
, Workspace
, Task
, etc) are
generated code, hence they shouldn't be modified by hand. The code that
generates it lives in lib/templates/resource.ejs
, and is tested by generating
spec/templates/unicorn.rb
and running spec/templates/unicorn_spec.rb
as part
of the build.
If you wish to make changes on the code generation script:
- Add/modify a spec on
spec/templates/unicorn_spec.rb
- Add your new feature or change to
lib/templates/resource.ejs
- Run
rake
or, more granularly,rake codegen && rspec spec/templates/unicorn_spec.rb
Once you're sure your code works, submit a pull request and ask the maintainer to make a release, as they'll need to run a release script from the asana-api-meta repository.
- Fork it ( https://github.com/[my-github-username]/asana/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request