BitBalloon Ruby Client

BitBalloon is a hosting service for the programmable web. It understands your documents, processes forms and lets you do deploys, manage forms submissions, inject javascript snippets into sites and do intelligent updates of HTML documents through it's API.

The basic flow to using the ruby client is:

  1. Authenticate (via credentials or a previously aquired access token)
  2. Get site (via id)
  3. Deploy
    • If site has not been deployed to yet, then the above step will throw a not found exception, and you'll need to use bitballoon.sites.create to create the site and do the initial deploy.
    • If the site has already been deployed and the above step was successful, you can simply use site.update to re-deploy.

If you'd rather, there's also a command line utility to handle most of these steps: bitballoon deploy.

Installation

Install the gem by running

gem install bitballoon

or put it in a Gemfile and run bundle install

gem bitballoon

Authenticating

Register a new application at https://www.bitballoon.com/applications to get your Oauth2 secret and key.

Once you have your credentials you can instantiate a BitBalloon client.

bitballoon = BitBalloon::Client.new(:client_id => "YOUR_API_KEY", :client_secret => "YOUR_API_SECRET")

Before you can make any requests to the API, you'll need to authenticate with OAuth2. The BitBalloon client supports two OAuth2 flows.

If you're authenticating on behalf of a user, you'll need to get a valid access token for that user. Use the BitBalloon client to request an authentication URL:

url = bitballoon.authorize_url(:redirect_uri => "http://www.example.com/callback")

The user then visits that URL and will be prompted to authorize your application to access his BitBalloon sites. If she grants permission, she'll be redirected back to the redirect_uri provided in the authorize_url call. This URL must match the redirect url configured for your BitBalloon application. Once the user comes back to your app, you'll be able to access a code query parameter that gives you an authorization code. Use this to finish the OAuth2 flow:

bitballoon.authorize!(token, :redirect_uri => "http://www.example.com/callback")

If you're not authenticating on behalf of a user you can authorize directly with the API credentials. Just call:

bitballoon.authorize_from_credentials!

If you already have an OAuth2 access_token you can instantiate the client like this:

bitballoon = BitBalloon::Client.new(:access_token => access_token)

And the client will be ready to do requests without having to use authorize_from_credentials. This means that once you've gotten a token via authorize_from_credentials! you can store it and reuse it for later sessions.

If you're authenticating via the access_token and you'd like to test if you have a valid access_token, you can attempt to make a request with the bitballoon client and if the token is invalid, a BitBalloon::Client::AuthenticationError will be raised. See Miles Matthias' BitBalloon Rakefile for an example.

Command Line Utility

The BitBalloon gem comes with a handy command line utility for deploying and redeploying sites. (See the "Deploys" section below to deploy within a ruby script, like a Rakefile.)

To deploy the site in the current working directory:

bitballoon deploy

The first time you deploy, you will be asked for your client id and client secret. After the deploy the tool will store an access_token and the site_id in .bitballoon. Next time you run the command the tool will redeploy the site using the stored access_token.

You can also deploy a specific path:

bitballoon deploy /path/to/my/site

Or a zip file:

bitballoon deploy /path/to/my/site.zip

If there is no .bitballoon file yet, you can deploy to an existing site by passing in the ID:

bitballoon deploy /path/to/my/site.zip --site-id YOUR_SITE_ID

Sites

Getting a list of all sites you have access to:

bitballoon.sites.each do |site|
  puts site.id
  puts site.url
end

Each site has a unique, system generated id. Getting a specific site by id:

site = bitballoon.sites.get(id)

Creating a site from a directory: (note the path given is a system path)

site = bitballoon.sites.create(:dir => "my-site")
puts site.id

You'll want to then save that site id for future reference. Note that a site can also be looked up by its url.

Creating a site from a zip file:

site = bitballoon.sites.create(:zip => "/tmp/my-site.zip")

Both methods will create the site and upload the files to a new deploy.

Creating a site with a dir or a zip is actually a shortcut for this:

site = bitballoon.sites.create(:name => "unique-site-subdomain", :custom_domain => "www.example.com")
deploy = site.deploys.create(:dir => "path/to/my-site")

Use wait_for_ready to wait until a site has finished processing.

site = bitballoon.sites.create(:dir => "/tmp/my-site")
site.wait_for_ready
site.state == "ready"

This also works on a specific deploy, and you can pass in a block to execute after each polling action:

deploy = site.deploys.create(:dir => "/tmp/my-site")
deploy.wait_for_ready do |deploy|
  puts "Current state: #{deploy.state}"
end

Redeploy a site from a dir:

site = bitballoon.sites.get(site_id)
deploy = site.deploys.create(:dir => "/tmp/my-site")
deploy.wait_for_ready

Redeploy a site from a zip file:

site = bitballoon.sites.get(site_id)
deploy = site.deploys.create(:zip => "/tmp/my-site.zip")
deploy.wait_for_ready

Update the name of the site (its subdomain), the custom domain and the notification email for form submissions:

    site.update(:name => "my-site", :custom_domain => "www.example.com", :notification_email => "[email protected]", :password => "secret-password")

Deleting a site:

    site.destroy!

Deploys

Access all deploys for a site

site = bitballoon.sites.get(site_id)
site.deploys.all

Access a specific deploy

site = bitballoon.sites.get(site_id)
deploy = site.deploys.get(id)

Publish a deploy (makes it the current live version of the site)

site.deploys.get(id).publish

Create a new deploy

deploy = site.deploys.create(:dir => "/tmp/my-site")

Create a draft deploy

deploy = site.deploys.draft(:dir => "/tmp/my-site")

Or

deploy = site.deploys.create(:dir => "/tmp/my-site", :draft => true)

This will upload and process a deploy. You can view the deploy at deploy.deploy_url and make it the live version of the site with deploy.publish.

Users

Access all users you have access to

bitballoon.users.all

Access a specific user

bitballoon.users.get(id)

Create a user. Reseller only. A unique email is required. You can optionally include a unique uid, typically the database ID you use for the user on your end.

bitballoon.users.create(:email => "[email protected]", :uid => "12345")

Update a user. Reseller only.

bitballoon.users.get(id).update(:email => "[email protected]", :uid => "12345")

Delete a user. Reseller only

bitballoon.users.get(id).destroy

Get all sites for a user

bitballoon.users.get(id).sites

Get all form submissions for a user

bitballoon.users.get(id).submissions

Forms

Access all forms you have access to:

    bitballoon.forms.all

Access forms for a specific site:

    site = bitballoon.sites.get(id)
    site.forms.all

Access a specific form:

    form = bitballoon.forms.get(id)

Access a list of all form submissions you have access to:

    bitballoon.submissions.all

Access submissions from a specific site

    site = bitballoon.sites.get(id)
    site.submissions.all

Access submissions from a specific form

    form = bitballoon.forms.get(id)
    form.submissions.all

Get a specific submission

    bitballoon.submissions.get(id)

Files

Access all files in a site:

    site = bitballoon.sites.get(id)
    site.files.all

Get a specific file:

    file = site.files.get(path) # Example paths: "/css/main.css", "/index.html"

Reading a file:

    file.read

Snippets

Snippets are small code snippets injected into all HTML pages of a site right before the closing head or body tag. To get all snippets for a site:

site = bitballoon.sites.get(id)
site.snippets.all

Get a specific snippet

site.snippets.get(0)

Add a snippet to a site.

You can specify a general snippet that will be inserted into all pages, and a goal snippet that will be injected into a page following a successful form submission. Each snippet must have a title. You can optionally set the position of both the general and the goal snippet to head or footer to determine if it gets injected into the head tag or at the end of the page.

site.snippets.create(
  :general => general_snippet,
  :general_position => "footer",
  :goal => goal_snippet,
  :goal_position => "head",
  :title => "My Snippet"
)

Update a snippet

site.snippets.get(id).update(
  :general => general_snippet,
  :general_position => "footer",
  :goal => goal_snippet,
  :goal_position => "head",
  :title => "My Snippet"
)

Remove a snippet

site.snippet.get(id).destroy
end

DNS Zones

Resellers can manage DNS Zones through the ruby client. To use this feature your access token must belong to a reseller administrator.

Create a DNS Zone

bitballoon.dns_zones.create(:name => "www.example.com", :user_id => "1234")

Get all DNS Zones

bitballoon.dns_zones.all

Delete a DNS Zone

dns_zone.destroy

Get all dns records for a zone

dns_zone.dns_records.all

Adding a new record (supported types: A, CNAME, TXT, MX)

dns_zone.dns_records.create(:hostname => "www", :type => "CNAME", :value => "bitballoon.com", :ttl => "500")

Deleting a record

dns_record.destroy

Access Tokens

Resellers can create and revoke access tokens on behalf of their users. To use this feature your access token must belong to a reseller administrator.

Create access token:

bitballoon.access_tokens.create(:user => {:email => "[email protected]", :uid => 123})

The user must have either an email or a uid or both. Both email and uid must be unique within your reseller account. The uid would typically correspond to your internal database id for the user. If the users doesn't exist, a new user will be created on the fly.

Revoke access token:

bitballoon.access_tokens.get("token-string").destroy