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README.md
Autohook 🎣
Autohook configures and manages Twitter webhooks for you. Zero configuration. Just run and go!
- 🚀 Spawns a server for you
- ⚙️ Registers a webhook (it removes existing webhooks if you want, and you can add more than one webhook if your Premium subscription supports it)
- ✅ Performs the CRC validation when needed
- 📝 Subscribes to your current user's context (you can always subscribe more users if you need)
- 🎧 Exposes a listener so you can pick up Account Activity events and process the ones you care about
Usage
You can use Autohook as a module or as a command-line tool.
Node.js module
const { Autohook } = require('twitter-autohook');
(async ƛ => {
const webhook = new Autohook();
// Removes existing webhooks
await webhook.removeWebhooks();
// Listens to incoming activity
webhook.on('event', event => console.log('Something happened:', event));
// Starts a server and adds a new webhook
await webhook.start();
// Subscribes to a user's activity
await webhook.subscribe({oauth_token, oauth_token_secret});
})();
Command line
Starting Autohook from the command line is useful when you need to test your connection and subscriptions.
When started from the command line, Autohook simply provisions a webhook, subscribes your user (unless you specify --do-not-subscribe-me
), and echoes incoming events to stdout
.
# Starts a server, removes any existing webhook, adds a new webhook, and subscribes to the authenticating user's activity.
$ autohook -rs
# All the options
$ autohook --help
OAuth
Autohook works only when you pass your OAuth credentials. You won't have to figure out OAuth by yourself – Autohook will work that out for you.
You can pass your OAuth credentials in a bunch of ways.
Dotenv (~/.env.twitter)
Create a file named ~/.env.twitter
(sits in your home dir) with the following variables:
TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ API key
TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ API secret key
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ Access token
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ Access token secret
TWITTER_WEBHOOK_ENV= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/account/environments ➡️ One of 'Dev environment label' or 'Prod environment label'
Autohook will pick up these details automatically, so you won't have to specify anything in code or via CLI.
Env variables
Useful when you're deploying to remote servers, and can be used in conjunction with your dotenv file.
# To your current environment
export TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ API key
export TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ API secret key
export TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ Access token
export TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps ➡️ Your app ID ➡️ Details ➡️ Access token secret
export TWITTER_WEBHOOK_ENV= # https://developer.twitter.com/en/account/environments ➡️ One of 'Dev environment label' or 'Prod environment label'
# To other services, e.g. Heroku
heroku config:set TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY=value TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET=value TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN=value TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET=value TWITTER_WEBHOOK_ENV=value
Directly
Not recommended, because you should always secure your credentials.
Node.js
new Autohook({
token: 'value',
token_secret: 'value',
consumer_key: 'value',
consumer_secret: 'value',
env: 'env',
port: 1337
});
CLI
$ autohook \
--token $TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN \
--secret $TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET \
--consumer-key $TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY \
--consumer-secret $TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET \
--env $TWITTER_WEBHOOK_ENV
Install
# npm
$ npm i -g twitter-autohook
# Yarn
$ yarn global add twitter-autohook