stream-rails is a Ruby on Rails client for Stream.
You can sign up for a Stream account at https://getstream.io/get_started.
Note there is also a lower level Ruby - Stream integration library which is suitable for all Ruby applications.
đź’ˇ This is a library for the Feeds product. The Chat SDKs can be found here.
What you can build:
- Activity streams such as seen on Github
- A twitter style newsfeed
- A feed like instagram/ pinterest
- Facebook style newsfeeds
- A notification system
You can check out our example app built using this library on Github https://github.com/GetStream/Stream-Example-Rails
- Activity Streams & Newsfeeds
- Demo
- Table of Contents
- Gem installation
- Setup
- Supported ORMs
- Model configuration
- Feed manager
- Showing the newsfeed
- Disable model tracking
- Running specs
- Full documentation and Low level APIs access
- Copyright and License Information
You can install stream_rails
as you would any other gem:
gem install stream_rails
or in your Gemfile:
gem 'stream_rails'
This library is tested against and fully supports the following Rails versions:
- 5.0
- 5.2
- 6.0
- 6.1
Login with Github on getstream.io and get your api_key
and api_secret
from your app configuration (Dashboard screen).
Then you can add the StreamRails configuration in config/initializers/stream_rails.rb
require 'stream_rails'
StreamRails.configure do |config|
config.api_key = "YOUR API KEY"
config.api_secret = "YOUR API SECRET"
config.timeout = 30 # Optional, defaults to 3
config.location = 'us-east' # Optional, defaults to 'us-east'
config.api_hostname = 'stream-io-api.com' # Optional, defaults to 'stream-io-api.com'
# If you use custom feed names, e.g.: timeline_flat, timeline_aggregated,
# use this, otherwise omit:
config.news_feeds = { flat: "timeline_flat", aggregated: "timeline_aggregated" }
# Point to the notifications feed group providing the name, omit if you don't
# have a notifications feed
config.notification_feed = "notification"
end
The integration will look as follows:
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
Please, use Sequel ~5
.
The integration will look as follows:
class Pin < Sequel::Model
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
Include StreamRails::Activity and add as_activity to the model you want to integrate with your feeds.
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :user
belongs_to :item
validates :item, presence: true
validates :user, presence: true
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
Everytime a Pin is created it will be stored in the feed of the user that created it. When a Pin instance is deleted, the feed will be removed as well.
ActiveRecord models are stored in your feeds as activities; Activities are objects that tell the story of a person performing an action on or with an object, in its simplest form, an activity consists of an actor, a verb, and an object. In order for this to happen your models need to implement these methods:
#activity_object the object of the activity (eg. an AR model instance)
#activity_actor the actor performing the activity -- this value also provides the feed name and feed ID to which the activity will be added.
For example, let's say a Pin was a polymorphic class that could belong to either a user (e.g. User
ID: 1) or a company (e.g. Company
ID: 1). In that instance, the below code would post the pin either to the user:1
feed or the company:1
feed based on its owner.
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :owner, :polymorphic => true
belongs_to :item
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_actor
self.owner
end
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
The activity_actor
defaults to self.user
#activity_verb the string representation of the verb (defaults to model class name)
Here's a more complete example of the Pin class:
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
belongs_to :item
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_actor
self.author
end
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
Often you'll want to store more data than just the basic fields. You achieve this by implementing #activity_extra_data
in your model.
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
belongs_to :item
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_extra_data
{'is_retweet' => self.is_retweet}
end
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
If you want to control when to create an activity you should implement
the #activity_should_sync?
method in your model.
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
belongs_to :item
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_should_sync?
self.published
end
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
This will create an activity only when self.published
is true.
stream_rails
comes with a Feed Manager class that helps with all common feed operations. You can get an instance of the manager with StreamRails.feed_manager
.
feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_user_feed(current_user.id)
To get you started the manager has 4 feeds pre-configured. You can add more feeds if your application requires it. Feeds are divided into three categories.
The user feed stores all activities for a user. Think of it as your personal Facebook page. You can easily get this feed from the manager.
feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_user_feed(current_user.id)
News feeds store activities from the people you follow. There is both a flat newsfeed (similar to twitter) and an aggregated newsfeed (like facebook).
feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_news_feeds(current_user.id)[:flat]
aggregated_feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_news_feeds(current_user.id)[:aggregated]
The notification feed can be used to build notification functionality.
Below we show an example of how you can read the notification feed.
notification_feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_notification_feed(current_user.id)
By default the notification feed will be empty. You can specify which users to notify when your model gets created. In the case of a retweet you probably want to notify the user of the parent tweet.
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :author
belongs_to :item
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_notify
if self.is_retweet
[StreamRails.feed_manager.get_notification_feed(self.parent.user_id)]
end
end
def activity_object
self.item
end
end
Another example would be following a user. You would commonly want to notify the user which is being followed.
class Follow < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :user
belongs_to :target
validates :target_id, presence: true
validates :user, presence: true
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
def activity_notify
[StreamRails.feed_manager.get_notification_feed(self.target_id)]
end
def activity_object
self.target
end
end
In order to populate newsfeeds, you need to notify the system about follow relationships.
The current user's flat and aggregated feeds will follow the target_user
's user feed, with the following code:
StreamRails.feed_manager.follow_user(user_id, target_id)
When you read data from feeds, a pin activity will look like this:
{ "actor": "User:1", "verb": "like", "object": "Item:42" }
This is far from ready for usage in your template. We call the process of loading the references from the database "enrichment." An example is shown below:
enricher = StreamRails::Enrich.new
feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_news_feeds(current_user.id)[:flat]
results = feed.get()['results']
activities = enricher.enrich_activities(results)
A similar method called enrich_aggregated_activities
is available for aggregated feeds.
enricher = StreamRails::Enrich.new
feed = StreamRails.feed_manager.get_news_feeds(current_user.id)[:aggregated]
results = feed.get()['results']
activities = enricher.enrich_aggregated_activities(results)
If you have additional metadata in your activity (by overriding activity_extra_data
in the class where you add the
Stream Activity mixin), you can also enrich that field's data by doing the following:
Step One: override the activity_extra_data
method from our mixin:
class Pin < ActiveRecord::Base
include StreamRails::Activity
as_activity
attr_accessor :extra_data
def activity_object
self.item
end
# override this method to add metadata to your activity
def activity_extra_data
@extra_data
end
end
Now we'll create a 'pin' object which has a location
metadata field. In this example, we will also have a
location
table and model, and we set up our metadata in the extra_data
field. It is important that the
symbol of the metadata as well as the value of the meta data match this pattern. The left half of the
string:string
metadata value when split on :
must also match the name of the model.
We must also tell the enricher to also fetch locations when looking through our activities
boulder = Location.new
boulder.name = "Boulder, CO"
boulder.save!
# tell the enricher to also do a lookup on the `location` model
enricher.add_fields([:location])
pin = Pin.new
pin.user = @tom
pin.extra_data = {:location => "location:#{boulder.id}"}
When we retrieve the activity later, the enrichment process will include our location
model as well, giving us
access to attributes and methods of the location model:
place = activity[:location].name
# Boulder, CO
Now that you've enriched the activities you can render them in a view. For convenience we include a basic view:
<div class="container">
<div class="container-pins">
<% for activity in @activities %>
<%= render_activity activity %>
<% end %>
</div>
</div>
The render_activity
view helper will render the activity by picking the partial activity/_pin
for a pin activity, aggregated_activity/_follow
for an aggregated activity with verb follow.
The helper will automatically send activity
to the local scope of the partial; additional parameters can be sent as well as use different layouts, and prefix the name
e.g. renders the activity partial using the small_activity
layout:
<%= render_activity activity, :layout => "small_activity" %>
e.g. prefixes the name of the template with "notification_":
<%= render_activity activity, :prefix => "notification_" %>
e.g. adds the extra_var to the partial scope:
<%= render_activity activity, :locals => {:extra_var => 42} %>
e.g. renders the activity partial using the notifications
partial root, which will render the partial with the path notifications/#{ACTIVITY_VERB}
<%= render_activity activity, :partial_root => "notifications" %>
For simple pagination you can use the stream-ruby API, as follows in your controller:
StreamRails.feed_manager.get_news_feeds(current_user.id)[:flat] # Returns a Stream::Feed object
results = feed.get(limit: 5, offset: 5)['results']
You can disable model tracking (eg. when you run tests) via StreamRails.configure
require 'stream_rails'
StreamRails.enabled = false
From the project root directory:
./bin/run_tests.sh
When needed you can also use the low level Ruby API directly. Documentation is available at the Stream website.
Copyright (c) 2014-2021 Stream.io Inc, and individual contributors. All rights reserved.
See the file "LICENSE" for information on the history of this software, terms & conditions for usage, and a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.