Awesome
Slackbotsy example
This is an example deployment of slackbotsy, using sinatra to listen to an outgoing webhook on Slack.
There are some example scripts and helpers to get you up and running with your new ruby bot.
Install
$ git clone https://github.com/rlister/slackbotsy_example.git
$ cd slackbotsy_example
$ bundle install
Test running the code
Run the server in one window:
$ OUTGOING_TOKEN=123 bundle exec shotgun
and in another window run a test query to botsy:
$ OUTGOING_TOKEN=123 bin/test botsy ping
{"text":"pong"}
Congratulations, botsy replied to you. Botsy will only respond to
messages with a matching OUTGOING_TOKEN
.
Test sending data to slack
Setup an Incoming Webhook in Slack:
- go to https://your_team.slack.com/services/new
- add Incoming Webhook, choose default channel in which you would like botsy to post (this will be overridden per message later)
- copy the URL from the integration; it will look something like:
https://hooks.slack.com/services/NOQU9ISI6/YAIJIECH4/DISHEINGOHYAE6AHNG3PIEK6
Re-run the server with your incoming webhook:
$ INCOMING_WEBHOOK=https://hooks.slack.com/services/NOQU9ISI6/YAIJIECH4/DISHEINGOHYAE6AHNG3PIEK6 \
OUTGOING_TOKEN=123 \
bundle exec shotgun
and test botsy's say
command:
$ OUTGOING_TOKEN=123 bin/test botsy say hello world
{"text":""}
This time botsy didn't return a response, but should have posted hello world
to the default channel you configured for your incoming webhook. If nothing
appeared, check your webhook is correct.
Test receiving data from slack
To receive data, your botsy will need to be listening on a publically-accessible port. Either run this on a public server, or setup some local tunnel, for example using https://ngrok.com/.
Setup at least one outgoing webhook:
- go to https://your_team.slack.com/services/new
- add Outgoing Webhook:
- choose a channel for botsy to listen
- add your URL for botsy (for example your ngrok forwarding URL)
- copy the outgoing token (which will look something like
Vupohshohj5xeTee3ohthe6n
)
Run the botsy server with your outgoing token:
$ INCOMING_WEBHOOK=https://hooks.slack.com/services/NOQU9ISI6/YAIJIECH4/DISHEINGOHYAE6AHNG3PIEK6 \
OUTGOING_TOKEN=Vupohshohj5xeTee3ohthe6n \
bundle exec shotgun
Now type botsy ping
into the channel you chose above, and botsy
should respond in the channel.
Multiple channels
You must choose between having botsy listen to all channels with a trigger word, or listen to all messages in a specific channel. To listen to all messages in multiple channels you can add a separate outgoing webhook for each channel, and pass all tokens to botsy as a list:
OUTGOING_TOKEN=Vupohshohj5xeTee3ohthe6n,Cupai9viQuaexi6ohPhahrie
Deploy to Heroku
$ heroku login
$ heroku create
Created http://mystic-wind-83.herokuapp.com/ | git@heroku.com:mystic-wind-83.git
$ git push heroku master
$ heroku config:set OUTGOING_TOKEN=Vupohshohj5xeTee3ohthe6n
$ heroku config:set INCOMING_WEBHOOK=https://hooks.slack.com/services/NOQU9ISI6/YAIJIECH4/DISHEINGOHYAE6AHNG3PIEK6
Now create your Outgoing Webhook as described above, using your new herokuapp URL.
Deploy with Docker
Coming soon.