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Luke Faraone d5d4edfbe3 Implement Humbug SVN integration.
This post-commit hook depends on pysvn. After a transaction is completed,
a Humbug is sent to a configurable stream with the repo modified, actor,
and commit message.

(imported from commit 75cab82d5fe993ea7c4c05be07a7b61e770aff81)
2013-05-01 11:37:07 -07:00
bin Consistently use #!/usr/bin/env python 2013-02-20 16:02:30 -05:00
bots Add a nagios check for a notify_tornado consumer 2013-04-17 09:24:28 -04:00
demos twitter-bot: Fix hyphen typo in usage string. 2013-03-08 15:58:45 -05:00
examples Remove the use of "--site" from the example scripts' usage text 2013-04-01 13:05:57 -04:00
humbug Bump API version 2013-04-18 09:57:54 -07:00
integrations Implement Humbug SVN integration. 2013-05-01 11:37:07 -07:00
README Update README so as not to lie about min requests version :) 2013-04-18 09:57:53 -07:00
setup.py Include folders with subfolders when creating api tarball 2013-03-26 18:20:02 -04:00

#### Dependencies

The Humbug API Python bindings require the following Python libraries:

* simplejson
* requests (version >= 0.12.1)


#### Installing

This package uses distutils, so you can just run:

    python setup.py install

#### Using the API

For now, the only fully supported API operation is sending a message.
The other API queries work, but are under active development, so
please make sure we know you're using them so that we can notify you
as we make any changes to them.

The easiest way to use these API bindings is to base your tools off
of the example tools under examples/ in this distribution.

If you place your API key in the config file `~/.humbugrc` the Python
API bindings will automatically read it in. The format of the config
file is as follows:

    [api]
    key=<api key from the web interface>
    email=<your email address>

You can obtain your Humbug API key from the Humbug settings page.

A typical simple bot sending API messages will look as follows:

At the top of the file:

    # Make sure the Humbug API distribution's root directory is in sys.path, then:
    import humbug
    humbug_client = humbug.Client(email="your_email@example.com")

When you want to send a message:

    message = {
      "type": "stream",
      "to": ["support"],
      "subject": "your subject",
      "content": "your content",
    }
    humbug_client.send_message(message)

Additional examples:

    client.send_message({'type': 'stream', 'content': 'Humbug rules!',
                         'subject': 'feedback', 'to': ['support']})
    client.send_message({'type': 'private', 'content': 'Humbug rules!',
                         'to': ['user1@example.com', 'user2@example.com']})

send_message() returns a dict guaranteed to contain the following
keys: msg, result.  For successful calls, result will be "success" and
msg will be the empty string.  On error, result will be "error" and
msg will describe what went wrong.

#### Sending messages

You can use the included `humbug-send` script to send messages via the
API directly from existing scripts.

    humbug-send hamlet@example.com cordelia@example.com -m \
        "Conscience doth make cowards of us all."