Hertz is a Ruby on Rails engine for sending in-app notifications to your users.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'hertz'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install hertz
Then, run the installer generator:
$ rails g hertz:install
$ rake db:migrate
Finally, add the following to the model that will receive the notifications (e.g. User
):
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
include Hertz::Notifiable
end
Couriers are what Hertz uses to deliver notifications to your users. For instance, you might have a courier for delivering notifications by SMS and another one for delivering them by email.
Creating a new courier in Hertz is easy:
module Hertz
class Sms
def self.deliver_notification(notification)
# ...
end
end
end
In Hertz, every notification is a model. If you want to create a new notification type, just create a new model
inheriting from Hertz::Notification
:
class CommentNotification < Hertz::Notification
end
Since not all notifications might implement interfaces for all couriers, you have to manually specify which couriers
they implement via deliver_by
:
class CommentNotification < Hertz::Notification
deliver_by :sms, :email
end
Notifications are not required to implement any couriers.
You can set common couriers (i.e. couriers that will be used for all notifications) by putting the following into an initializer:
Hertz.configure do |config|
config.common_couriers = [:sms, :email]
end
You can attach custom metadata to a notification, but make sure it can be cleanly stored in an hstore:
notification = CommentNotification.new(meta: { comment_id: comment.id })
user.notify(notification)
You can then unserialize any data in the model:
class CommentNotification < Hertz::Notification
def comment
Comment.find(meta['comment_id'])
end
end
Note that you should always access your metadata with string keys, regardless of the type you use when attaching it.
You can use #notify
for notifying a user:
user.notify(CommentNotification.new(meta: { comment_id: comment.id }))
# or
user.notify(CommentNotification, comment_id: comment.id)
You can access a user's notifications with #notifications
:
current_user.notifications
current_user.notifications.read
current_user.notifications.unread
You can also mark notifications as read/unread:
notification.mark_as_read
notification.mark_as_unread
Hertz provides an API couriers can use to mark the notification as delivered. This allows you to know which couriers have successfully delivered your notifications and helps prevent double deliveries:
notification.delivered_with?(:email) # => false
notification.mark_delivered_with(:email) # => Hertz::Delivery
notification.delivered_with?(:email) # => true
Hertz does not enforce usage of the delivery API in any way, so some couriers might not take advantage of it.
- hertz-twilio: delivers notifications by SMS with the Twilio API.
- hertz-email: delivers notifications by email with ActionMailer.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/aldesantis/hertz.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.