Turbovax gem helps you quickly stand up bots that can:
- fetch data from vaccine websites
- tweet appointment data
- return structured appointment data
Note: the gem does not provide data storage or web server functionality on its own. Please see turbovax-web repo for an example of how to build those layers on top of the gem.
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Detailed docs can be found at https://rubydoc.info/github/hugem/turbovax-gem.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'turbovax'
And then execute:
$ bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install turbovax
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and the created tag, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Initialize configuration:
Turbovax.configure do |config|
config.twitter_credentials = {
consumer_key: "CONSUMER_KEY",
consumer_secret: "CONSUMER_SECRET",
access_token: "ACCESS_TOKEN",
access_token_secret: "ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET"
}
end
Create test portal:
class TestPortal < Turbovax::Portal
name "Gotham City Clinic"
key "gotham_city"
public_url "https://www.turbovax.info/"
api_url "http://api.turbovax.info/v1/test.json"
request_http_method Turbovax::Constants::GET_REQUEST_METHOD
parse_response do |response|
response_json = JSON.parse(response)
Array(response_json["appointments"]).map do |location_json|
appointments = Array(location_json["slots"]).map do |appointment_string|
{
time: DateTime.parse(appointment_string)
}
end
Turbovax::Location.new(
id: "ID",
name: location_json["clinic_name"],
full_address: location_json["area"],
time_zone: "America/New_York",
data: {
vaccine_types: [location_json["vaccine"]],
appointments: appointments,
}
)
end
end
end
Execute operation:
locations = Turbovax::DataFetcher.new(TestPortal, twitter_handler: Turbovax::Handlers::LocationHandler).execute!
Specify logger:
Turbovax.configure do |config|
config.logger = Logger.new($stdout, level: Logger::DEBUG)
end
Change Faraday (HTTP request library) logging:
Turbovax.configure do |config|
config.faraday_logging_config = {
headers: true,
bodies: true,
log_level: :info
}
end
Disable tweets:
Turbovax.configure do |config|
config.twitter_enabled = false
end
Provide extra parameters:
Turbovax::DataFetcher.new(
TestPortal,
twitter_handler: Turbovax::Handlers::LocationHandler,
# will be passed to Portal methods
extra_params: {
site_id: 123,
date: "2021-08-08",
}
).execute!
Custom HTTP headers (curl-to-ruby is helpful here):
class TestPortal < Turbovax::Portal
request_headers do
headers = {}
headers["Connection"] = "keep-alive"
headers["Pragma"] = "no-cache"
headers["Cache-Control"] = "no-cache"
headers["Sec-Ch-Ua"] = "\"Google Chrome\";v=\"89\", \"Chromium\";v=\"89\", \";Not A Brand\";v=\"99\""
headers
end
end
Use extra params provided by data fetcher:
class TestPortal < Turbovax::Portal
request_body do
{
site_id: data_fetcher_params[:site_id],
}
end
end
Interpolate variables into URL:
# resulting URL https://www.example-site.info/abc/2021-08-08
class TestPortal < Turbovax::Portal
api_url "https://www.example-site.info/%{site_id}/${date}"
api_url_variables do
{
site_id: data_fetcher_params[:site_id],
date: data_fetcher_params[:date].strftime("%F"),
}
end
end
Use HTTP POST:
class TestPortal < Turbovax::Portal
request_http_method Turbovax::Constants::POST_REQUEST_METHOD
end
This gem is licensed according to GNU General Public License v3.0.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/hugem/turbovax-gem.
This gem should only be used for the purposes of improving accessibility to vaccines and not for private gain.
This is not affiliated, associated, authorized, endorsed by, or in any way officially connected with Intuit, Inc or any of its subsidiaries or its affiliates. The names TurboTax as well as related names, marks, emblems and images are registered trademarks of their respective owners.