FbRails¶ ↑
FbRails makes it easy to integrate your website with Facebook.
Setting up¶ ↑
Add the following to your configuration. This can go in config/application.rb, or customized in each environment in config/environments/.rb:
config.facebook = { :app_id => 'my_app_id', :secret => 'my_app_secret' }
or
config.facebook.app_id = 'my_app_id' config.facebook.secret = 'my_app_secret'
Include facebook Javascript and a login button:
<%= include_facebook_javascript %> <%= fbml 'login-button' %>
FBRails API¶ ↑
FbRails adds an object called ‘fb’, which is available to all controllers and views:
Determine if the current user is connected through Facebook:
fb.connected?
Get the Facebook user id for the current user:
fb.uid
Get the Facebook user’s access token:
fb.access_token
Retrieve your Facebook application app_id or secret:
fb.app_id fb.secret
Using the Graph API¶ ↑
Make a request to the Facebook Graph:
<% result = fb.graph.get 'me' %> my name is <%= result['first_name'] %>
Post to the user’s wall:
fb.graph.post 'me/feed', :message => 'I like turtles'
Persisting the Facebook User:¶ ↑
Websites that interact with Facebook usually have a user model in a local database. This user is accessed with ‘fb.user’:
The current user is <%= fb.user.inspect %>
For this to work, FbRails assumes there is a model called ‘User’ with a column ‘fb_uid’. If your user model name is different than ‘User’, it can be configured:
config.facebook.user_class_name = 'Author'
If the fb_uid for the current user is not in the database, fb.user is an unsaved instance. One thing I like to do for new Facebook users is store them in a before filter:
if fb.connected? && fb.user.new_record? data = fb.graph.get('me') fb.user.first_name = data['first_name'] fb.user.last_name = data['last_name'] fb.user.save end
Timeouts¶ ↑
Calls to the Graph API can timeout. If this occurs, an FbRails::TimeoutError occurs. Your application can rescue from these:
begin fb.get 'me' rescue FbRails::TimeoutError => e ... end
The timeout defaults to 60 seconds. This can be configured:
config.timeout = 10
Testing¶ ↑
Facebook requests can be mocked, so that your tests do not require real HTTP connections. This is done with FbRails::Mock:
FbRails::Mock.respond_to do |mock| mock.add 'me', 'first_name' => 'Matt', 'last_name' => 'Higgins' end
Now, a call to fb.graph.get(‘me’) returns the above response.