alfred-nutile-inc / incomings-client
Connects to incomings.io
Installs: 23 147
Dependents: 0
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 5
Watchers: 14
Forks: 1
Open Issues: 2
Requires
- php: >=5.6.0
- guzzlehttp/guzzle: ~5.3|~6.0
- monolog/monolog: ^1.23
Requires (Dev)
- fzaninotto/faker: 1.4.0
- mockery/mockery: *
- orchestra/testbench: ~3.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ~4.0
- squizlabs/php_codesniffer: ^2.3
- symfony/var-dumper: ^2.7
This package is not auto-updated.
Last update: 2023-04-29 10:09:27 UTC
README
Laravel and Non-Laravel Library To Connect to Incomings.io Service
Sign up for the service https://incomings.io
Then setup and start watching your processes come in one place instead of 5 plus places!
Docs below and at https://incomings.io/help
Install
Tested on Laravel 4.2 and 5.x more platforms to be tested soon.
Composer install
composer require alfred-nutile-inc/incomings-client:">=2.0"
Add to app.php
'AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsServiceProvider',
NOTE: If you are using Lumen, instead of the above you need to enable the provider in bootstrap/app.php like this:
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Register Service Providers
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here we will register all of the application's service providers which
| are used to bind services into the container. Service providers are
| totally optional, so you are not required to uncomment this line.
|
*/
$app->register('AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsServiceProvider');
Set in your .env
INCOMINGS_URL=https://incomings.io
INCOMINGS_TOKEN=token_of_project
Laravel 5.6
Add the incomings
log channel to your config/logging.php
file:
'channels' => [
'stack' => [
'driver' => 'stack',
// Add incomings to the stack:
'channels' => ['single', 'incomings'],
],
'incomings' => [
'driver' => 'incomings',
'level' => 'debug',
],
],
Send Data to the Service
URL
This is the most simple helper. Each project gets one
So you can for example use that on Iron.io as a PUSH queue route since you can have more than one.
Or even on your server setup a cron job to post every minute your server resource status or security status.
Example Iron.io
Laravel Facade
Say you are about to send off to a queue
Queue::push("foo", $data);
Now try
$data = ['title' => 'Foo Bar', 'message' => [1,2,3]]
Incomings::send($data);
Queue::push("foo", $data);
For the above Facade to work you might have to add
use AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsFacade as Incomings;
NOTE: If you're using Lumen, make sure to enable facades in bootstrap/app.php with $app->withFacades();
Also see Laravel Docs for failed Queue https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/queues
For example I can register with my AppServiceProvider
Queue::failing(function (JobFailed $event) {
$message = sprintf("Connection %s, Job %s, Exception %s %s %s",
$event->connectionName, implode("\n", $event->data), $event->job->getRawBody()
);
$data = ['title' => 'Failed Queue From FooBar', 'message' =>
json_encode($message, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT)
];
Incomings::send($data);
});
Logger
This setup will allow you to use Log::info("Some Message") and all the other Log methods as normal.
All you need to do at the top of your Class is to set use as follow
use AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\Log;
From there on your log messages go to Incomings then to Logger
Even better you now can/should do this
$send = [
'title' => 'foo',
'message' => "bar",
];
Log::info($send);
The IncomingLogger will pass this array to Incomings.io giving your incoming more context and then it will just pass the message to Log as normal. So you could even do.
$send = [
'title' => 'foo',
'message' => print_r($some_array_payload, 1),
];
Like sometimes we do in Log::info as we are watching for non string based info in the logs. Or
$send = [
'title' => 'foo',
'message' => json_encode($some_array_payload, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT),
];
For nicer looking data.
MiddleWare
protected $routeMiddleware = [
'auth' => \App\Http\Middleware\Authenticate::class,
'auth.basic' => \Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\AuthenticateWithBasicAuth::class,
'guest' => \App\Http\Middleware\RedirectIfAuthenticated::class,
'incomings' => \AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsMiddleWare::class
];
Then plug it in
Route::get('foobar', ['middleware' => 'incomings', function() {
return "Send to incomings!";
}]);
Then data coming in via POST, GET, etc will be sent to Incomings for a sense of is the data coming into my system correctly etc.
You can pass a title as well
Route::get('foobar', ['middleware' => 'incomings:My Title', function() {
return "Send to incomings!";
}]);
Laravel Exceptions
Just edit your app/Exceptions/Handler.php
so it uses Incomings Exception handler
Before
<?php namespace App\Exceptions; use Exception; use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Exception\HttpException; use IncomingsExceptionHandler as ExceptionHandler; class Handler extends ExceptionHandler {
After
<?php namespace App\Exceptions; use Exception; use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Exception\HttpException; use AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsExceptionHandler as ExceptionHandler; class Handler extends ExceptionHandler {
If you are using Lumen, you will need to use the IncomingsExceptionHandlerForLumen
instead, like so:
<?php namespace App\Exceptions; use Exception; use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Exception\HttpException; use AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsExceptionHandlerForLumen as ExceptionHandler; class Handler extends ExceptionHandler {
Then as seen in this route it will send a message first to Incomings.io
Route::get('/example_exception', function() { throw new \Exception("Yo Incomings!!!"); });
Will send a message like
Bugsnag Too
If you are using a service like BugSnag just follow their directions so your app/Exceptions/Handler.php
would then look like this.
<?php namespace App\Exceptions; use Exception; use Bugsnag\BugsnagLaravel\BugsnagExceptionHandler as ExceptionHandler; use AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsFacade as Incomings; class Handler extends ExceptionHandler { protected $dontReport = [ HttpException::class, ]; public function report(Exception $e) { $data = [ 'title' => 'Application Exception Error', 'message' => sprintf( "Error Filename %s \n on line %d \n with message %s \n with Code %s", $e->getFile(), $e->getLine(), $e->getMessage(), $e->getCode() ), ]; Incomings::send($data); return parent::report($e); } }
Filter for Laravel 4.2
As above plug in your provider
If you are not using DotEnv as I write about here https://alfrednutile.info/posts/113
Then update your .env.php
to have your tokens and url
<?php
return array(
'INCOMINGS_URL' => 'https://post.incomings.io',
'INCOMINGS_TOKEN' => 'foo-bar-foo'
);
Then in your route
Route::get('/', ['before' => 'incomings', function()
{
return View::make('hello');
}]);
Finally in your filter file add the following app/filters.php
Route::filter('incomings', function() {
try
{
$incomings = new \AlfredNutileInc\Incomings\IncomingsFilter();
$incomings->handle(\Illuminate\Support\Facades\Request::instance());
}
catch(\Exception $e)
{
Log::error(sprintf("Error with Incomings :( %s", $e->getMessage());
}
});
This will catch any issues and not mess up your application.
Curl
Here is an example of using Curl. In this case I want to see some info from my server every hour.
curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Accept: application/json" -X POST --data @status.json https://post.incomings.io/incomings/f4ac705d-5087-3432-8182-334de6726fc5
Then every hour I get to see the updates to that file. The CronJob would run this as root
01 * * * * apt-get upgrade -s | grep -i security > /tmp/status.json
03 * * * * curl -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Accept: application/json" -X POST --data @/tmp/status.json https://post.incomings.io/incomings/foobar
You can even make a bach command to run this all and gather more data like "Last Run" etc.
Drupal 8
Coming Soon...
Drupal 7
Coming Soon...