Pushpad - Web Push Notifications
Pushpad is a service for sending push notifications from websites and web apps. It uses the Push API, which is a standard supported by all major browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Edge, Safari).
The notifications are delivered in real time even when the users are not on your website and you can target specific users or send bulk notifications.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'pushpad'
And then execute:
$ bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install pushpad
Getting started
First you need to sign up to Pushpad and create a project there.
Then set your authentication credentials:
Pushpad.auth_token = '5374d7dfeffa2eb49965624ba7596a09'
Pushpad.project_id = 123 # set it here or pass it as a param to methods later
auth_token
can be found in the user account settings.project_id
can be found in the project settings. If your application uses multiple projects, you can pass theproject_id
as a param to methods (e.g.notification.deliver_to user, project_id: 123
).
Collecting user subscriptions to push notifications
You can subscribe the users to your notifications using the Javascript SDK, as described in the getting started guide.
If you need to generate the HMAC signature for the uid
you can use this helper:
Pushpad.signature_for current_user.id
Sending push notifications
notification = Pushpad::Notification.new({
# required, the main content of the notification
body: "Hello world!",
# optional, the title of the notification (defaults to your project name)
title: "Website Name",
# optional, open this link on notification click (defaults to your project website)
target_url: "https://example.com",
# optional, the icon of the notification (defaults to the project icon)
icon_url: "https://example.com/assets/icon.png",
# optional, the small icon displayed in the status bar (defaults to the project badge)
badge_url: "https://example.com/assets/badge.png",
# optional, an image to display in the notification content
# see https://pushpad.xyz/docs/sending_images
image_url: "https://example.com/assets/image.png",
# optional, drop the notification after this number of seconds if a device is offline
ttl: 604800,
# optional, prevent Chrome on desktop from automatically closing the notification after a few seconds
require_interaction: true,
# optional, enable this option if you want a mute notification without any sound
silent: false,
# optional, enable this option only for time-sensitive alerts (e.g. incoming phone call)
urgent: false,
# optional, a string that is passed as an argument to action button callbacks
custom_data: "123",
# optional, add some action buttons to the notification
# see https://pushpad.xyz/docs/action_buttons
actions: [
{
title: "My Button 1",
target_url: "https://example.com/button-link", # optional
icon: "https://example.com/assets/button-icon.png", # optional
action: "myActionName" # optional
}
],
# optional, bookmark the notification in the Pushpad dashboard (e.g. to highlight manual notifications)
starred: true,
# optional, use this option only if you need to create scheduled notifications (max 5 days)
# see https://pushpad.xyz/docs/schedule_notifications
send_at: Time.utc(2016, 7, 25, 10, 9),
# optional, add the notification to custom categories for stats aggregation
# see https://pushpad.xyz/docs/monitoring
custom_metrics: ['examples', 'another_metric'] # up to 3 metrics per notification
})
# deliver to a user
notification.deliver_to user # or user_id
# deliver to a group of users
notification.deliver_to users # or user_ids
# deliver to some users only if they have a given preference
# e.g. only "users" who have a interested in "events" will be reached
notification.deliver_to users, tags: ['events']
# deliver to segments
# e.g. any subscriber that has the tag "segment1" OR "segment2"
notification.broadcast tags: ['segment1', 'segment2']
# you can use boolean expressions
# they can include parentheses and the operators !, &&, || (from highest to lowest precedence)
# https://pushpad.xyz/docs/tags
notification.broadcast tags: ['zip_code:28865 && !optout:local_events || friend_of:Organizer123']
notification.deliver_to users, tags: ['tag1 && tag2', 'tag3'] # equal to 'tag1 && tag2 || tag3'
# deliver to everyone
notification.broadcast
You can set the default values for most fields in the project settings. See also the docs for more information about notification fields.
If you try to send a notification to a user ID, but that user is not subscribed, that ID is simply ignored.
The methods above return an hash:
"id"
is the id of the notification on Pushpad"scheduled"
is the estimated reach of the notification (i.e. the number of devices to which the notification will be sent, which can be different from the number of users, since a user may receive notifications on multiple devices)"uids"
(deliver_to
only) are the user IDs that will be actually reached by the notification because they are subscribed to your notifications. For example if you send a notification to['uid1', 'uid2', 'uid3']
, but only'uid1'
is subscribed, you will get['uid1']
in response. Note that if a user has unsubscribed after the last notification sent to him, he may still be reported for one time as subscribed (this is due to the way the W3C Push API works)."send_at"
is present only for scheduled notifications. The fields"scheduled"
and"uids"
are not available in this case.
The id
and scheduled_count
attribute are also stored on the notification object:
notification.deliver_to user
notification.id # => 1000
notification.scheduled_count # => 5
Getting push notification data
You can retrieve data for past notifications:
notification = Pushpad::Notification.find(42)
# get basic attributes
notification.id # => 42
notification.title # => "Foo Bar"
notification.body # => "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit."
notification.target_url # => "https://example.com"
notification.ttl # => 604800
notification.require_interaction # => false
notification.silent # => false
notification.urgent # => false
notification.icon_url # => "https://example.com/assets/icon.png"
notification.badge_url # => "https://example.com/assets/badge.png"
# `created_at` is a `Time` instance
notification.created_at.utc.to_s # => "2016-07-06 10:09:14 UTC"
# get statistics
notification.scheduled_count # => 1
notification.successfully_sent_count # => 4
notification.opened_count # => 2
Or for mutliple notifications of a project at once:
notifications = Pushpad::Notification.find_all(project_id: 5)
# same attributes as for single notification in example above
notifications[0].id # => 42
notifications[0].title # => "Foo Bar"
If Pushpad.project_id
is defined, the project_id
option can be
omitted.
The REST API paginates the result set. You can pass a page
parameter
to get the full list in multiple requests.
notifications = Pushpad::Notification.find_all(project_id: 5, page: 2)
Scheduled notifications
You can create scheduled notifications that will be sent in the future:
notification = Pushpad::Notification.new({
body: "This notification will be sent after 60 seconds",
send_at: Time.now.utc + 60
})
notification.broadcast
You can also cancel a scheduled notification:
notification = Pushpad::Notification.find(5)
notification.cancel
Getting subscription count
You can retrieve the number of subscriptions for a given project,
optionally filtered by tags
or uids
:
Pushpad::Subscription.count(project_id: 5) # => 100
Pushpad::Subscription.count(project_id: 5, uids: ['user1']) # => 2
Pushpad::Subscription.count(project_id: 5, tags: ['sports']) # => 10
Pushpad::Subscription.count(project_id: 5, tags: 'sports && travel') # => 5
Pushpad::Subscription.count(project_id: 5, uids: ['user1'], tags: 'sports && travel') # => 1
If Pushpad.project_id
is defined, the project_id
option can be
omitted.
Getting push subscription data
You can retrieve the subscriptions for a given project,
optionally filtered by tags
or uids
:
Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(project_id: 5)
Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(project_id: 5, uids: ['user1'])
Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(project_id: 5, tags: ['sports'])
Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(project_id: 5, tags: 'sports && travel')
Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(project_id: 5, uids: ['user1'], tags: 'sports && travel')
If Pushpad.project_id
is defined, the project_id
option can be
omitted.
The REST API paginates the result set. You can pass a page
parameter
to get the full list in multiple requests.
subscriptions = Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(project_id: 5, page: 2)
You can also retrieve the data of a specific subscription if you already know its id:
Pushpad::Subscription.find 123
Pushpad::Subscription.find 123, project_id: 456
Updating push subscription data
Usually you add data, like user IDs and tags, to the push subscriptions using the JavaScript SDK in the frontend.
However you can also update the subscription data from your server:
Pushpad::Subscription.find_all(uids: ['user1']).each do |subscription|
# update the user ID associated to the push subscription
subscription.update uid: 'myuser1'
# update the tags associated to the push subscription
= subscription.
<< 'another_tag'
subscription.update tags:
end
Importing push subscriptions
If you need to import some existing push subscriptions (from another service to Pushpad, or from your backups) or if you simply need to create some test data, you can use this method:
attributes = {
endpoint: "https://example.com/push/f7Q1Eyf7EyfAb1",
p256dh: "BCQVDTlYWdl05lal3lG5SKr3VxTrEWpZErbkxWrzknHrIKFwihDoZpc_2sH6Sh08h-CacUYI-H8gW4jH-uMYZQ4=",
auth: "cdKMlhgVeSPzCXZ3V7FtgQ==",
uid: "exampleUid",
tags: ["exampleTag1", "exampleTag2"]
}
subscription = Pushpad::Subscription.create(attributes, project_id: 5)
Please note that this is not the standard way to collect subscriptions on Pushpad: usually you subscribe the users to the notifications using the JavaScript SDK in the frontend.
Deleting push subscriptions
Usually you unsubscribe a user from push notifications using the JavaScript SDK in the frontend (recommended).
However you can also delete the subscriptions using this library. Be careful, the subscriptions are permanently deleted!
subscription = Pushpad::Subscription.find 123
subscription.delete
Managing projects
Projects are usually created manually from the Pushpad dashboard. However you can also create projects from code if you need advanced automation or if you manage many different domains.
attributes = {
# required attributes
sender_id: 123,
name: "My project",
website: "https://example.com",
# optional configurations
icon_url: "https://example.com/icon.png",
badge_url: "https://example.com/badge.png",
notifications_ttl: 604800,
notifications_require_interaction: false,
notifications_silent: false
}
project = Pushpad::Project.create(attributes)
You can also find, update and delete projects:
Pushpad::Project.find_all.each do |p|
puts "Project #{p.id}: #{p.name}"
end
project = Pushpad::Project.find 123
project.update(name: 'The New Project Name')
project.delete
Managing senders
Senders are usually created manually from the Pushpad dashboard. However you can also create senders from code.
attributes = {
# required attributes
name: "My sender",
# optional configurations
# do not include these fields if you want to generate them automatically
vapid_private_key: "-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY----- ...",
vapid_public_key: "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- ..."
}
sender = Pushpad::Sender.create(attributes)
You can also find, update and delete senders:
Pushpad::Sender.find_all.each do |s|
puts "Sender #{s.id}: #{s.name}"
end
sender = Pushpad::Sender.find 987
sender.update(name: 'The New Sender Name')
sender.delete
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.