… of the Third Party.
Add serices and events that can track responses from third-party services.
Install it like any other rails engine.
rails close_encounters:install:migrations
Then when you have it installed and migrated you can start tracking events.
response = SomeThirdPartyService.call
CloseEncounters.contact("SomeThirdPartyService", status: response.status.to_i, response.body)
If the services regularly returns 200 responses, no new events will be recorded. When it switches to a different status, a new event will be recorded.
CloseEncounters.status("SomeThirdPartyService") # => 200
# evuntually you use `contact` and it records a 500 and you'll be able to get
CloseEncounters.status("SomeThirdPartyService") # => 500
Setup your middleware in your config/application.rb
or config/environments/production.rb
.
config.middleware.use CloseEncounters::Middleware
This will automatically track responses from third-party services when you store a "domain" key in the
connection_info
in the ParticipantService records.
Alternatively, you can use the auto_contact!
method to automatically turn on the rack middleware:
CloseEncounters.auto_contact!
- Add JS to the gem to track events on the front-end.
- Add a UI to create and manage services.
- Add a UI to view events.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "close_encounters"
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install close_encounters
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.