A Ruby wrapper for use with the MX Atrium API. In order to make requests, you will need to sign up for MX Atrium API and get a MX-API-KEY
and MX-CLIENT-ID
. Then, configure your instance with:
Atrium.configure do |config|
config.mx_api_key = YOUR_API_KEY
config.mx_client_id = YOUR_CLIENT_ID
config.base_url = "https://atrium.mx.com" # base_url is set to "https://vestibule.mx.com" by default
end
From there, you can start using some basic class methods to make calls for data. See our full documentation for more details.
The following demonstrates how you can read data back from the API in a memory efficient way using built-in pagination
helpers. You can also specify query parameters such as from_date
and to_date
.
::Atrium::User.list_each do |user|
user.each_member do |member|
puts member.name
puts member.accounts.total_entries
member.each_account do |account|
puts account.name
puts account.transactions.total_entries
account.each_transaction do |transaction|
puts transaction.description
end
end
end
user.each_account do |account|
puts account.name
puts account.transactions.total_entries
account.each_transaction do |transaction|
puts transaction.description
end
end
user.each_transaction do |transaction|
puts transaction.description
end
end
You can specify from_date
and to_date
to limit or widen your search. For example:
from_date = ::Date.new(2017, 02, 18)
to_date = ::Date.new(2017, 03, 18)
params = {:from_date => from_date, :to_date => to_date}
::Atrium::Transaction.list_each(:user_guid => "USR-123", :query_params => params) do |transaction|
puts transaction.description
end
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'atrium-ruby'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install atrium-ruby
Suggested implementation flow can be found in bin/demo
comments. You can also use that as an executable for managing the settings and creating your own test flow to handle the requests and data with ./bin/demo
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/mxenabled/atrium-ruby.