Sending and receiving SMSs with Ruby through pluggable backends.
Supported Ruby versions: 2.0.0 or higher
Licensed under the MIT license, see LICENSE for more information.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'cellular'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install cellular
Cellular.configure do |config|
config.username = 'username'
config.password = 'password'
config.backend = Cellular::Backends::Sendega
config.sender = 'Default custom sender'
config.country_code = 'NO'
endThe options supported may differ between backends.
sms = Cellular::SMS.new(
recipient: '47xxxxxxxx',
sender: 'Custom sender',
message: 'This is an SMS message',
price: 0,
country_code: 'NO' # defaults to Cellular.config.country_code
)
sms.deliverYou can also use Sidekiq to send texts, which is great if you're in a Rails app
and are concerned that it might time out or something. Actually, if you have
Sidekiq at your disposal, it's a great idea anyway! To use it, just call
deliver_later instead of deliver on the SMS object:
sms = Cellular::SMS.new(
recipient: '47xxxxxxxx',
sender: 'Custom sender',
message: 'This is an SMS message'
)
sms.deliver_laterThis will create a Sidekiq job for you on the cellular queue, so make sure that Sidekiq is processing that queue.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create pull request
Hyper made this. We're a digital communications agency with a passion for good code, and if you're using this library we probably want to hire you.