Simple wrapper around Zoho CRM version2, using OAuth 2.0 protocol for authentication.
This gem reads your Module configuration and builds the corresponding classes for you, using some reflection mechanisms. You should then be able to use simple classes with an API close to ActiveRecord, to do CRUD operations.
NOTE: this gem is WIP, please try to use it and open an issue if you run into limitations / problems
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'zoho_hub'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install zoho_hub
If you want to access your Zoho CRM account from your application you first need to create your application as described here: https://www.zoho.com/crm/help/developer/api/register-client.html.
This will give you a Client ID and a secret, that you'll use in step 2.
Registration and authorization requests are made to Zoho's domain-specific Accounts URL which varies depending on your region:
- China: https://accounts.zoho.com.cn
- EU: https://accounts.zoho.eu
- India: https://accounts.zoho.in
- US: https://accounts.zoho.com
ZohoHub uses the EU Account URL by default, but this can be overriden in a ZohoHub.configure
block
via the api_domain
method (step 2.)
Per Zoho's API documentation, providing a redirect URI is optional. Doing so allows a user of your application to be redirected back to your app (to the redirect URI) with a grant token upon successful authentication.
If you don't provide a redirect URI, you'll need to use the self-client option for authorization (see 3.2.)
Note: Treat these credentials like an important password. It is strongly recommended to not paste them anywhere in plain text. Do not add them to version control; keep them out of your code directly by referencing them via environment variables. Use something like the dotenv gem or encrypted credentials in Rails to keep them as secret and secure as possible.
You need to have a configuration block like the one below (in Rails add a zoho_hub.rb
in your
config/initializers
directory):
ZohoHub.configure do |config|
config.client_id = 'YOUR_ZOHO_CLIENT_ID' # obtained in 1.
config.secret = 'YOUR_ZOHO_SECRET' # obtained in 1.
config.redirect_uri = 'YOUR_ZOHO_OAUTH_REDIRECT_URL'
config.api_domain = 'https://accounts.zoho.com' # can be omitted if in the EU
# config.debug = true # this will be VERY verbose, but helps to identify bugs / problems
end
In order to access data in Zoho CRM you need to authorize ZohoHub to access your account. To do so you have to request a specific URL with the right scope and access_type. Successful authorization will provide a grant token which will be used to generate access and refresh tokens.
To get the right URL you can use this simple line of code:
ZohoHub::Auth.auth_url
# => "https://accounts.zoho.eu/oauth/v2/auth?access_type=offline&client_id=&redirect_uri=&response_type=code&scope=ZohoCRM.modules.custom.all,ZohoCRM.settings.all,ZohoCRM.modules.contacts.all,ZohoCRM.modules.all"
If you request this generated URL you should see a screen like this one, where you have to click on "Accept":
You will then be redirected to the redirect URI you provided with additional query parameters
as follows (the value after code=
is the grant token):
{redirect_uri}?code={grant_token}&location=us&accounts-server=https%3A%2F%2Faccounts.zoho.com
If you don't have a redirect URI or you want your application to be able to authorize with Zoho programmatically (without a user required to be present and click the "Accept" prompt), Zoho provides a self-client option for authentication which will provide a grant token.
You can change the default scope (what data can be accessed by your application). This is the list provided as the default scope:
ZohoCRM.modules.custom.all
ZohoCRM.settings.all
ZohoCRM.modules.contacts.all
ZohoCRM.modules.all
To get the URL for a different scope you can provide a scope
argument:
ZohoHub::Auth.auth_url(scope: ['ZohoCRM.modules.custom.all', 'ZohoCRM.modules.all'])
# => "https://accounts.zoho.eu/oauth/v2/auth?access_type=offline&client_id=&redirect_uri=&response_type=code&scope=ZohoCRM.modules.custom.all,ZohoCRM.modules.all"
Refer to Zoho's API documentation on scopes for detailed information.
By design the access tokens returned by the OAuth flow expire after a period of time (1 hour by default), as a safety mechanism. This means that any application that wants to work with a user's data needs the user to have recently gone through the OAuth flow, aka be online.
When you request offline access the Zoho API returns a refresh token. Refresh tokens give your application the ability to request data on behalf of the user when the user is not present and in front of your application.
By default ZohoHub::Auth.auth_url
will request offline access
You can force "online" access by using #auth_url
with a access_type
argument:
ZohoHub::Auth.auth_url(access_type: 'online')
# => "https://accounts.zoho.eu/oauth/v2/auth?access_type=online&client_id=&redirect_uri=&response_type=code&scope=ZohoCRM.modules.custom.all,ZohoCRM.settings.all,ZohoCRM.modules.contacts.all,ZohoCRM.modules.all"
See Zoho's API documentation for generating an initial access token: https://www.zoho.com/crm/help/developer/api/access-refresh.html
To use an access token in a manual request, include it as a request header as
Authorization: Zoho-oauthtoken {access_token}
(without the braces.)
To use an access token with ZohoHub, pass it to the ZohoHub.setup_connection
method as the
access_token
parameter.
TODO
Once ZohoHub has been configured with your credentials (section 2) and you have a fresh access token, setup a ZohoHub connection:
ZohoHub.setup_connection access_token: 'ACCESS_TOKEN',
expires_in: 'EXPIRES_IN_SEC',
api_domain: 'API_DOMAIN'
Now you can issue requests to Zoho's API with the Connection object, e.g.:
# request a (paginated) list of all Lead records
ZohoHub.connection.get 'Leads'
A successful request will receive a response like the sample here: https://www.zoho.com/crm/help/developer/api/get-records.html.
At this point, ZohoHub is starting to do some of the heavy lifting, but using ZohoHub.connection
still gets tedious after just a handful of requests. But we can improve that by allowing ZohoHub
to build our record classes or by manually defining them ourselves.
TODO
See lib/zoho_hub/base_record.rb
and any of the classes in examples/models/
for reference.
For any Zoho module with which you want to interact via ZohoHub, make a class of the same name that
inherits from ZohoHub::BaseRecord
. For example, to build a class for the Leads module:
# lead.rb
class Lead < ZohoHub::BaseRecord
...
end
Specify this module's fields as attributes:
# lead.rb
class Lead < ZohoHub::BaseRecord
attributes :id, :first_name, :last_name, :phone, :email, :source, # etc.
end
Now you can issue requests more easily with your record class, e.g.:
# Request a (paginated) list of all Lead records
Lead.all
# Get the Lead instance with a specific ID
Lead.find('78265000003433063')
And even create new Lead entries in Zoho:
lead = Lead.new(
first_name: 'First name',
last_name: 'Last name',
phone: '+35197736281',
email: 'myemail@gmail.com',
source: 'Homepage'
)
# Creates the new lead
lead.save
- Using a tool such as Postman or curl to issue HTTP requests and verify responses in isolation can be a great sanity check during setup.
- Downloading ZohoHub code (as opposed to the gem) and running
bin/console
is a great way to learn how the code works and test aspects of setup and Zoho's API in isolation. - The Zoho API Documentation is your friend - especially the sample HTTP requests and responses in the various sections under "Rest API" on the left.
- If you're manually implementing your record classes (rather than using the reflection mechanism),
the files in
/examples/models/
can help you get started. - Requests can be issued to Zoho CRM's
Sandbox
by configuring
https://crmsandbox.zoho.com/crm
(or regional equivalent) as theapi_domain
.
This example assumes use of the dotenv gem and is written directly into ZohoHub's root directory (rather than using ZohoHub as a gem) for simplicity.
- Edit
bin/console
to comment out refreshing the token and setting up the connection:
# bin/console
...
# puts 'Refreshing token...'
# token_params = ZohoHub::Auth.refresh_token(ENV['ZOHO_REFRESH_TOKEN'])
# ZohoHub.setup_connection(token_params)
...
- Register your application to obtain a client ID and secret. (Leave the Zoho API Credentials page open; you'll need it in step 5.)
- Determine your Zoho Accounts URL.
- Add your registration and account URL information to a
.env
file:
# .env
ZOHO_CLIENT_ID=YOUR_CLIENT_ID
ZOHO_SECRET=YOUR_SECRET
ZOHO_API_DOMAIN=YOUR_ZOHO_ACCOUNTS_URL
- On the Zoho API Credentials page from step 1, click
the three vertical dots and select
Self client
. - Paste this into the
Scope
field:ZohoCRM.users.ALL
, choose an expiration time, and clickView Code
; this is your Grant token. - Run the ZohoHub console from your terminal:
bin/console
- Issue a token request with the grant token (notice the quotes around the token value):
ZohoHub::Auth.get_token('paste_your_grant_token_here')
This should return a response with an access token, e.g.:
=> {:access_token=>"ACCESS_TOKEN_VALUE",
:expires_in_sec=>3600,
:api_domain=>"https://www.zohoapis.com",
:token_type=>"Bearer"
}
exit the console with exit
.
- Add the access token to your
.env
file:
# .env
ZOHO_CLIENT_ID=YOUR_CLIENT_ID
ZOHO_SECRET=YOUR_SECRET
ZOHO_API_DOMAIN=YOUR_ZOHO_ACCOUNTS_URL
ZOHO_ACCESS_TOKEN=YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN
- Edit
bin/console
to add a newsetup_connection
after the previously commented out one:
# bin/console
...
# ZohoHub.setup_connection(token_params)
ZohoHub.setup_connection(access_token: ENV['ZOHO_ACCESS_TOKEN'])
...
-
Start the console again:
bin/console
. -
Issue a request for the current user:
ZohoHub.connection.get 'users?type=CurrentUser'
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run
the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to
experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/rikas/zoho_hub.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.