68 releases (33 breaking)
0.34.1 | Nov 2, 2024 |
---|---|
0.33.0 | Sep 11, 2024 |
0.32.1 | Jul 16, 2024 |
0.30.5 | Mar 26, 2024 |
0.1.0 | Mar 13, 2021 |
#17 in HTTP client
890 downloads per month
Used in 3 crates
300KB
6K
SLoC
Frankenstein
Telegram bot API client for Rust.
It's a complete wrapper for Telegram bot API, and it's up-to-date with version 7.11 of the API.
Frankenstein's data structures (rust structs and enums) are mapped one-to-one from Telegram bot API objects and method parameters.
Installation
Run cargo add frankenstein
or add the following to your Cargo.toml
.
[dependencies]
frankenstein = "0.34"
Features
Default features
http-client
- a blocking HTTP client (usesureq
), it's the only default featuretelegram-trait
- a blocking API trait, it's included in thehttp-client
feature. It may be useful for people who want to create a custom blocking client (for example, replacing an HTTP client)
Optional features
async-http-client
- an async HTTP client, it usesreqwest
, and it's disabled by defaultasync-telegram-trait
- an async API trait, it's used in theasync-http-client
. It may be useful for people who want to create a custom async client
To use the async client add the following line to your Cargo.toml
file:
frankenstein = { version = "0.34", default-features = false, features = ["async-http-client"] }
You can also disable all features. In this case the crate will ship only with Telegram types.
frankenstein = { version = "0.34", default-features = false }
Usage
Examples in this section use the blocking client (frankenstein::Api
), but async examples would look the same (just replace frankenstein::Api
with frankenstein::AsyncApi
)
Data structures
All objects described in the API docs have direct counterparts in the Frankenstein. For example, in the docs there is the user type:
id Integer Unique identifier for this user or bot. This number may have more than 32 significant bits and some programming languages may have difficulty/silent defects in interpreting it. But it has at most 52 significant bits, so a 64-bit integer or double-precision float type are safe for storing this identifier.
is_bot Boolean True, if this user is a bot
first_name String User's or bot's first name
last_name String Optional. User's or bot's last name
username String Optional. User's or bot's username
language_code String Optional. IETF language tag of the user's language
can_join_groups Boolean Optional. True, if the bot can be invited to groups. Returned only in getMe.
can_read_all_group_messages Boolean Optional. True, if privacy mode is disabled for the bot. Returned only in getMe.
supports_inline_queries Boolean Optional. True, if the bot supports inline queries. Returned only in getMe.
In Frankenstein, it's described like this:
pub struct User {
pub id: u64,
pub is_bot: bool,
pub first_name: String,
pub last_name: Option<String>,
pub username: Option<String>,
pub language_code: Option<String>,
pub can_join_groups: Option<bool>,
pub can_read_all_group_messages: Option<bool>,
pub supports_inline_queries: Option<bool>,
}
Optional fields are described as Option
.
Every struct can be created with the associated builder. Only required fields are required to set, optional fields are set to None
when not provided:
let send_message_params = SendMessageParams::builder()
.chat_id(message.chat.id)
.text("hello")
.reply_to_message_id(message.message_id)
.build();
For API parameters, the same approach is used. The only difference for parameters is the name of the struct in Frankenstein ends with Params
postfix.
For example, parameters for leaveChat
method:
pub struct LeaveChatParams {
chat_id: ChatId,
}
Making requests
To make a request to the Telegram bot API initialize the Api
struct.
use frankenstein::Api;
use frankenstein::TelegramApi;
...
let token = "My_token";
let api = Api::new(token);
Then use this API object to make requests to the Bot API:
let update_params = GetUpdatesParams::builder()
.allowed_updates(vec![AllowedUpdate::Message])
.build();
let result = api.get_updates(&update_params);
Every function returns a Result
enum with a successful response or failed response.
See a complete example in the examples
directory.
Uploading files
Some methods in the API allow uploading files. In the Frankenstein for this FileUpload
enum is used:
pub enum FileUpload {
InputFile(InputFile),
String(String),
}
pub struct InputFile {
path: std::path::PathBuf
}
It has two variants:
FileUpload::String
is used to pass the ID of the already uploaded fileFileUpload::InputFile
is used to upload a new file using multipart upload.
Customizing HTTP clients
Both the async (reqwest
) and the blocking (ureq
) HTTP clients can be customized with their builders.
Customizing the blocking client:
use frankenstein::ureq;
use frankenstein::Api;
use std::time::Duration;
let request_agent = ureq::builder().timeout(Duration::from_secs(100)).build();
let api_url = format!("{}{}", BASE_API_URL, TOKEN);
Api::builder()
.api_url(api_url)
.request_agent(request_agent)
.build()
Customizing the async client:
use frankenstein::reqwest;
use frankenstein::AsyncApi;
use std::time::Duration;
let client = reqwest::ClientBuilder::new()
.connect_timeout(Duration::from_secs(100))
.timeout(Duration::from_secs(100))
.build()
.unwrap();
let api_url = format!("{}{}", BASE_API_URL, TOKEN);
AsyncApi::builder().api_url(api_url).client(client).build()
Documentation
Frankenstein implements all Telegram bot API methods. To see which parameters you should pass, check docs.rs
You can check out real-world bots created using this library:
- El Monitorro - RSS/Atom/JSON feed reader.
- subvt-telegram-bot - A Telegram bot for the validators of the Polkadot and Kusama.
- wdr-maus-downloader - checks for a new episode of the WDR Maus and downloads it.
- weather_bot_rust - A Telegram bot that provides weather info around the world.
Replacing the default HTTP client
The library uses ureq
HTTP client by default, but it can be easily replaced with any HTTP client of your choice.
ureq
comes with a default feature (impl
). So the feature should be disabled.
frankenstein = { version = "0.34", default-features = false, features = ["telegram-trait"] }
Then implement the TelegramApi
trait for your HTTP client which requires two functions:
request_with_form_data
is used to upload filesrequest
is used for requests without file uploads
You can check the default TelegramApi
trait implementation for ureq
.
Also, you can take a look at the implementation for isahc
HTTP client in the examples
directory.
Without the default ureq
implementation, frankenstein
has only one dependency - serde
.
Contributing
- 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 new Pull Request
Author
Ayrat Badykov (@ayrat555)
Dependencies
~1–14MB
~189K SLoC