Gibbon is an API wrapper for MailChimp's API.
Please read MailChimp's Getting Started Guide.
Gibbon 3.0.0+ returns a Gibbon::Response
instead of the response body directly. Gibbon::Response
exposes the parsed response body
and headers
.
$ gem install gibbon
A MailChimp account and API key. You can see your API keys here.
First, create a one-time use instance of Gibbon::Request
:
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new(api_key: "your_api_key")
Note Only reuse instances of Gibbon after terminating a call with a verb, which makes a request. Requests are light weight objects that update an internal path based on your call chain. When you terminate a call chain with a verb, a request instance makes a request and resets the path.
You can set an individual request's timeout
and open_timeout
like this:
gibbon.timeout = 30
gibbon.open_timeout = 30
You can read about timeout
and open_timeout
in the Net::HTTP doc.
Now you can make requests using the resources defined in MailChimp's docs. Resource IDs
are specified inline and a CRUD
(create
, retrieve
(or get
), update
, upsert
, or delete
) verb initiates the request. upsert
lets you update a record, if it exists, or insert it otherwise where supported by MailChimp's API.
Note upsert
requires Gibbon version 2.1.0 or newer!
You can specify headers
, params
, and body
when calling a CRUD
method. For example:
gibbon.lists.retrieve(headers: {"SomeHeader": "SomeHeaderValue"}, params: {"query_param": "query_param_value"})
Note get
can be substituted for retrieve
as of Gibbon version 3.4.1 or newer!
Of course, body
is only supported on create
, update
, and upsert
calls. Those map to HTTP POST
, PATCH
, and PUT
verbs respectively.
You can set api_key
, timeout
, open_timeout
, faraday_adapter
, proxy
, symbolize_keys
, logger
, and debug
globally:
Gibbon::Request.api_key = "your_api_key"
Gibbon::Request.timeout = 15
Gibbon::Request.open_timeout = 15
Gibbon::Request.symbolize_keys = true
Gibbon::Request.debug = false
For example, you could set the values above in an initializer
file in your Rails
app (e.g. your_app/config/initializers/gibbon.rb).
Assuming you've set an api_key
on Gibbon, you can conveniently make API calls on the class itself:
Gibbon::Request.lists.retrieve
You can also set the environment variable MAILCHIMP_API_KEY
and Gibbon will use it when you create an instance:
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new
Note Substitute an underscore if a resource name contains a hyphen.
Pass symbolize_keys: true
to use symbols (instead of strings) as hash keys in API responses.
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new(api_key: "your_api_key", symbolize_keys: true)
MailChimp's resource documentation is a list of available resources.
Pass debug: true
to enable debug logging to STDOUT.
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new(api_key: "your_api_key", debug: true)
Ruby Logger.new
is used by default, but it can be overrided using:
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new(api_key: "your_api_key", debug: true, logger: MyLogger.new)
Logger can be also set by globally:
Gibbon::Request.logger = MyLogger.new
Fetch first page of lists:
gibbon.lists.retrieve
Retrieving a specific list looks like:
gibbon.lists(list_id).retrieve
Retrieving a specific list's members looks like:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve
Get first page of subscribers for a list:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve
By default the Mailchimp API returns 10 results. To set the count to 50:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve(params: {"count": "50"})
And to retrieve the next 50 members:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve(params: {"count": "50", "offset": "50"})
And to retrieve only subscribed members
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve(params: {"count": "50", "offset": "50", "status": "subscribed"})
Subscribe a member to a list:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.create(body: {email_address: "foo@bar.com", status: "subscribed", merge_fields: {FNAME: "First Name", LNAME: "Last Name"}})
If you want to upsert
instead, you would do the following:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(lower_case_md5_hashed_email_address).upsert(body: {email_address: "foo@bar.com", status: "subscribed", merge_fields: {FNAME: "First Name", LNAME: "Last Name"}})
You can also unsubscribe a member from a list:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(lower_case_md5_hashed_email_address).update(body: { status: "unsubscribed" })
Get a specific member's information (open/click rates etc.) from MailChimp:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(lower_case_md5_hashed_email_address).retrieve
Permanently delete a specific member from a list:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(lower_case_md5_hashed_email_address).actions.delete_permanent.create
Tags are a flexible way to organize (slice and dice) your list: for example, you can send a campaign directly to one or more tags.
Add tags to a subscriber:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(Digest::MD5.hexdigest(lower_case_email_address)).tags.create(
body: {
tags: [{name:"referred-from-xyz", status:"active"},{name:"pro-plan",status:"active"}]
}
)
Any API call that can be made directly can also be organized into batch operations. Performing batch operations requires you to generate a hash for each individual API call and pass them as an Array
to the Batch endpoint.
# Create a new batch job that will create new list members
gibbon.batches.create(body: {
operations: [
{
method: "POST",
path: "lists/#{ list_id }/members",
body: "{...}" # The JSON payload for PUT, POST, or PATCH
},
...
]
})
This will create a new batch job and return a Batch response. The response will include an id
attribute which can be used to check the status of a particular batch job.
gibbon.batches(batch_id).retrieve
{
"id"=>"0ca62e43cc",
"status"=>"started",
"total_operations"=>1,
"finished_operations"=>1,
"errored_operations"=>0,
"submitted_at"=>"2016-04-19T01:16:58+00:00",
"completed_at"=>"",
"response_body_url"=>""
}
Note This response truncated for brevity. Reference the MailChimp API documentation for Batch Operations for more details.
Only retrieve ids and names for fetched lists:
gibbon.lists.retrieve(params: {"fields": "lists.id,lists.name"})
Only retrieve emails for fetched lists:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve(params: {"fields": "members.email_address"})
Get first page of campaigns:
campaigns = gibbon.campaigns.retrieve
Fetch the number of opens for a campaign
email_stats = gibbon.reports(campaign_id).retrieve["opens"]
Create a new campaign:
recipients = {
list_id: list_id,
segment_opts: {
saved_segment_id: segment_id
}
}
settings = {
subject_line: "Subject Line",
title: "Name of Campaign",
from_name: "From Name",
reply_to: "my@email.com"
}
body = {
type: "regular",
recipients: recipients,
settings: settings
}
begin
gibbon.campaigns.create(body: body)
rescue Gibbon::MailChimpError => e
puts "Houston, we have a problem: #{e.message} - #{e.raw_body}"
end
Add content to a campaign:
(Please note that Mailchimp does not currently support dynamic replacement of mc:edit areas in their drag-and-drop templates using their API. Custom templates can be used instead.)
body = {
template: {
id: template_id,
sections: {
"name-of-mc-edit-area": "Content here"
}
}
}
gibbon.campaigns(campaign_id).content.upsert(body: body)
Send a campaign:
gibbon.campaigns(campaign_id).actions.send.create
Schedule a campaign:
body = {
schedule_time: "2016-06-27 20:00:00"
}
gibbon.campaigns(campaign_id).actions.schedule.create(body: body)
Interests are a little more complicated than other parts of the API, so here's an example of how you would set interests during at subscription time or update them later. The ID of the interests you want to opt in or out of must be known ahead of time so an example of how to find interest IDs is also included.
Subscribing a member to a list with specific interests up front:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.create(body: {email_address: user_email_address, status: "subscribed", interests: {some_interest_id: true, another_interest_id: true}})
Updating a list member's interests:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(member_id).update(body: {interests: {some_interest_id: true, another_interest_id: false}})
So how do we get the interest IDs? When you query the API for a specific list member's information:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members(member_id).retrieve
The response body (i.e. response.body
) looks someting like this (unrelated things removed):
{"id"=>"...", "email_address"=>"...", ..., "interests"=>{"3def637141"=>true, "f7cc4ee841"=>false, "fcdc951b9f"=>false, "3daf3cf27d"=>true, "293a3703ed"=>false, "72370e0d1f"=>false, "d434d21a1c"=>false, "bdb1ff199f"=>false, "a54e78f203"=>false, "c4527fd018"=>false} ...}
The API returns a map of interest ID to boolean value. Now we to get interest details so we know what these interest IDs map to. Looking at this doc page, we need to do this:
gibbon.lists(list_id).interest_categories.retrieve
To get a list of interest categories. That gives us something like (again, this is the response.body
):
{"list_id"=>"...", "categories"=>[{"list_id"=>"...", "id"=>"0ace7aa498", "title"=>"Food Preferences", ...}] ...}
In this case, we're interested in the ID of the "Food Preferences" interest, which is 0ace7aa498
. Now we can fetch the details for this interest group:
gibbon.lists(list_id).interest_categories("0ace7aa498").interests.retrieve
That response gives the interest data, including the ID for the interests themselves, which we can use to update a list member's interests or set them when we call the API to subscribe her or him to a list.
Gibbon raises an error when the API returns an error.
Gibbon::MailChimpError
has the following attributes: title
, detail
, body
, raw_body
, status_code
. Some or all of these may not be
available depending on the nature of the error. For example:
begin
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.create(body: body)
rescue Gibbon::MailChimpError => e
puts "Houston, we have a problem: #{e.message} - #{e.raw_body}"
end
Overriding Gibbon's API endpoint (i.e. if using an access token from OAuth and have the api_endpoint
from the metadata):
Gibbon::Request.api_endpoint = "https://us1.api.mailchimp.com"
Gibbon::Request.api_key = your_access_token_or_api_key
You can set an optional proxy url like this (or with an environment variable MAILCHIMP_PROXY):
gibbon.proxy = 'http://your_proxy.com:80'
You can set a different Faraday adapter during initialization:
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new(api_key: "your_api_key", faraday_adapter: :net_http)
Gibbon 2.x+ exposes a different API from version 1.x. This is because Gibbon maps to MailChimp's API and because version 3 of the API is quite different from version 2. First, the name of the primary class has changed from API
to Request
. And the way you pass an API key during initialization is different. A few examples below.
Gibbon 1.x:
gibbon = Gibbon::API.new("your_api_key")
Gibbon 2.x+:
gibbon = Gibbon::Request.new(api_key: "your_api_key")
MailChimp API 3 is a RESTful API, so Gibbon's syntax now requires a trailing call to a verb, as described above.
Gibbon 1.x:
gibbon.lists.list
Gibbon 2.x+:
gibbon.lists.retrieve
Gibbon 1.x:
gibbon.lists.members({:id => list_id})
Gibbon 2.x+:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.retrieve
Gibbon 1.x:
gibbon.lists.subscribe({:id => list_id, :email => {:email => "foo@bar.com"}, :merge_vars => {:FNAME => "Bob", :LNAME => "Smith"}})
Gibbon 2.x+:
gibbon.lists(list_id).members.create(body: {email_address: "foo@bar.com", status: "subscribed", merge_fields: {FNAME: "Bob", LNAME: "Smith"}})
Thanks to everyone who has contributed to Gibbon's development.
- Copyright (c) 2010-2022 Amro Mousa. See LICENSE.txt for details.
- MailChimp (c) 2001-2022 The Rocket Science Group.