Github offers to send Post-receive hooks to an URL of your choice when there's activity on your repo. I want to write a small Python command-line/background (i.e. no GUI or webapp) application running on my computer (later on a NAS), which continually listens for those incoming POST requests, and once a POST is received from Github, it processes the JSON information contained within. Processing the json as soon as I have it is no problem. The POST can come from a small number of IPs given by github; I plan/hope to specify a port on my computer where it should get sent.
The problem is, I don't know enough about web technologies to deal with the vast number of options you find when searching.. do I use Django, Requests, sockets,Flask, microframeworks...? I don't know what most of the terms involved mean, and most sound like they offer too much/are too big to solve my problem - I'm simply overwhelmed and don't know where to start.
Most tutorials about POST/GET I could find seem to be concerned with either sending or directly requesting data from a website, but not with continually listening for it.
I feel the problem is not really a difficult one, and will boil down to a couple of lines, once I know where to go/how to do it. Can anybody offer pointers/tutorials/examples/sample code?
Here's a basic web.py example for receiving data via POST and doing something with it (in this case, just printing it to stdout):
import web
urls = ('/.*', 'hooks')
app = web.application(urls, globals())
class hooks:
def POST(self):
data = web.data()
print
print 'DATA RECEIVED:'
print data
print
return 'OK'
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
I POSTed some data to it using hurl.it (after forwarding 8080 on my router), and saw the following output:
$ python hooks.py
http://0.0.0.0:8080/
DATA RECEIVED:
test=thisisatest&test2=25
50.19.170.198:33407 - - [27/Jan/2013 10:18:37] "HTTP/1.1 POST /hooks" - 200 OK
You should be able to swap out the print statements for your JSON processing.
To specify the port number, call the script with an extra argument:
$ python hooks.py 1234
First thing is, web is request-response based. So something will request your link, and you will respond accordingly. Your server application will be continuously listening on a port; that you don't have to worry about.
Here is the similar version in Flask
(my micro framework of choice):
from flask import Flask, request
import json
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route('/',methods=['POST'])
def foo():
data = json.loads(request.data)
print "New commit by: {}".format(data['commits'][0]['author']['name'])
return "OK"
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
Here is a sample run, using the example from github:
Running the server (the above code is saved in sample.py
):
burhan@lenux:~$ python sample.py
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/
Here is a request to the server, basically what github will do:
burhan@lenux:~$ http POST http://127.0.0.1:5000 < sample.json
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Length: 2
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2013 19:07:56 GMT
Server: Werkzeug/0.8.3 Python/2.7.3
OK # <-- this is the response the client gets
Here is the output at the server:
New commit by: Chris Wanstrath
127.0.0.1 - - [27/Jan/2013 22:07:56] "POST / HTTP/1.1" 200 -
I would use:
https://github.com/carlos-jenkins/python-github-webhooks
You can configure a web server to use it, or if you just need a process running there without a web server you can launch the integrated server:
python webhooks.py
This will allow you to do everything you said you need. It, nevertheless, requires a bit of setup in your repository and in your hooks.
Late to the party and shameless autopromotion, sorry.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14536992/how-do-i-receive-github-webhooks-in-python