This is the official Ruby SDK for the CloudConvert API v2.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "cloudconvert"
And then execute:
bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
gem install cloudconvert
cloudconvert = CloudConvert::Client.new(api_key: "API_KEY", sandbox: false)
Or set the environment variables CLOUDCONVERT_API_KEY
and CLOUDCONVERT_SANDBOX
and use:
cloudconvert = CloudConvert::Client.new
cloudconvert.jobs.create({
tasks: [
{
name: "import-my-file",
operation: "import/url",
url: "https://my-url"
},
{
name: "convert-my-file",
operation: "convert",
input: "import-my-file",
output_format: "pdf",
some_other_option: "value"
},
{
name: "export-my-file",
operation: "export/url",
input: "convert-my-file"
},
]
})
CloudConvert can generate public URLs for using export/url
tasks.
You can use these URLs to download output files:
exported_url_task_id = "84e872fc-d823-4363-baab-eade2e05ee54"
task = cloudconvert.tasks.wait(exported_url_task_id) # Wait for job completion
file = task.result.files.first
export = cloudconvert.download(file.url)
By default the remote file will be downloaded into a temporary location and returned as a Tempfile
.
If you would like the file to be downloaded to a specific location on disk, you can specify the :destination
option:
export = cloudconvert.download(file.url, destination: "/path/to/destination")
The download
method is powered by the Down gem,
for the full list of arguments see the the down docs.
Uploads to CloudConvert are done via import/upload
tasks (see the docs):
job = cloudconvert.jobs.create({
tasks: [
{
name: "upload-my-file",
operation: "import/upload",
}
]
})
After you've created a import/upload
task, you can upload a file:
upload_task = job.tasks.where(operation: "import/upload").first
response = cloudconvert.tasks.upload("/path/to/sample.pdf", upload_task)
updated_task = cloudconvert.tasks.find(upload_task.id)
Alternatively, instead of a path, you can pass in an open IO
object:
file = File.open("/path/to/sample.pdf")
response = cloudconvert.tasks.upload(file, upload_task)
If you need to manually specify a mimetype
or filename
use our file wrapper:
file = CloudConvert::File.new("/path/to/sample.pdf", "video/mp4", "sample.mp4")
response = cloudconvert.tasks.upload(file, upload_task)
Webhooks can be created on the CloudConvert Dashboard, where you can also find the signing secret.
If you're using Rails, you'll want to configure a route to receive the CloudConvert webhook POST requests:
# config/routes.rb
resource :cloudconvert_webhooks, controller: :cloud_convert_webhooks, only: :create
Then create a new controller that uses our processor concern:
# app/controllers/cloudconvert_webhooks_controller.rb
class CloudConvertWebhooksController < ActionController::Base
include CloudConvert::Webhook::Processor
# Handle job.created event
def job_created(event)
# TODO: handle job.created webhook
end
# Handle job.finished event
def job_finished(event)
# TODO: handle job.finished webhook
end
# Handle job.failed event
def job_failed(event)
# TODO: handle job.failed webhook
end
private
def webhook_secret(event)
ENV['CLOUDCONVERT_WEBHOOK_SECRET']
end
end
Alternatively, you can verify the payload yourself:
payload = request.body.read
signature = request.headers["CloudConvert-Signature"]
secret = "..." # You can find it in your webhook settings
if CloudConvert::Webhook::verify(payload, signature, secret)
event = CloudConvert::Webhook::event(payload)
event.name == "job.finished"
puts event.job.id
puts event.job.tasks.count
end
Or by passing in a request:
CloudConvert::Webhook::verify_request(request, secret)
The verify
/verify_request
methods return true
/false
, use verify!
or verify_request!
if you'd rather raise a CloudConvert::Webhook::Error
.
You can read the full list of events CloudConvert can notify you about in our documentation.
Signed URLs allow converting files on demand only using URL query parameters. The Ruby SDK allows to generate such URLs. Therefore, you need to obtain a signed URL base and a signing secret on the CloudConvert Dashboard.
base = 'https://s.cloudconvert.com/...' # You can find it in your signed URL settings.
signing_secret = '...' # You can find it in your signed URL settings.
cache_key = 'cache-key' # Allows caching of the result file for 24h
job = {
tasks: {
"import-it": { operation: "import/url", filename: "test.file", url: "http://invalid.url" },
"convert-it": { input: "import-it", operation: "convert", output_format: "pdf" },
}
}
url = CloudConvert::SignedUrl.sign(base, signing_secret, job, cache_key)
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
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/cloudconvert/cloudconvert-ruby.
rspec --tag unit
rspec --tag integration
By default, this runs the integration tests against VCR recordings of the Sandbox API with an official CloudConvert account.
If you would like to use your own account, you can set your API key using the CLOUDCONVERT_API_KEY
environment variable and disable VCR with VCR=off
or by using the rake spec:sandbox
task.
In this case you need to whitelist the following MD5 hashes for Sandbox API (using the CloudConvert dashboard).
53d6fe6b688c31c565907c81de625046 input.pdf
99d4c165f77af02015aa647770286cf9 input.png
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.