To use this gem, add this line to your Gemfile
gem 'trackerific'
and then run
bundle install
If you would like to see a functional example of this gem in action, check out the sample Rails app here: package-tracker
To take advantage of Trackerific’s automatic service discovery, you will need to configure your credentials for each service.
# config/initializers/trackerific.rb require 'trackerific' Trackerific.configure do |config| config.fedex :account => 'account', :meter => '123456789' config.ups :key => 'key', :user_id => 'userid', :password => 'secret' config.usps :user_id => 'userid', :use_city_state_lookup => true end
For USPS packages, the option :use_city_state_lookup defaults to false, and will only work if you have access to USPS’s CityStateLookup API. If you can enable it, this feature will provide the location for USPS package events.
Once you configured the services, tracking a package is as easy as
include Trackerific details = track_package "package id"
If you do not know the tracking service provider of a package id, or you used track_package, and you need to know which service was used to track it, you can use the tracking_service helper method.
include Trackerific tracking_service "183689015000001" # => Trackerific::FedEx tracking_service "1Z12345E0291980793" # => Trackerific::UPS tracking_service "EJ958083578US" # => Trackerific::USPS tracking_service "unknown package id" # => nil
Use this method if you need to specify exactly which service to track a package.
# Track a FedEx package: fedex = Trackerific::FedEx.new :account => '123456789', :meter => '123456789' details = fedex.track_package('183689015000001') # Track a USPS package: usps = Trackerific::USPS.new :user_id => '123USERID4567' details = usps.track_package('EJ958083578US') # Track a UPS package: ups = Trackerific::UPS.new :user_id => 'userid', :key => 'kQdEJwuHBjtQ7g2', :password => 'secret' details = ups.track_package('1Z12345E0291980793')
The tracking information is returned in a Trackerific::Details instance.
details.summary # => a summary of the tracking events details.events # => an Array of Trackerific::Events
You can easily print out the tracking events just by doing:
puts details.events # for all the events puts details.events.first # for just one event
Or, if you need specific information about an event:
details.events.last.date # => the date the package was shipped details.events.first.date # => the last date the package was updated details.events.first.description # => a description of an event details.events.first.location # => the location of the package during that event
location will not work for USPS packages, because USPS does not provide that information seperately from the description. So for USPS packages, the location will always be at the end of the description.
Note that events.last will return the first event the tracking provider supplied. This is because the events are listed in LIFO order, so the most recent events will always be at the top of the list.
If you have access to the USPS CityStateLookup API, you can use Trackerific to look up the city and state of a zipcode.
usps = Trackerific::USPS.new :user_id => 'userid' usps.city_state_lookup "90210" # => { :city => 'BEVERLY HILLS', :state => 'CA', :zip => '90210' }
Exception handling is esssential for tracking packages. If, for example, you enter the wrong number, or the tracking provider has yet to have added the tracking number to their system, a Trackerific::Error will be raised. Here’s an example on how to handle Trackerific::Errors:
begin usps.track_package('EJ958083578US') rescue Trackerific::Error => e puts e.message end
or for a Rails application:
# in app/controllers/application_controller.rb rescue_from Trackerific::Error do |exception| redirect_to root_url, :alert => exception.message end
See the examples folder for an example of a custom service.
Trackerific provides a mocked service you can use in your unit tests of your application. The mocked service will be available in development and test environments only, and disabled in production.
details = track_package("XXXXXXXXXX") # => returns a populated Trackerific::Details details = track_package("XXXxxxxxxx") # => throws a Trackerific::Errror exception
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Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn’t been implemented or the bug hasn’t been fixed yet
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Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn’t requested it and/or contributed it
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Fork the project
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Start a feature/bugfix branch
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Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
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Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don’t break it in a future version unintentionally.
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Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
Copyright © 2011 Travis Haynes. See LICENSE.txt for further details.