@josue.0/whatsapp-cloud-api v0.2.7-alpha-04
This repository is a fork of 🤗:
https://github.com/tawn33y/whatsapp-cloud-api
Changes made here:
- Added to_phone_number so you can identify which phone number was the one receiving the message.
- Added support for "reply" from template button (support for type 'button' in messages).
- Added 'parameters' type for template header component.
- Added a logging callback for each message sent so you can log each sent message easily.
- Other details: to see all the changes made you can compare the two repositories.
Note: The current repo is published on npm as https://www.npmjs.com/package/@josue.0/whatsapp-cloud-api
Note2: I built a chats visualization frontend compatible here that you can use
The following lines are the README of the original work.
whatsapp-cloud-api
whatsapp-cloud-api
is a Node.js library for creating bots and sending/receiving messages using the Whatsapp Cloud API.
Contains built-in Typescript declarations.
Install
Using npm:
npm i whatsapp-cloud-api
Using yarn:
yarn add whatsapp-cloud-api
Usage
import { createBot } from 'whatsapp-cloud-api';
// or if using require:
// const { createBot } = require('whatsapp-cloud-api');
(async () => {
try {
// replace the values below
const from = 'YOUR_WHATSAPP_PHONE_NUMBER_ID';
const token = 'YOUR_TEMPORARY_OR_PERMANENT_ACCESS_TOKEN';
const to = 'PHONE_NUMBER_OF_RECIPIENT';
const webhookVerifyToken = 'YOUR_WEBHOOK_VERIFICATION_TOKEN';
// Create a bot that can send messages
const bot = createBot(from, token);
// Send text message
const result = await bot.sendText(to, 'Hello world');
// Start express server to listen for incoming messages
// NOTE: See below under `Documentation/Tutorial` to learn how
// you can verify the webhook URL and make the server publicly available
await bot.startExpressServer({
webhookVerifyToken,
});
// Listen to ALL incoming messages
// NOTE: remember to always run: await bot.startExpressServer() first
bot.on('message', async (msg) => {
console.log(msg);
if (msg.type === 'text') {
await bot.sendText(msg.from, 'Received your text message!');
} else if (msg.type === 'image') {
await bot.sendText(msg.from, 'Received your image!');
}
});
} catch (err) {
console.log(err);
}
})();
Documentation
- API Reference.
- Tutorial for a step-by-step on how to get everything set up.
Examples
Sending other message types (read more in API reference):
// Send image
const result = await bot.sendImage(to, 'https://picsum.photos/200/300', {
caption: 'Random jpg',
});
// Send location
const result = await bot.sendLocation(to, 40.7128, -74.0060, {
name: 'New York',
});
// Send template
const result = await bot.sendTemplate(to, 'hello_world', 'en_us');
Customized express server (read more below):
import cors from 'cors';
// Create bot...
const bot = createBot(...);
// Customize server
await bot.startExpressServer({
webhookVerifyToken: 'my-verification-token',
port: 3000,
webhookPath: `/custom/webhook`,
useMiddleware: (app) => {
app.use(cors()),
},
});
Listening to other message types (read more in API reference):
const bot = createBot(...);
await bot.startExpressServer({ webhookVerifyToken });
// Listen to incoming text messages ONLY
bot.on('text', async (msg) => {
console.log(msg);
await bot.sendText(msg.from, 'Received your text!');
});
// Listen to incoming image messages ONLY
bot.on('image', async (msg) => {
console.log(msg);
await bot.sendText(msg.from, 'Received your image!');
});
Notes
1. Verifying your Webhook URL
By default, the endpoint for whatsapp-related requests will be: /webhook/whatsapp
.
This means that locally, your URL will be: http://localhost/webhook/whatsapp
.
You can use a reverse proxy to make the server publicly available. An example of this is ngrok.
You can read more on the Tutorial.
2. Handling incoming messages
The implementation above creates an express server for you through which it listens to incoming messages. There may be plans to support other types of server in future (PRs are welcome! :)).
You can change the port as follows:
await bot.startExpressServer({
port: 3000,
});
By default, all requests are handled by the POST|GET /webhook/whatsapp
endpoint. You can change this as below:
await bot.startExpressServer({
webhookPath: `/custom/webhook`,
});
Note: Remember the leading /
; i.e. don't use custom/whatsapp
; instead use /custom/whatsapp
.
If you are already running an express server in your application, you can avoid creating a new one by using it as below:
// your code...
import express from 'express';
const app = express();
...
// use the `app` variable below:
await bot.startExpressServer({
app,
});
To add middleware:
import cors from 'cors';
await bot.startExpressServer({
useMiddleware: (app) => {
app.use(cors()),
},
});
Full customized setup:
import cors from 'cors';
await bot.startExpressServer({
webhookVerifyToken: 'my-verification-token',
port: 3000,
webhookPath: `/custom/webhook`,
useMiddleware: (app) => {
app.use(cors()),
},
});
3. on()
listener
This library uses a single process pubsub, which means that it won't work well if you're deploying on multi-instance clusters, e.g. distributed Kubernetes clusters. In future, there may be plans to export/support a pubsub reference which can be stored in extenal storage, e.g. redis (PRs are welcome! :)).
Development
# install npm modules
npm i
# eslint
npm run lint
# typescript check
npm run ts-check
# test
## Read 'Local Testing' below before running this
npm t
# build
npm run build
Local Testing
Create a .env file in the root of your project:
FROM_PHONE_NUMBER_ID=""
ACCESS_TOKEN=""
VERSION=""
TO=""
WEBHOOK_VERIFY_TOKEN=""
WEBHOOK_PATH=""
Publishing
In case using a scoped package, you can publish as follows:
npm run build
npm publish --access public
Attribution
Library API inspired by node-telegram-bot-api.
Pull Requests
Any and all PRs are open.
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