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SMSframework

SMS framework with pluggable providers.

Key features:

  • Send messages
  • Receive messages
  • Delivery confirmations
  • Handle multiple pluggable providers with a single gateway
  • Synchronous message receipt through events
  • Reliable message handling
  • Supports provider APIs (like getting the balance)
  • Providers use Flask microframework for message receivers (not required)
  • 0 dependencies
  • Unit-tested

Table of Contents

Tutorial

Sending Messages

In order to send a message, you will use a Gateway:

from smsframework import Gateway
gateway = Gateway()

By itself, it cannot do anything. However, if you install a provider -- a library that implements some SMS service -- you can add it to the Gateway and configure it to send your messages through a provider:

from smsframework_clickatell import ClickatellProvider

gateway.add_provider('main', ClickatellProvider)  # the default one

The first provider defined becomes the default one. (If you have multiple providers, Gateway supports routing: rules that select which provider to use).

Now, let's send a message:

from smsframework import OutgoingMessage

gateway.send(OutgoingMessage('+123456789', 'hi there!'))

Receiving Messages

In order to receive messages, you will use the same Gateway object and ask it to generate an HTTP API endpoint for you. It uses Flask framework, and you'll need to run a Flask application in order to receive SMS messages:

from flask import Flask

app = Flask()
bp = gateway.receiver_blueprint_for('main')  # SMS receiver
app.register_blueprint(bp, url_prefix='/sms/main')  # register it with Flask

Now, use Clickatell's web interface and register the following URL: http://example.com/sms/main. It will send you messages to the application.

Next, you need to handle the incoming messages in your code. To to this, you need to subscribe your handler to the gateway.onReceive event:

def on_receive(message):
    """ :type message: IncomingMessage """
    pass  # Your logic here

gateway.onReceive += on_receive

In addition to receiving messages, you can receive status reports about the messages you have sent. See Gateway.onStatus for more information.

Supported Providers

SMSframework supports the following bundled providers:

  • log: log provider for testing. Bundled.
  • null: null provider for testing. Bundled.
  • loopback: loopback provider for testing. Bundled.

Supported providers list:

Also see the full list of providers.

Installation

Install from pypi:

$ pip install smsframework

Install with some additional providers:

$ pip install smsframework[clickatell]

To receive SMS messages, you need to ensure that Flask microframework is also installed:

$ pip install smsframework[clickatell,receiver]

Gateway

SMSframework handles the whole messaging thing with a single Gateway object.

Let's start with initializing a gateway:

from smsframework import Gateway

gateway = Gateway()

The Gateway() constructor currently has no arguments.

Providers

A Provider is a package which implements the logic for a specific SMS provider.

Each provider reside in an individual package smsframework_*. You'll probably want to install some of these first.

Gateway.add_provider(name, Provider, **config):IProvider

Register a provider on the gateway

Arguments:

  • provider: str Provider name that will be used to uniquely identify it
  • Provider: type Provider class that inherits from smsframework.IProvider You'll use this string in order to send messages via a specific provider.
  • **config Provider configuration. Please refer to the Provider documentation.
from smsframework.providers import NullProvider
from smsframework_clickatell import ClickatellProvider

gateway.add_provider('main', ClickatellProvider)  # the default one
gateway.add_provider('null', NullProvider)

The first provider defined becomes the default one: used in case the routing function has no better idea. See: Message Routing.

Gateway.default_provider

Property which contains the default provider name. You can change it to something else:

gateway.default_provider = 'null'

Gateway.get_provider(name):IProvider

Get a provider by name

You don't normally need this, unless the provider has some public API: refer to the provider documentation for the details.

Sending Messages

Gateway.send(message):OutgoingMessage

To send a message, you first create the OutgoingMessage object and then pass it as the first argument.

Arguments:

  • message: OutgoingMessage: The messasge to send

Exceptions:

  • AssertionError: Wrong provider name encountered (returned by the router, or provided to OutgoingMessage)
  • ProviderError: Generic provider error
  • ConnectionError: Connection failed
  • MessageSendError: Generic sending error
  • RequestError: Request error: likely, validation errors
  • UnsupportedError: The requested operation is not supported
  • ServerError: Server error: sevice unavailable, etc
  • AuthError: Provider authentication failed
  • LimitsError: Sending limits exceeded
  • CreditError: Not enough money on the account

Returns: the same OutgoingMessage, with some additional fields populated: msgid, meta, ..

from smsframework import OutgoingMessage

msg = gateway.send(OutgoingMessage('+123456789', 'hi there!'))

A message sending fail when the provider raises an exception. This typically occurs when the wrapped HTTP API has returned an immediate error. Note that some errors occur later, and are typically reported with status messages: see MessageStatus

Event Hooks

The Gateway object has three events you can subscribe to.

The event is a simple object that implements the += and -= operators which allow you to subscribe to the event and unsubscribe respectively.

Event hook is a python callable which accepts arguments explained in the further sections.

Note that if you accidentally replace the hook with a callable (using the = operator instead of +=), you'll end up having a single hook, but smsframework will continue to work normally: thanks to the implementation.

See smsframework/lib/events.py.

Gateway.onSend

Outgoing Message: a message that was successfully sent.

Arguments:

  • message: OutgoingMessage: The message that was sent. See OutgoingMessage.

The message object is populated with the additional information from the provider, namely, the msgid and meta fields.

Note that if the hook raises an Exception, it will propagate to the place where Gateway.send() was called!

def on_send(message):
    """ :type message: OutgoingMessage """
    print(message)

gw.onSend += on_send

Gateway.onReceive

Incoming Message: a message that was received from the provider.

Arguments:

Note that if the hook raises an Exception, the Provider will report the error to the sms service. Most services will retry the message delivery with increasing delays.

def on_receive(message):
    """ :type message: IncomingMessage """
    print(message)

gw.onReceive += on_receive

Gateway.onStatus

Message Status: a message status reported by the provider.

A status report is only delivered when explicitly requested with OutgoingMessage.options(status_report=True).

Arguments:

  • status: MessageStatus: The status info. See MessageStatus and its subclasses.

Note that if the hook raises an Exception, the Provider will report the error to the sms service. Most services will retry the status delivery with increasing delays.

def on_status(status):
    """ :type status: MessageStatus """
    print(status)

gw.onStatus += on_status

Data Objects

SMSframework uses the following objects to represent message flows.

Note that internally all non-digit characters are removed from all phone numbers, both outgoing and incoming. Phone numbers are typically provided in international formats, though some local providers may be less strict with this.

IncomingMessage

A messsage received from the provider.

Source: smsframework/data/IncomingMessage.py.

OutgoingMessage

A message being sent.

Source: smsframework/data/OutgoingMessage.py.

MessageStatus

A status report received from the provider.

Source: smsframework/data/MessageStatus.py.

Exceptions

Source: smsframework/exc.py.

Provider HTTP Receivers

Note: the whole receiver feature is optional. Skip this section if you only need to send messages.

In order to receive messages, most providers need an HTTP handler.

To get standardized, by default providers use Flask microframework for this: a provider defines a Blueprint which can be registered on your Flask application as the receiver endpoint.

The resources are provider-dependent: refer to the provider documentation for the details. The recommended approach is to use /im for incoming messages, and /status for status reports.

Gateway.receiver_blueprint_for(name): flask.Blueprint

Get a Flask blueprint for the named provider that handles incoming messages & status reports.

Returns: flask.Blueprint

Errors:

  • KeyError: provider not found
  • NotImplementedError: Provider does not implement a receiver

This method is mostly internal, as the following ones are usually much more convenient.

Gateway.receiver_blueprints():(name, flask.Blueprint)*

Get Flask blueprints for every provider that supports it.

The method is a generator that yields (name, blueprint) tuples, where blueprint is flask.Blueprint for provider named name.

Use this method to register your receivers manually:

from flask import Flask

app = Flask()

for name, bp in gateway.receiver_blueprints():
    app.register_blueprint(bp, url_prefix='/sms/'+name)

With the example above, each receivers will be registered under /name prefix.

Assuming the 'clickatell' provider defines /im and /status receivers and your app is running on http://localhost:5000/, you will configure the SMS service to send messages to:

Gateway.receiver_blueprints_register(app, prefix='/'):flask.Flask

Register all provider receivers on the provided Flask application under '/{prefix}/provider-name'.

This is a convenience method to register all blueprints at once using the following recommended rules:

  • If prefix is provided, all blueprints are registered under this prefix
  • Provider receivers are registered under '/provider-name' path

It's adviced to mount the receivers under some difficult-to-guess prefix: otherwise, attackers can send fake messages into your system!

Secure example:

gateway.receiver_blueprints_register(app, '/24fb0d6963f/');

NOTE: Other mechanisms, such as basic authentication, are not typically useful as some services do not support that.

Message Routing

SMSframework requires you to explicitly specify the provider for each message: otherwise, it uses the first defined provider by default.

In real world conditions with multiple providers, you may want a router function that decides on which provider to use and which options to pick.

In order to achieve flexible message routing, we need to associate some metadata with each message, for instance:

  • module: name of the sending module: e.g. "users"
  • type: type of the message: e.g. "notification"

These 2 arbitrary strings need to be standardized in the application code, thus offering the possibility to define complex routing rules.

When creating the message, use OutgoingMessage.route() function to specify these values:

gateway.send(OutgoingMessage('+1234', 'hi').route('users', 'notification'))

Now, set a router function on the gateway: a function which gets an outgoing message + some additional routing values, and decides on the provider to use:

gateway.add_provider('primary', ClickatellProvider, ...)
gateway.add_provider('quick', ClickatellProvider, ...)
gateway.add_provider('usa', ClickatellProvider, ...)

def router(message, module, type):
    """ Custom router function """
    if message.dst.startswith('1'):
        return 'usa'  # Use 'usa' for all messages sent to the United States
    elif type == 'notification':
        return 'quick'  # use the 'quick' for all notifications
    else:
        return None  # Use the default provider ('primary') for everything else

    self.gw.router = router

Router function is also the right place to specify provider-specific options.

Bundled Providers

The following providers are bundled with SMSframework and thus require no additional packages.

NullProvider

Source: smsframework/providers/null.py

The 'null' provider just ignores all outgoing messages.

Configuration: none

Sending: does nothing, but increments message.msgid

Receipt: Not implemented

Status: Not implemented

from smsframework.providers import NullProvider

gw.add_provider('null', NullProvider)

LogProvider

Source: smsframework/providers/log.py

Logs the outgoing messages to a python logger provided as the config option.

Configuration:

  • logger: logging.Logger: The logger to use. Default logger is used if nothing provided.

Sending: does nothing, increments message.msgid, prints the message to the log

Receipt: Not implemented

Status: Not implemented

Example:

import logging
from smsframework.providers import LogProvider

gw.add_provider('log', LogProvider, logger=logging.getLogger(__name__))

LoopbackProvider

Source: smsframework/providers/loopback.py

The 'loopback' provider is used as a dummy for testing purposes.

All messages are stored in the local log and can be retrieved as a list.

The provider even supports status & delivery notifications.

In addition, is supports virtual subscribers: callbacks bound to some phone numbers which are called when any simulated message is sent to their phone number. Replies are also supported!

Configuration: none

Sending: sends message to a registered subscriber (see: :meth:LoopbackProvider.subscribe), silently ignores other messages.

Receipt: simulation with a method

Status: always reports success

LoopbackProvider.get_traffic():list

LoopbackProvider stores all messages that go through it: both IncomingMessage and OutgoingMessage.

To get those messages, call .get_traffic(). This method empties the message log and returns its previous state:

from smsframework.providers import LoopbackProvider

gateway.add_provider('lo', LoopbackProvider);
gateway.send(OutgoingMessage('+123', 'hi'))

traffic = gateway.get_provider('lo').get_traffic()
print(traffic[0].body)  #-> 'hi'

LoopbackProvider.received(src, body):IncomingMessage

Simulate an incoming message.

The message is reported to the Gateway as if it has been received from the sms service.

Arguments:

  • src: str: Source number
  • body: str | unicode: Message text

Returns: IncomingMessage

LoopbackProvider.subscribe(number, callback):IProvider

Register a virtual subscriber which receives messages to the matching number.

Arguments:

  • number: str: Subscriber phone number
  • callback: : A callback(OutgoingMessage) which handles the messages directed to the subscriber. The message object is augmented with the .reply(str) method which allows to send a reply easily!
def subscriber(message):
    print(message)  #-> OutgoingMessage('1', 'obey me')
    message.reply('got it')  # use the augmented reply method

provider = gateway.get_provider('lo')
provider.subscribe('+1', subscriber)  # register the subscriber

gateway.send('+1', 'obey me')

ForwardServerProvider, ForwardClientProvider

Source: smsframework/providers/forward/provider.py

A pair of providers to bind two application instances together:

  • ForwardClientProvider can be used to send and receive messages using a remote server as a proxy

  • ForwardServerProvider is the remote server which:

    • Gets outgoing messages from clients and loops them back to the gateway so they're sent with another provider
    • Hooks into the gateway and passes all incoming messages and statuses to the clients

Two providers are bound together using two pairs of receivers. You are not required to care about this :)

Remote errors will be transparently re-raised on the local host.

To support message receipt, include the necessary dependencies:

pip install smsframework[receiver,async]

ForwardClientProvider

Example setup:

from smsframework.providers import ForwardClientProvider

gw.add_provider('fwd', ForwardClientProvider, 
                server_url='http://sms.example.com/sms/fwd')

Configuration:

  • server_url: URL to ForwardServerProvider installed on a remote host. All outgoing messages will be sent through it instead.

ForwardServerProvider

Example setup:

from smsframework.providers import ForwardServerProvider

gw.add_provider(....)  # Default provider
gw.add_provider('fwd', ForwardServerProvider, clients=[
    'http://a.example.com/sms/fwd',
    'http://b.example.com/sms/fwd',
])

Configuration:

  • clients: List of URLs to ForwardClientProvider installed on remote hosts. All incoming messages and statuses will be forwarded to all specified clients.

Routing Server

If you want to forward only specific messages, you need to override the choose_clients method: given an object, which is either IncomingMessage or MessageStatus, it should return a list of client URLs the object should be forwarded to.

Example: send all messages to "a.example.com", and status reports to "b.example.com":

from smsframework import ForwardServerProvider
from smsframework.data import OutgoingMessage, MessageStatus

class RoutingProvider(ForwardServerProvider):
    def choose_clients(self, obj):
        if isinstance(obj, OutgoingMessage):
            return [ self.clients[0] ]
        else:
            return [ self.clients[1] ]
            
gw.add_provider(....)  # Default provider
gw.add_provider('fwd', RoutingProvider, clients=[
    'http://a.example.com/sms/fwd',
    'http://b.example.com/sms/fwd',
])

Async

If your Server is going to forward messages to multiple clients simultaneously, you will probably want this to happen in parallel.

Just install the asynctools dependency:

pip install smsframework[receiver,async]

Authentication

Both Client and Server support HTTP basic authentication in URLs:

http://user:password@a.example.com/sms/fwd

For requests. Server-side authentication is your responsibility ;)

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Bi-directional SMS gateway with pluggable providers

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