Steve Kemp d0349a909f Significant comment updates. | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
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.travis | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
webhook | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
.travis.yml | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
LICENSE | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
README.md | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
rss2hook.go | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
sample.cfg | %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos |
This project is a self-hosted utility which will make HTTP POST requests to remote web-hooks when new items appear in an RSS feed.
I have a couple of webhooks in-place already which will take incoming HTTP submissions and "do stuff" with them, for example:
I also have a bunch of RSS feeds that I follow, typically these include github releases of projects. For example my git-host runs gitbucket so I subscribe to the release feed of that, to ensure I'm always up to date:
If you have a working golang setup you should be able to install this application via:
go get -u github.com/skx/rss2hook
go install github.com/skx/rss2hook
If you prefer you can fetch a binary from our release page. Currently there is only a binary for Linux (amd64) due to the use of cgo
in our dependencies.
There are two parts to the setup:
For the first create a configuration-file like so:
http://example.com/feed.rss = https://webhook.example.com/notify/me
(There is a sample configuration file sample.cfg which will demonstrate this more verbosely.)
You can use your favourite supervision tool to launch the deamon, but you can test interactively like so:
$ rss2hook -config ./sample.cfg
There is a simple webserver located beneath webhook/ which will listen upon http://localhost:8080, and dump any POST submission to the console.
You can launch it like so:
cd webhook/
go run webhook.go
Testing it via curl
would look like this:
$ curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
--request POST \
--data '{"username":"blah","password":"blah"}' \
http://localhost:8080/
The sample.cfg file will POST to this end-point so you can see how things work:
$ rss2hook --config=sample.cfg
~/.rss2hook/seen/
.Turning this into a SaaS project would be interesting. A simple setup would be very straight-forward to implement, however at a larger scale it would get more interesting:
Anyway it would be fun to implement, but I'm not sure there is a decent revenue model out there for it. Especially when you can wire up IFTTT or similar system to do the same thing.