Vacuum is a Ruby wrapper to Amazon Product Advertising API 5.0. The API provides programmatic access to query product information on the Amazon marketplaces.
Cart Form functionality is not covered by this gem but is a primary focus on carriage gem
You need to register first to use the API.
Create a request with your marketplace credentials. Set the marketplace by passing its two-letter country code.
request = Vacuum.new(marketplace: 'US',
access_key: '<ACCESS_KEY>',
secret_key: '<SECRET_KEY>',
partner_tag: '<PARTNER_TAG>')
You can now access the API using the available operations.
response = request.search_items(title: 'lean startup')
puts response.to_h
Create a persistent connection to make multiple requests.
request.persistent
Refer to the API docs for more detailed information.
Given a BrowseNodeId, the GetBrowseNodes
operation returns details about the specified browse node, like name, children and ancestors, depending on the resources specified in the request. The names and browse node IDs of the children and ancestor browse nodes are also returned. GetBrowseNodes
enables you to traverse the browse node hierarchy to find a browse node.
request.get_browse_nodes(
browse_node_ids: ['283155', '3040'],
resources: ['BrowseNodes.Ancestor', 'BrowseNodes.Children']
)
Given an Item identifier, the GetItems
operation returns the item attributes, based on the resources specified in the request.
request.get_items(
item_ids: ['B0199980K4', 'B000HZD168', 'B01180YUXS', 'B00BKQTA4A'],
resources: ['Images.Primary.Small', 'ItemInfo.Title', 'ItemInfo.Features',
'Offers.Summaries.HighestPrice' , 'ParentASIN']
)
Given an ASIN, the GetVariations
operation returns a set of items that are the same product, but differ according to a consistent theme, for example size and color. These items which differ according to a consistent theme are called variations. A variation is a child ASIN. The parent ASIN is an abstraction of the children items. For example, a shirt is a parent ASIN and parent ASINs cannot be sold. A child ASIN would be a blue shirt, size 16, sold by MyApparelStore. This child ASIN is one of potentially many variations. The ways in which variations differ are called dimensions.
request.get_variations(
asin: 'B00422MCUS',
resources: ['ItemInfo.Title', 'VariationSummary.Price.HighestPrice',
'VariationSummary.Price.LowestPrice',
'VariationSummary.VariationDimension']
)
The SearchItems
operation searches for items on Amazon based on a search query. The API returns up to ten items per search request.
request.search_items(keywords: 'harry potter')
Consume a response by parsing it into a Ruby hash.
response.to_h
You can also #dig
into this hash.
response.dig('ItemsResult', 'Items')
Write requests and reponses to a logger using the logging feature of the HTTP gem under the hood:
require 'logger'
logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
request.use(logging: {logger: logger})
You can extend Vacuum with a custom parser. Just swap the original with a class or module that responds to .parse
.
response.parser = MyParser
response.parse
If no custom parser is set, Vacuum::Response#parse
delegates to #to_h
.
If you are using VCR to test an app that accesses the API, you can use the custom VCR matcher of Vacuum to stub requests.
require 'vacuum/matcher'
# in your test
VCR.insert_cassette('cassette_name',
match_requests_on: [Vacuum::Matcher])
In RSpec, use the :paapi
metadata.
require 'vacuum/matcher'
# in your test
it 'queries Amazon', :paapi do
end
Clone the repo and install dependencies.
bundle install
Tests and Rubocop should now pass as-is.
bundle exec rake
By default, the tests stub requests. Use the RECORD
env var to record new interactions.
RECORD=true bundle exec rake test
You can set the LIVE
env var to run all tests against live data.
LIVE=true bundle exec rake test
In either case, add actual API credentials to a locales.yml
file under test
.