Messagebird tap class.
Built with the Meltano Singer SDK.
catalog
state
discover
about
stream-maps
schema-flattening
Setting | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
api_key | True | None | The token to authenticate against the API service. Test keys are not supported for Conversations see https://support.messagebird.com/hc/en-us/articles/360000670709-What-is-the-difference-between-a-live-key-and-a-test-key- |
start_date | False | now -3 years | When to pull records starting at what date. ISO8601 format of date, defaults to 3 years ago. |
stream_maps | False | None | Config object for stream maps capability. For more information check out Stream Maps. |
stream_map_config | False | None | User-defined config values to be used within map expressions. |
flattening_enabled | False | None | 'True' to enable schema flattening and automatically expand nested properties. |
flattening_max_depth | False | None | The max depth to flatten schemas. |
A full list of supported settings and capabilities is available by running: tap-messagebird --about
Install from PyPi:
pipx install tap-messagebird
This Singer tap will automatically import any environment variables within the working directory's
.env
if the --config=ENV
is provided, such that config values will be considered if a matching
environment variable is set either in the terminal context or in the .env
file.
Note that Conversations do not work without a Production API key
You can easily run tap-messagebird
by itself or in a pipeline using Meltano.
tap-messagebird --version
tap-messagebird --help
tap-messagebird --config CONFIG --discover > ./catalog.json
Follow these instructions to contribute to this project.
pipx install poetry
poetry install
Create tests within the tap_messagebird/tests
subfolder and
then run:
poetry run pytest
You can also test the tap-messagebird
CLI interface directly using poetry run
:
poetry run tap-messagebird --help
Testing with Meltano
Note: This tap will work in any Singer environment and does not require Meltano. Examples here are for convenience and to streamline end-to-end orchestration scenarios.
Next, install Meltano (if you haven't already) and any needed plugins:
# Install meltano
pipx install meltano
# Initialize meltano within this directory
cd tap-messagebird
meltano install
Now you can test and orchestrate using Meltano:
# Test invocation:
meltano invoke tap-messagebird --version
# OR run a test `elt` pipeline:
meltano elt tap-messagebird target-jsonl
See the dev guide for more instructions on how to use the SDK to develop your own taps and targets.