A Node.js SDK for the open source jambonz CPaaS platform. Node.js applications can use this library to respond to jambonz webhooks and to make REST API calls to a jambonz platform.
Note: One suggested way to get up and running with this Node SDK is to use the
npx create-jambonz-app
command, which will scaffold out a jambonz application for you using this SDK.
To respond to webhooks, you will need a lightweight http server. An example is shown below using express.
const {WebhookResponse} = require('@jambonz/node-client');
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
app.use(express.json());
app.post('/my-app', (req, res) => {
const jambonz = new WebhookResponse();
jambonz
.pause({length: 1.5})
.say({
text: 'Good morning. This is a simple test of text to speech functionality. That is all. Goodbye',
synthesizer: {
vendor: 'google',
language: 'en-US'
}
});
res.status(200).json(app);
});
app.listen(port, () => {
logger.info(`listening at http://localhost:${port}`);
});
See here for information on the available verbs you can use in a jambonz application, and for their associated properties.
If your jambonz server includes a Jambonz-Signature header on webhook requests, you can verify that the request was signed by jambonz using your webhook secret as follows:
const {WebhookResponse} = require('@jambonz/node-client');
if (process.env.WEBHOOK_SECRET) {
app.use(WebhookResponse.verifyJambonzSignature(process.env.WEBHOOK_SECRET));
}
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
app.use(express.json());
/* make sure this comes after the body has been converted to json */
if (process.env.WEBHOOK_SECRET) {
app.use(WebhookResponse.verifyJambonzSignature(process.env.WEBHOOK_SECRET));
}
/* if we get here we know the request was signed with our webhook secret */
app.post('/my-app', (req, res) => { ...})
To use the REST API you need to know your account sid and api key (both of which you can view in the jambonz portal). You generate a REST client as shown below.
const client = require('@jambonz/node-client')(<my-account-sid>, <my-api-key>, {
baseUrl: http://<my-jambonz-sbc>
});
All of the above parameters are required (account sid, api key, and baseUrl);
const sid = await client.calls.create({
from: '16172223333',
to: {
type: 'phone',
number: '15083084808'
},
call_hook: 'http://myurl.com/myapp-webhook',
call_status_hook: 'http://myurl.com/call-status'
});
See here for further details.
To update a call in progress -- for example to mute/unmute, hangup the call etc -- you need to know the call sid. Typically you would get this from a webhook sent from an existing call event.
// play a whisper prompt to one party on the call
await client.calls.update(<my-call-sid>, {
whisper: {
verb: 'say',
text: 'You have 30 seconds remaining on this call.'
}
}
});
See here for further details.
See here for a full-featured example application built using this API.
This project is under active development and is currently very much pre-beta.