public
Description: A ruby gem for accessing the AMEE carbon calculator
Homepage:
Clone URL: git://github.com/Floppy/amee-ruby.git
amee-ruby / README
100644 108 lines (75 sloc) 4.354 kb
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
== AMEE-Ruby
 
A gem to provide a Ruby interface to the AMEE carbon calculator (http://amee.cc)
 
Licensed under the MIT license (See COPYING file for details)
 
Author: James Smith (james@floppy.org.uk / http://www.floppy.org.uk)
 
Homepage: http://github.com/Floppy/amee-ruby
 
Documentation: http://docs.github.com/Floppy/amee-ruby
 
== INSTALLATION
 
1) Enable gems from gemcutter, if you haven't already done so:
    > sudo gem install gemcutter
    > sudo gem tumble
 
2) Install gem
    > sudo gem install amee
 
== IMPORTANT CHANGES when upgrading beyond 2.0.25
 
If you are using the $amee connection in your Rails apps, this is now deprecated
and will be removed in future releases. See the "Rails" section below for details
of what you should use instead.
 
== USAGE
 
Currently, you can read DataCategories, DataItems and DataItemValues. See
examples/view_data_*.rb for simple usage examples. You can also get the list
of available Profiles, and create and delete them. See examples/list_profiles.rb
and examples/create_profile.rb for details. You can also load ProfileCategories,
and load, create and update ProfileItems.
 
The gem will use the AMEE JSON API if the JSON gem is installed on the local
system. Otherwise the XML API will be used.
 
== SUPPORT
                    Create Read Update Delete
DataCategories N Y N N
DataItems N Y N N
DataItemValues N Y N Y
Profile List - Y - -
Profiles Y - - Y
ProfileCategories - Y - -
 - drilldown - Y - -
ProfileItems Y Y Y Y
 
== INTERACTIVE SHELL
 
You can use the 'ameesh' app to interactively explore the AMEE data area. Run
'ameesh -u USERNAME -p PASSWORD -s SERVER' to try it out. Source code for this
tool is in bin/ameesh and lib/amee/shell.rb. Profiles are not accessible through
this interface yet.
 
== RAILS
 
This gem can also be used as a Rails plugin. You can either extract it into
vendor/plugins, or use the new-style config.gem command in environment.rb. For
example:
 
    config.gem "amee", :version => '>= 2.0.26'
 
If you copy amee.example.yml from the gem source directory to amee.yml in your
app's config directory, a persistent AMEE connection will be available from
AMEE::Rails#connection, which you can use anywhere. In your controllers, you can
also use the global_amee_connection function to access the same global connection.
 
    data = AMEE::Data::Category.root(global_amee_connection)
 
If you do not use this facility, you will have to create your own connection
objects and manage them yourself, which you can do using AMEE::Connection#new
 
There is a helper for ActiveRecord models which should be linked to an AMEE profile.
By adding:
 
    has_amee_profile
 
to your model, and by adding an amee_profile:string field to the model in the
database, an AMEE profile will be automatically created and destroyed with your
model. By overriding the function amee_save in your model, you can store data in
AMEE when your model is saved.
 
== CACHING
 
The AMEE::Connection object implements an optional cache for GET requests. This is
currently a versy simple implementation which caches the result of all GET requests
until a POST, PUT, or DELETE is executed, at which point the cache is cleared. To
enable caching, set the enable_caching parameter of AMEE::Connection.new to true.
Caching is disabled by default.
 
== UPGRADING TO VERSION > 2
 
There are a few changes to the API exposed by this gem for version 2. The main
ones are:
 
1) AMEE::Connection#new takes a hash of options instead of an explicit parameter list.
   Whereas before you would have used new(server, username, password, use_json, enable_cache, enable_debug)
   you would now use new(server, username, password, :format => :json, :enable_caching => true, :enable_debug => true)
 
2) Many get functions take a hash of options instead of explicit date and itemsPerPage parameters.
   get(... , :start_date => {your_date}, :itemsPerPage => 20)
 
3) total_amount_per_month functions have been replaced with total_amount. There are also
   total_amount_unit and total_amount_per_unit functions which give the units that the total
   amount is in.