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Twilio Functions Utils

About

This lib was created with the aim of simplifying the use of serverless Twilio, reducing the need to apply frequent try-catches and improving context management, making it no longer necessary to return the callback() method in all functions.

How it works

useInjection

The useInjection method takes two parameters. The first to apply as a handler and the last is an object of configuration options.

[useInjection] Options

Can contain providers that will be defined, which act as use cases to perform internal actions in the handler function through the "this" method.

You can pass validateToken equal true too, to force Token validation using Twilio Flex Token Validator

useInjection(yourFunction,
  {
    providers: { create, remove },
    validateToken: true
  }
);

When using Token Validator, the Request body must contain a valid Token from Twilio.

// Event
{
  Token: "Twilio-Token-Here"
}

Response

The responses coming from the function destined to the handler must be returned as an instance of Response.

Response receives a string and a number (status code):

return new Response('Your pretty answer.', 200);

There are two failure response models, BadRequest and NotFound. Its use follows the same model.

const notFound = new NotFoundError('Your error message here.');
const badRequest = new BadRequestError('Your error message here.');

TwiMLResponse

There is a proper response template to use with the TwiML format:

const twimlVoice = new Twilio.twiml
  .VoiceResponse();

const enqueueVoice = twimlVoice
  .enqueue({
    action,
    workflowSid,
  })
  .task('{}');

return new TwiMLResponse(twimlVoice, 201)

Install

npm install twilio-functions-utils

Usage

IMPORTANT TO USE CONVENTIONAL FUNCTIONS

  function yourFunctionName() {
    // ...
  }

With arrow functions it doesn't work as expected as 'this' cannot be injected correctly..


// File: assets/create.private.js

/**
 * @param { object } event
 * @this { {
 * client: import('twilio').Twilio,
 * env: {
 *      TWILIO_WORKFLOW_SID: string,
 *      DOMAIN_NAME: string
 * } } }
 * @returns { Promise<unknown> }
 */
exports.create = async function (event) {
  // Here you can acess  Twilio Client as client and Context as env (so you can get env vars).
  const { client, env } = this

  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    const random = Math.random();

    if (random >= 0.5) {
      return resolve({ sucess: 'Resolved' });
    }
  
    return reject(new Error('Unresolved'));
  });
};
// File: functions/create.js

const { useInjection, Response } = require('twilio-functions-utils');
const { create } = require(Runtime.getAssets()['/create.js'].path)

/**
 * @param { object } event
 * @this { {
 * request: object,
 * cookies: object,
 * env: {
 *      TWILIO_WORKFLOW_SID: string,
 *      DOMAIN_NAME: string
 * },
 * providers: {
 *      create: create,
 * } } }
 * @returns { Promise<unknown> }
 */
async function createAction(event) {
  // You can perform all your "controller" level actions, as you have access to the request headers and cookies.
  const { cookies, request, env } = this

  // Then just call the providers you provided to handler by using useInjection.
  const providerResult = await this.providers.create(event)

  // Just put it on a Response object and you are good to go!
  return new Response(providerResult, 201);
}

exports.handler = useInjection(createAction, {
  providers: {
    create,
  },
  validateToken: true, // When using Token Validator, the Request body must contain a valid Token from Twilio.
});

Testing with useMock

The Twilio Serverless structure make it hard for testing sometimes. So this provides a method that works perfectly with useInjection ready functions. The useMock act like useInjection but mocking some required fragments as getAssets and getFunctions.

Your files structures must be as:

| /root
| - package.json
| - src
| -- functions
| -- assets|

or:

| /root
| - package.json
| - functions
| - assets

Exports your function:

async function functionToBeTested(event) {
  const something = await this.providers.myCustomProvider(event)
  return Response(something)
}

const handler = useInjection(functionToBeTested, {
  providers: {
    myCustomProvider,
  },
});

module.exports = { functionToBeTested, handler }; // <--

You always need to import the twilio.mock for Response Twilio Global object on your testing files begining. (Required)

require('twilio-functions-utils/lib/twilio.mock');

Use Twilio Functions Utils useMock to do the hard job and just write your tests with the generated function.

/* global describe, it, expect */

require('twilio-functions-utils/lib/twilio.mock');

const { useMock, Response } = require('twilio-functions-utils');
const { functionToBeTested } = require('../../functions/functionToBeTested'); // <-- Import here!

// Create the test function from the function to be tested
const fn = useMock(functionToBeTested, {
  providers: {
    myCustomProvider: async (sid) => ({ sid }), // Mock the providers implementation.
  },
});

describe('Function functionToBeTested', () => {
  it('if {"someValue": true}', async () => {
    const request = { TaskSid: '1234567', TaskAttributes: '{"someValue": true}' };

    const res = await fn(request);

    expect(res).toBeInstanceOf(Response);
    expect(res.body).not.toEqual(request);
    expect(res.body).toEqual({ sid: '1234567' });
  });
});

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