Trufina No Longer Exists¶ ↑
It appears the Trufina service is no longer available (the website is down and the API is unresponsive). Unfortunately that renders this gem inoperable.
Trufina¶ ↑
The Trufina gem provides a DSL allowing you to easily interface with {Trufina.com}[http://www.trufina.com]‘s identity verification API.
Trufina provides an identity verification service, and this DSL basically lets you request verified information from the user (who provides that information directly to Trufina, and then uses their website to control permissions of who can access what parts of their personal data).
Requirements¶ ↑
Before you begin you’ll need to fill out some paperwork with Trufina and, after a bit of administrative mucking around, you’ll be given two important identifiers: a PID (Partner ID) and a PAK (Partner Authentication Key). Place these in your config/trufina.yml
file, replace the other defaults, and you’ll be good to go.
Installation¶ ↑
Getting the code on your system is as simple as
script/plugin install git://github.com/kdonovan/trufina.git
or
gem sources -a http://gems.github.com sudo gem install kdonovan-trufina # Add this to environment.rb config.gem 'kdonovan-trufina', :lib => 'trufina', :source => "http://gems.github.com"
Once you have the code, you’ll need to create a trufina.yml
file in your project’s config directory. If you don’t do this by hand, a template file will be created automatically the first time you load your application after installation. Trufina will raise a ConfigFileError until you fill out the config file with meaningful data.
Examples¶ ↑
Once installation has been completed, using the code itself is really easy – the most complicated step is understanding Trufina[http://www.trufina.com]‘s various flows. We’ll walk through an example:
# We'll skip it here for verbosity, but note that you can turn on debugging # to print out pretty versions of any XML sent or received. # Trufina::Config.debug = true
Say we have a user in our database for whom we want verified information. The first step is to establish a session key with Trufina so we can associate later responses with this request. This is done by sending them a PRT (Partner Request Token), which can be any arbitrary value. In a real app I’d probably use a user-id + timestamp combination, but for this demo we’ll use the random number 4.
Note that you can also specify what data you want access to (name, address, country of birth, etcetera), as well as any default values you may already know to prefill the form on the Trufina website. See Trufina.login_url or Trufina.login_request for more details, but the default is to request the user’s first and last name.
Trufina.login_url(4, :demo => true) # => http://staging.trufina.com/DemoPartnerLogin/DemoLogin/6ZEeENWWD8@K
You can now visit this URL to create an account for a fake user on Trufina[http://www.trufina.com]‘s demo server. When you’re done, you’ll be redirected to whatever you put as your success endpoint in trufina.yml
, and there will be a TLID (Temporary Login ID) appended. In my case it was 870. You have 15 minutes to use this TLID to access the information about the user Trufina has verified.
info = Trufina.login_info_request(870) info.data.present_and_verified # => {:name=>{:first=>"FIRSTNAME"}, {:last=>"LASTNAME"}} (or whatever names you entered on the staging server)
That completes the simplest use-case. Say we decide we want more information about the user, like their middle name. We send Trufina an access request, and if the user has already provided the information and given us permission we’ll get the info back immediately.
new_info = Trufina.access_request(info, {:name => [:middle]}) new_info.data.present_and_verified # => {:name=>{:middle=>"SomeMiddleName"}}
Note that here our demo user has already given Trufina permission to see all the name components, so we get the middle name back immediately. For a different component where Trufina needs to ask the user there’s no useful data in the response (the XML contains a “pending” node, but the gem doesn’t bother parsing it out).
Trufina.access_request(info, [:phone]).data.present_and_verified # => {}
In this case we would receive an AccessNotification to our servers once the user gave us permission to access the requested data, and at that point we’d be able to re-request the data with another Trufina.access_request call, for which the newly requested data would show up like the middle name did above.
Advanced Topics¶ ↑
Seed Info¶ ↑
Trufina.login_request (and therefore Trufina.login_url, which is just a wrapper) allows you to pass along seed data used to prepopulate the fields the user will encounter on Trufina.com (see Trufina::Elements::SeedInfoGroup for all options). Prepopulated data will be specified as the value of a :seed key in the options hash of either method. Example:
Trufina.login_request(4, :seed => {:name => {:first => 'Foo', :last => 'Bar'}})
Request Data¶ ↑
A number of the API calls allow you to supply a list of the data you’d like returned about the user in question. You may do this as follows:
Trufina.login_request(4, :requested => [:age, {:name => [:first, :middle, :last]}])
or
Trufina.access_request({:pur => 4, :prt => 4}, [:age, {:name => [:first, :middle, :last]}])
Note that an array item creates an empty node (e.g. <age/>) unless it’s a hash, in which case it creates a node named from the hash key containing and recurses into the hash value inside the node. That is to say,
:name => [:first, :middle, :last]
will generate something like:
<name> <first/> <middle/> <last/> </name>
which is exactly the format Trufina requires to indicate we want to receive the first and middle names of the specified user. Note that the gem does some additional work to hide irregularities of the Trufina API from the user (i.e. you), so the above code really renders:
<Name> <First/> <MiddleName/> <Surname/> </Name>
(meaning you don’t have to remember that Trufina randomly uses Surname, and breaks their convention by using MiddleName rather than simply Middle).
Rails Integration¶ ↑
Personally, I set up a controller dedicated to handling Trufina’s postbacks (Success, Failure, and Cancel) as well as their AccessNotification. If (as I’d suggest) you use the current_user
‘s ID as your PRT, then when a user wants to sign up with Trufina:
redirect_url = Trufina.login_url(current_user.id, :requested => REQUESTED_DATA, :seed => SEED_DATA)
The biggest gotcha is that Trufina only uses the PRT for the login_info_request / login_info_response messages – after that they use their own identifier (the PUR) to indicate which user a given response refers to, so you’ll need to store the PUR provided in the login_info_request somewhere and use that going forward. Your success action will end up looking something like this:
def success info = Trufina.login_info_request( params[:tlid ) user = User.find(info.prt) user.pur = info.pur ... end
Also, note that an AccessNotification will be sent immediately upon a new user’s registration with Trufina. You can just ignore any AccessNotification with an unknown PUR value, or it’s also possible to use the Trufina.info_request in response to this first AccessNotification and avoid using the login_info_response altogether.
Once you’ve verified the user, you just need to handle any AccessNotifications you may receive:
def handle_access_notification tnid = params[:trufina_access_notification][:tnid] info = Trufina.info_request( tnid ) user = User.find_by_pur( info.pur ) # Now take appropriate actions to handle user either revoking or adding # permissions for you to access certain subsets of their verified data. ... end
Unsupported functionality¶ ↑
-
Does not handle requesting comparisons or other request attributes
-
(Note that Trufina itself doesn’t support maxAge or timeframe yet)
-
API Version¶ ↑
This is compatible with the latest Trufina API version as of the creation date: Trufina API 1.0.4
Compatibility¶ ↑
The goal of this module is to be relatively framework agnostic. That being said, I’ve personally only tried to use it in conjunction with a Rails application. If you run into problems trying to use it elsewhere, well… patches happily accepted. :)
Copyright © 2009 Kali Donovan, released under the MIT license