A native Braintree client library for Elixir.
Add braintree to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[{:braintree, "~> 0.9"}]
end
Once that is configured you are all set. Braintree is a library, not an
application, but it does rely on hackney
, which must be started. For Elixir
versions < 1.4 you'll need to include it in the list of applications:
def application do
[applications: [:braintree]]
end
Within your application you will need to configure the merchant id and
authorization keys. You do not want to put this information in your
config.exs
file! Either put it in a {prod,dev,test}.secret.exs
file which is
sourced by config.exs
, or read the values in from the environment:
config :braintree,
environment: :sandbox,
master_merchant_id: {:system, "BRAINTREE_MASTER_MERCHANT_ID"},
merchant_id: {:system, "BRAINTREE_MERCHANT_ID"},
public_key: {:system, "BRAINTREE_PUBLIC_KEY"},
private_key: {:system, "BRAINTREE_PRIVATE_KEY"}
Furthermore, the environment defaults to :sandbox
, so you'll want to configure
it with :production
in prod.exs
.
You may optionally pass directly those configuration keys to all functions performing an API call. In that case, those keys will be used to perform the call.
You can optionally configure Hackney options with:
config :braintree,
http_options: [
timeout: 8000, # default, in milliseconds
recv_timeout: 5000 # default, in milliseconds
]
The online documentation for Ruby/Java/Python etc. will give you a general idea of the modules and available functionality. Where possible the namespacing has been preserved.
The CRUD functions for each action module break down like this:
alias Braintree.Customer
alias Braintree.ErrorResponse, as: Error
case Customer.create(%{company: "Whale Corp"}) do
{:ok, %Customer{} = customer} -> do_stuff_with_customer(customer)
{:error, %Error{} = error} -> do_stuff_with_error(error)
end
Search params are constructed with a fairly complex structure of maps. There isn't a DSL provided, so queries must be constructed by hand. For example, to search for a customer:
search_params = %{
first_name: %{is: "Jenna"},
last_name: %{
starts_with: "Smith",
contains: "ith",
is_not: "Smithsonian"
},
email: %{ends_with: "gmail.com"}
}
{:ok, customers} = Braintree.Customer.search(search_params)
Or, to search for pending credit card verifications within a particular dollar amount:
search_params = %{
amount: %{
min: "10.0",
max: "15.0"
},
status: ["approved", "pending"]
}
{:ok, verifications} = Braintree.CreditCardVerification.search(search_params)
You'll need a Braintree sandbox account to run the integration tests. Also, be sure that your account has Duplicate Transaction Checking disabled.
In order to test the merchant account features, your sandbox account needs to have a master merchant account and it needs to be added to your environment variables (only needed in test).
Your environment needs to have the following:
- Add-ons with ids: "bronze", "silver" and "gold"
- Plans with ids: "starter", "business"
- "business" plan needs to include the following add-ons: "bronze" and "silver"
PayPal testing uses the mocked API flow, which requires linking a sandbox PayPal account. You can accomplish that by following the directions for linked paypal testing.
MIT License, see LICENSE.txt for details.