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DeviseInvitable

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This fork adds a “single_invitor” option. In the normal devise_invitable gem, if an invite is not yet accepted and a different user invites the same email address, that user becomes the “invited_by” value instead of the original. In cases where invites are like currency, you want the first person to invite someone to always remain the invitor.

CURRENTLY UNDER DEVELOPMENT. DON’T USE YET

It adds support to devise for send invitations by email (it requires to be authenticated) and accept the invitation setting the password.

DeviseInvitable currently only support Rails 3, if you want to use it with Rails 2.3 you must install version 0.2.3

Installation for Rails ~> 3.0 and Devise ~> 1.2

Install DeviseInvitable gem, it will also install dependencies (such as devise and warden):

gem install devise_invitable

Add DeviseInvitable to your Gemfile (and Devise if you weren’t using them):

gem 'devise',           '~> 1.2.0'
gem 'devise_invitable', '~> 0.4.0'

Automatic installation

Run the following generator to add DeviseInvitable’s configuration option in the Devise configuration file (config/initializers/devise.rb):

rails generate devise_invitable:install

When you are done, you are ready to add DeviseInvitable to any of your Devise models using the following generator:

rails generate devise_invitable MODEL

Replace MODEL by the class name you want to add DeviseInvitable, like User, Admin, etc. This will add the :invitable flag to your model’s Devise modules. The generator will also create a migration file (if your ORM support them). Continue reading this file to understand exactly what the generator produces and how to use it.

Manual installation

Follow the walkthrough for Devise and after it’s done, follow this walkthrough.

Add :invitable to the devise call in your model (we’re assuming here you already have a User model with some Devise modules):

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  devise :database_authenticatable, :confirmable, :invitable
end

Add t.invitable to your Devise model migration:

create_table :users do
  ...
  t.invitable
  ...
end
add_index :users, :invitation_token

or for a model that already exists, define a migration to add DeviseInvitable to your model:

change_table :users do |t|
  t.string   :invitation_token, :limit => 60
  t.datetime :invitation_sent_at
  t.datetime :invitation_accepted_at
  t.index    :invitation_token
end

# Allow null encrypted_password
change_column_null :users, :encrypted_password, true
# Allow null password_salt (add it if you are using Devise's encryptable module)
change_column_null :users, :password_salt, true

Model configuration

DeviseInvitable adds some new configuration options:

  • invite_for: The period the generated invitation token is valid, after this period, the invited resource won’t be able to accept the invitation. When invite_for is 0 (the default), the invitation won’t expire.

You can set this configuration option in the Devise initializer as follow:

# ==> Configuration for :invitable
# The period the generated invitation token is valid, after
# this period, the invited resource won't be able to accept the invitation.
# When invite_for is 0 (the default), the invitation won't expire.
# config.invite_for = 2.weeks

or directly as parameters to the devise method:

devise :database_authenticatable, :confirmable, :invitable, :invite_for => 2.weeks
  • invitation_limit: The number of invitations users can send. The default value of nil means users can send as many invites as they want. A setting of 0 means they can’t send invitations. A setting n > 0 means they can send n invitations.

  • invite_key: The key to be used to check existing users when sending an invitation. The key must be an unique field. The default value is looking for users by email.

  • validate_on_invite: force a record to be valid before being actually invited.

  • resend_invitation: resend invitation if user with invited status is invited again. Enabled by default.

For more details, see config/initializers/devise.rb (after you invoked the “devise_invitable:install” generator described above).

Configuring views

All the views are packaged inside the gem. If you’d like to customize the views, invoke the following generator and it will copy all the views to your application:

rails generate devise_invitable:views

You can also use the generator to generate scoped views:

rails generate devise_invitable:views users

Please refer to Devise’s README for more information about views.

Configuring controllers

To change the controller’s behavior, create a controller that inherits from Devise::InvitationsController. The available methods are: new, create, edit, and update. You should read the original controllers source before editing any of these actions. Your controller might now look something like this:

class Users::InvitationsController < Devise::InvitationsController
  def update
    if this
      redirect_to root_path
    else
      super
    end
  end
end

Now just tell Devise that you want to use your controller, the controller above is ‘users/invitations’, so our routes.rb would have this line:

devise_for :users, :controllers => { :invitations => 'users/invitations' }

be sure that you generate the views and put them into the controller that you generated, so for this example it would be:

rails generate devise_invitable:views users/invitations

Usage

Send an invitation

To send an invitation to a user, use the invite! class method. :email must be present in the parameters hash. You can also include other attributes in the hash. The record will not be validated.

User.invite!(:email => "[email protected]", :name => "John Doe")
# => an invitation email will be sent to [email protected]

If you want to create the invitation but not send it, you can set skip_invitation to true.

User.invite!(:email => "[email protected]", :name => "John Doe") do |u|
  u.skip_invitation = true
end
# => the record will be created, but the invitation email will not be sent

You can add :skip_invitation to attributes hash if skip_invitation is added to attr_accessible.

User.invite!(:email => "[email protected]", :name => "John Doe", :skip_invitation => true)
# => the record will be created, but the invitation email will not be sent

Accept an invitation

To accept an invitation with a token use the accept_invitation! class method. :invitation_token must be present in the parameters hash. You can also include other attributes in the hash.

User.accept_invitation!(:invitation_token => params[:invitation_token], :password => "ad97nwj3o2", :name => "John Doe")

Callbacks

A callback event is fired before and after an invitation is accepted (User#accept_invitation!). For example, in your resource model you can add:

after_invitation_accepted :email_invited_by

def email_invited_by
   # ...
end

The callbacks support all options and arguments available to the standard callbacks provided by AR.

Integration in a Rails application

Since the invitations controller take care of all the creation/acceptation of an invitation, in most cases you wouldn’t call the invite! and accept_invitation! methods directly. Instead, in your views, put a link to new_user_invitation_path or new_invitation_path(:user) or even /users/invitation/new to prepare and send an invitation (to a user in this example).

After an invitation is created and sent, the inviter will be redirected to after_invite_path_for(resource_name), which is stored path or the same path as after_sign_in_path_for by default.

After an invitation is accepted, the invitee will be redirected to after_accept_path_for(resource), which is the same path as after_sign_in_path_for by default. If you want to override the path, override invitations controller and define after_accept_path_for method. This is useful in the common case that a user is invited to a specific location in your application. More on Devise’s README, “Controller filters and helpers” section.

The invitation email includes a link to accept the invitation that looks like this: /users/invitation/accept?invitation_token=abcd123. When clicked, the invited must set a password in order to accept its invitation. Note that if the invitation_token is not present or not valid, the invited is redirected to after_sign_out_path_for(resource_name).

The controller sets the invited_by_id attribute for the new user to the current user. This will let you easily keep track of who invited who.

Controller filter

InvitationsController uses authenticate_inviter! filter to restrict who can send invitations. You can override this method in your ApplicationController.

Default behavior requires authentication of the same resource as the invited one. For example, if your model User is invitable, it will allow all authenticated users to send invitations to other users.

You would have a User model which is configured as invitable and an Admin model which is not. If you want to allow only admins to send invitations, simply overwrite the authenticate_inviter! method as follow:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
protected
  def authenticate_inviter!
    authenticate_admin!(:force => true)
  end
end

And include DeviseInvitable::Inviter module into Admin model:

class Admin < ActiveRecord::Base
  devise :database_authenticatable, :validatable
  include DeviseInvitable::Inviter
end

Has many invitations

If you want to get all records invited by a resource, you should define has_many association in the model allowed to send invitations.

For the default behavior, define it like this:

has_many :invitations, :class_name => self.class.to_s, :as => :invited_by

For the previous example, where admins send invitations to users, define it like this:

has_many :invitations, :class_name => 'User', :as => :invited_by

I18n

DeviseInvitable uses flash messages with I18n with the flash keys :send_instructions, :invitation_token_invalid and :updated. To customize your app, you can modify the generated locale file:

en:
  devise:
    invitations:
      send_instructions: 'An invitation email has been sent to %{email}.'
      invitation_token_invalid: 'The invitation token provided is not valid!'
      updated: 'Your password was set successfully. You are now signed in.'

You can also create distinct messages based on the resource you’ve configured using the singular name given in routes:

en:
  devise:
    invitations:
      user:
        send_instructions: 'A new user invitation has been sent to %{email}.'
        invitation_token_invalid: 'Your invitation token is not valid!'
        updated: 'Welcome on board! You are now signed in.'

The DeviseInvitable mailer uses the same pattern as Devise to create mail subject messages:

en:
  devise:
    mailer:
      invitation_instructions:
        subject: 'You got an invitation!'
        user_subject: 'You got a user invitation!'

Take a look at the generated locale file (in config/locales/devise_invitable.en.yml) to check all available messages.

Other ORMs

DeviseInvitable supports ActiveRecord and Mongoid, like Devise.

Contributors

Check them all at:

github.com/scambra/devise_invitable/contributors

Special thanks to rymai for the Rails 3 support, his fork was a great help.

Note on Patches/Pull Requests

  • Fork the project.

  • Make your feature addition or bug fix.

  • Add tests for it. This is important so I don’t break it in a future version unintentionally.

  • Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)

  • Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.

Copyright © 2009 Sergio Cambra. See LICENSE for details.

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An invitation strategy for devise

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