Simple, ergonomic Rust wrapper for the TickTick Open API
First, register your application with the TickTick Developer Center:
To get started using the TickTick Open API, you will need to register your application and obtain a client ID and client secret. You can register your application by visiting the TickTick Developer Center. Once registered, you will receive a client ID and client secret which you will use to authenticate your requests.
Once you have registered your application, add ticks
to your project's Cargo.toml
:
cargo add ticks
To use the TickTick API, you must authorize your app at runtime. Let's talk about Authorization.
The TickTick API uses OAuth for authentication. Ticks handles most of the authentication for you, leaving only reading the API's HTTP OAuth response to you.
/// Get Authorization URL, this is the link the user must visit to allow our Application access to their account.
/// redirect_uri must be the same URL specified in the TickTick Developer Center.
let auth = Authorization::begin_auth(/* client_id */, /* redirect_uri */)?;
println!("Browse to: {:?}", auth.get_url());
/// Wait for response from TickTick's API. TickTick will send the required auth info over HTTP to the redirect_uri we specified.
let (access_code, state) = /* Get access_code & state from redirect_uri over HTTP */;
/// Get access token
let token = auth.finish_auth({client_secret}, code, state).await?;
/// Done! Create TickTick instance using AccessToken.
let ticktick = TickTick::new(token.clone())?;
For testing, you may want to set your redirect_uri to localhost
. To read the OAuth HTTP Response locally, try a TcpListener
let listener = TcpListener::bind("127.0.0.1:{port of redirect_uri}")?;
let (mut stream, _) = listener.accept()?;
let mut stream_reader = BufReader::new(&stream);
let mut response = String::new();
stream_reader.read_line(&mut response)?;
stream.write_all("HTTP/1.1 200 OK".as_bytes())?;
println!("Response {:?}", response);
The docs can be found at https://docs.rs/ticks/latest.