cylon/examples/salesforce/salesforce.markdown

1.5 KiB

Sales Force

First, let's import Cylon:

var Cylon = require('../..');

Now that we have Cylon imported, we can start defining our robot

Cylon.robot({

Let's define the connections and devices:

  connections: {
    sfcon: {
      adaptor: 'force',
      sfuser: process.env.SF_USERNAME,
      sfpass: process.env.SF_SECURITY_TOKEN,
      orgCreds: {
        clientId: process.env.SF_CLIENT_ID,
        clientSecret: process.env.SF_CLIENT_SECRET,
        redirectUri: 'http://localhost:3000/oauth/_callback'
      }
    }
  },

  devices: {
    salesforce: { driver: 'force' }
  },

Now that Cylon knows about the necessary hardware we're going to be using, we'll tell it what work we want to do:

  work: function(my) {
    my.salesforce.on('start', function() {
      my.salesforce.subscribe('/topic/SpheroMsgOutbound', function(data) {
        var msg = "Sphero: " + data.sobject.Sphero_Name__c + ",";
        msg += "Bucks: " + data.sobject.Bucks__c + ",";
        msg += "SM_Id: " + data.sobject.Id;

        console.log(msg);
      });
    });

    var i = 0;

    every((2).seconds(), function() {
      var data = JSON.stringify({
        spheroName: "" + my.name,
        bucks: "" + i
      });

      my.salesforce.push('SpheroController', 'POST', data);
    });
  }

Now that our robot knows what work to do, and the work it will be doing that hardware with, we can start it:

}).start();