zotero

Zotero API client

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README

Zotero-Node

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A Zotero API client package for Node.js. This package tries to make it as easy as possible to bootstrap a Zotero client application in Node.js; it comes with hardly any runtime dependencies and provides four simple abstractions to interact with Zotero: Client, Library, Message, Stream.

Clients handle the HTTPS connection to a Zotero data server, observing any rate-limiting directives issued by the server; you can configure settings (like API versions, default headers etc.) for each Client. Each Library represents a Zotero user or group library and is associated with a Client instance; a Library offers many convenience methods to make it easy to construct Zotero API requests. Each request and the corresponding response are then encapsulated in a Message instance, wich provides accessors and an extendable body parser collection to handle the various formats supported by Zotero. The Stream class, finally, uses a WebSocket connection to access the Zotero Streaming API, manages the subscription list locally, and automatically tries to re-open prematurely closed connections.

Quickstart

Install the NPM package:

$ npm install zotero

And:

var zotero = require('zotero');

Now you can use the zotero.Client and zotero.Library constructors; the latter is also aliased to the zotero namespace. Let's access the Library of Zotero's public user:

var lib = zotero({ user: '475425' });

When creating a Library you can pass-in a Client instance using the client property; if you don't, a default Client will be created for you. You can access the client through the library:

> // The default HTTP headers used by the client
> lib.client.options.headers;
{ 'Zotero-API-Version': '3', 'User-Agent': 'zotero-node/0.0.1' }

> // Let's make the client re-use the TCP connection to the server
> lib.client.persist = true;
> lib.client.options.headers['Connection'];
'keep-alive'

To send requests to Zotero you can now use Library#get(path, options, callback), or use the convenience methods baked into Zotero-Node:

> lib.items();
// Will call /users/475425/items

> lib.items.top({ limit: 3 })
// Will call /users/475425/items/top?limit=3

> lib.items('KWENT2ZM', { format: 'csljson' });
// Will call /users/475425/items/KWENT2ZM?format=csljson

And so on; all valid Zotero API paths can be created this way (but you can also use the #get method with any path yourself). All of these path methods allow you to pass options which will be added as URL parameters. The methods will return a Message instance; at that moment, the Message will only contain the HTTP request which has not been sent yet, allowing you to make alterations, set event handlers and so on. You can also pass a callback function to the request methods, which will receive the Message instance when the response has been received and parsed.

If you just want to quickly print information about a message, pass-in zotero.print as the callback. It will print out information like this:

> lib.items('KWENT2ZM', { format: 'csljson' }, zotero.print);

zotero:node Path:     /users/475425/items/KWENT2ZM?format=csljson +0ms
zotero:node Status:   200 +2ms
zotero:node Type:     json +1ms
zotero:node Headers:  {"date":"Thu, 26 Jun 2014 10:36:07 GMT","server":"Apache/2.2.15 (CentOS)","zotero-api-version":"2","content-length":"148","connection":"close","content-type":"application/vnd.citationstyles.csl+json"} +0ms
zotero:node Content:  {"items":[{"id":"392648/KWENT2ZM","type":"webpage","title":"Zotero | Home","URL":"http://staging.zotero.net/","accessed":{"raw":"2011-06-28"}}]} +0ms

Message Parsing

Zotero-Node was written with the Zotero API v3 in mind and, by default, will parse JSON responses automatically. Contents are accessible in the message.data property once the response has been received. Other content-types will be saved as strings using the appropriate encoding. Having said that, it is very easy to add your own message parsers to Zotero-Node, by adding them to zotero.Messages.parsers. For instance, we could add a parser for Atom responses like this:

var zotero = require('zotero');
var xml2js = require('xml2js').parseString;

zotero.Message.parsers.atom = function (data, callback) {
  return xml2js(data.toString(this.encoding), callback);
};

Now, if you make a call that returns an Atom feed, it will be parsed automatically:

lib.items.top({ format: 'atom', limit: 2 }, function (error, message) {
  if (error) return console.log(error.message);
  console.dir(message.data.feed);
});

Stream API

Zotero-Node supports the Zotero Stream API through zotero.Stream. To create a single-key stream, simply pass your Zotero API key to the constructor:

var stream = new zotero.Stream({ apiKey: 'your-zotero-api-key' });

You can then register handlers for all events (e.g., topicUpdated, topicRemoved, topicAdded, subscriptionsCreated, etc.):

stream.on('topicUpdated', function (data) {
  console.log(data.topic);
  console.log(data.version);
});

If you create a stream without a key, it will default to a multi-key stream. Once the stream has been established, you can manage your subscriptions using the .subscribe and .unsubscribe methods.

(new zotero.Stream())
  .on('connected', function () {
    this.subscribe([
      { apiKey: 'abc123' },
      { apiKey: 'efd456', topics: [ '/users/12345' ] }
    ]);
  });

Alternatively, you can add your subscriptions even before the stream has been connected: the respective createSubscriptions message will be sent automatically once the connection has been established.

You can also create a multi-key stream for a given Zotero user/group library, by using the .stream method on the library instance. This will automatically create the stream and subscribe to the current library, using the library's API key (if present):

zotero({ user: '475425' })
  .stream(function (error, stream) {

    // This will set up a stream and subscribe to
    // the topic '/users/475425'. The callback will
    // be called once the subscription has been
    // accepted (or if there was an error).

  });

Each stream keeps track of its subscriptions locally; call stream.subscriptions.all to see your current subscriptions.

You can close a stream at any time by calling stream.close(); if the stream is closed unexpectedly, the stream will automatically wait for the retry interval (sent by the Zotero API with the connected event) and then try to re-connect. Once the connection is established, the stream will attempt to restore your previous subscriptions.

Rate-Limiting

Zotero-Node observes rate-limit directives by default, so you should not have to worry about them. The headers of each response are parsed by the client; if there are any Retry-After or Backoff headers, the client will switch into limited mode; all messages you send in limited mode, will be held back, until the limited period has expired.

If you want to check the client's state, you can do so by calling client.state.limited – this will return the time until the limited period will be expired; if limited is zero, the client is in normal mode.

If you want to force the client to send messages in limited mode, you can do so by calling client.flush(true) with the force flag set to true.

What about promises?

Zotero-Node uses standard Node.js style callbacks out of the box, but you can easily promisify the API. Simply call zotero.promisify passing in the Promise implementation's promisify variant of your choice.

// For Bluebird:
zotero.promisify(Promise.promisify.bind(Promise));

// For Q:
zotero.promisify(Q.denodeify.bind(Q));

This will promisify the Client's request method; as a result Client#get and all Library getters will return a Promise instead of a Message object. If you want to access the message object before it is sent, you can still do so: all messages are stored in client.messages before they are sent; messages are added at the start of the list, so your last message will always be at index zero in the queue.

// Using Bluebird promises, fetch the top 5 items of a library:
var promise = lib.items.top({ limit: 5 });

// If you need to modify the message before it is sent, you
// can access it at the start of the client's message queue.
lib.client.messages[0].req.getHeader('Zotero-API-Version');

// Handle the API response or errors when the promise is
// resolved or rejected:
promise
  .then(function (message) {
    // Handle the Zotero API response...
  })
  .catch(function (error) {
    // Handle any errors...
  });

Note that the Stream API also uses promieses now:

lib
  .stream()
  .then(function (stream) {
    // ...
  });

You can undo the promisification at any time by calling:

zotero.promisify.restore();

License

Copyright 2014-2015 Zotero. All rights reserved.

Zotero-Node is licensed under the AGPL3 license. See LICENSE for details.