Remi Jannel 65e8f505d5 Added support for the new Payout and RecipientTransfer objects
The Transfer object used to represent all movements of funds in Stripe. It
split in three resources:
- Transfer: this describes the movement of funds between Stripe accounts
and is specific to Stripe Connect.
- Payout: this describes the movement of funds from a Stripe account to a
bank account, debit card or any future payout method.
- RecipientTransfer: this describes the movement of funds from a Stripe
account to a Recipient's card or Bank Account. This is here for legacy
reasons and can only be accessed from an expanded BalanceTransaction.

This change is behind an API version so old API versions would still use
the Transfer object for everything while new API version would see the
split.

This applies beyond the new object as some properties/methods are removed
from Transfer and other properties are renamed on other objects.
2017-03-31 14:03:56 -04:00

260 lines
8.4 KiB
Ruby

require "cgi"
module Stripe
module Util
def self.objects_to_ids(h)
case h
when APIResource
h.id
when Hash
res = {}
h.each { |k, v| res[k] = objects_to_ids(v) unless v.nil? }
res
when Array
h.map { |v| objects_to_ids(v) }
else
h
end
end
def self.object_classes
@object_classes ||= {
# data structures
'list' => ListObject,
# business objects
'account' => Account,
'alipay_account' => AlipayAccount,
'apple_pay_domain' => ApplePayDomain,
'application_fee' => ApplicationFee,
'balance' => Balance,
'balance_transaction' => BalanceTransaction,
'bank_account' => BankAccount,
'bitcoin_receiver' => BitcoinReceiver,
'bitcoin_transaction' => BitcoinTransaction,
'card' => Card,
'charge' => Charge,
'country_spec' => CountrySpec,
'coupon' => Coupon,
'customer' => Customer,
'dispute' => Dispute,
'event' => Event,
'fee_refund' => ApplicationFeeRefund,
'file_upload' => FileUpload,
'invoice' => Invoice,
'invoiceitem' => InvoiceItem,
'order' => Order,
'order_return' => OrderReturn,
'payout' => Payout,
'plan' => Plan,
'product' => Product,
'recipient' => Recipient,
'recipient_transfer' => RecipientTransfer,
'refund' => Refund,
'sku' => SKU,
'source' => Source,
'subscription' => Subscription,
'subscription_item' => SubscriptionItem,
'three_d_secure' => ThreeDSecure,
'token' => Token,
'transfer' => Transfer,
'transfer_reversal' => Reversal,
}
end
# Converts a hash of fields or an array of hashes into a +StripeObject+ or
# array of +StripeObject+s. These new objects will be created as a concrete
# type as dictated by their `object` field (e.g. an `object` value of
# `charge` would create an instance of +Charge+), but if `object` is not
# present or of an unknown type, the newly created instance will fall back
# to being a +StripeObject+.
#
# ==== Attributes
#
# * +data+ - Hash of fields and values to be converted into a StripeObject.
# * +opts+ - Options for +StripeObject+ like an API key that will be reused
# on subsequent API calls.
def self.convert_to_stripe_object(data, opts)
case data
when Array
data.map { |i| convert_to_stripe_object(i, opts) }
when Hash
# Try converting to a known object class. If none available, fall back to generic StripeObject
object_classes.fetch(data[:object], StripeObject).construct_from(data, opts)
else
data
end
end
def self.file_readable(file)
# This is nominally equivalent to File.readable?, but that can
# report incorrect results on some more oddball filesystems
# (such as AFS)
begin
File.open(file) { |f| }
rescue
false
else
true
end
end
def self.symbolize_names(object)
case object
when Hash
new_hash = {}
object.each do |key, value|
key = (key.to_sym rescue key) || key
new_hash[key] = symbolize_names(value)
end
new_hash
when Array
object.map { |value| symbolize_names(value) }
else
object
end
end
# Encodes a hash of parameters in a way that's suitable for use as query
# parameters in a URI or as form parameters in a request body. This mainly
# involves escaping special characters from parameter keys and values (e.g.
# `&`).
def self.encode_parameters(params)
Util.flatten_params(params).
map { |k,v| "#{url_encode(k)}=#{url_encode(v)}" }.join('&')
end
# Transforms an array into a hash with integer keys. Used for a small
# number of API endpoints. If the argument is not an Array, return it
# unchanged. Example: [{foo: 'bar'}] => {"0" => {foo: "bar"}}
def self.array_to_hash(array)
case array
when Array
hash = {}
array.each_with_index { |v,i| hash[i.to_s] = v }
hash
else
array
end
end
# Encodes a string in a way that makes it suitable for use in a set of
# query parameters in a URI or in a set of form parameters in a request
# body.
def self.url_encode(key)
CGI.escape(key.to_s).
# Don't use strict form encoding by changing the square bracket control
# characters back to their literals. This is fine by the server, and
# makes these parameter strings easier to read.
gsub('%5B', '[').gsub('%5D', ']')
end
def self.flatten_params(params, parent_key=nil)
result = []
# do not sort the final output because arrays (and arrays of hashes
# especially) can be order sensitive, but do sort incoming parameters
params.each do |key, value|
calculated_key = parent_key ? "#{parent_key}[#{key}]" : "#{key}"
if value.is_a?(Hash)
result += flatten_params(value, calculated_key)
elsif value.is_a?(Array)
check_array_of_maps_start_keys!(value)
result += flatten_params_array(value, calculated_key)
else
result << [calculated_key, value]
end
end
result
end
def self.flatten_params_array(value, calculated_key)
result = []
value.each do |elem|
if elem.is_a?(Hash)
result += flatten_params(elem, "#{calculated_key}[]")
elsif elem.is_a?(Array)
result += flatten_params_array(elem, calculated_key)
else
result << ["#{calculated_key}[]", elem]
end
end
result
end
def self.normalize_id(id)
if id.kind_of?(Hash) # overloaded id
params_hash = id.dup
id = params_hash.delete(:id)
else
params_hash = {}
end
[id, params_hash]
end
# The secondary opts argument can either be a string or hash
# Turn this value into an api_key and a set of headers
def self.normalize_opts(opts)
case opts
when String
{:api_key => opts}
when Hash
check_api_key!(opts.fetch(:api_key)) if opts.has_key?(:api_key)
opts.clone
else
raise TypeError.new('normalize_opts expects a string or a hash')
end
end
def self.check_string_argument!(key)
raise TypeError.new("argument must be a string") unless key.is_a?(String)
key
end
def self.check_api_key!(key)
raise TypeError.new("api_key must be a string") unless key.is_a?(String)
key
end
private
# We use a pretty janky version of form encoding (Rack's) that supports
# more complex data structures like maps and arrays through the use of
# specialized syntax. To encode an array of maps like:
#
# [{a: 1, b: 2}, {a: 3, b: 4}]
#
# We have to produce something that looks like this:
#
# arr[][a]=1&arr[][b]=2&arr[][a]=3&arr[][b]=4
#
# The only way for the server to recognize that this is a two item array is
# that it notices the repetition of element "a", so it's key that these
# repeated elements are encoded first.
#
# This method is invoked for any arrays being encoded and checks that if
# the array contains all non-empty maps, that each of those maps must start
# with the same key so that their boundaries can be properly encoded.
def self.check_array_of_maps_start_keys!(arr)
expected_key = nil
arr.each do |item|
return if !item.is_a?(Hash)
return if item.count == 0
first_key = item.first[0]
if expected_key
if expected_key != first_key
raise ArgumentError,
"All maps nested in an array should start with the same key " +
"(expected starting key '#{expected_key}', got '#{first_key}')"
end
else
expected_key = first_key
end
end
end
end
end