This application should give you a ready-made starting point for writing your own real-time apps with Sync. Before we begin, we need to collect all the config values we need to run the application:
Config Value | Description |
---|---|
Service Instance SID | Like a database for your Sync data - generate one with the curl command below. |
Account SID | Your primary Twilio account identifier - find this in the console here. |
API Key | Used to authenticate - Use the IP Messaging dev tools to generate one here. |
API Secret | Used to authenticate - just like the above, you'll get one here. |
During the Sync developer preview, you will need to generate Sync service instances via API until the Console GUI is available. Using the API key pair you generated above, generate a service instance via REST API with this curl command:
curl -X POST https://preview.twilio.com/Sync/Services \
-d 'FriendlyName=MySyncServiceInstance' \
-u 'SKXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX:your_api_secret'
When you generate an API key pair at the URLs above, your API Secret will only
be shown once - make sure to save this in a secure location,
or possibly your ~/.bash_profile
.
Create a configuration file for your application:
cp config.sample.js config.js
Edit config.js
with the four configuration parameters we gathered from above.
Next, we need to install our dependencies from npm:
npm install
Now we should be all set! Run the application using the node
command.
node .
Your application should now be running at http://localhost:3000. Open this page in a couple browsers or tabs, and start syncing!
MIT