eBay API client for Node.js
Background
This was built to power the "eBay Picks" section of AntiquesNearMe.com. It can currently query the FindingService, MerchandisingService, and Shopping API via JSON-GET requests, and parts of the Trading API via XML-POST. Other services can be added as needed. (Pull requests welcome!)
To use
npm install ebay-api
var ebay = require('ebay-api');
(See the examples)
A word on the eBay APIs
eBay has an enormous collection of APIs built over the years. Enter the labyrinth here: http://developer.ebay.com or here: https://www.x.com/developers/ebay/products
Sign up for an API key here: https://publisher.ebaypartnernetwork.com/PublisherToolsAPI
(You'll need a key to run the examples.)
Make sure to obey the eBay API License and Terms when using this library.
Why use Node.js to do this?
Node.js is great at running HTTP requests asynchronously. If each request takes 5 seconds to run and 5 seconds to parse, for example, dozens of requests can run in parallel and only take 10 seconds total, instead of 10 seconds for each. (This module uses restler for the HTTP handling and the async library for flow control.)
Node.js speaks JSON natively, so the response data from the JSON APIs can be very easily parsed in code, or dumped into MongoDB.
Javascript is a little insane and a lot of fun.
Methods
ebayApiGetRequest(options, callback)
Make an individual request to a GET service.
options
must contain:
- serviceName: e.g. 'FindingService'
- opType: e.g. 'findItemsAdvanced'
- appId: your eBay API application ID
and can optionally contain:
- params: (see examples and API documentation)
- filters: (see examples and API documentation)
- reqOptions: passed to the request, e.g. with custom headers
- parser: function which takes the response data and extracts items (or other units depending on the query). Defaults to
parseItemsFromResponse
. To return the raw data, pass in a function like function(data, callback) { callback(null, data); }
. - sandbox: true/false (default false = production). May need to add additional endpoint URLs to the code as needed.
callback
gets (error, items)
or (error, data)
depending on the parser.
paginateGetRequest(options, callback)
Make a multi-page request to a GET service, running them in parallel and combining the results.
options
contains the same parameters as ebayApiGetRequest
, plus:
- pages: # of pages to query
- perPage: items per page
parser
here needs to return an array, so the results can be concatenated and passed to callback
.
Note: Because the pages all run in parallel, they can cause spikes on CPU and network activity. In the future, I might switch this to using an async queue
(instead of forEach
) with a variable concurrency. (A forEachSeries
can also be used, but negates the purpose of running the requests asynchronously.)
callback
gets (error, items)
parseItemsFromResponse(data, callback)
Default parser, takes the response from an API request and parses items or other units per request type.
Each response type is a little different, so this needs to be built out further.
Is used as the default parser
option for paginateGetRequest
.
callback
gets (error, items)
where items
are the items parsed from data
.
ebayApiPostXmlRequest(options, callback)
Make an individual request to a POST-XML service.
options
must contain:
- serviceName: e.g. 'FindingService'
- opType: e.g. 'findItemsAdvanced'
and can optionally contain:
-
(for authentication)
-
params (for the XML input)
-
reqOptions: headers and other options to pass to the request
- IMPT: Some parameters for these endpoints, such as SITE-ID and authToken, should go into the headers, not into
params
. See the API documentation.
-
sandbox: true/false (default false = production). May need to add additional endpoint URLs to the code as needed.
callback
gets (error, data)
. (There is not currently a default parser for these endpoints.)
Helpers
flatten(obj)
Simplifies the JSON format of the API responses:
- Single-element arrays and objects are flatted to their key:value pair.
- The structure of the format
{ @key:KEY, __value__:VALUE }
is flattened to its key:value pair.
Its purpose is to make the data easier to handle in code, and to model/query in MongoDB.
Runs synchronously, returns flattened object.
ItemFilter(name, value, paramName, paramValue)
A class constructor to simplify creating filters. (See the examples)
checkAffiliateUrl(url)
If you want your affiliate codes included in returned items (see the examples for how to do that), use this to verify that the URLs are of the right format.
e.g. checkAffiliateUrl(item.viewItemURL)
Returns boolean.
Examples
See the /examples directory. There are two examples, one with a single-page findItemsByKeywords
request, the other a paginated findItemsAdvanced
request. It should be reasonably apparent from the examples how these functions are used.
To run the examples, you need to add your own app key (I don't want my keys to be disabled for abuse!) - you can get one here.
Possible Roadmap
- Add more services and generally expand the functionality.
- Add more links related to relevant eBay documentation.
- Add a generic Mongoose model. (Mine is currently too filled with custom business logic to be included.)
- Switch from
async.forEach
to async.queue
for more fine-grained concurrency control. - Suggestions...?
Credits
Created by Ben Buckman of New Leaf Digital, an independent dev/consulting shop specializing in Node.js, Drupal, mapping, system architecture, and general "full stack" development. Ben writes a dev blog about Node.js and many other subjects.
Ben's other hat is co-founder and CTO of Antiques Near Me, and this library was created for use there.
Enjoy!