Smartcar Rust SDK

Crate Documentation Tests

Rust library crate for sending requests to Smartcar API

Overview

Smartcar API lets you read vehicle data and send commands to vehicles (lock, unlock) using HTTP requests.

To make requests to a vehicle from a web or mobile application, the end user must connect their vehicle using Smartcar Connect. This flow follows the OAuth spec and will return a code which can be used to obtain an access token from Smartcar.

The Smartcar Rust SDK provides methods to:

  1. Generate the link to redirect to Connect.
  2. Make a request to Smartcar with the code obtained from Connect to obtain an access and refresh token
  3. Make requests to the Smartcar API to read vehicle data and send commands to vehicles using the access token obtained in step 2.

Before integrating with Smartcar's SDK, you'll need to register an application in the Smartcar Developer portal. If you do not have access to the dashboard, please request access.

Note that the Rust SDK only supports version 2.0 of Smartcar API.

Installation

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies] smartcar = "0.1.5"

Flow

  1. Create a new AuthClient struct with your client_id, client_secret, and redirect_uri.
  2. Redirect the user to Smartcar Connect using <AuthClient>.get_auth_url with required scope.
  3. The user will login and then accept or deny your scope's permissions.
  4. If the user accepted your permissions:

    a. Handle the get request to your redirect_uri.

    b. Use <AuthClient>.exchange_code with this code to obtain an Access struct. This struct contains your tokens: access_token (lasting 3 hours) and refresh_token (lasting 60 days) *.

  5. Use get_vehicles to get a Vehicles struct that has all the the ids of the owner's vehicles.

  6. Create a new Vehicle struct using an id from the previous response and the access_token from Step 4.
  7. Start making requests to the Smartcar API

* In order to make subsequent requests, you will need to save this Access struct somewhere.

** When your access token expires, use <AuthClient>.exchange_refresh_token to get new tokens

Getting Started

Let's see a basic use case of smartcar using the axum web framework. In this example, we will set up a simple server running on localhost 3000 to run through the flow described above, in order to get the make, model, and year of a vehicle.

See the code in ./example/getting-started.rs.

Requirements

How to Run the Example

  1. Clone this repo cd into the directory.
  2. Set up a new redirect URI in your Smartcar dashboard.
  3. Find get_auth_client in ./example/getting-started.rs and replace the fake credentials with your actual client credentials from your dashboard.
  4. Run the example by using the cargo run with the example flag*:

cargo run --example=getting-started

  1. In a browser, go http://locahost:3000/login to see the Smartcar Connect flow. This example runs connect in Test Mode, which uses randomized data and fake cars.

  2. After logging in and approving permissions, you should get a JSON response with the vehicle's make, model, year, and id.

Follow along with the print statements in your terminal to see the steps!


** example/getting-started.rs has print statements that correspond to the 7-step Flow above. The code below does not include the print statements, to minimize noise.

getting-started - without the print statements

```rust use axum::extract::Query; use axum::http::StatusCode; use axum::response::{IntoResponse, Redirect}; use axum::Json; use axum::{routing::get, Router}; use serde::Deserialize; use serde_json::json;

use smartcar; use smartcar::auth_client::{AuthClient, AuthUrlOptionsBuilder}; use smartcar::response::{Meta, VehicleAttributes}; use smartcar::vehicle::Vehicle; use smartcar::{Permission, ScopeBuilder};

[tokio::main]

async fn main() { let app = Router::new() // This route demonstrates the Smartcar Conenct flow that your user // will go through. For this example, you'll be going through it yourself. .route("/login", get(login)) // This route captures the redirect after your user finishes the Smartcar Connect flow. // If the user grants permission to your app, it will contain a query code .route("/callback", get(callback));

// Run the server on localhost 3000
axum::Server::bind(&"0.0.0.0:3000".parse().unwrap())
    .serve(app.into_make_service())
    .await
    .unwrap();

}

/// Helper for creating an Auth Client instance with your credentials fn getauthclient() -> AuthClient { AuthClient::new( "REPLACEWITHYOURSMARTCARCLIENTID", "REPLACEWITHYOURSMARTCARCLIENTSECRET", "REPLACEWITHYOURSMARTCARREDIRECT_URI.COM", true, ) }

/// Smartcar Connect Flow async fn login() -> Redirect { // Flow - Step 1 let authclient = getauth_client();

// Here we are adding the read_vehicle_info permission so we can get
// the make, model, and year of the vehicle. In other words, we are asking
// the vehicle owner for permission to get these attributes.
let scope = ScopeBuilder::new().add_permission(Permission::ReadVehicleInfo);

// Here we build the options for creating the auth url.
// This particular option forces the approval prompt page to show up.
// For educational purposes, let's force it to show up all the time.
let auth_url_options = AuthUrlOptionsBuilder::new().set_force_prompt(true);

// Flow - Step 2
let auth_url = auth_client.get_auth_url(&scope, Some(&auth_url_options));

Redirect::to(&auth_url)

}

/// The potential query values in the redirect to /callback /// after user goes through Smartcar Connect

[derive(Deserialize)]

struct Callback { code: Option, error: Option, }

// Handle Smartcar callback with auth code. To run this example, setup your // redirect URI in your Smartcar account dashboard to include http://localhost:3000/callback

[axummacros::debughandler]

async fn callback(q: Query) -> impl IntoResponse { // Flow - after Step 3 completed, starting 4a

// If user denies you access, you'll see this
if let Some(_) = &q.error {
    return (
        StatusCode::EXPECTATION_FAILED,
        Json(json!("User delined during Smartcar Connect")),
    );
};

// This is the authorization code that represents the user’s consent
// granting you (in this example) permission to read their vehicle's attributes
// This code must be exchanged for an access token to start making requests to the vehicle.
let code = &q.code.to_owned().unwrap();

match get_attributes_handler(&code).await {
    Err(_) => {
        return (
            StatusCode::EXPECTATION_FAILED,
            Json(json!("attributes request failed")),
        )
    }
    Ok((attributes, _)) => {
        (
            StatusCode::OK,
            Json(json!(attributes)), // please help me make this better... lol
        )
    }
}

}

async fn getattributeshandler( authcode: &str, ) -> Result<(VehicleAttributes, Meta), smartcar::error::Error> { let client = getauth_client();

// Flow - Step 4b
let (access, _) = client.exchange_code(auth_code).await?;

// Flow - Step 5
let (vehicle_ids, _) = smartcar::get_vehicles(&access, None, None).await?;

// Flow - Step 6
let vehicle = Vehicle::new(&vehicle_ids.vehicles[0], &access.access_token);

// Flow - Step 7
let (attributes, meta) = vehicle.attributes().await?;

Ok((attributes, meta))

} ```