ember-stripe-service
is an easy way to add Stripe.js library to your ember-cli project without having to deal with manually setting the script tag. We will keep this addon on Stripe v2. Stripe v2 passes an object to create a token. Stripe v3 requires that first argument to be a Stripe Element. Stripe v3 is supported in ember-stripe-elements
. As such, this addon should only be used to create tokens and I would imagine most of you will use ember-stripe-elements
.
- sets stripe.js script in index.html (test, app)
- initializes stripe with publishable key
- injects service in controllers which provides promisified method for
Stripe.card.createToken
- provides debugging logs for easy troubleshooting
- client side validations for card number, expiration dates, card type and CVC
- lazy load stripe.js
npm install --save ember-stripe-service
ember server
- set
stripe.publishableKey
inconfig/environment.js
- Visit your app at http://localhost:4200, you should now see the stripe.js script has been included
Stripe
global is now available in your app
In order to use Stripe you must set your publishable key in config/environment.js
.
ENV.stripe = {
publishableKey: 'pk_thisIsATestKey',
debug: false, // turn on debugging
lazyLoad: false, // lazy load stripe
mock: false // mock out stripe.js, good for offline testing
};
If lazyLoad
is set to turn Stripe.js will not be loaded until you call the load()
function on the service. It's best to call this function in a route's beforeModel hook.
// subscription page route
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
stripe: Ember.inject.service('stripe'),
beforeModel() {
return this.get('stripe').load();
}
});
ember-stripe-service
provides a promisified version of
Stripe.card.createToken
which makes it easier to interact with its returns
within your Ember controllers.
The method makes createToken
operate under Ember run's loop making it easier
to create integration tests that operate with Stripe's test mode.
To use it inside of a controller action or method you would:
export default Ember.Controller.extend({
stripe: Ember.inject.service(),
myCreditCardProcessingMethod: function() {
var customer = this.get('customer');
// obtain access to the injected service
var stripe = this.get('stripe');
// if for example you had the cc set in your controller
var card = this.get('creditCard');
return stripe.card.createToken(card).then(function(response) {
// you get access to your newly created token here
customer.set('stripeToken', response.id);
return customer.save();
})
.then(function() {
// do more stuff here
})
.catch(function(response) {
// if there was an error retrieving the token you could get it here
if (response.error.type === 'card_error') {
// show the error in the form or something
}
});
}
})
The interface is similar for bank account tokens:
// obtain access to the injected service
var stripe = this.get('stripe');
// if for example you had the cc set in your controller
var bankAccount = {
country: 'US',
routingNumber: '1235678',
accountNumber: '23875292349'
}
return stripe.bankAccount.createToken(bankAccount).then(function(response) {
// you get access to your newly created token here
customer.set('bankAccountStripeToken', response.id);
return customer.save();
})
.catch(response) {
// if there was an error retrieving the token you could get it here
if (response.error.type === 'invalid_request_error') {
// show an error in the form
}
}
}
})
The interface is similar yet again for PII data tokens:
// obtain access to the injected service
var stripe = this.get('stripe');
var piiData = {
personalIdNumber: '123456789'
}
return stripe.piiData.createToken(piiData).then(function(response) {
// you get access to your newly created token here
customer.set('personalIdNumberStripeToken', response.id);
return customer.save();
})
.catch(response) {
// if there was an error retrieving the token you could get it here
if (response.error.type === 'invalid_request_error') {
// show an error in the form
}
}
}
})
By setting LOG_STRIPE_SERVICE
to true in your application configuration you can enable some debugging messages from the service
var ENV = {
// some vars...
stripe: {
debug: true
}
// more config ...
}
Stripe has a few client-side validation helpers. See more information here
validateCardNumber
- Checks that the number is formatted correctly and passes the Luhn check.validateExpiry
- Checks whether or not the expiration date represents an actual month in the future.validateCVC
- Checks whether or not the supplied number could be a valid verification code.cardType
- Returns the type of the card as a string. The possible types are "Visa", "MasterCard", "American Express", "Discover", "Diners Club", and "JCB". If a card isn't recognized, the return value is "Unknown".
ember test
ember test --server
In order to run integration tests which use real Stripe tokens, the environment variable STRIPE_PUBLISHABLE_KEY
must be set to use a real Stripe Publishable Key (either test or live).
export STRIPE_PUBLISHABLE_KEY="pk_thisIsAKey" ember test
This repo comes with a envrc.example
file, which uses the direnv tool to manage directory-local environment variables. To use direnv to set the STRIPE_PUBLISHABLE_KEY
environment variable, install and enable direnv
, make a copy of envrc.example
and name it .envrc
, and add your key to that file. Note that .envrc
is ignored by git, and thus will not ever be checked into this repository.
You can also use any other tool you'd like to manage setting your environment variable.
You can get the test key used to run this repo's integration tests by looking at the output from the latest Travis build.
For more information on using ember-cli, visit http://www.ember-cli.com/.
- We're thinking of giving access other methods of Stripe, but we're not sure so if you find one useful please make an issue
- Provide an option to inject mocked Stripe library inspired by ember-cli-custom-form but with deeper mocking and set by config flag not environment so integration tests can still be run with real service if wanted
- PRs welcome and encouraged, and if you're not sure how to implement something we could try to work together