I'm using Sinatra 1.2.6 in Ruby 1.8.7 and I have something like a Twitter client that I'm writing. I am using the Twitter gem version 1.7.2 written by John Nunemaker. For database ORM I'm using Sequel 3.29.0.
Overall, things are working great. I've got a good Oauth sequence working and any user who goes through the Oauth process can post Tweets to my application.
I cannot however for the life of me get media upload working using update_with_media. I'm trying to upload a multi-part octet-stream image file, keep it in memory and then give it to Twitter.
post '/file_upload' do
user_name = params[:user]
if params[:action] == "FILE-UPLOAD"
unless params[:name].match(/\.jpg|png|jpeg/).nil?
#Assume these 3 lines work, and properly authorize to Twitter
current_user = User[:user_name => user_name, :current_account => "1"]
client = current_user.authorize_to_twitter #Handles the Oauth keys/process
client.update("Text status updates work properly")
#Something incorrect is happening in the next two lines.
#I'm either handling the file upload wrong, or posting wrong to Twitter
datafile = params[:file]
client.update_with_media("File upload from Skype: ", datafile)
return "File uploaded ok"
end
end
end
Yet, when I try this, I'm getting:
Twitter::Unauthorized - POST https://upload.twitter.com/1/statuses/update_with_media.json: 401: Could not authenticate with OAuth.
Its saying the line causing this error is the client.update_with_media line.
I am trying to use Rack::RawUpload, but I don't know if I'm using it incorrectly. If I don't need to use it I won't, but I'm just currently stuck. The only thing outside of this code snippet that's using it is this at the top of my code:
require 'rack/raw_upload'
use Rack::RawUpload
Any help on this would be massively appreciated. I've tried messing around with Tempfile.new() as well, but that didn't seem to help much, and I was either getting 401 or 403 errors. I'm fairly new to Ruby, so being as explicit as possible about changes needed would be really helpful.
I should note that I'd like to avoid putting the file on the filesystem if possible. I'm really just passing along the upload here, and I never need access in my scenario to the file on-disk afterward. Keeping the files in-memory is much preferred.