Skip to content

Java framework for developing USSD applications against the SMSGH USSD API

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

scalpovich/hubtel-ussd-java

 
 

Repository files navigation

SMSGH USSD Framework in Java

Framework for building Ussd applications in Java against the SMSGH USSD API.

It was inspired by the sister framework Smsgh.UssdFramework for the .NET framework, and began as a port of it to Java.

Key Features

  • Automated session management.
  • MVC-like in its handling of concerns, so that a single servlet can handle all USSD requests.
  • Dynamic routing.
  • DataBag helper in controllers for caching data across requests.
  • Support for auto dialling, i.e. being able to automatically process *713*1*2# as *713# followed by input of 1, and then followed by input of 2.
  • Create menus and forms to collect user input.
  • Automated handling of invalid choices for menus and form options.
  • Extensible for logging and replacing default in-memory session store

Dependencies

No external dependencies required. Minimum JDK level is JDK 1.6. To build, some Maven knowledge is required.

This project was built with JDK 8, Apache Maven 3.3 and NetBeans IDE 8, and tested on Apache Tomcat 7/8.

Run The Demo

Included in this repository is a build of a sample web app demonstrating the basic features provided by the framework. To try it out, download the ussd-demo WAR file and deploy it to your servlet container of choice (if using Tomcat using the manager app is an easy way to deploy a WAR file).

You can then test it locally using USSD Simulator or USSD Mocker, by pointing them to the endpoint http://localhost:8080/ussd-demo-1.0/ussd (the servlet path is /ussd). Modify the port if running locally on a different port from 8080. Modify the context path also if different from /ussd-demo-1.0.

Installation

Download the zip distribution and copy the ussd-framework-*.jar (currently ussd-framework-1.0.jar) and its dependent jars in the lib folder to the appropriate class paths on your system, depending on your build environment.

Alternatively, if your project/workflow is based on Maven, then you can manually install the ussd-framework-*.jar into your local repository, and copy the dependencies listed in the ussd-framework's pom.xml (not in the zip) into your project's pom.xml.

Quick Start

Setup

To process USSD requests, create a Ussd instance and call its service method.

Here is a sample setup in a Java servlet.

...

public class UssdServlet extends HttpServlet {
    
    @Override
    protected void service(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) 
            throws ServletException, IOException {
        Ussd ussd = new Ussd()
                .controllerPackages(new String[]{"com.smsgh.ussd.demo"})
                .initiationController("controllers.Main")
                .initiationAction("start")
                .maxAutoDialDepth(5);        
        ussd.service(req, resp);
    }
}

This tells the framework to route all initial requests to MainController's start action, which is a method with signature UssdResponse start().

Controller actions

Next we create our MainController which extends UssdController.

package com.smsgh.ussd.demo.controllers;

...

public class MainController extends UssdController {
    
    public UssdResponse start() {
        UssdMenu menu = new UssdMenu().header("Welcome")
                .addItem("Greet me", "greetingForm")
                .addItem("What's the time?", "time")
                .addItem(new UssdMenuItem("0", "Exit", "exit"))
                .footer("\nPowered by SMSGH");
        return renderMenu(menu);
    }
    
    public UssdResponse greetingForm() {
        String formHeader = "Greet Me!";
        UssdForm form = new UssdForm("greeting")
                .addInput(new UssdInput("Name").header(formHeader))
                .addInput(new UssdInput("Gender").header(formHeader)
                        .addOption(new UssdInput.Option("Male", "M"))
                        .addOption(new UssdInput.Option("Female", "F")));
        return renderForm(form);
    }
    
    public UssdResponse greeting() {
        Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
        int hour = cal.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
        String greeting = "";
        if (hour < 12) {
            greeting = "Good morning";
        }
        if (hour >= 12) {
            greeting = "Good afternoon";
        }
        if (hour >= 16) {
            greeting = "Good evening";
        }
        if (hour >= 21) {
            greeting = "Good night";
        }        
        
        // formData will be null if previous screen was not a UssdForm
        Map<String, String> formData = getFormData();
        
        String name = formData.get("Name");
        String gender = formData.get("Gender");
        String prefix = gender.equals("M") ? "Master" : "Madam";
        return render(String.format("%s, %s %s", greeting, prefix, name));
    }
    
    public UssdResponse time() {
        return render(DateFormat.getTimeInstance(DateFormat.SHORT)
                .format(new Date()));
    }
    
    public UssdResponse exit() {
        return render("Bye bye!");
    }
}

And that's it!

See ussd-demo folder in source for full sample source code.

About

Java framework for developing USSD applications against the SMSGH USSD API

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 100.0%