omnihook is a flexible, type-safe Rust library for sending webhook notifications to various platforms. It provides platform-specific payload builders for Slack, Discord, Telegram, and generic endpoints, with optional HMAC-SHA256 signing.
- Multi-Platform Support: Built-in builders for:
- Slack: Blocks-based messages with mrkdwn.
- Discord: Content-based messages with markdown.
- Telegram: HTML-formatted messages with markdown support and chat ID.
- Generic: Custom JSON payloads with optional HMAC signing and idempotency keys.
- Middleware Support: Built on top of
reqwest-middlewarefor extensible HTTP client behavior. - Async/Await: Native async support for high-performance notification delivery.
- Ready-to-use Examples: Check the examples/ directory for platform-specific implementations.
Add this to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
omnihook = "0.1.1"use omnihook::{WebhookClient, WebhookConfig, SlackPayloadBuilder};
use url::Url;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let url = Url::parse("https://hooks.slack.com/services/T000/B000/XXXX")?;
// 1. Configure the webhook
let config = WebhookConfig::new(url);
// 2. Build client using default HTTP settings
let client = config.build()?;
// 3. Send notification
let builder = SlackPayloadBuilder::default();
client.notify("System Alert", "Database is down!", &builder).await?;
Ok(())
}Since omnihook uses reqwest-middleware, you can add retries, logging, or caching. To do this, provide your own Arc<ClientWithMiddleware> to WebhookClient::new:
use std::sync::Arc;
use reqwest_middleware::ClientBuilder;
use reqwest_retry::{RetryTransientMiddleware, policies::ExponentialBackoff};
use omnihook::{WebhookClient, WebhookConfig};
use url::Url;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
// 1. Setup retry policy
let retry_policy = ExponentialBackoff::builder().build_with_max_retries(3);
let http_client = ClientBuilder::new(reqwest::Client::new())
.with(RetryTransientMiddleware::new_with_policy(retry_policy))
.build();
// 2. Wrap in Arc and pass to client
let config = WebhookConfig::new(Url::parse("https://...")?);
let client = WebhookClient::new(config, Arc::new(http_client))?;
Ok(())
}omnihook supports automatic payload signing using HMAC-SHA256 for Generic webhooks. When a secret is provided in the configuration, every request will include x-signature and x-timestamp headers. Use this when sending notifications to a custom endpoint where you wish to verify the payload's integrity.
use omnihook::{WebhookClient, WebhookConfig, GenericWebhookPayloadBuilder};
use url::Url;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let config = WebhookConfig::new(Url::parse("https://your-api.com/webhook")?)
.with_secret("top-secret-key"); // Enables automatic signing
let client = config.build()?;
// This call will now automatically sign the payload and include an idempotency key
client.notify_with_key("Alert", "Something happened", &GenericWebhookPayloadBuilder::default(), Some("idempotency_key")).await?;
Ok(())
}You can pass an optional idempotency key using notify_with_key. This will add an Idempotency-Key header to the request, which is useful for preventing duplicate processing on custom generic endpoints.
client.notify_with_key("Alert", "Something happened", &builder, Some("your-unique-key")).await?;The library uses the WebhookPayloadBuilder trait to allow for easy extensibility:
Uses Slack's Block Kit for structured messages.
use omnihook::{SlackPayloadBuilder, WebhookPayloadBuilder};
let builder = SlackPayloadBuilder::default();
let payload = builder.build_payload("Alert", "Something happened");
// Returns: { "blocks": [ { "type": "section", "text": { "type": "mrkdwn", "text": "Alert\n\nSomething happened" } } ] }Simple markdown-enabled content messages.
use omnihook::{DiscordPayloadBuilder, WebhookPayloadBuilder};
let builder = DiscordPayloadBuilder::default();
let payload = builder.build_payload("Alert", "Something happened");
// Returns: { "content": "Alert\n\nSomething happened" }Handles required chat_id and markdown-to-HTML conversion.
use omnihook::{TelegramPayloadBuilder, WebhookPayloadBuilder};
let builder = TelegramPayloadBuilder {
chat_id: "123456789".to_string(),
disable_web_preview: true,
};
let payload = builder.build_payload("Alert", "Something happened");
// Returns: { "chat_id": "123456789", "text": "Alert\n\nSomething happened", "parse_mode": "HTML", ... }Producing a standard high-level JSON object.
use omnihook::{GenericWebhookPayloadBuilder, WebhookPayloadBuilder};
let builder = GenericWebhookPayloadBuilder::default();
let payload = builder.build_payload("Alert", "Something happened");
// Returns: { "title": "Alert", "body": "Something happened" }You can run the examples provided in the examples/ directory using cargo run --example <name>. Most examples look for environment variables for configuration:
export SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL="https://hooks.slack.com/services/..."
cargo run --example slackexport DISCORD_WEBHOOK_URL="https://discord.com/api/webhooks/..."
cargo run --example discordexport TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN="123456:ABC..."
export TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID="123456789"
cargo run --example telegramexport GENERIC_WEBHOOK_URL="https://api.yourserver.com/webhook"
cargo run --example generic- MIT license (http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)