Twilio Connect allows developers to obtain authorization to make
calls, send text messages, purchase phone numbers, read access logs and perform
other API functions on behalf of another Twilio account holder.
As an example, imagine you want to access the Twilio account of a user of
your web application to provide in-depth analytics of their Twilio account
activity. In this quickstart we'll solve this problem by creating your first
Twilio Connect App, placing the "Connect" button on your website so users can
authorize your app to access their Twilio account data and make API requests
against their account.
Creating Your First Twilio Connect App
Let's jump right in and create our first Connect app. Log in to your Twilio
account dashboard, select "Apps" and click the "Create Connect App" button.
Fill in the top section with the name of your application and your company
information.
Next, assign an Authorize URL to your Connect application. The Authorize
URL is the URL that Twilio will redirect the user's browser to after they have
authorized your application to access their Twilio account. Later on in the
quickstart we'll demonstrate how the Authorize URL is used.
Lastly, select the access rights your Connect app requires on the user's
account. For this example, we'll only be accessing call logs for analytics so
we'll choose "Read all account data".
Here's what our sample Connect application looks like:
Click 'Save Changes' and you're done!
Placing the Connect Button on Your Website
The Connect button is where your customers will start the process of
authorizing your Connect App to access their Twilio account.
to create the code needed to place this button on your website with the Twilio
Connect button HTML generator.
After saving your application you will see a bit of HTML code in a popup.
Copy the generated code and paste it into the HTML of your website where you
would like the button to appear. If you ever need to generate this HTML again,
you can scroll to the bottom of your Connect App's details page and click
"Generate Connect Button HTML".
Testing the Authorization Workflow
With the Twilio Connect button now on your website, browse to the page
where you placed the HTML and click the Connect button. Verify that the
information displayed on the authorization screen is correct.
After completing the app authorization process, you are redirected to the
Authorize URL you specified when creating your Connect App. Appended to that
URL is an AccountSid URL parameter with a value that looks like this:
Your application should extract the Account SID value from the URL and
associate it with the user's account within your application. After extracting
the Account SID, we recommend that you redirect the user to another page within
your app so the Account SID isn't hanging around. For example, in PHP this
is the code required to access the Account SID value and redirect to a new
location:
quickstart/connect/authorize-callback.php
1
<?php
2
3
$accountSid=$_GET['AccountSid'];
4
// store $accountSid value in database
5
// associated with a user in your application
6
// redirect back to my app when done
7
header("Location: http://www.example.com/myapp");
Making an Authorized Request
With the user's Account SID in hand, you can now request data from their account
via the Twilio REST API. A request to retrieve data from a user's account
is nearly identical to a request made against your own account, with one
key difference. Instead of authenticating with your own Account SID, you
authenticate with the Account SID retrieved during the authorization process and
your account's Auth Token.
Here is a request to retrieve call logs from an account using the
PHP helper library. Pay special attention to line 4 where
the customer's Account SID is specified instead of your own:
quickstart/connect/authorized-request.php
1
<?php
2
3
require"Services/Twilio.php";
4
5
$sid="ACXXXXXX";// The customer's AccountSid
6
$token="YYYYYY";// Your account's AuthToken
7
8
// create a new instance of the Twilio REST client
9
$client= newServices_Twilio($sid, $token);
10
11
// request the call logs for the customer's account
Retrieving call logs on behalf of your customers is just the
start of what you can accomplish with Twilio Connect. Visit
the complete Connect documentation and best
practices to learn more about how to integrate
Connect's additional capabilities into your applications.