Easily Integrate Wordpress Webhooks with your application.
https://wordpress.com/support/webhooks/
Steps to receive Wordpress Webhooks
- Sign up for your free Hooky account.
- Create a new Webhook Source, and select Wordpress. This will be the endpoint that receives webhooks on behalf of your application, and forwards them using the unified SDK.
- Step 1
- Step 2
- Once a webhook is received from Wordpress, you'll see it under the Live Logs section of your webhook source.
- Next, follow the examples below to integrate the Hooky SDK in ruby or javascript, and start receiving webhooks.
Integrating Wordpress Webhooks Using Javascript
- Sign up for your free Hooky account.
- Create a new Webhook Source, and select Wordpress. This will be the endpoint that receives webhooks on behalf of your application, and forwards them using the unified SDK.
- Step 1
- Step 2
- Once a webhook is received from Wordpress, you'll see it under the Live Logs section of your webhook source.
- Next, follow the examples below to integrate the Hooky SDK in ruby or javascript, and start receiving webhooks.
Integrating Wordpress webhooks with Hooky in your Javascript based application is straight forward. Just grab the SDK, and call a function when that webhook is received.
Integrating Wordpress Webhooks Using Ruby
Integrating Wordpress webhooks with Hooky in your Ruby or Ruby on Rails application is straight forward. Just grab the SDK, and call a method when that webhook is received.
Configuring Wordpress Webhook Authentication
Here's how it works
Supported Wordpress Webhook Events
comment_post
Runs just after a comment is saved in the database
publish_page
Runs when a page is published, or if it is edited and its status is “published”
publish_post
Runs when a post is published, or if it is edited and its status is “published”