Real-time events API

Zulip's real-time events API lets you write software that reacts immediately to events happening in Zulip. This API is what powers the real-time updates in the Zulip web and mobile apps. As a result, the events available via this API cover all changes to data displayed in the Zulip product, from new messages to stream descriptions to emoji reactions to changes in user or organization-level settings.

Using the events API

The simplest way to use Zulip's real-time events API is by using call_on_each_event from our Python bindings. You just need to write a Python function (in the examples below, the lambdas) and pass it into call_on_each_event; your function will be called whenever a new event matching the specified parameters (event_types, narrow, etc.) occurs in Zulip.

call_on_each_event takes care of all the potentially tricky details of long-polling, error handling, exponential backoff in retries, etc. It's cousin, call_on_each_message, provides an even simpler interface for processing Zulip messages.

More complex applications (like a Zulip terminal client) may need to instead use the raw register and events endpoints.

Usage examples

#!/usr/bin/env python

import sys
import zulip

# Pass the path to your zuliprc file here.
client = zulip.Client(config_file="~/zuliprc")

# Print every message the current user would receive
# This is a blocking call that will run forever
client.call_on_each_message(lambda msg: sys.stdout.write(str(msg) + "\n"))

# Print every event relevant to the user
# This is a blocking call that will run forever
client.call_on_each_event(lambda event: sys.stdout.write(str(event) + "\n"))

Parameters

You may also pass in the following keyword arguments to call_on_each_event:

event_types (string)[] optional

Example: ["message"]

A JSON-encoded array indicating which types of events you're interested in. Values that you might find useful include:

  • message (messages)
  • subscription (changes in your subscriptions)
  • realm_user (changes to users in the organization and their properties, such as their name).

If you do not specify this parameter, you will receive all events, and have to filter out the events not relevant to your client in your client code. For most applications, one is only interested in messages, so one specifies: event_types=['message']

Event types not supported by the server are ignored, in order to simplify the implementation of client apps that support multiple server versions.


narrow ((string)[])[] optional

Example: [["stream", "Denmark"]]

A JSON-encoded array of arrays of length 2 indicating the narrow filter(s) for which you'd like to receive events for.

For example, to receive events for private messages (including group private messages) received by the user, one can use narrow=[["is", "private"]].

Unlike the API for fetching messages, this narrow parameter is simply a filter on messages that the user receives through their stream subscriptions (or because they are a recipient of a private message).

This means that a client that requests a narrow filter of [["stream", "Denmark"]] will receive events for new messages sent to that stream while the user is subscribed to that stream. The client will not receive any message events at all if the user is not subscribed to "Denmark".

Newly created bot users are not usually subscribed to any streams, so bots using this API need to be subscribed to any streams whose messages you'd like them to process using this endpoint.

See the all_public_streams parameter for how to process all public stream messages in an organization.

Defaults to [].


all_public_streams boolean optional

Example: true

Whether you would like to request message events from all public streams. Useful for workflow bots that you'd like to see all new messages sent to public streams. (You can also subscribe the user to private streams).

Defaults to false.


See the GET /events documentation for more details on the format of individual events.