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I introduced Hacker News to Apprise back when it was just an experiment (and supported just 30 or so notification services at the time). Now supporting more then 85+ services and with a ton of built in features, I officially created it's first stable v1.0.0 release marking a major milestone for the project.
Apprise doesn't compete with other notification services out there; instead it just acts as a proxy (or master switchboard) to support handling messages to them. It's a means of decoupling notification support from the systems that want to provide them. The idea is to adopt Apprise into your environment, and then you no longer have to worry about adding/removing support for new services as the come along and deprecating the ones that go away.
The way it works is that every service out there maps to a `schema://credentials/?optional_configuration`. You just need to define the schemas you use, and then you can already use Apprise. Check out the list of the services available today here: https://github.com/caronc/apprise#supported-notifications
Apprise is 100% open source (MIT Licensed). It has an acompanied API I built for those who want to centralize their configuration (found here: https://github.com/caronc/apprise-api).
Some reasons you may also all find it useful:
- It works perfectly with legacy servers (supporting even Python 2.7). So this fits system admins using older systems such as CentOS 6+
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
Related posts
- Show HN: Apprise (Notifications) Supports 100 Services Now
- Apprise v1.4.0 Released - Apprise API Attachment Support
- Apprise v1.0.0 (Official Release)
- Show HN: Apprise-API – All in one notification solution with API access point
- What services do you guys use to allow sending alert E-mails to yourself and others?