Execute: composer require smsapi/php-client
Depending on which of SMSAPI service your account is, you should pick it calling one of a method from examples below:
Starting from version 3, SMSAPI PHP Client supports PSR-17 and PSR-18 compliant HTTP clients. That way this library is independent of client of your choice. You have to provide HTTP client, request factory and stream factory to use our library.
For your convenience we provide an adapter for Curl. To use it you have to enable PHP curl extension and install some HTTP helpers:
composer require guzzlehttp/psr7:^1
Example below shows how to make use of that adapter (pay attention to namespace Smsapi\Client\Curl):
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\Curl\SmsapiHttpClient;
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
$client = new SmsapiHttpClient();
If your are not willing to use Curl as HTTP client then you have to provide your own HTTP client, request factory and stream factory, as in example below (pay attention to namespace Smsapi\Client):
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Psr\Http\Client\ClientInterface;
use Psr\Http\Message\RequestFactoryInterface;
use Psr\Http\Message\StreamFactoryInterface;
use Smsapi\Client\SmsapiHttpClient;
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
/**
* @var ClientInterface $httpClient
* @var RequestFactoryInterface $requestFactory
* @var StreamFactoryInterface $streamFactory
*/
require_once 'your-own-psr18-stuff.php';
$client = new SmsapiHttpClient($httpClient, $requestFactory, $streamFactory);
All following examples consider you have client well-defined in client.php
file.
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\SmsapiClient;
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
/**
* @var SmsapiClient $client
*/
require_once 'client.php';
$apiToken = '0000000000000000000000000000000000000000';
$service = $client->smsapiComService($apiToken);
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\SmsapiClient;
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
/**
* @var SmsapiClient $client
*/
require_once 'client.php';
$apiToken = '0000000000000000000000000000000000000000';
$service = $client->smsapiPlService($apiToken);
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\SmsapiClient;
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
/**
* @var SmsapiClient $client
*/
require_once 'client.php';
$apiToken = '0000000000000000000000000000000000000000';
$uri = 'https://smsapi.io/';
$service = $client->smsapiComServiceWithUri($apiToken, $uri);
All following examples consider you have an account on SMSAPI.COM and service has been setup in service.php
file.
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\Service\SmsapiComService;
/** @var SmsapiComService $service */
require_once 'service.php';
$result = $service->pingFeature()
->ping();
if ($result->authorized) {
echo 'Authorized';
} else {
echo 'Not authorized';
}
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\Service\SmsapiComService;
use Smsapi\Client\Feature\Sms\Bag\SendSmsBag;
/** @var SmsapiComService $service */
require_once 'service.php';
$sms = SendSmsBag::withMessage('someone phone number', 'some message');
$service->smsFeature()
->sendSms($sms);
Request parameters are represented in a form of data transfer object. DTOs can be found by searching for 'bag' postfixed classes. Each bag may contain required and optional parameters.
Required parameters are that class public properties, usually accessible via some form of a setter or named constructor. Each parameter can be also set directly by setting bag property, as in example:
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\Feature\Sms\Bag\SendSmsBag;
$sms = SendSmsBag::withMessage('someone phone number', 'some message');
$sms->encoding = 'utf-8';
Some of request's optional parameters have been described by docblock's '@property' annotation. You can always add any not documented here optional parameter by setting dynamic property to 'bag'. Camel case property names are being converted to snake case on the fly.
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Smsapi\Client\Service\SmsapiComService;
use Smsapi\Client\Feature\Sms\Bag\SendSmsBag;
/** @var SmsapiComService $service */
require_once 'service.php';
$sms = SendSmsBag::withMessage('someone phone number', 'some message');
$sms->from = 'Test';
$service->smsFeature()
->sendSms($sms);
For more usage examples take a look at client test suite.
To use proxy server you have to define it with your HTTP client.
Set logger to SmsapiHttpClient
instance.
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Psr\Log\LoggerInterface;
use Psr\Log\LoggerTrait;
use Smsapi\Client\SmsapiClient;
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
/**
* @var SmsapiClient $client
*/
require_once 'client.php';
$logger = new class() implements LoggerInterface
{
use LoggerTrait;
public function log($level, $message, array $context = [])
{
var_dump($level, $message, $context);
}
};
$client->setLogger($logger);
Copy phpunit.dist.xml
to phpunit.xml
. You may adjust it to your needs then.
Copy tests-resources/config/config.dist.yml
to tests-resources/config/config.yml
. Fill in SMSAPI service connection data.
Unit tests are included into package build process and run against its current version on every commit (see workflow Tests). You can run those tests locally with ease using provided Docker configuration, simply run:
make test-suite SUITE="unit"
Note that integration test works within an account you have configured in tests-resources/config/config.yml
.
Although those test have been written to self-cleanup on exit, in case of failure some trash data may stay.
Use it with caution.
make test-suite SUITE="integration"
Feature test groups are defined in phpunit.dist.xml
. To run tests execute:
make test-suite SUITE="feature-contacts"
To run any of mentioned above against PHP8 use make targets with php8
suffix. See Makefile.php8
.