google/cloud-functions-framework

Google Cloud Functions Framework for PHP

v1.4.1 2024-10-03 21:26 UTC

README

PHP unit CI PHP lint CI PHP conformace CI Security Scorecard

An open source FaaS (Function as a service) framework for writing portable PHP functions.

The Functions Framework lets you write lightweight functions that run in many different environments, including:

  • Your local development machine
  • Knative-based environments

The framework allows you to go from:

use Psr\Http\Message\ServerRequestInterface;

function helloHttp(ServerRequestInterface $request)
{
    return "Hello World from a PHP HTTP function!" . PHP_EOL;
}

To:

curl http://my-url
# Output: "Hello World from a PHP HTTP function!"

All without needing to worry about writing an HTTP server or complicated request handling logic.

Watch this video to learn more about Functions Frameworks.

Features

  • Spin up a local development server for quick testing
  • Invoke a function in response to a request
  • Automatically unmarshal events conforming to the CloudEvents spec
  • Portable between serverless platforms

Installation

Add the Functions Framework to your composer.json file using Composer.

composer require google/cloud-functions-framework

Define your Function

Create an index.php file with the following contents:

<?php

use Psr\Http\Message\ServerRequestInterface;

function helloHttp(ServerRequestInterface $request)
{
    return "Hello World from a PHP HTTP function!" . PHP_EOL;
}

Quickstarts

Run your function locally

After completing the steps under Installation and Define your Function, run the following commands:

export FUNCTION_TARGET=helloHttp
php -S localhost:8080 vendor/google/cloud-functions-framework/router.php

Open http://localhost:8080/ in your browser and see Hello World from a PHP HTTP function!.

Run your function in a container

After completing the steps under Installation and Define your Function, build the container using the example Dockerfile:

docker build . \
    -f vendor/google/cloud-functions-framework/examples/hello/Dockerfile \
    -t my-cloud-function

Run the cloud functions framework container:

docker run -p 8080:8080 \
    -e FUNCTION_TARGET=helloHttp \
    my-cloud-function

Open http://localhost:8080/ in your browser and see Hello World from a PHP HTTP function. You can also send requests to this function using curl from another terminal window:

curl localhost:8080
# Output: Hello World from a PHP HTTP function!

Run your function on Google Cloud Run Functions

NOTE: For an extensive list of samples, see the [PHP functions samples][functions-samples] and the [official how-to guides][functions-how-to].

Follow the Cloud Run function quickstart for PHP to learn how to deploy a function to Cloud Run.

Run your function as a container in Cloud Run

You can manually build your function as a container and deploy it into Cloud Run. Follow the Cloud Run instructions for building a function for complete instructions.

Use CloudEvents

The Functions Framework can unmarshall incoming CloudEvents payloads to a cloudevent object. This will be passed as arguments to your function when it receives a request. Note that your function must use the cloudevent function signature:

use Google\CloudFunctions\CloudEvent;

function helloCloudEvent(CloudEvent $cloudevent)
{
    // Print the whole CloudEvent
    $stdout = fopen('php://stdout', 'wb');
    fwrite($stdout, $cloudevent);
}

You will also need to set the FUNCTION_SIGNATURE_TYPE environment variable to cloudevent.

export FUNCTION_TARGET=helloCloudEvent
export FUNCTION_SIGNATURE_TYPE=cloudevent
php -S localhost:8080 vendor/google/cloud-functions-framework/router.php

In a separate tab, make a cURL request in Cloud Event format to your function:

curl localhost:8080 \
    -H "ce-id: 1234567890" \
    -H "ce-source: //pubsub.googleapis.com/projects/MY-PROJECT/topics/MY-TOPIC" \
    -H "ce-specversion: 1.0" \
    -H "ce-type: com.google.cloud.pubsub.topic.publish" \
    -d '{"foo": "bar"}'

Your original process should output the following:

CLOUDEVENT metadata:
- id: 1234567890
- source: //pubsub.googleapis.com/projects/MY-PROJECT/topics/MY-TOPIC
- specversion: 1.0
- type: com.google.cloud.pubsub.topic.publish
- datacontenttype:
- dataschema:
- subject:
- time:

IMPORTANT: The above tutorials to deploy to a docker container and to Cloud Run work for CloudEvents as well, as long as FUNCTION_TARGET and FUNCTION_SIGNATURE_TYPE are set appropriately.

Working with PSR-7 HTTP Objects

The first parameter of your function is a Request object which implements the PSR-7 ServerRequestInterface:

use Psr\Http\Message\ServerRequestInterface;

function helloHttp(ServerRequestInterface $request): string
{
    return sprintf("Hello %s from PHP HTTP function!" . PHP_EOL,
        $request->getQueryParams()['name'] ?? 'World');
}

You can return a PSR-7 compatible ResponseInterface instead of a string. This allows you to set additional request properties such as the HTTP Status Code and headers.

use Psr\Http\Message\ServerRequestInterface;
use Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface;
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Response;
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Utils;

function helloHttp(ServerRequestInterface $request): ResponseInterface
{
    $body = sprintf("Hello %s from PHP HTTP function!" . PHP_EOL,
        $request->getQueryParams()['name'] ?? 'World');

    return (new Response())
        ->withBody(Utils::streamFor($body))
        ->withStatus(418) // I'm a teapot
        ->withHeader('Foo', 'Bar');
}

A request to this function will produce a response similar to the following:

HTTP/1.1 418 I'm a teapot
Host: localhost:8080
Date: Wed, 03 Jun 2020 00:48:38 GMT
Foo: Bar

Hello World from PHP HTTP function!

See the PSR-7 documentation documentation for more on working with the request and response objects.

Use Google Cloud Storage

When you require the google/cloud-storage package with composer, the functions framework will register the gs:// stream wrapper. This enables your function to read and write to Google Cloud Storage as you would any filesystem:

// Get the contents of an object in GCS
$object = file_get_contents('gs://{YOUR_BUCKET_NAME}/object.txt');
// Make modifications
$object .= "\nadd a line";
// Write the new contents back to GCS
file_put_contents('gs://{YOUR_BUCKET_NAME}/object.txt', $object);

You can unregister this at any time by using stream_wrapper_unregister:

// unregister the automatically registered one
stream_wrapper_unregister('gs');

Run your function on Knative

Cloud Run and Cloud Run on GKE both implement the Knative Serving API. The Functions Framework is designed to be compatible with Knative environments. Just build and deploy your container to a Knative environment.

If you want even more control over the environment, you can deploy your container image to Cloud Run on GKE. With Cloud Run on GKE, you can run your function on a GKE cluster, which gives you additional control over the environment (including use of GPU-based instances, longer timeouts and more).

Configure the Functions Framework

You can configure the Functions Framework using the environment variables shown below:

Contributing

Contributions to this library are welcome and encouraged. See CONTRIBUTING for more information on how to get started.