A SOAP client that provides a clean interface for handling requests and responses.
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Requires
- php: ^8.1|^8.2|^8.3
- illuminate/support: ^10.0|^11.0
Requires (Dev)
- ext-soap: *
- laravel/pint: ^1.14
- mockery/mockery: ^1.4
- orchestra/testbench: ^8.0|^9.0
- pestphp/pest: ^2.0
- phpoption/phpoption: ^1.8.1
- spatie/ray: ^1.17
README
A Laravel SOAP client that provides a clean interface for handling requests and responses.
Docs
Requirements
- PHP 7.4 or greater
- Laravel 8.16 or greater
Installation
You can install the package via composer
composer require ricorocks-digital-agency/soap
Note: As of v1.5.0 Soap requires PHP ^7.4
Using Soap
Soap can be accessed through the provided Facade
use RicorocksDigitalAgency\Soap\Facades\Soap Soap::to()
Features/API
Headers
You can set the headers for each soap request that will be passed to the Soap Client using the withHeaders
method.
Soap::to('...')->withHeaders(...$headers)->call('...');
Each header should be a Header
instance, which provides a fluent interface for constructing a new PHP Soap Header and can be composed as follows:
$header = Soap::header() ->name('Authentication') ->namespace('test.com') ->data([ 'user' => '...', 'password' => '...' ]) ->mustUnderstand() ->actor('foo.co.uk')
This can also be expressed as:
$header = Soap::header('Authentication', 'test.com', [ 'user' => '...', 'password' => '...' ]) ->mustUnderstand() ->actor('foo.co.uk')
Plus, the soap_header
helper method can be used:
$header = soap_header('Authentication', 'test.com') ->data([ 'user' => '...', 'password' => '...' ])
The
data
for the header can either be an array or aSoapVar
, as per theSoapHeader
constructor
Global Headers
Soap allows you to set headers that should be included for every request:
Soap::headers(...$headers)
Again, each header should be an instance of Header
.
You may also want to include headers on every request, but only for a certain endpoint or action:
// Only requests to this endpoint will include these headers Soap::headers(soap_header('Auth', 'test.com'))->for('https://api.example.com'); // Only requests to this endpoint and the method Customers will include these headers Soap::headers(soap_header('Brand', 'test.com'))->for('https://api.example.com', 'Customers');
These calls are usually placed in the boot
method of one of your application's Service Providers.
To
The endpoint to be accessed
Soap::to('github.com/api')
Functions
Retrieve the functions the endpoint provides
Soap::to('github.com/api')->functions()
This is a wrapper for the PHP SoapClient _getFunctions()
method.
Call
Call the method at the endpoint.
Soap::to('github.com/api')->call('merge')
The method can also be called as a Magic Method.
Soap::to('github.com/api')->merge()
Parameters
The Call method of course accepts parameters. The parameters passed can be an array
Soap::to('github.com/api')->call('merge', ['branch' => 'staging', 'credentials' => ['password' => '...'])
Nodes
To simplify dealing with SOAP XML in your requests, Soap provides a method to fluently construct the nodes in the request.
For example, say the following node was desired in the XML request. Note it has no body.
<PullRequest branch="dev" target="main"> </PullRequest>
The array
to pass to the underlying php SoapClient
to construct this node would be as follows
'PullRequest' => [ '_' => '', 'branch' => 'dev', 'target' => 'main' ]
The _
is required to set the information not as the body, but as the attributes for the node.
However, this is not required if the XML node has a body.
<PullRequest branch="dev" target="main"> <Author>Ricorocks</Author> </PullRequest>
Now, the array
would be as follows
'PullRequest' => [ 'Author' => 'Ricorocks', 'branch' => 'dev', 'target' => 'main' ]
So, to prevent confusion, the Soap::node()
will allow for intelligent construction of the php array
to be passed to SoapClient
.
Imagine we are accessing the information
method to see details about Pull Requests
Soap::to('...') ->information('PullRequest' => soap_node(['branch' => 'dev', 'target' => 'main'])) 'PullRequest' => [ '_' => '', 'branch' => 'dev', 'target' => 'main' ] Soap::to('...') ->information('PullRequest' => soap_node(['branch' => 'dev', 'target' => 'main'])->body(['Author' => 'Ricorocks'])) 'PullRequest' => [ 'Author' => 'Ricorocks', 'branch' => 'dev', 'target' => 'main' ]
Now, just by adding or removing a body to the soap_node()
the outputted array is intelligently constructed.
A node can be made with either the Facade Soap::node()
or the helper method soap_node()
.
Options
You can set custom options for each soap request that will be passed to the Soap Client using the withOptions
method.
Soap::to('...')->withOptions(['soap_version' => SOAP_1_2])->call('...');
See https://www.php.net/manual/en/soapclient.construct.php for more details and available options.
Soap also provides a number of methods that add syntactical sugar to the most commonly used options, which are detailed below.
Tracing
Soap allows you to easily trace your interactions with the SOAP endpoint being accessed.
To trace all requests, set the following in the register method of your ServiceProvider
:
Soap::trace()
Now, all Response
objects returned will have a Trace
object attached, accessible via $response->getTrace()
. This has four properties which are wrappers for the respective methods found on the SoapClient
:
xmlRequest
(__getLastRequest
)xmlResponse
(__getLastResponse
)requestHeaders
(__getLastRequestHeaders
)responseHeaders
(__getLastResponseHeaders
)
Tracing can also be declared locally:
Soap::to('...')->trace()->call('...')
Now, just this Response
will have a valid Trace
.
Tracing is null safe. If $response->getTrace()
is called when a Trace
hasn't been set, a new Trace
is returned. This Trace
's properties will all return null
.
Authentication
You can authenticate using Basic or Digest by calling withBasicAuth
and withDigestAuth
respectively.
Soap::to('...')->withBasicAuth('username', 'password')->call('...'); Soap::to('...')->withDigestAuth('username', 'password')->call('...');
Global Options
Sometimes, you may wish to include the same set of options on every SOAP request. You can do that using the options
method on the Soap
facade:
// Every request will include these options automatically Soap::options(['login' => 'foo', 'password' => 'bar']);
You may also want to include options on every request, but only for a certain endpoint or action:
// Only requests to this endpoint will include these options Soap::options(['login' => 'foo', 'password' => 'bar'])->for('https://api.example.com'); // Only requests to this endpoint and the method Customers will include these options Soap::options(['login' => 'foo', 'password' => 'bar'])->for('https://api.example.com', 'Customers');
These calls are usually placed in the boot
method of one of your application's Service Providers.
Hooks
Hooks allow you to perform actions before and after Soap makes a request. These hooks can be local (per request), or global (applied to every request).
You can make changes to the Request
object in beforeRequesting
hooks if you wish. These changes will be reflected in the actual request. In fact, this is how the Soap include
functionality works.
Local
To create a local hook, chain beforeRequesting
or afterRequesting
to a Request
object:
Soap::to('http://example.com') ->beforeRequesting(fn() => Log::info('Request going in!')) ->afterRequesting(fn() => Log::info('Request coming out!')) ->call('Action', []);
Any before requesting hooks will receive the request as a parameter and after requesting hooks will receive the request and response as a parameter.
Global
To create a global hook, use the Soap::beforeRequesting
and Soap::afterRequesting
methods.
Soap::beforeRequesting(fn() => Log::info('Request going in!')); Soap::afterRequesting(fn() => Log::info('Request coming out!'));
Any before requesting hooks will receive the request as a parameter and after requesting hooks will receive the request and response as a parameter.
Faking
Soap includes full support for faking endpoints and actions, as well as inspecting requests and responses.
To fake all SOAP requests, call Soap:fake()
. This will return an empty
response for every request. It is likely that you will want to be more
specific, so you can pass the fake
method an array of endpoints as keys
and response objects as values:
Soap::fake(['http://endpoint.com' => Response::new(['foo' => 'bar'])]);
In the above example, any SOAP request made to http://endpoint.com
will
be faked, and a Response
object with a body of ['foo' => 'bar']
will
be returned instead.
What if you want to specify the SOAP action too? Easy! Just add :{ActionName}
after your endpoint, like so:
Soap::fake(['http://endpoint.com:Details' => Response::new(['foo' => 'bar'])]);
Now, only SOAP requests to the Details
actions will be mocked.
You can also specify multiple actions with the |
operator:
Soap::fake(['http://endpoint.com:Details|Information|Overview' => Response::new(['foo' => 'bar'])]);
Now, only SOAP requests to the Details
, Information
and Overview
actions will be mocked.
Inspecting requests
If you've made a call to Soap::fake()
, Soap will record all requests made. You can then inspect these requests as you see fit.
Soap::assertSentCount($count)
If you just want to assert that n
amount of SOAP requests were sent,
you can use this method, passing in the desired count as a parameter.
Soap::assertSent(callable $callback)
You can dive a little deeper and test that a particular request was
actually sent, and that it returned the expected response. You should
pass a closure into this method, which receives the $request
and $response
as parameters, and return true
if they match your
expectations.
Soap::assertNotSent(callable $callback)
This is the opposite of Soap::assertSent
. You can make sure that a
particular request wasn't made. Again, returning true
from the
closure will cause it to pass.
Soap::assertNothingSent()
If you just want to make sure that absolutely nothing was sent out, you can call this. It does what it says on the tin.
Configuration
Configuration of Soap is via the Soap
facade in the boot()
method in your service provider.
Include
Parameters can be set to be automatically included in all requests. These can be arrays
or nodes
Soap::include(['credentials' => soap_node(['user' => '...', 'password' => '...'])]);
You can even use dot syntax on your array keys to permeate deeper into the request body.
Soap::include(['login.credentials' => soap_node(['user' => '...', 'password' => '...'])]);
Often, you'll want to target specific endpoints or actions. You can chain the for
method to achieve this.
// Only requests to https://api.example.com will include this data Soap::include(['credentials' => soap_node(['user' => '...', 'password' => '...'])])->for('https://api.example.com'); // Only requests to https://api.example.com calling the Customers method will include this data Soap::include(['credentials' => soap_node(['user' => '...', 'password' => '...'])])->for('https://api.example.com', 'Customers');
Ray Support
This package comes with first party support for Ray, an awesome debugging tool by Spatie! We offer a couple of methods that you can use to start debugging immediately.
Obviously, you'll need Ray installed in your project for this to work.
ray()->showSoapRequests()
This enables Ray support in the SOAP package. Any SOAP requests made will be recorded in the Ray app for you to inspect.
ray()->stopShowingSoapRequests()
This disables Ray support in the SOAP package. Requests will stop being recorded if previously enabled.
If you want to use the Ray integration inside of your tests, remember to register the
RayServiceProvider
along with your other providers.
Changelog
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
Security
If you discover any security related issues, please email hello@ricorocks.agency instead of using the issue tracker.
Credits
License
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.