Webservice helper
This is a fork of Webservice helper from David Kingma.
Original sources come from www.jool.nl/webservicehelper/.
Original author : David Kingma davidjoolnl, (*1)
Maintainer of this fork: Laurent Jouanneau
web site: https://github.com/jelix/webservice-helper, (*2)
What does the webservice helper?
The webservice helper does what the name says: helping you making a php class
available as webservice. It generates the documentation, the webservice
description file (WSDL) and handles errorhandling. It consists of three parts:
* extension of the PHP reflection classes to also parse the comments for
information on parameter info and return values. The documentation and WSDL
are generated from these classes.(see also documentation.php as an example)
* extension to the PHP SOAP implementation. It catches all normal exceptions
and allows typehints in the webservice methods. (ie. saveContact(contact $contact)
), (*3)
Installation
Use Composer to install the library. Package name: jelix/webservice-helper
., (*4)
If you don't want to use Composer, you can copy the content of the source code
(all needed classes are into lib/
), and you must create an autoloader (like in
example/common.php
or you must include all classes., (*5)
Manual
So how do you create your own webservice. As an example we create a webservice to
add and show contacts. First you create a class called contactManager in the
/example/data_objects
with the public functions getContacts()
,
saveContact(contact $contact)
and newContact()
. To let the Webservice helper
know what the parameters and return values of each method are we put a comment
in front of each method specifying the parameters and return types. For example:, (*6)
/**
* This method saves the given contact
* @return contact[] Array with all the contacts
*/
public function getContacts(){}
/**
* This method saves the given contact
* @param contact The contact to save
* @return void
*/
public function saveContact(contact $contact){}
/**
* This method saves the given contact
* @return contact A new contact template
*/
public function newContact(){}
/**
* Gets the current contact list as associative array
* @return contact[=>] keys are contact name
*/
public function getContactsAsAssoc() {}
We used the contact type as a return value for newContact()
and getContacts()
so we
need to define what a contact looks like. For that we create a class called contact:, (*7)
class contact{
/** @var string */
public $name;
/** @var string */
public $address;
}
Since string is (just as boolean and int) a known datatype we don't need to specify it
any further., (*8)
The last thing we need to do to finish our webservice is to tell the webservice that de
contactManager
class is an allowed webservice and that contact
is an allowed data-
structure (for documentation purpose and classmap). In the config.php
you add
"contactmanager"
to the WSClasses
array and add "contact"
to the WSStructures
array., (*9)
You can now view the service documentation at /doc/documentation.php
and the wsdl at
/example/service.php?class=contactManager&wsdl
, (*10)
Note about associative array containing objects: if the soap server defines a classmap
('classmap'
option to SoapServer
in PHP), objects are wrapped into SoapVal
objects, else
they are simple stdClass
objects., (*11)
FAQ
-
My function doesn't showup in the documentation nor the WSDL file?
Please check if it's a public function and it doesn't start with __
, (*12)
-
It doesn't work!, (*13)
- Do you see any warnings in the generated documentation? Fix them
- Check case sensitivity of class names
- Did you check the javascript console to see if anything goes wrong?
- Tried cleaning the wsdl cache in the WSDL cache directory?
- Did you check the WSDL url in the client?
-
Can I use the webservice helper in my own project?
Yes you can use it under the terms of LGPL 2.1, (*14)
-
Can I contribute?, (*15)
Yes, open an issue and/or a PR on https://github.com/jelix/webservice-helper, (*16)
Example and unit tests
See tests/README.md, (*17)