169 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
169 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
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Requests for PHP
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================
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[![CS](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/actions/workflows/cs.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/actions/workflows/cs.yml)
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[![Lint](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/actions/workflows/lint.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/actions/workflows/lint.yml)
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[![Test](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/actions/workflows/test.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/actions/workflows/test.yml)
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[![codecov.io](https://codecov.io/gh/WordPress/Requests/branch/stable/graph/badge.svg?token=AfpxK7WMxj&branch=stable)](https://codecov.io/gh/WordPress/Requests?branch=stable)
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Requests is a HTTP library written in PHP, for human beings. It is roughly
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based on the API from the excellent [Requests Python
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library](http://python-requests.org/). Requests is [ISC
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Licensed](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/blob/stable/LICENSE) (similar to
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the new BSD license) and has no dependencies, except for PHP 5.6+.
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Despite PHP's use as a language for the web, its tools for sending HTTP requests
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are severely lacking. cURL has an
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[interesting API](https://www.php.net/curl-setopt), to say the
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least, and you can't always rely on it being available. Sockets provide only low
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level access, and require you to build most of the HTTP response parsing
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yourself.
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We all have better things to do. That's why Requests was born.
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```php
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$headers = array('Accept' => 'application/json');
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$options = array('auth' => array('user', 'pass'));
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$request = WpOrg\Requests\Requests::get('https://api.github.com/gists', $headers, $options);
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var_dump($request->status_code);
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// int(200)
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var_dump($request->headers['content-type']);
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// string(31) "application/json; charset=utf-8"
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var_dump($request->body);
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// string(26891) "[...]"
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```
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Requests allows you to send **HEAD**, **GET**, **POST**, **PUT**, **DELETE**,
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and **PATCH** HTTP requests. You can add headers, form data, multipart files,
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and parameters with basic arrays, and access the response data in the same way.
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Requests uses cURL and fsockopen, depending on what your system has available,
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but abstracts all the nasty stuff out of your way, providing a consistent API.
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Features
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--------
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- International Domains and URLs
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- Browser-style SSL Verification
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- Basic/Digest Authentication
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- Automatic Decompression
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- Connection Timeouts
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Installation
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------------
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### Install with Composer
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If you're using [Composer](https://getcomposer.org/) to manage
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dependencies, you can add Requests with it.
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```sh
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composer require rmccue/requests
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```
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or
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```json
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{
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"require": {
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"rmccue/requests": "^2.0"
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}
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}
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```
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### Install source from GitHub
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To install the source code:
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```bash
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$ git clone git://github.com/WordPress/Requests.git
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```
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Next, include the autoloader in your scripts:
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```php
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require_once '/path/to/Requests/src/Autoload.php';
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```
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You'll probably also want to register the autoloader:
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```php
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WpOrg\Requests\Autoload::register();
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```
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### Install source from zip/tarball
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Alternatively, you can fetch a [tarball][] or [zipball][]:
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```bash
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$ curl -L https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/tarball/stable | tar xzv
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(or)
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$ wget https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/tarball/stable -O - | tar xzv
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```
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[tarball]: https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/tarball/stable
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[zipball]: https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/zipball/stable
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### Using a Class Loader
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If you're using a class loader (e.g., [Symfony Class Loader][]) for
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[PSR-4][]-style class loading:
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```php
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$loader = new Psr4ClassLoader();
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$loader->addPrefix('WpOrg\\Requests\\', 'path/to/vendor/Requests/src');
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$loader->register();
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```
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[Symfony Class Loader]: https://github.com/symfony/ClassLoader
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[PSR-4]: https://github.com/php-fig/fig-standards/blob/master/accepted/PSR-4.md
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Documentation
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-------------
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The best place to start is our [prose-based documentation][], which will guide
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you through using Requests.
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After that, take a look at [the documentation for
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`\WpOrg\Requests\Requests::request()`][request_method], where all the parameters are fully
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documented.
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Requests is [100% documented with PHPDoc](https://requests.ryanmccue.info/api-2.x/).
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If you find any problems with it, [create a new
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issue](https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/issues/new)!
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[prose-based documentation]: https://github.com/WordPress/Requests/blob/stable/docs/README.md
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[request_method]: https://requests.ryanmccue.info/api-2.x/classes/WpOrg-Requests-Requests.html#method_request
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Testing
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-------
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Requests strives to have 100% code-coverage of the library with an extensive
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set of tests. We're not quite there yet, but [we're getting close][codecov].
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[codecov]: https://codecov.io/github/WordPress/Requests/
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To run the test suite, first check that you have the [PHP
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JSON extension ](https://www.php.net/book.json) enabled. Then
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simply:
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```bash
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$ phpunit
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```
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If you'd like to run a single set of tests, specify just the name:
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```bash
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$ phpunit Transport/cURL
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```
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Contribute
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----------
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1. Check for open issues or open a new issue for a feature request or a bug.
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2. Fork [the repository][] on Github to start making your changes to the
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`develop` branch (or branch off of it).
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3. Write one or more tests which show that the bug was fixed or that the feature works as expected.
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4. Send in a pull request.
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If you have questions while working on your contribution and you use Slack, there is
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a [#core-http-api] channel available in the [WordPress Slack] in which contributions can be discussed.
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[the repository]: https://github.com/WordPress/Requests
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[#core-http-api]: https://wordpress.slack.com/archives/C02BBE29V42
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[WordPress Slack]: https://make.wordpress.org/chat/
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