/reactphp-soap

Simple, async SOAP webservice client, built on top of ReactPHP.

Primary LanguagePHPMIT LicenseMIT

clue/reactphp-soap

CI status installs on Packagist

Simple, async SOAP web service client library, built on top of ReactPHP.

Most notably, SOAP is often used for invoking Remote procedure calls (RPCs) in distributed systems. Internally, SOAP messages are encoded as XML and usually sent via HTTP POST requests. For the most part, SOAP (originally Simple Object Access protocol) is a protocol of the past, and in fact anything but simple. It is still in use by many (often legacy) systems. This project provides a simple API for invoking async RPCs to remote web services.

  • Async execution of functions - Send any number of functions (RPCs) to the remote web service in parallel and process their responses as soon as results come in. The Promise-based design provides a sane interface to working with out of order responses.
  • Async processing of the WSDL - The WSDL (web service description language) file will be downloaded and processed in the background.
  • Event-driven core - Internally, everything uses event handlers to react to incoming events, such as an incoming RPC result.
  • Lightweight, SOLID design - Provides a thin abstraction that is just good enough and does not get in your way. Built on top of tested components instead of re-inventing the wheel.
  • Good test coverage - Comes with an automated tests suite and is regularly tested against actual web services in the wild.

Table of contents

Support us

We invest a lot of time developing, maintaining and updating our awesome open-source projects. You can help us sustain this high-quality of our work by becoming a sponsor on GitHub. Sponsors get numerous benefits in return, see our sponsoring page for details.

Let's take these projects to the next level together! 🚀

Quickstart example

Once installed, you can use the following code to query an example web service via SOAP:

<?php

require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';

$browser = new React\Http\Browser();
$wsdl = 'http://example.com/demo.wsdl';

$browser->get($wsdl)->then(function (Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface $response) use ($browser) {
    $client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client($browser, (string)$response->getBody());
    $api = new Clue\React\Soap\Proxy($client);

    $api->getBank(array('blz' => '12070000'))->then(function ($result) {
        var_dump('Result', $result);
    });
});

See also the examples.

Usage

Client

The Client class is responsible for communication with the remote SOAP WebService server. It requires the WSDL file contents and an optional array of SOAP options:

$wsdl = '<?xml …';
$options = array();

$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client(null, $wsdl, $options);

This class takes an optional Browser|null $browser parameter that can be used to pass the browser instance to use for this object. If you need custom connector settings (DNS resolution, TLS parameters, timeouts, proxy servers etc.), you can explicitly pass a custom instance of the ConnectorInterface to the Browser instance and pass it as an additional argument to the Client like this:

$connector = new React\Socket\Connector(array(
    'dns' => '127.0.0.1',
    'tcp' => array(
        'bindto' => '192.168.10.1:0'
    ),
    'tls' => array(
        'verify_peer' => false,
        'verify_peer_name' => false
    )
));

$browser = new React\Http\Browser($connector);
$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client($browser, $wsdl);

The Client works similar to PHP's SoapClient (which it uses under the hood), but leaves you the responsibility to load the WSDL file. This allows you to use local WSDL files, WSDL files from a cache or the most common form, downloading the WSDL file contents from an URL through the Browser:

$browser = new React\Http\Browser();

$browser->get($url)->then(
    function (Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface $response) use ($browser) {
        // WSDL file is ready, create client
        $client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client($browser, (string)$response->getBody());

        // do something…
    },
    function (Exception $e) {
        // an error occured while trying to download the WSDL
    }
);

The Client constructor loads the given WSDL file contents into memory and parses its definition. If the given WSDL file is invalid and can not be parsed, this will throw a SoapFault:

try {
    $client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client(null, $wsdl);
} catch (SoapFault $e) {
    echo 'Error: ' . $e->getMessage() . PHP_EOL;
}

Note that if you have an old version of ext-xdebug < 2.7 loaded, this may halt with a fatal error instead of throwing a SoapFault. It is not recommended to use this extension in production, so this should only ever affect test environments.

The Client constructor accepts an array of options. All given options will be passed through to the underlying SoapClient. However, not all options make sense in this async implementation and as such may not have the desired effect. See also SoapClient documentation for more details.

If working in WSDL mode, the $options parameter is optional. If working in non-WSDL mode, the WSDL parameter must be set to null and the options parameter must contain the location and uri options, where location is the URL of the SOAP server to send the request to, and uri is the target namespace of the SOAP service:

$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client(null, null, array(
    'location' => 'http://example.com',
    'uri' => 'http://ping.example.com',
));

Similarly, if working in WSDL mode, the location option can be used to explicitly overwrite the URL of the SOAP server to send the request to:

$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client(null, $wsdl, array(
    'location' => 'http://example.com'
));

You can use the soap_version option to change from the default SOAP 1.1 to use SOAP 1.2 instead:

$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client(null, $wsdl, array(
    'soap_version' => SOAP_1_2
));

You can use the classmap option to map certain WSDL types to PHP classes like this:

$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client(null, $wsdl, array(
    'classmap' => array(
        'getBankResponseType' => BankResponse::class
    )
));

The proxy_host option (and family) is not supported by this library. As an alternative, you can configure the given $browser instance to use an HTTP proxy server. If you find any other option is missing or not supported here, PRs are much appreciated!

All public methods of the Client are considered advanced usage. If you want to call RPC functions, see below for the Proxy class.

soapCall()

The soapCall(string $method, mixed[] $arguments): PromiseInterface<mixed, Exception> method can be used to queue the given function to be sent via SOAP and wait for a response from the remote web service.

// advanced usage, see Proxy for recommended alternative
$promise = $client->soapCall('ping', array('hello', 42));

Note: This is considered advanced usage, you may want to look into using the Proxy instead.

$proxy = new Clue\React\Soap\Proxy($client);
$promise = $proxy->ping('hello', 42);

getFunctions()

The getFunctions(): string[]|null method can be used to return an array of functions defined in the WSDL.

It returns the equivalent of PHP's SoapClient::__getFunctions(). In non-WSDL mode, this method returns null.

getTypes()

The getTypes(): string[]|null method can be used to return an array of types defined in the WSDL.

It returns the equivalent of PHP's SoapClient::__getTypes(). In non-WSDL mode, this method returns null.

getLocation()

The getLocation(string|int $function): string method can be used to return the location (URI) of the given webservice $function.

Note that this is not to be confused with the WSDL file location. A WSDL file can contain any number of function definitions. It's very common that all of these functions use the same location definition. However, technically each function can potentially use a different location.

The $function parameter should be a string with the the SOAP function name. See also getFunctions() for a list of all available functions.

assert('http://example.com/soap/service' === $client->getLocation('echo'));

For easier access, this function also accepts a numeric function index. It then uses getFunctions() internally to get the function name for the given index. This is particularly useful for the very common case where all functions use the same location and accessing the first location is sufficient.

assert('http://example.com/soap/service' === $client->getLocation(0));

When the location option has been set in the Client constructor (such as when in non-WSDL mode) or via the withLocation() method, this method returns the value of the given location.

Passing a $function not defined in the WSDL file will throw a SoapFault.

withLocation()

The withLocation(string $location): self method can be used to return a new Client with the updated location (URI) for all functions.

Note that this is not to be confused with the WSDL file location. A WSDL file can contain any number of function definitions. It's very common that all of these functions use the same location definition. However, technically each function can potentially use a different location.

$client = $client->withLocation('http://example.com/soap');

assert('http://example.com/soap' === $client->getLocation('echo'));

As an alternative to this method, you can also set the location option in the Client constructor (such as when in non-WSDL mode).

withHeaders()

The withHeaders(array $headers): self method can be used to return a new Client with the updated headers for all functions. This allows to set specific headers required by some SOAP endpoints, like for authentication, etc.

$client = $client->withHeaders([new SoapHeader(...)]);

Proxy

The Proxy class wraps an existing Client instance in order to ease calling SOAP functions.

$proxy = new Clue\React\Soap\Proxy($client);

Note that this class is called "Proxy" because it will forward (proxy) all method calls to the actual SOAP service via the underlying Client::soapCall() method. This is not to be confused with using a proxy server. See Client documentation for more details on how to use an HTTP proxy server.

Functions

Each and every method call to the Proxy class will be sent via SOAP.

$proxy->myMethod($myArg1, $myArg2)->then(function ($response) {
    // result received
});

Please refer to your WSDL or its accompanying documentation for details on which functions and arguments are supported.

Promises

Issuing SOAP functions is async (non-blocking), so you can actually send multiple RPC requests in parallel. The web service will respond to each request with a return value. The order is not guaranteed. Sending requests uses a Promise-based interface that makes it easy to react to when a request is fulfilled (i.e. either successfully resolved or rejected with an error):

$proxy->demo()->then(
    function ($response) {
        // response received for demo function
    },
    function (Exception $e) {
        // an error occured while executing the request
    }
});

Cancellation

The returned Promise is implemented in such a way that it can be cancelled when it is still pending. Cancelling a pending promise will reject its value with an Exception and clean up any underlying resources.

$promise = $proxy->demo();

Loop::addTimer(2.0, function () use ($promise) {
    $promise->cancel();
});

Timeouts

This library uses a very efficient HTTP implementation, so most SOAP requests should usually be completed in mere milliseconds. However, when sending SOAP requests over an unreliable network (the internet), there are a number of things that can go wrong and may cause the request to fail after a time. As such, timeouts are handled by the underlying HTTP library and this library respects PHP's default_socket_timeout setting (default 60s) as a timeout for sending the outgoing SOAP request and waiting for a successful response and will otherwise cancel the pending request and reject its value with an Exception.

Note that this timeout value covers creating the underlying transport connection, sending the SOAP request, waiting for the remote service to process the request and receiving the full SOAP response. To use a custom timeout value, you can pass the timeout to the underlying Browser like this:

$browser = new React\Http\Browser();
$browser = $browser->withTimeout(10.0);

$client = new Clue\React\Soap\Client($browser, $wsdl);
$proxy = new Clue\React\Soap\Proxy($client);

$proxy->demo()->then(function ($response) {
    // response received within 10 seconds maximum
    var_dump($response);
});

Similarly, you can use a negative timeout value to not apply a timeout at all or use a null value to restore the default handling. Note that the underlying connection may still impose a different timeout value. See also the underlying timeouts documentation for more details.

Install

The recommended way to install this library is through Composer. New to Composer?

This project follows SemVer. This will install the latest supported version:

$ composer require clue/soap-react:^2.0

See also the CHANGELOG for details about version upgrades.

This project aims to run on any platform and thus only requires ext-soap and supports running on PHP 7.1+.

Tests

To run the test suite, you first need to clone this repo and then install all dependencies through Composer:

$ composer install

To run the test suite, go to the project root and run:

$ php vendor/bin/phpunit

The test suite also contains a number of functional integration tests that rely on a stable internet connection. If you do not want to run these, they can simply be skipped like this:

$ php vendor/bin/phpunit --exclude-group internet

License

This project is released under the permissive MIT license.

Did you know that I offer custom development services and issuing invoices for sponsorships of releases and for contributions? Contact me (@clue) for details.