A fully RESTful server implementation for CodeIgniter using one library, one config file and one controller.
- PHP 5.2 or greater
- CodeIgniter 2.1.0 to 3.0-dev
Note: for 1.7.x support download v2.2 from Downloads tab
Drag and drop the application/libraries/Format.php and application/libraries/REST_Controller.php files into your application's directories. Either autoload the REST_Controller
class or require_once
it at the top of your controllers to load it into the scope. Additionally, copy the rest.php file from application/config in your application's configuration directory.
When your controller extends from REST_Controller
, the method names will be appended with the HTTP method used to access the request. If you're making an HTTP GET
call to /books
, for instance, it would call a Books#index_get()
method.
This allows you to implement a RESTful interface easily:
class Books extends REST_Controller
{
public function index_get()
{
// Display all books
}
public function index_post()
{
// Create a new book
}
}
REST_Controller
also supports PUT
and DELETE
methods, allowing you to support a truly RESTful interface.
Accessing parameters is also easy. Simply use the name of the HTTP verb as a method:
$this->get('blah'); // GET param
$this->post('blah'); // POST param
$this->put('blah'); // PUT param
The HTTP spec for DELETE requests precludes the use of parameters. For delete requests, you can add items to the URL
public function index_delete($id)
{
$this->response(array(
'returned from delete:' => $id,
));
}
REST_Controller
supports a bunch of different request/response formats, including XML, JSON and serialised PHP. By default, the class will check the URL and look for a format either as an extension or as a separate segment.
This means your URLs can look like this:
http://example.com/books.json
http://example.com/books?format=json
This can be flaky with URI segments, so the recommend approach is using the HTTP Accept
header:
$ curl -H "Accept: application/json" http://example.com
Any responses you make from the class (see responses for more on this) will be serialised in the designated format.
The class provides a response()
method that allows you to return data in the user's requested response format.
Returning any object / array / string / whatever is easy:
public function index_get()
{
$this->response($this->db->get('books')->result());
}
This will automatically return an HTTP 200 OK
response. You can specify the status code in the second parameter:
public function index_post()
{
// ...create new book
$this->response($book, 201); // Send an HTTP 201 Created
}
If you don't specify a response code, and the data you respond with == FALSE
(an empty array or string, for instance), the response code will automatically be set to 404 Not Found
:
$this->response(array()); // HTTP 404 Not Found
If your application uses language files to support multiple locales, REST_Controller
will automatically parse the HTTP Accept-Language
header and provide the language(s) in your actions. This information can be found in the $this->response->lang
object:
public function __construct()
{
parent::__construct();
if (is_array($this->response->lang))
{
$this->load->language('application', $this->response->lang[0]);
}
else
{
$this->load->language('application', $this->response->lang);
}
}
This class also provides rudimentary support for HTTP basic authentication and/or the securer HTTP digest access authentication.
You can enable basic authentication by setting the $config['rest_auth']
to 'basic'
. The $config['rest_valid_logins']
directive can then be used to set the usernames and passwords able to log in to your system. The class will automatically send all the correct headers to trigger the authentication dialogue:
$config['rest_valid_logins'] = array( 'username' => 'password', 'other_person' => 'secure123' );
Enabling digest auth is similarly easy. Configure your desired logins in the config file like above, and set $config['rest_auth']
to 'digest'
. The class will automatically send out the headers to enable digest auth.
If you're tying this library into an AJAX endpoint where clients authenticate using PHP sessions then you may not like either of the digest nor basic authentication methods. In that case, you can tell the REST Library what PHP session variable to check for. If the variable exists, then the user is authorized. It will be up to your application to set that variable. You can define the variable in $config['auth_source']
. Then tell the library to use a php session variable by setting $config['rest_auth']
to session
.
All three methods of authentication can be secured further by using an IP whitelist. If you enable $config['rest_ip_whitelist_enabled']
in your config file, you can then set a list of allowed IPs.
Any client connecting to your API will be checked against the whitelisted IP array. If they're on the list, they'll be allowed access. If not, sorry, no can do hombre. The whitelist is a comma-separated string:
$config['rest_ip_whitelist'] = '123.456.789.0, 987.654.32.1';
Your localhost IPs (127.0.0.1
and 0.0.0.0
) are allowed by default.
In addition to the authentication methods above, the REST_Controller
class also supports the use of API keys. Enabling API keys is easy. Turn it on in your config/rest.php file:
$config['rest_enable_keys'] = TRUE;
You'll need to create a new database table to store and access the keys. REST_Controller
will automatically assume you have a table that looks like this:
CREATE TABLE `keys` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`key` varchar(40) NOT NULL,
`level` int(2) NOT NULL,
`ignore_limits` tinyint(1) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`date_created` int(11) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
The class will look for an HTTP header with the API key on each request. An invalid or missing API key will result in an HTTP 403 Forbidden
.
By default, the HTTP will be X-API-KEY
. This can be configured in config/rest.php.
$ curl -X POST -H "X-API-KEY: some_key_here" http://example.com/books
- Added Blacklist IP option
- Added controller based access controls
- Added support for OPTIONS, PATCH, and HEAD (from boh1996)
- Added logging of the time it takes for a request (rtime column in DB)
- Changed DB schemas to use InnoDB, not MyISAM
- Updated Readme to reflect new developer (Chris Kacerguis)
- Update CodeIgniter files to 2.1.3
- Fixed issue #165
- Update CodeIgniter files to 2.1.2
- Log Table support for IPv6 & NULL parameters
- Abstract out the processes of firing a controller method within _remap() to an separate method
- Moved GET, POST, PUT, and DELETE parsing to separate methods, allowing them to be overridden as needed
- Small bugfix for a PHP 5.3 strlen error
- Fixed some PHP 5.4 warnings
- Fix for bug in Format.php's to_html() which failed to detect if $data was really a multidimensional array.
- Fix for empty node on XML output format, for false = 0, true = 1.
- Added loads of PHPDoc comments.
- Response where method doesn't exist is now "HTTP 405 Method Not Allowed", not "HTTP 404 Not Found".
- Compatible with PHP 5.4.
- Added support for gzip compression.
- Fix the apache_request_header function with CGI.
- Fixed up correctly .foo extensions to work when get arguments provided.
- Allows method emulation via X-HTTP-Method-Override
- Support for Backbone.emulateHTTP improved.
- Combine both URI segment and GET params instead of using one or the other
- Separate each piece of the WWW-Authenticate header for digest requests with a comma.
- Added IP whitelist option.
- Instead of just seeing item, item, item, the singular version of the basenode will be used if possible. Example.
- Re-factored to use the Format library, which will soon be merged with CodeIgniter.
- Fixed Limit bug (limit of 5 would allow 6 requests).
- Added logging for invalid API key requests.
- Changed serialize to serialized.
- Changed all visibility 'private' to 'protected'.
- MIME's with character encodings on the end will now work.
- Fixed PUT arguments. Once again just sending a body query string works. Example
- Fixed up all .foo extensions to work when no get arguments provided, and moved .html to Format library.
- Updated key.php example to use config_item('rest_keys_table') instead of hardcoded 'keys' table name.
- Updated REST_Controller to use config_item('rest_limits_table') instead of hardcoded 'limits'.
- Added support for UTF-8 characters in XML.
- Added JSONP as a return type.
- Loaded the Security lib before use in case it is not loaded in the application.
- Emulate the Request method for MooTools support.
- Upgraded everything to use CodeIgniter Reactor 2.0.0.
- Added the ability to set or override the Auth type per controller / method.
- Adding ability to only accept AJAX requests.
- Upgraded to CodeIgniter 2.0 and stopped supporting CodeIgniter 1.7.2.
- After $this->response() is called the controller will stop processing.
- Added config options to set table names for keys, limits and logs.
- FALSE values were coming out as empty strings in xml or rawxml mode, now they will be 0/1.
- key => FALSE can now be used to override the keys_enabled option for a specific method, and level is now optional. If no level is set it will assume the method has a level of 0.
- Fixed issue where calls to ->get('foo') would error is foo was not set. Reported by Paul Barto.
This project was originally written by the awesome Phil Sturgeon, however his involvment has shifted as he is no longer using it. As of 11/20/2013 further developement and support will be done by Chris Kacerguis.
Pull Requests are the best way to fix bugs or add features. I know loads of you use this, so please contribute if you have improvements to be made and I'll keep releasing versions over time.