reCAPTCHA is a free CAPTCHA service that protects websites from spam and abuse. This is a PHP library that wraps up the server-side verification step required to process responses from the reCAPTCHA service. This client supports both v2 and v3.
- reCAPTCHA: https://www.google.com/recaptcha
- This repo: https://github.com/google/recaptcha
- Hosted demo: https://recaptcha-demo.appspot.com/
- Version: 1.2.1
- License: BSD, see LICENSE
Use Composer to install this library from Packagist:
google/recaptcha
Run the following command from your project directory to add the dependency:
composer require google/recaptcha "^1.2"
Alternatively, add the dependency directly to your composer.json
file:
"require": {
"google/recaptcha": "^1.2"
}
Download the ZIP file
and extract into your project. An autoloader script is provided in
src/autoload.php
which you can require into your script. For example:
require_once '/path/to/recaptcha/src/autoload.php';
$recaptcha = new \ReCaptcha\ReCaptcha($secret);
The classes in the project are structured according to the PSR-4 standard, so you can also use your own autoloader or require the needed files directly in your code.
First obtain the appropriate keys for the type of reCAPTCHA you wish to integrate for v2 at https://www.google.com/recaptcha/admin or v3 at https://g.co/recaptcha/v3.
Then follow the integration guide on the developer site to add the reCAPTCHA functionality into your frontend.
This library comes in when you need to verify the user's response. On the PHP
side you need the response from the reCAPTCHA service and secret key from your
credentials. Instantiate the ReCaptcha
class with your secret key, specify any
additional validation rules, and then call verify()
with the reCAPTCHA
response and user's IP address. For example:
<?php
$recaptcha = new \ReCaptcha\ReCaptcha($secret);
$resp = $recaptcha->setExpectedHostname('recaptcha-demo.appspot.com')
->verify($gRecaptchaResponse, $remoteIp);
if ($resp->isSuccess()) {
// Verified!
} else {
$errors = $resp->getErrorCodes();
}
The following methods are available:
setExpectedHostname($hostname)
: ensures the hostname matches. You must do this if you have disabled "Domain/Package Name Validation" for your credentials.setExpectedApkPackageName($apkPackageName)
: if you're verifying a response from an Android app. Again, you must do this if you have disabled "Domain/Package Name Validation" for your credentials.setExpectedAction($action)
: ensures the action matches for the v3 API.setScoreThreshold($threshold)
: set a score theshold for responses from the v3 APIsetChallengeTimeout($timeoutSeconds)
: set a timeout between the user passing the reCAPTCHA and your server processing it.
Each of the set
*()
methods return the ReCaptcha
instance so you can chain
them together. For example:
<?php
$recaptcha = new \ReCaptcha\ReCaptcha($secret);
$resp = $recaptcha->setExpectedHostname('recaptcha-demo.appspot.com')
->setExpectedAction('homepage')
->setScoreThreshold(0.5)
->verify($gRecaptchaResponse, $remoteIp);
if ($resp->isSuccess()) {
// Verified!
} else {
$errors = $resp->getErrorCodes();
}
You can find the constants for the libraries error codes in the ReCaptcha
class constants, e.g. ReCaptcha::E_HOSTNAME_MISMATCH
For more details on usage and structure, see ARCHITECTURE.
You can see examples of each reCAPTCHA type in examples/. You can run the examples locally by using the Composer script:
composer run-script serve-examples
This makes use of the in-built PHP dev server to host the examples at http://localhost:8080/
These are also hosted on Google AppEngine Flexible environment at
https://recaptcha-demo.appspot.com/. This is configured by
app.yaml
which you can also use to deploy to your own AppEngine
project.
No one ever has enough engineers, so we're very happy to accept contributions via Pull Requests. For details, see CONTRIBUTING