PHP Telegram Bot Manager
This project builds on top of PHP Telegram Bot and as such, depends on it!
The main purpose of this mini-library is to make the interaction between your webserver and Telegram easier. I strongly suggest your read the PHP Telegram Bot instructions first, to understand what this library does exactly.
Installation and usage is pretty straight forward:
Composer
Require this package withEither run this command in your command line:
composer require php-telegram-bot/telegram-bot-manager:^1.0
or
For existing Composer projects, edit your project's composer.json
file to require php-telegram-bot/telegram-bot-manager
:
"require": {
"php-telegram-bot/telegram-bot-manager": "^1.0"
}
and then run composer update
NOTE: This will automatically also install PHP Telegram Bot into your project (if it isn't already).
Advanced: Due to the fact that the core library is not a stable version yet, this project is partly locked to the core version, to ensure reliable functioning.
It is possible however, to override the core version that this library requires:
"require": {
"php-telegram-bot/telegram-bot-manager": "^1.0",
"longman/telegram-bot": "dev-develop as 0.44"
}
This example will pull the develop version of the core library, making it appear to be version 0.44, which then satisfies the requirement.
Performing actions
What use would this library be if you couldn't perform any actions?!
There are a few parameters available to get things rolling:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
s | secret: This is a special secret value defined in the main manager.php file. |
This parameter is required to call the script via browser! | |
a | action: The actual action to perform. (handle (default), webhookinfo, cron, set, unset, reset) |
handle executes the getUpdates method; webhookinfo to get result from getWebhookInfo , cron executes cron commands; set / unset / reset the webhook. |
|
l | loop: Number of seconds to loop the script for (used for getUpdates method). |
This would be used mainly via CLI, to continually get updates for a certain period. | |
i | interval: Number of seconds to wait between getUpdates requests (used for getUpdates method, default is 2). |
This would be used mainly via CLI, to continually get updates for a certain period, every i seconds. | |
g | group: Commands group for cron (only used together with cron action, default group is default ). |
Define which group of commands to execute via cron. Can be a comma separated list of groups. |
via browser
Simply point your browser to the manager.php
file with the necessary GET parameters:
http://example.com/manager.php?s=<secret>&a=<action>&l=<loop>&i=<interval>
Webhook
Set, unset and reset the webhook:
http://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&a=set
http://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&a=unset
http://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&a=reset
(unset & set combined)
getUpdates
Handle updates once:
http://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&a=handle
or simplyhttp://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret
(handle
action is the default)
Handle updates for 30 seconds, fetching every 5 seconds:
http://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&l=30&i=5
cron
Execute commands via cron:
http://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&a=cron&g=maintenance
or multiple groupshttp://example.com/manager.php?s=super_secret&a=cron&g=maintenance,cleanup
via CLI
When using CLI, the secret is not necessary (since it could just be read from the file itself).
Call the manager.php
file directly using php
and pass the parameters:
$ php manager.php a=<action> l=<loop> i=<interval>
Webhook
Set, unset and reset the webhook:
$ php manager.php a=set
$ php manager.php a=unset
$ php manager.php a=reset
(unset & set combined)
getUpdates
Handle updates once:
$ php manager.php a=handle
or simply$ php manager.php
(handle
action is the default)
Handle updates for 30 seconds, fetching every 5 seconds:
$ php manager.php l=30 i=5
cron
Execute commands via cron:
$ php manager.php a=cron g=maintenance
or multiple groups$ php manager.php a=cron g=maintenance,cleanup
Create the manager PHP file
You can name this file whatever you like, it just has to be somewhere inside your PHP project (preferably in the root folder to make things easier).
(Let's assume our file is called manager.php
)
Let's start off with a simple example that uses the webhook method:
<?php
use TelegramBot\TelegramBotManager\BotManager;
// Load composer.
require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
try {
$bot = new BotManager([
// Vitals!
'api_key' => '12345:my_api_key',
// Extras.
'bot_username' => 'my_own_bot',
'secret' => 'super_secret',
'webhook' => [
'url' => 'https://example.com/manager.php',
]
]);
$bot->run();
} catch (\Exception $e) {
echo $e->getMessage() . PHP_EOL;
}
Set vital bot parameters
The only vital parameter is the API key:
$bot = new BotManager([
// (string) Bot API key provided by @BotFather.
'api_key' => '12345:my_api_key',
...
]);
Set extra bot parameters
Apart from the necessary API key, the bot can be easily configured using extra parameters.
Set the webhook? Enable admins? Add custom command paths? Set up logging?
All no problem!
The secret
is a user-defined key that is required to execute any of the library's features via webhook.
Best make it long, random and very unique!
For 84 random characters:
- If you have
pwgen
installed, just executepwgen 84 1
and copy the output. - If you have
openssl
installed, useopenssl rand -hex 84
. - Or just go here and put all the output onto a single line.
(You get 2 guesses why 84 is a good number 😉)
Below is a complete list of all available extra parameters.
$bot = new BotManager([
...
// (string) Bot username that was defined when creating the bot.
'bot_username' => 'my_own_bot',
// (string) A secret password required to authorise access to the webhook.
'secret' => 'super_secret',
// (array) All options that have to do with the webhook.
'webhook' => [
// (string) URL to the manager PHP file used for setting up the webhook.
'url' => 'https://example.com/manager.php',
// (string) Path to a self-signed certificate (if necessary).
'certificate' => __DIR__ . '/server.crt',
// (int) Maximum allowed simultaneous HTTPS connections to the webhook.
'max_connections' => 20,
// (array) List the types of updates you want your bot to receive.
'allowed_updates' => ['message', 'edited_channel_post', 'callback_query'],
],
// (bool) Only allow webhook access from valid Telegram API IPs.
'validate_request' => true,
// (array) When using `validate_request`, also allow these IPs.
'valid_ips' => [
'1.2.3.4', // single
'192.168.1.0/24', // CIDR
'10/8', // CIDR (short)
'5.6.*', // wildcard
'1.1.1.1-2.2.2.2', // range
],
// (array) Paths where the log files should be put.
'logging' => [
// (string) Log file for all incoming update requests.
'update' => __DIR__ . '/php-telegram-bot-update.log',
// (string) Log file for debug purposes.
'debug' => __DIR__ . '/php-telegram-bot-debug.log',
// (string) Log file for all errors.
'error' => __DIR__ . '/php-telegram-bot-error.log',
],
// (array) All options that have to do with the limiter.
'limiter' => [
// (bool) Enable or disable the limiter functionality.
'enabled' => true,
// (array) Any extra options to pass to the limiter.
'options' => [
// (float) Interval between request handles.
'interval' => 0.5,
],
],
// (array) An array of user ids that have admin access to your bot (must be integers).
'admins' => [12345],
// (array) Mysql credentials to connect a database (necessary for [`getUpdates`](#using-getupdates-method) method!).
'mysql' => [
'host' => '127.0.0.1',
'user' => 'root',
'password' => 'root',
'database' => 'telegram_bot',
],
// (array) List of configurable paths.
'paths' => [
// (string) Custom download path.
'download' => __DIR__ . '/Download',
// (string) Custom upload path.
'upload' => __DIR__ . '/Upload',
],
// (array) All options that have to do with commands.
'commands' => [
// (array) A list of custom commands paths.
'paths' => [
__DIR__ . '/CustomCommands',
],
// (array) A list of all custom command configs.
'configs' => [
'sendtochannel' => ['your_channel' => '@my_channel'],
'weather' => ['owm_api_key' => 'owm_api_key_12345'],
],
],
// (array) All options that have to do with botan.
'botan' => [
// (string) The Botan.io token to be used for analytics.
'token' => 'botan_12345',
// (array) Any extra options to pass to botan.
'options' => [
// (float) Custom timeout for requests.
'timeout' => 3,
],
],
// (array) All options that have to do with cron.
'cron' => [
// (array) List of groups that contain the commands to execute.
'groups' => [
// Each group has a name and array of commands.
// When no group is defined, the default group gets executed.
'default' => [
'/default_cron_command',
],
'maintenance' => [
'/db_cleanup',
'/db_repair',
'/log_rotate',
'/message_admins Maintenance completed',
],
],
],
// (string) Override the custom input of your bot (mostly for testing purposes!).
'custom_input' => '{"some":"raw", "json":"update"}',
]);
Using getUpdates method
Using the getUpdates
method must not have a webhook
parameter set and requires a MySQL database connection:
$bot = new BotManager([
...
// Extras.
'mysql' => [
'host' => '127.0.0.1',
'user' => 'root',
'password' => 'root',
'database' => 'telegram_bot',
],
]);
Now, the updates can be done either through the browser or via CLI.
Custom getUpdates output
A callback can be defined, to override the default output when updates are handled via getUpdates.
Example of the default output:
...
2017-07-10 14:59:25 - Updates processed: 1
123456: <text>
2017-07-10 14:59:27 - Updates processed: 0
2017-07-10 14:59:30 - Updates processed: 0
2017-07-10 14:59:32 - Updates processed: 0
2017-07-10 14:59:34 - Updates processed: 1
123456: <photo>
2017-07-10 14:59:36 - Updates processed: 0
...
Using custom callback that must return a string:
// In manager.php after $bot has been defined:
$bot->setCustomGetUpdatesCallback(function (ServerResponse $get_updates_response) {
$results = array_filter((array) $get_updates_response->getResult());
return sprintf('There are %d update(s)' . PHP_EOL, count($results));
});
output:
...
There are 0 update(s)
There are 0 update(s)
There are 2 update(s)
There are 1 update(s)
...
Development
When running live bot tests on a fork, you must enter the following environment variables to your repository settings on travis-ci.org:
API_KEY="12345:your_api_key"
BOT_USERNAME="username_of_your_bot"
It probably makes sense for you to create a new dummy bot for this.