A simple Json-RPC client/server that just works.
Forked From fguillot/json-rpc
- JSON-RPC 2.0 only
- The server support batch requests and notifications
- Authentication and IP based client restrictions
- Custom Middleware
- Fully unit tested
- Requirements: PHP >= 8.0
- License: MIT
Original Author: Frédéric Guillot
Steven Lewis
composer require srjlewis/json-rpc @stable
Callback binding:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
$server = new Server();
$server->getProcedureHandler()
->withCallback('addition', function ($a, $b) {
return $a + $b;
})
->withCallback('random', function ($start, $end) {
return mt_rand($start, $end);
})
;
echo $server->execute();
Callback binding from array:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
$callbacks = array(
'getA' => function() { return 'A'; },
'getB' => function() { return 'B'; },
'getC' => function() { return 'C'; }
);
$server = new Server();
$server->getProcedureHandler()->withCallbackArray($callbacks);
echo $server->execute();
Class/Method binding:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
class Api
{
public function doSomething($arg1, $arg2 = 3)
{
return $arg1 + $arg2;
}
public function doSomething2($arg1, $arg2)
{
return $arg1 * $arg2;
}
}
$server = new Server();
$procedureHandler = $server->getProcedureHandler();
// Bind the method Api::doSomething() to the procedure myProcedure
$procedureHandler->withClassAndMethod('myProcedure', 'Api', 'doSomething');
// Use a class instance instead of the class name
$procedureHandler->withClassAndMethod('mySecondProcedure', new Api, 'doSomething');
// The procedure and the method are the same
$procedureHandler->withClassAndMethod('doSomething', 'Api');
// Attach the class, the client will be able to call directly Api::doSomething()
$procedureHandler->withObject(new Api());
// Attach a class as a service, so the client can call all the classess public methods
// Client Examples:
// $client->execute('apiService.doSomething', [3]);
// $client->execute('apiService.doSomething2', [3, 5]);
$procedureHandler->withServiceClass('apiService', 'Api');
echo $server->execute();
Class/Method binding from array:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
class MathApi
{
public function addition($arg1, $arg2)
{
return $arg1 + $arg2;
}
public function subtraction($arg1, $arg2)
{
return $arg1 - $arg2;
}
public function multiplication($arg1, $arg2)
{
return $arg1 * $arg2;
}
public function division($arg1, $arg2)
{
return $arg1 / $arg2;
}
}
$callbacks = array(
'addition' => array( 'MathApi', addition ),
'subtraction' => array( 'MathApi', subtraction ),
'multiplication' => array( 'MathApi', multiplication ),
'division' => array( 'MathApi', division )
);
$server = new Server();
$server->getProcedureHandler()->withClassAndMethodArray($callbacks);
echo $server->execute();
Server Middleware:
Middleware might be used to authenticate and authorize the client. They are executed before each procedure.
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
use JsonRPC\MiddlewareInterface;
use JsonRPC\Exception\AuthenticationFailureException;
class Api
{
public function doSomething($arg1, $arg2 = 3)
{
return $arg1 + $arg2;
}
}
class MyMiddleware implements MiddlewareInterface
{
public function execute($username, $password, $procedureName)
{
if ($username !== 'foobar') {
throw new AuthenticationFailureException('Wrong credentials!');
}
}
}
$server = new Server();
$server->getMiddlewareHandler()->withMiddleware(new MyMiddleware());
$server->getProcedureHandler()->withObject(new Api());
echo $server->execute();
You can raise a AuthenticationFailureException
when the API credentials are wrong or a AccessDeniedException
when the user is not allowed to access to the procedure.
Example with positional parameters:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost/server.php');
$result = $client->execute('addition', [3, 5]);
Example with named arguments:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost/server.php');
$result = $client->execute('random', ['end' => 10, 'start' => 1]);
Arguments are called in the right order.
Examples with the magic method __call()
:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost/server.php');
$result = $client->random(50, 100);
The example above use positional arguments for the request and this one use named arguments:
$result = $client->random(['end' => 10, 'start' => 1]);
Call several procedures in a single HTTP request:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost/server.php');
$results = $client->batch()
->foo(['arg1' => 'bar'])
->random(1, 100)
->add(4, 3)
->execute('add', [2, 5])
->send();
print_r($results);
All results are stored at the same position of the call.
Client exceptions are normally thrown when an error is returned by the server. You can change this behaviour by
using the $returnException
argument which causes exceptions to be returned. This can be extremely useful when
executing the batch request.
BadFunctionCallException
: Procedure not found on the serverInvalidArgumentException
: Wrong procedure argumentsJsonRPC\Exception\AccessDeniedException
: Access deniedJsonRPC\Exception\ConnectionFailureException
: Connection failureJsonRPC\Exception\ServerErrorException
: Internal server error
You can enable the debug mode to see the JSON request and response:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost/server.php');
$client->getHttpClient()->withDebug();
The debug output is sent to the PHP system logger.
You can configure the log destination in your php.ini
.
Output example:
==> Request:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"method": "removeCategory",
"id": 486782327,
"params": [
1
]
}
==> Response:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 486782327,
"result": true
}
The server can allow only some IP addresses:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
$server = new Server;
// IP client restrictions
$server->allowHosts(['192.168.0.1', '127.0.0.1']);
[...]
// Return the response to the client
echo $server->execute();
If the client is blocked, you got a 403 Forbidden HTTP response.
If you use HTTPS, you can allow client by using a username/password.
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
$server = new Server;
// List of users to allow
$server->authentication(['user1' => 'password1', 'user2' => 'password2']);
[...]
// Return the response to the client
echo $server->execute();
On the client, set credentials like that:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost/server.php');
$client->getHttpClient()
->withUsername('Foo')
->withPassword('Bar');
If the authentication failed, the client throw a RuntimeException.
Using an alternative authentication header:
use JsonRPC\Server;
$server = new Server();
$server->setAuthenticationHeader('X-Authentication');
$server->authentication(['myusername' => 'mypassword']);
The example above will use the HTTP header X-Authentication
instead of the standard Authorization: Basic [BASE64_CREDENTIALS]
.
The username/password values need be encoded in base64: base64_encode('username:password')
.
By default, the server will relay all exceptions to the client.
If you would like to relay only some of them, use the method Server::withLocalException($exception)
:
<?php
use JsonRPC\Server;
class MyException1 extends Exception {};
class MyException2 extends Exception {};
$server = new Server();
// Exceptions that should NOT be relayed to the client, if they occurs
$server
->withLocalException('MyException1')
->withLocalException('MyException2')
;
[...]
echo $server->execute();
You can use a callback to change the HTTP headers or the URL before to make the request to the server.
Example:
<?php
$client = new Client();
$client->getHttpClient()->withBeforeRequestCallback(function(HttpClient $client, $payload) {
$client->withHeaders(array('Content-Length: '.strlen($payload)));
});
$client->myProcedure(123);