From 8df3db566a3a937b45ebf11adb90d265e6f5e2d4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andreas Baumann Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2019 20:45:02 +0100 Subject: initial checking of customized version 1.0rc9 --- .../using-the-service-builder.rst | 316 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 316 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/using-the-service-builder.rst (limited to 'vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/using-the-service-builder.rst') diff --git a/vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/using-the-service-builder.rst b/vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/using-the-service-builder.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b7113d6 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/guzzle/guzzle/docs/webservice-client/using-the-service-builder.rst @@ -0,0 +1,316 @@ +======================= +Using a service builder +======================= + +The best way to instantiate Guzzle web service clients is to let Guzzle handle building the clients for you using a +ServiceBuilder. A ServiceBuilder is responsible for creating concrete client objects based on configuration settings +and helps to manage credentials for different environments. + +You don't have to use a service builder, but they help to decouple your application from concrete classes and help to +share configuration data across multiple clients. Consider the following example. Here we are creating two clients that +require the same API public key and secret key. The clients are created using their ``factory()`` methods. + +.. code-block:: php + + use MyService\FooClient; + use MyService\BarClient; + + $foo = FooClient::factory(array( + 'key' => 'abc', + 'secret' => '123', + 'custom' => 'and above all' + )); + + $bar = BarClient::factory(array( + 'key' => 'abc', + 'secret' => '123', + 'custom' => 'listen to me' + )); + +The redundant specification of the API keys can be removed using a service builder. + +.. code-block:: php + + use Guzzle\Service\Builder\ServiceBuilder; + + $builder = ServiceBuilder::factory(array( + 'services' => array( + 'abstract_client' => array( + 'params' => array( + 'key' => 'abc', + 'secret' => '123' + ) + ), + 'foo' => array( + 'extends' => 'abstract_client', + 'class' => 'MyService\FooClient', + 'params' => array( + 'custom' => 'and above all' + ) + ), + 'bar' => array( + 'extends' => 'abstract_client', + 'class' => 'MyService\FooClient', + 'params' => array( + 'custom' => 'listen to me' + ) + ) + ) + )); + + $foo = $builder->get('foo'); + $bar = $builder->get('bar'); + +You can make managing your API keys even easier by saving the service builder configuration in a JSON format in a +.json file. + +Creating a service builder +-------------------------- + +A ServiceBuilder can source information from an array, an PHP include file that returns an array, or a JSON file. + +.. code-block:: php + + use Guzzle\Service\Builder\ServiceBuilder; + + // Source service definitions from a JSON file + $builder = ServiceBuilder::factory('services.json'); + +Sourcing data from an array +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Data can be source from a PHP array. The array must contain an associative ``services`` array that maps the name of a +client to the configuration information used by the service builder to create the client. Clients are given names +which are used to identify how a client is retrieved from a service builder. This can be useful for using multiple +accounts for the same service or creating development clients vs. production clients. + +.. code-block:: php + + $services = array( + 'includes' => array( + '/path/to/other/services.json', + '/path/to/other/php_services.php' + ), + 'services' => array( + 'abstract.foo' => array( + 'params' => array( + 'username' => 'foo', + 'password' => 'bar' + ) + ), + 'bar' => array( + 'extends' => 'abstract.foo', + 'class' => 'MyClientClass', + 'params' => array( + 'other' => 'abc' + ) + ) + ) + ); + +A service builder configuration array contains two top-level array keys: + ++------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Key | Description | ++============+=========================================================================================================+ +| includes | Array of paths to JSON or PHP include files to include in the configuration. | ++------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| services | Associative array of defined services that can be created by the service builder. Each service can | +| | contain the following keys: | +| | | +| | +------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | +| | | Key | Description | | +| | +============+========================================================================================+ | +| | | class | The concrete class to instantiate that implements the | | +| | | | ``Guzzle\Common\FromConfigInterface``. | | +| | +------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | +| | | extends | The name of a previously defined service to extend from | | +| | +------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | +| | | params | Associative array of parameters to pass to the factory method of the service it is | | +| | | | instantiated | | +| | +------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | +| | | alias | An alias that can be used in addition to the array key for retrieving a client from | | +| | | | the service builder. | | +| | +------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ++------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +The first client defined, ``abstract.foo``, is used as a placeholder of shared configuration values. Any service +extending abstract.foo will inherit its params. As an example, this can be useful when clients share the same username +and password. + +The next client, ``bar``, extends from ``abstract.foo`` using the ``extends`` attribute referencing the client from +which to extend. Additional parameters can be merged into the original service definition when extending a parent +service. + +.. important:: + + Each client that you intend to instantiate must specify a ``class`` attribute that references the full class name + of the client being created. The class referenced in the ``class`` parameter must implement a static ``factory()`` + method that accepts an array or ``Guzzle\Common\Collection`` object and returns an instantiated object. + +Sourcing from a PHP include +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +You can create service builder configurations using a PHP include file. This can be useful if you wish to take +advantage of an opcode cache like APC to speed up the process of loading and processing the configuration. The PHP +include file is the same format as an array, but you simply create a PHP script that returns an array and save the +file with the .php file extension. + +.. code-block:: php + + '...'); + // Saved as config.php + +This configuration file can then be used with a service builder. + +.. code-block:: php + + $builder = ServiceBuilder::factory('/path/to/config.php'); + +Sourcing from a JSON document +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +You can use JSON documents to serialize your service descriptions. The JSON format uses the exact same structure as +the PHP array syntax, but it's just serialized using JSON. + +.. code-block:: javascript + + { + "includes": ["/path/to/other/services.json", "/path/to/other/php_services.php"], + "services": { + "abstract.foo": { + "params": { + "username": "foo", + "password": "bar" + } + }, + "bar": { + "extends": "abstract.foo", + "class": "MyClientClass", + "params": { + "other": "abc" + } + } + } + } + +Referencing other clients in parameters +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +If one of your clients depends on another client as one of its parameters, you can reference that client by name by +enclosing the client's reference key in ``{}``. + +.. code-block:: javascript + + { + "services": { + "token": { + "class": "My\Token\TokenFactory", + "params": { + "access_key": "xyz" + } + }, + "client": { + "class": "My\Client", + "params": { + "token_client": "{token}", + "version": "1.0" + } + } + } + } + +When ``client`` is constructed by the service builder, the service builder will first create the ``token`` service +and then inject the token service into ``client``'s factory method in the ``token_client`` parameter. + +Retrieving clients from a service builder +----------------------------------------- + +Clients are referenced using a customizable name you provide in your service definition. The ServiceBuilder is a sort +of multiton object-- it will only instantiate a client once and return that client for subsequent retrievals. Clients +are retrieved by name (the array key used in the configuration) or by the ``alias`` setting of a service. + +Here's an example of retrieving a client from your ServiceBuilder: + +.. code-block:: php + + $client = $builder->get('foo'); + + // You can also use the ServiceBuilder object as an array + $client = $builder['foo']; + +Creating throwaway clients +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +You can get a "throwaway" client (a client that is not persisted by the ServiceBuilder) by passing ``true`` in the +second argument of ``ServiceBuilder::get()``. This allows you to create a client that will not be returned by other +parts of your code that use the service builder. Instead of passing ``true``, you can pass an array of configuration +settings that will override the configuration settings specified in the service builder. + +.. code-block:: php + + // Get a throwaway client and overwrite the "custom" setting of the client + $foo = $builder->get('foo', array( + 'custom' => 'in this world there are rules' + )); + +Getting raw configuration settings +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +You can get the raw configuration settings provided to the service builder for a specific service using the +``getData($name)`` method of a service builder. This method will null if the service was not found in the service +builder or an array of configuration settings if the service was found. + +.. code-block:: php + + $data = $builder->getData('foo'); + echo $data['key'] . "\n"; + echo $data['secret'] . "\n"; + echo $data['custom'] . "\n"; + +Adding a plugin to all clients +------------------------------ + +You can add a plugin to all clients created by a service builder using the ``addGlobalPlugin($plugin)`` method of a +service builder and passing a ``Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\EventSubscriberInterface`` object. The service builder +will then attach each global plugin to every client as it is created. This allows you to, for example, add a LogPlugin +to every request created by a service builder for easy debugging. + +.. code-block:: php + + use Guzzle\Plugin\Log\LogPlugin; + + // Add a debug log plugin to every client as it is created + $builder->addGlobalPlugin(LogPlugin::getDebugPlugin()); + + $foo = $builder->get('foo'); + $foo->get('/')->send(); + // Should output all of the data sent over the wire + +.. _service-builder-events: + +Events emitted from a service builder +------------------------------------- + +A ``Guzzle\Service\Builder\ServiceBuilder`` object emits the following events: + ++-------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------+ +| Event name | Description | Event data | ++===============================+============================================+=========================================+ +| service_builder.create_client | Called when a client is created | * client: The created client object | ++-------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------+ + +.. code-block:: php + + use Guzzle\Common\Event; + use Guzzle\Service\Builder\ServiceBuilder; + + $builder = ServiceBuilder::factory('/path/to/config.json'); + + // Add an event listener to print out each client client as it is created + $builder->getEventDispatcher()->addListener('service_builder.create_client', function (Event $e) { + echo 'Client created: ' . get_class($e['client']) . "\n"; + }); + + $foo = $builder->get('foo'); + // Should output the class used for the "foo" client -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf