146 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
146 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
# BeSimpleSoap (Symfony 3.4 / 4.x)
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This fork provides the BeSimpleSoap bundle, updated to be compatible with Symfony 3.4 and 4.x (as well as with PHP 7.0-7.4).
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We forked the official [BeSimpleSoap](https://github.com/BeSimple/BeSimpleSoap) repository in order to sucessfully maintain some of our projects.
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We now have integrated changes and fixes from sub-forks (thank you guys!), and we should be up to date now :)
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This fork is maintained by people from [Cadoles](https://www.cadoles.com/).
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# Contributing
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We do welcome pull requests :) please include tests if you can.
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Running tests can be done by running `php vendor/bin/phpunit`.
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# Installation
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If you do not yet have composer, follow instructions on the [Composer website](https://getcomposer.org/download/) to install it.
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Then just running:
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```
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$ composer require cadoles/soap
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```
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should be enough to get you up and running.
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# Components
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BeSimpleSoap consists of five components ...
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## BeSimpleSoapClient
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**Refactored** BeSimpleSoapClient is a component that extends the native PHP SoapClient with further features like SwA and WS-Security.
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## BeSimpleSoapServer
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**Refactored** BeSimpleSoapServer is a component that extends the native PHP SoapServer with further features like SwA and WS-Security.
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## BeSimpleSoapCommon
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**Refactored** BeSimpleSoapCommon component contains functionality shared by both the server and client implementations.
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## BeSimpleSoapWsdl
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**Untouched!**
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The component is not affected by refactoring so it should work properly.
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For further information see the original [README](https://github.com/BeSimple/BeSimpleSoap/blob/master/src/BeSimple/SoapWsdl/README.md).
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## BeSimpleSoapBundle
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**Unsupported!**
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The BeSimpleSoapBundle is a Symfony2 bundle to build WSDL and SOAP based web services.
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For further information see the the original [README](https://github.com/BeSimple/BeSimpleSoap/blob/master/src/BeSimple/SoapBundle/README.md).
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*Will not work since the Symfony libraries were removed and usages of other components were not refactored. Feel free to fork this repository and fix it!*
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# How to use
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You can investigate the unit tests dir ``tests`` in order to get a clue.
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Forget about associative arrays, vague configurations, multiple extension and silent errors!
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This may look a bit more complex at the first sight,
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but it will guide you to configure and set up your client or server properly.
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## Example of soap client call
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```php
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$soapClientBuilder = new SoapClientBuilder();
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$soapClient = $soapClientBuilder->build(
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SoapClientOptionsBuilder::createWithDefaults(),
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SoapOptionsBuilder::createWithDefaults('http://path/to/wsdlfile.wsdl')
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);
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$myRequest = new MyRequest();
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$myRequest->attribute = 'string value';
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$soapResponse = $soapClient->soapCall('myMethod', [$myRequest]);
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var_dump($soapResponse); // Contains Response, Attachments
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```
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### Something wrong?!
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Turn on the tracking and catch `SoapFaultWithTracingData` exception to get some sweets :)
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```php
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try {
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$soapResponse = $soapClient->soapCall('myMethod', [$myRequest]);
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} catch (SoapFaultWithTracingData $fault) {
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var_dump($fault->getSoapResponseTracingData()->getLastRequest());
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}
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```
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In this example, a ``MyRequest`` object has been used to describe request.
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Using a ClassMap, you help SoapClient to turn it into XML request.
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## Example of soap server handling
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Starting a SOAP server is a bit more complex.
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I recommend you to inspect SoapServer unit tests for inspiration.
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```php
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$dummyService = new DummyService();
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$classMap = new ClassMap();
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foreach ($dummyService->getClassMap() as $type => $className) {
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$classMap->add($type, $className);
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}
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$soapServerBuilder = new SoapServerBuilder();
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$soapServerOptions = SoapServerOptionsBuilder::createWithDefaults($dummyService);
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$soapOptions = SoapOptionsBuilder::createWithClassMap($dummyService->getWsdlPath(), $classMap);
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$soapServer = $soapServerBuilder->build($soapServerOptions, $soapOptions);
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$request = $soapServer->createRequest(
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$dummyService->getEndpoint(),
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'DummyService.dummyServiceMethod',
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'text/xml;charset=UTF-8',
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'<received><soap><request><here /></request></soap></received>'
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);
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$response = $soapServer->handleRequest($request);
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var_dump($response); // Contains Response, Attachments
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```
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In this example, a ``DummyService`` service has been used to handle request.
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Using a service can help you create coherent SoapServer endpoints.
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Service can hold an endpoint URL, WSDL path and a class map as associative array.
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You can hold a class map as ``ClassMap`` object directly in the ``DummyService`` instead of array.
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In the service you should describe SOAP methods from given WSDL.
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In the example, the dummyServiceMethod is called.
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The method will receive request object and return response object that are matched according to the class map.
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See a simplified implementation of ``dummyServiceMethod`` to get a clue:
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```php
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/**
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* @param DummyServiceRequest $dummyServiceRequest
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* @return DummyServiceResponse
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*/
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public function dummyServiceMethod(DummyServiceRequest $dummyServiceRequest)
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{
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$response = new DummyServiceResponse();
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$response->status = true;
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return $response;
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}
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```
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For further information and getting inspiration for your implementation, see the unit tests in ``tests`` dir. |