GraphQL query in PHP without libraries - php

Is it possible to convert an array or an object in PHP to a GraphQL query without importing a library?
I'm hoping for something that works like json_encode does for JSON.
e.g.
$array['products']['edges']['node']['handle'] = true;
$graphql = graphql_encode($array);
echo $graphql; // prints: {products(first: 10) { edges { node { handle }}}}
Maybe this would always be an oversimplification (e.g. I'm not quite sure how "(first: 10)" would be added to the array).
But I'm just looking for a simple way to start experimenting with GraphQL (and I don't have access to SSH or Composer on my shared hosting so it's not easy for me to add the right libraries).

Related

Different behaviour with and without Symfony's response system

I'd like to be able to manage WebDAV directories (and even reimplement the way files are read and written) in Symfony. To do so I found SabreDAV, which is itself a framework with all the basic classes required.
My problem is, while it's quite easy to get a WebDAV server running using SabreDAV alone, it doesn't work that well when I use Symfony.
Without Symfony, it boils down to:
$server = new DAV\Server($rootDirectory);
$server->exec();
And I can use cadaver to access my directory.
More here: http://code.google.com/p/sabredav/wiki/GettingStarted
I tried to do the same in my controller with Symfony, using:
return new Response($server->exec());
but for some reason cadaver doesn't have access to the folder.
I guess I'm missing something about the way responses work in Symfony, but what? SabreDAV uses its own system of http requests and responses, but if (as I presume) Symfony doesn't mess with superglobal variables such as $_SERVER, this shouldn't be an issue.
About requests and responses in Symfony: http://symfony.com/doc/current/book/http_fundamentals.html#requests-and-responses-in-symfony
Here's what I did; it's a bit slow and there must be a better way, but I'll make do with that for the moment:
Controller.php :
$path=(__DIR__.'/../../../../web/public/');
$path=realpath($path);
$publicDir= new \MyClasses\FS\MyDirectory($path);
$server = new \Sabre\DAV\Server($publicDir);
$server->setBaseUri('/Symfony/web/app_dev.php/');
{
$SyRequest = Request::createFromGlobals();
$_server=$SyRequest->server->all();
$_post=$SyRequest->request->all();
}
{
$SaRequest=new \MyClasses\HTTP\Request($_server,$_post);
$resourceStream=false;
$SaRequest->setBody($SyRequest->getContent($resourceStream),$resourceStream);
}
{
$server->httpRequest=$SaRequest;
$SaResponse=new \MyClasses\HTTP\Response();
$server->httpResponse=$SaResponse;
$server->exec();
}
{
$content=ob_get_clean();
}
{
$SyResponse=new Response($content,http_response_code(),headers_list());
}
return $SyResponse;
$server->exec();
Doesn't really return anything. It attempts to set headers itself, and stream the output to php://output (indeed, with the built-in request/response system).
If you want to embed SabreDAV into symfony, the most proper way to solve this is to subclass both Sabre\HTTP\Request and Sabre\HTTP\Response, and set these in the server (setting the ->httpRequest and ->httpResponse properties) before calling ->exec.
Your overridden request/response objects should then map to symfony's equivalents.
I don't know enough about symfony to tell you if they map cleanly and easily though, and I imagine it will in practice be simpler to try to work around symfony's system (although from an architectural standpoint, it will not be the most proper).

Generating a client with Soap 1.2 in php

Could you tell me if there is a tool to generate a soap client with these requirements:
soap 1.2
the client is based on three different service (so 3 wsdl)
those services have shared types
I found out about:
http://php.net/manual/en/class.soapclient.php
and
http://www.php.net/manual/en/soapclient.soapclient.php
The thing I can't find out searching for it is especially the last two point.
Any help will be appreciated because I can't unserstand how to create it from different sources and how to call a specific service.
I can't test my solution as i don't have 2-3 web services running, but i think this solution will work (if i understood you correctly). Please if you can try it and let me know.
<?php
class wstest {
function __construct($url) {
$this->soapUrl = $url;
try{
$this->client = new SoapClient($this->soapUrl,array('login' => 'wsuser', 'password' => "some_password", "connection_timeout"=>30,'trace'=>true,'keep_alive'=>false,'features' => SOAP_SINGLE_ELEMENT_ARRAYS));
} catch (Exception $e) {
echo $e->getMessage();
}
}
};
$con = new wstest("http://firstwebservice.com/?wsdl");
$con2 = new wstest("http://secondwebservice.com/?wsdl");
$con3 = new wstest("http://thirdwebservice.com/?wsdl");
?>
I'm trying to figure out what you might want to do.
First: One WSDL === one Service === one SoapClient. You cannot mix two WSDL locations on the Soap client level, but depending on your application, might connect each services' results on a higher level.
So if you have three WSDL, then you must instantiate three SoapClient classes to be used. It's not like a single generic HTTP Client which can make requests to any existing webserver.
Second: Unless you provide a classmap to the SoapClient, the return value of any request is only a mixture of stdClass and array. There might be types defined in the WSDL, but PHP does not map them to anything unless you define it.
I would recommend using a classmap with your own defined classes that match the ComplexType definitions in the WSDL. There are some code generators to be googled that might do the job, but the Soap standard is complex, as is the definitionof WSDL, so you might end up doing work by hand.
You can perfectly live without a classmap if the data structures are small.
Third: If the three WSDL share data types, this will not affect PHP in any way. Since without classmap the responses are stdClass and Array, and the Request parameters can be the same, you won't get any benefit from this information.
If on the other hand you go the way of the classmap, I'd expect that the shared types will lead to the same classes generated, so you would also see on the PHP level that a ComplexType from Service A is identical to the ComplexType of Service B.

Does anyone know of a simple json(p) parsing class for PHP?

I am stuck using a pre 5.2 release of PHP (v 5.1.6), and therefore don't have access to the handy functions like json_decode()
To complicate matters, I also don't have server privileges to install any extensions.
It would be really nice to simply include a class definition that i can use to create objects (or even a complex array) from a string of json data.
Does anyone know of a lightweight and reliable class definition that will work for me?
(I don't really feel like re-inventing the wheel here.)
Thanks in Advance!
You can download the pear JSON library directly and include the script in your app. Check out this link: http://pear.php.net/package/Services_JSON/download
You can use Services_JSON on PEAR, you'll use it like this:
if ( !function_exists('json_decode') ){
function json_decode($content, $assoc=false){
include_once('JSON.php');
if ( $assoc ){
$json = new Services_JSON(SERVICES_JSON_LOOSE_TYPE);
} else {
$json = new Services_JSON;
}
return $json->decode($content);
}
function json_encode($content){
include_once('JSON.php');
$json = new Services_JSON;
return $json->encode($content);
}
}
Check out Zend_Json, it seems OK, but I don't know the minimum php version required.

Creating a web service in PHP

I would like to create a web service in PHP which can be consumed by different consumers (Web page, Android device, iOS device).
I come from a Microsoft background so am confortable in how I would do it in C# etc. Ideally I would like to be able to provide a REST service which can send JSON.
Can you let me know how I can achieve this in PHP?
Thanks
Tariq
I developed a class that is the PHP native SoapServer class' REST equivalent.
You just include the RestServer.php file and then use it as follows.
class Hello
{
public static function sayHello($name)
{
return "Hello, " . $name;
}
}
$rest = new RestServer(Hello);
$rest->handle();
Then you can make calls from another language like this:
http://myserver.com/path/to/api?method=sayHello&name=World
(Note that it doesn't matter what order the params are provided in the query string. Also, the param key names as well as the method name are case-insensitive.)
Get it here.
I would suggest you go for Yii it is worth of learning. You can easily establish it in this.
Web Service. Yii provides CWebService and CWebServiceAction to simplify the work of implementing Web service in a Web application. Web service relies on SOAP as its foundation layer of the communication protocol stack.
Easiest way in PHP is to use GET/POST as data-in and echo as data-out.
Here's a sample:
<?php if(empty($_GET['method'])) die('no method specified');
switch($_GET['method']){
case 'add': {
if(empty($_GET['a']) || empty($_GET['b'])) die("Please provide two numbers. ");
if(!is_numeric($_GET['a']) || !is_numeric($_GET['b'])) die("Those aren't numbers, please provide numbers. ");
die(''.($_GET['a']+$_GET['b']));
break;
}
}
Save this as test.php and go to http://localhost/test.php?method=add&a=2&b=3 (or wherever your webserver is) and it should say 5.
PHP does have native support for a SOAP server ( The SoapServer class manual shows it) and I've found it pretty simple to use.
Creating a REST style API is pretty easy if you use a framework. I don't want to get into a debate about which framework is better but CakePHP also supports output as XML and I'm pretty sure others will as well.
If you're coming from a Microsoft background just be careful about thinking about "datasets". They are a very specific Microsoft thing and have been a curse of mine in the past. It's probably not going to be an issue for you, but you may want to just see the differences between Microsoft and open implementations.
And of course PHP has a native json_encode() function.
You can check out this nice RESTful server written for Codeigniter, RESTful server.
It does support XML, JSON, etc. responses, so I think this is your library.
There is even a nice tutorial for this on the Tutsplus network -
Working with RESTful Services in CodeIgniter
You can also try PHP REST Data Services https://github.com/chaturadilan/PHP-Data-Services
You can use any existing PHP framework like CodeIgniter or Symfony or CakePHP to build the webservices.
You can also use plain PHP like disscussed in this example

consuming web service (for the first time) in php

It took me a while to get soap configured in php. Now I'm just trying to learn about it. I'm using the web service here to learn:
http://www.webservicex.net/WCF/ServiceDetails.aspx?SID=19
It says the WSDL is here:
http://www.webservicex.net/stockquote.asmx?wsdl
and this is my code:
$client = new SoapClient('http://www.webservicex.net/stockquote.asmx?wsdl');
$result = $client->getQuote("AAPL");
echo $result;
I'm getting an error saying "Object of class stdClass could not be converted to string". Now I realize that $result is an object, and I'm wondering how do I access data that the server populated? I tried to understand the WSDL but I'm getting nowhere. Is it supposed to be something like:
$result->price
? (That doesn't work by the way...)
Ideas?
When curious about datatypes from the soapserver, use the SoapClient->__getTypes() & SoapClient->__getFunctions() methods
If you return is still not clear, var_dump() your return and examine it.

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