I have been trying to get a json response body when webhook hit on my URL but failing. This is my controller method
public function sendSMS(Request $request){
$response = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'));
Storage::disk('local')->put('file.txt', Response::json($response));
}
It always save a empty response in .txt. Can you help me out.
there have lots of reasons you get errors here.
I suggest you try debug the following reasons:
dump(file_get_contents('php://input')) check if the post is valid json
make sure your file file.txt is writable
make sure Storage configuration is correct
Related
I develop at php Laravel.
I receiving GuzzleHttp response from Mailgun as Object and can't to get from it the status.
the Object is:
O:8:"stdClass":2:{s:18:"http_response_body";O:8:"stdClass":2:{s:6:"member";O:8:"stdClass":4:{s:7:"address";s:24:"test_of_json-4#zapara.fr";s:4:"name";s:10:"not filled";s:10:"subscribed";b:1;s:4:"vars";O:8:"stdClass":0:{}}s:7:"message";s:36:"Mailing list member has been created";}s:18:"http_response_code";i:200;}
I need just last data pair:
"http_response_code";i:200;
to get it into variable, like:
$http_response_code = 200;
or even just its value.
To get string as I cited above I use
$result_ser = serialize($result);
but yet can't to extract value of variable.
Also I tried this:
$this->resultString .= \GuzzleHttp\json_decode($result_ser, true);
and get error.
Please, explain me , How to get/extract value I needed?
To take the response status code you can use the function getStatusCode :
$response = $client->request();
$statusCode = $response->getStatusCode();
while to take the body of response you can use :
$contents = $response->getBody()->getContents();
let's consider your request is something like
$response = $client->get("https://example.com");
if ( $object_res->getStatusCode() == 200 ) { // here you are checking your http status code
}
$object_res->getStatusCode() is the method to get http status code.
refer docs, there is simple example in this page.
I found that 'mailgun/mailgun' package uses its own HTTP client which also uses 'RestClient' and these classes are return stdObject.
In that Object there is property 'http_response_code' containing HTTP response code like 200, 400, 401 etc.
This property accessible by standard way $object->property and it's a solution of my query in this case.
For anybody who will read this question and answers I should to explain one thing that I not cleared in question.
I made request to the Mailgun API for subscribing member to mailing list. The API returns stdObject, not JSON or XML data.
But also there is one more strange thing - stdObject returned when request is successful only. If request fails you'll get just Exception thrown with message and without code. This forced me, if fail, to parse message body instead of get and resolve error code.
$responseObj->getStatusCode();
I want to return a JSON response from my REST API as well as a file.
So the json will include metadata about the file and the return also the file itself within the same http response.
Is this something that can be done in PHP and if so does someone have a simple example to help me?
One of my partners has an API service which should send an HTTP POST request whenever a new file is published. This requires me to have an api file which will get the POST this way:
http://myip:port/api/ReciveFile
and requesting that the JSON format request should be:
{
"FILE ":"filename.zip",
"FILE_ID":"123",
"FILE_DESC":"PRUPOUS_FILE",
"EXTRAVAR":"",
"EXTRAVAR2":"",
"USERID":" xxxxxxxxxxxx",
"PASSWORD":"yyyyyyyyyyy"
}
Meanwhile it should issue a response, in JSON format if it got the file or not
{"RESULT_CODE":0,"RESULT_DESCR":""}
{"RESULT_CODE":1001,"RESULT_DESCR":"Bad request"}
And after, when I am finished elaborating the file, I should send back the modified file same way.
The question is, now basically from what I understand he will send me the variables witch I have to read, download the file, and send a response back.
I am not really sure how to do this any sample code would be welcomed!
I'm not sure exactly what the question is, but if you mean creating a success response in JSON for if an action occurred while adding data to it which is what can be understood from the question, just create an array with the values you wish to send back to the provider and do json_encode on the array which should create json and just print it back as a response.
About receiving the information; all you have to do is use the integrated curl functions or use a wrapper (Guzzle, etc) to output the raw JSON or json_decode data into a variable and do whatever you please with it.
From what I read in the question, you wish to modify the contents of it. This can be achieved by just decoding the json and changing the variables in the array, then printing the modified JSON back as a response.
Example (this uses GuzzleHTTP as an example):
$res = $client->request('GET', 'url');
$json = $res->getBody();
$array = json_decode($json, 1); // decode the json
// Start modifying the values or adding
$array['value_to_modify'] = $whatever;
$filename = $array['filename']; // get filename
// make a new request
$res = $client->request('GET', 'url/'.$filename);
// get the body of specified filename
$body = $res->getBody();
// Return the array.
echo json_encode($body);
References:
http://docs.guzzlephp.org/en/latest/
I use Unirest for PHP to do some HTTP Requests. Everything works fine, until I want to pass a fairly complex JSON to my Node.js router.
First I do a GET request that returns a JSON Object, then I extend this JSON object (needs to be done, I know it sucks) and want to feed it back into my other http POST request... and here is where the trouble starts:
I echoed the JSON that is returned and copied the output into postman -> works fine. If I want use the JSON directly in PHP in next request:
$teamsMemberOf is the variable which is containing the GET response.
$headers = array("Accept" => "application/json");
$newBody = '{"team":'.$teamsMemberOf->raw_body.'}';
$relevantBoxesAmount = Unirest\Request::post("http://localhost:3001/my/route/".$result['_id']."/get-something-from-server", $headers, $newBody);
and it doesn't work.
Error is 500 and 'Cannot read property '0' of undefined' which is certainly related to something in the JSON object.
Does someone have an idea how to fix it?
I am attempting to write a RESTful service using CakePHP 2.3.5. So far I've successfully created the GET functions for the resource I'm working with. I can send a GET request to example.com/areas.json or to example.com/areas/1.json and it returns the data in my database.
However, I started trying to get the edit function working. I wrote a simple edit method that simply saved the incoming data from $this->request->data. I'm using Postman to test the functionality and sending raw JSON over PUT or POST to example.com/areas/1.json returns a message telling me that the data couldn't be saved. I made the method send me more information when it failed and it tells me that there is no incoming data in either $this->request->data or $this->data.
I've been searching the Internet for solutions to this or similar problems, but everything I have tried has failed so far. I've attempted disabling CSRF checks, disabling the SecurityComponent altogether, and multiple other fixes all involving the security. Changing any of those resulted in black holing the request.
Does anyone have any thoughts on what else I could try to get CakePHP to accept the JSON data into a request? I'll include my edit function below in case that helps.
public function edit($id)
{
$this->Area->id = $id;
$message['request-data'] = $this->request->data;
if ($this->Area->save($this->request->data)) {
$message['response'] = $this->Area->findById($id);
} else {
$message['response'] = "Error";
}
$this->set(array(
'message' => $message,
'_serialize' => array('message')
));
}
First, make sure the Content-Type of the request is application/json.
Second, CakePHP doesn't automatically decode the JSON payload; you have to do it manually. From the manual:
// Get JSON encoded data submitted to a PUT/POST action
$data = $this->request->input('json_decode');