I have a two websites in php and python.
When a user sends a request to the server I need php/python to send an HTTP POST request to a remote server. I want to reply to the user immediately without waiting for a response from the remote server.
Is it possible to continue running a php/python script after sending a response to the user. In that case I'll first reply to the user and only then send the HTTP POST request to the remote server.
Is it possible to create a non-blocking HTTP client in php/python without handling the response at all?
A solution that will have the same logic in php and python is preferable for me.
Thanks
In PHP you can close the connection by sending this request (this is HTTP related and works also in python, although I don't know the proper syntax to use):
// Send the response to the client
header('Connection: Close');
// Do the background job: just don't output anything!
Addendum: I forgot to mention you probably have to set the "Context-Length". Also, check out this comment for tips and a real test case.
Example:
<?php
ob_end_clean();
header('Connection: close');
ob_start();
echo 'Your stuff goes here...';
header('Content-Length: ' . ob_get_length());
ob_end_flush();
flush();
// Now we are in background mode
sleep(10);
echo 'This text should not be visible';
?>
You can spawn another process to handle the POST to the other server. In PHP you would spawn the process and "disconnect" so you don't wait for the response.
exec("nohup /path/to/script/post_content.php > /dev/null 2>&1 &");
You can then you curl to perform the post. If you want to pass parameters to the PHP script, you can use the getopt() function to read them. Not sure if you would do something similar in Python.
What you need to do is have the PHP script execute another script that does the server call and then sends the user the request.
You have to set a middle man. So in your own server you would have:
A web form;
A submit handler ( php or python script that handles the form submission );
Your handler creates a new file and fill it up with the submission data. You can, for instance, format the data as JSON;
So your handler has a single job, save the submitted data in a file and respond the user, nothing else. This should be fast.
Create a filesystem event driven cron ( not a time driven cron ). See this and this questions (for a windows and an ubuntu servers respectively).
Set your cron to execute a php or python script which will then re-post the data to a remote server.
You have to use fsockopen. And don't listen to the result
<?php
$fp = fsockopen('example.com', 80);
$vars = array(
'hello' => 'world'
);
$content = http_build_query($vars);
fwrite($fp, "POST /reposter.php HTTP/1.1\r\n");
fwrite($fp, "Host: example.com\r\n");
fwrite($fp, "Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded\r\n");
fwrite($fp, "Content-Length: ".strlen($content)."\r\n");
fwrite($fp, "Connection: close\r\n");
fwrite($fp, "\r\n");
fwrite($fp, $content);
Hookah is designed to solve your problem.
Related
I am trying to execute a callback function after response send in php.
For example in JAVA i made that using Threads. But in php after response it finish the process of script.Besides I try to implement pthreads but its too much complicated.
In my code:
if(isset($_REQUEST['x']) && $_REQUEST['x'] == "x") {
header('Content-type: application/json');
$data = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), TRUE);
if (!empty($data)) {
$request = new XRequest($data['params']);
$customParams = unserialize(file_get_contents('customParams'));
$customParams->callCallback($request); //Calling from another PHP class
echo(json_encode(array('status' => 'OK')));
}
}
The request come from different server. I want to start first php echo response when response send i want to call $customParams->callCallback($request);
How can I do that? Any ideas?
In php i solved my problem using bottom code. But pay attention to fastcgi_finish_request . With out this my server can not stop the first response and start callback.
Thanks.
ob_start();
// Send your response.
echo json_encode(array('status' => 'ok')) ;
// Get the size of the output.
$size = ob_get_length();
// Disable compression (in case content length is compressed).
header("Content-Encoding: none");
header($_SERVER["SERVER_PROTOCOL"] . " 202 Accepted");
header("Status: 202 Accepted");
// Set the content length of the response.
header("Content-Length: {$size}");
// Close the connection.
header("Connection: close");
ignore_user_abort(true);
set_time_limit(0);
// Flush all output.
ob_end_flush();
ob_flush();
flush();
session_write_close();
fastcgi_finish_request();
// Do processing here
sleep(5);
callBackAfterResponse();
PHP's concurrency model is simple and based around the fact that multiple PHP scripts can be executed simultaneously by a Web server. So typically, the way you'd implement this is by
Placing the body of your callback function in its own, separate script; and
Invoking it from the parent script through an outgoing Web request (using cURL or similar).
That is, have the first PHP script request the second at a URL on (presumably) the same Web server, just as though a user had opened the two URLs sequentially in their Web browser. This way, the second script can continue to run after the first has completed its response and terminated.
More sophisticated approaches are possible, involving message queues or remote-procedure call mechanisms like XML-RPC and Apache Thrift, if the second PHP script is made to run separately and continuously in its own process. But I think this will be enough for what you're trying to do.
I want to have an HTTP GET request sent from PHP. Example:
http://tracker.example.com?product_number=5230&price=123.52
The idea is to do server-side web-analytics: Instead of sending tracking
information from JavaScript to a server, the server sends tracking
information directly to another server.
Requirements:
The request should take as little time as possible, in order to not
noticeably delay processing of the PHP page.
The response from the tracker.example.com does not need to be
checked. As examples, some possible responses from
tracker.example.com:
200: That's fine, but no need to check that.
404: Bad luck, but - again - no need to check that.
301: Although a redirect would be appropriate, it would delay
processing of the PHP page, so don't do that.
In short: All responses can be discarded.
Ideas for solutions:
In a now deleted answer, someone suggested calling command line
curl from PHP in a shell process. This seems like a good idea,
only that I don't know if forking a lot of shell processes under
heavy load is a wise thing to do.
I found php-ga, a package for doing server-side Google
Analytics from PHP. On the project's page, it is
mentioned: "Can be configured to [...] use non-blocking requests."
So far I haven't found the time to investigate what method php-ga
uses internally, but this method could be it!
In a nutshell: What is the best solution to do generic server-side
tracking/analytics from PHP.
Unfortunately PHP by definition is blocking. While this holds true for the majority of functions and operations you will normally be handling, the current scenario is different.
The process which I like to call HTTP-Ping, requires that you only touch a specific URI, forcing the specific server to boot-strap it's internal logic. Some functions allow you to achieve something very similar to this HTTP-ping, by not waiting for a response.
Take note that the process of pinging an url, is a two step process:
Resolve the DNS
Making the request
While making the request should be rather fast once the DNS is resolved and the connection is made, there aren't many ways of making the DNS resolve faster.
Some ways of doing an http-ping are:
cURL, by setting CONNECTION_TIMEOUT to a low value
fsockopen by closing immediately after writing
stream_socket_client (same as fsockopen) and also adding STREAM_CLIENT_ASYNC_CONNECT
While both cURL and fsockopen are both blocking while the DNS is being resolved. I have noticed that fsockopen is significantly faster, even in worst case scenarios.
stream_socket_client on the other hand should fix the problem regarding DNS resolving and should be the optimal solution in this scenario, but I have not managed to get it to work.
One final solution is to start another thread/process that does this for you. Making a system call for this should work, but also forking the current process should do that also. Unfortunately both are not really safe in applications where you can't control the environment on which PHP is running.
System calls are more often than not blocked and pcntl is not enabled by default.
I would call tracker.example.com this way:
get_headers('http://tracker.example.com?product_number=5230&price=123.52');
and in the tracker script:
ob_end_clean();
ignore_user_abort(true);
ob_start();
header("Connection: close");
header("Content-Length: " . ob_get_length());
ob_end_flush();
flush();
// from here the response has been sent. you can now wait as long as you want and do some tracking stuff
sleep(5); //wait 5 seconds
do_some_stuff();
exit;
I implemented function for fast GET request to url without waiting for response:
function fast_request($url)
{
$parts=parse_url($url);
$fp = fsockopen($parts['host'],isset($parts['port'])?$parts['port']:80,$errno, $errstr, 30);
$out = "GET ".$parts['path']." HTTP/1.1\r\n";
$out.= "Host: ".$parts['host']."\r\n";
$out.= "Content-Length: 0"."\r\n";
$out.= "Connection: Close\r\n\r\n";
fwrite($fp, $out);
fclose($fp);
}
We were using fsockopen and fwrite combo, then it up and stopped working one day. Or it was kind of intermittent. After a little research and testing, and if you have fopen wrappers enabled, I ended up using file_get_contents and stream_context_create functions with a timeout that is set to 100th of second. The timeout parameter can receive floating values (https://www.php.net/manual/en/context.http.php). I wrapped it in a try...catch block so it would fail silently. It works beautifully for our purposes. You can do logging stuff in the catch if needed. The timeout is the key if you don't want the function to block runtime.
function fetchWithoutResponseURL( $url )
{
$context = stream_context_create([
"http" => [
"method"=>"GET",
"timeout" => .01
]
]
);
try {
file_get_contents($url, 0, $context);
}catch( Exception $e ){
// Fail silently
}
}
For those of you working with wordrpess as a backend -
it is as simple as:
wp_remote_get( $url, array(blocking=>false) );
Came here whilst researching a similar problem. If you have a database connection handy, one other possibility is to quickly stuff the request details into a table, and then have a seperate cron-based process that periodically scans that table for new records to process, and makes the tracking request, freeing up your web application from having to make the HTTP request itself.
You can use shell_exec, and command line curl.
For an example, see this question
You can actually do this using CURL directly.
I have both implemented it using a very short timeout (CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS) and/or using curl_multi_exec.
Be advised: eventually i quit this method because not every request was correctly made. This could have been caused by my own server though i haven't been able to rule out the option of curl failing.
I needed to do something similar, just ping a url and discard all responses. I used the proc_open command which lets you end the process right away using proc_close. I'm assuming you have lynx installed on your server:
<?php
function ping($url) {
$proc = proc_open("lynx $url",[],$pipes);
proc_close($proc);
}
?>
<?php
// Create a stream
$opts = array(
'http'=>array(
'method'=>"GET",
'header'=>"Accept-language: en"
)
);
$context = stream_context_create($opts);
// Open the file using the HTTP headers set above
$file = file_get_contents('http://tracker.example.com?product_number=5230&price=123.52', false, $context);
?>
I'm using codeIgniter RESTful API (https://github.com/philsturgeon/codeigniter-restserver) that return information (json format) to my android/iphone app.
There are an operation where i send some values, if it is everything OK i return 200 code as response.
Now, i want to add a new operation at the same method: send notifications of this modifications with APNS (Apple Push Notificacion Service) and GCM (Google Cloud Messaging).
It works well when i have to send no more than 3-5 notifications, the problem is APNS, because i have to send this messages one by one and it takes a long time, so my apps recieves a timeout exception (all the notifications are sent but the user get the Error Connection...)
Can i send the 200 code response and then continue sending this notifications? (Something like this...)
function my_update_method_post(){
//....GET my POST values
update($data);
$this->response(array('result'=>1),200));
//Send Notifications
....
}
Thanks in advance...
I found a solution that works perfect for me because i don't expect any result value. If notification can't be send...i log it in my database.
This is the function that i use to send "async" request (yes, This is not an asynchronous request, but it works how i'm looking for)
function curl_post_async($url, $params)
{
$post_string = http_build_query($params);
$parts=parse_url($url);
$fp = fsockopen($parts['host'],
isset($parts['port'])?$parts['port']:80,
$errno, $errstr, 30);
if(!$fp)
{
//Perform whatever logging you want to have happen b/c this call failed!
}
$out = "POST ".$parts['path']." HTTP/1.1\r\n";
$out.= "Host: ".$parts['host']."\r\n";
$out.= "Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded\r\n";
$out.= "Content-Length: ".strlen($post_string)."\r\n";
$out.= "Connection: Close\r\n\r\n";
if (isset($post_string)) $out.= $post_string;
fwrite($fp, $out);
fclose($fp);
}
Yes this is possible.
You should look at PHP exec() and this link. You should set up a function in your controller to be called from the command line. you will then pass in an array of the GCM/APNS data to be used.
This solution is not ideal because you won't be able to tell the client that all message were sent successfully. You will send back 200 to say the request was received ok and that is all.
Since PHP doesn't natively support threads or asynchronus function calls you will have to use a kindof hacky solution.
Have a look at my question here: PHP file_get_contents() follow Content-length header
The Solution is to send a Connection: Close and Content-Length header, then make the client to be aware of these headers (see link above). In case of curl for example the connection will be closed as soon as the Content-Length is reached, but your PHP Script still runs "in the background" so you can start time consuming operations then.
Kind regards,
Stefan
P.S. If the Script takes really long to execute, make sure that the PHP max exection time doesn't get in your way
Take a look at this article. I like this solution much more than one where you have the client tell the server to hang up immediately; there are multiple benefits if you build this solution on the server side.
You know the server will continue processing once the client has disconnected
The client can still receive a response from the server
EDIT
I'd not realized OP doesn't have access to the service here. In this case, the article I've mentioned is of little value. The problem here is the server is taking a long time to respond and hanging the client up. For this I suggest curl_multi_init. This allows you to make a number of requests simultaneously.
How can I have PHP 5.2 (running as apache mod_php) send a complete HTTP response to the client, and then keep executing operations for one more minute?
The long story:
I have a PHP script that has to execute a few long database requests and send e-mail, which takes 45 to 60 seconds to run. This script is called by an application that I have no control over. I need the application to report any error messages received from the PHP script (mostly invalid parameter errors).
The application has a timeout delay shorter than 45 seconds (I do not know the exact value) and therefore registers every execution of the PHP script as an error. Therefore, I need PHP to send the complete HTTP response to the client as fast as possible (ideally, as soon as the input parameters have been validated), and then run the database and e-mail processing.
I'm running mod_php, so pcntl_fork is not available. I could work my way around this by saving the data to be processed to the database and run the actual process from cron, but I'm looking for a shorter solution.
I had this snippet in my "special scripts" toolbox, but it got lost (clouds were not common back then), so I was searching for it and came up with this question, surprised to see that it's missing, I searched more and came back here to post it:
<?php
ob_end_clean();
header("Connection: close");
ignore_user_abort(); // optional
ob_start();
echo ('Text the user will see');
$size = ob_get_length();
header("Content-Length: $size");
ob_end_flush(); // Strange behaviour, will not work
flush(); // Unless both are called !
session_write_close(); // Added a line suggested in the comment
// Do processing here
sleep(30);
echo('Text user will never see');
?>
I actually use it in few places. And it totally makes sense there: a banklink is returning the request of a successful payment and I have to call a lot of services and process a lot of data when that happens. That sometimes takes more than 10 seconds, yet the banklink has fixed timeout period. So I acknowledge the banklink and show him the way out, and do my stuff when he is already gone.
Have the script that handles the initial request create an entry in a processing queue, and then immediately return. Then, create a separate process (via cron maybe) that regularly runs whatever jobs are pending in the queue.
What you need is this kind of setup
One can to use "http fork" to oneself or any other script. I mean something like this:
// parent sript, called by user request from browser
// create socket for calling child script
$socketToChild = fsockopen("localhost", 80);
// HTTP-packet building; header first
$msgToChild = "POST /sript.php?¶m=value&<more params> HTTP/1.0\n";
$msgToChild .= "Host: localhost\n";
$postData = "Any data for child as POST-query";
$msgToChild .= "Content-Length: ".strlen($postData)."\n\n";
// header done, glue with data
$msgToChild .= $postData;
// send packet no oneself www-server - new process will be created to handle our query
fwrite($socketToChild, $msgToChild);
// wait and read answer from child
$data = fread($socketToChild, $dataSize);
// close connection to child
fclose($socketToChild);
...
Now the child script:
// parse HTTP-query somewhere and somehow before this point
// "disable partial output" or
// "enable buffering" to give out all at once later
ob_start();
// "say hello" to client (parent script in this case) disconnection
// before child ends - we need not care about it
ignore_user_abort(1);
// we will work forever
set_time_limit(0);
// we need to say something to parent to stop its waiting
// it could be something useful like client ID or just "OK"
...
echo $reply;
// push buffer to parent
ob_flush();
// parent gets our answer and disconnects
// but we can work "in background" :)
...
The main idea is:
parent script called by user request;
parent calls child script (same as parent or another) on the same server (or any other server) and gives request data to them;
parent says ok to user and ends;
child works.
If you need to interact with child - you can use DB as "communication medium": parent may read child status and write commands, child may read commands and write status. If you need that for several child scripts - you should keep child id on the user side to discriminate them and send that id to parent each time you want to check status of respective child.
I've found that here - http://linuxportal.ru/forums/index.php/t/22951/
What about calling a script on the file server to execute as if it had been triggered at the command line? You can do this with PHP's exec.
You can use the PHP function register-shutdown-function that will execute something after the script has completed its dialog with the browser.
See also ignore_user_abort - but you shouldn't need this function if you use the register_shutdown_function. On the same page, set_time_limit(0) will prevent your script to time out.
Using a queue, exec or cron would be an overkill to this simple task.
There is no reason not to stay within the same script.
This combination worked great for me:
ignore_user_abort(true);
$response = "some response";
header("Connection: close");
header("Content-Length: " . mb_strlen($response));
echo $response;
flush(); // releasing the browser from waiting
// continue the script with the slow processing here...
read more in:
How to continue process after responding to ajax request in PHP?
It is possible to use cURL for that, with a very short timeout. This would be your main file:
<?php>
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, "http://example.com/processor.php");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS, 10); //just some very short timeout
curl_exec($ch);
curl_close($ch);
?>
And this your processor file:
<?php
ignore_user_abort(true); //very important!
for($x = 0; $x < 10; $x++) //do some very time-consuming task
sleep(10);
?>
As you can see, the upper script will timeout after a short time (10 milliseconds in this case). It is possible that CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS will not work like this, in this case, it would be equivalent to curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 1).
So when the processor file has been accessed, it will do its tasks no matter that the user (i.e. the calling file) aborts the connection.
Of course you can also pass GET or POST parameters between the pages.
You can create an http request between server and server. (not browser is needed).
The secret to create a background http request is setting a very small timeout, so the response is ignored.
This is a working function that I have used for that pupose:
MAY
31
PHP asynchronous background request
Another way to create an asynchronous request in PHP (simulating background mode).
/**
* Another way to make asyncronous (o como se escriba asincrono!) request with php
* Con esto se puede simpular un fork en PHP.. nada que envidarle a javita ni C++
* Esta vez usando fsockopen
* #author PHPepe
* #param unknown_type $url
* #param unknown_type $params
*/
function phpepe_async($url, $params = array()) {
$post_params = array();
foreach ($params as $key => &$val) {
if (is_array($val)) $val = implode(',', $val);
$post_params[] = $key.'='.urlencode($val);
}
$post_string = implode('&', $post_params);
$parts=parse_url($url);
$fp = fsockopen($parts['host'],
isset($parts['port'])?$parts['port']:80,
$errno, $errstr, 30);
$out = "POST ".$parts['path']." HTTP/1.1\r\n";
$out.= "Host: ".$parts['host']."\r\n";
$out.= "Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded\r\n";
$out.= "Content-Length: ".strlen($post_string)."\r\n";
$out.= "Connection: Close\r\n\r\n";
if (isset($post_string)) $out.= $post_string;
fwrite($fp, $out);
fclose($fp);
}
// Usage:
phpepe_async("http://192.168.1.110/pepe/feng_scripts/phprequest/fork2.php");
For more info you can take a look at
http://www.phpepe.com/2011/05/php-asynchronous-background-request.html
You can split these functions into three scripts.
1. Initiate process and call second one via exec or command, this is also possible to run via http call.
2. second one will run database processing and at the end will start last one
3. last one will email
Bah, I misunderstood your requirements. Looks like they're actually:
Script receives input from an external source you do not control
Script processes and validates the input, and lets the external app know if they're good or not and terminates the session.
Script kicks off a long-running proccess.
In this case, then yes, using an outside job queue and/or cron would work. After the input is validated, insert the job details into the queue, and exit. Another script can then run, pick up the job details from the queue, and kick off the longer process. Alex Howansky has the right idea.
Sorry, I admit I skimmed a bit the first time around.
I would recommend spawning a new async request at the end, rather than continuing the process with the user.
You can spawn the other request using the answer here:
Asynchronous PHP calls?
In your Apache php.ini config file, make sure that output buffering is disabled:
output_buffering = off
I am writing a simple REST service, which responds to requests from clients. All in PHP.
My concern is, that when my server responds to a request, it could end up tying up resources if the client side is too slow in sending back "ok" response.
How do I send a POST request via lib_curl setting it to not wait for any responses, but rather quit immidiately after the POST data have been sent?
Is this even possible? Thank you !
You cannot just send data without receiving an answer with HTTP. HTTP always goes request -> response. Even if the response is just very short (like a simple 200 with no text), there needs to be a response. And every HTTP socket will wait for that response.
If you don't care about the response, you could add a process to the server that makes your requests, and you just push your request data to it (like a service that is running in the background, checking a request database, and always starting the request whenever a new entry was added). That way you would make the request asynchronously and could quit as soon as you added that request to the stack.
Also as meouw said, the client is not part of any communication you are doing with php. Php is a server-side language, so when the client requests a webpage (the php file), the server executes that file (and does all requests the php file states) and then returns the result to the client.
This solutions is for software minimal recevied package to continue script. If you want don't care about respond and have access to exec than use exec and call script in background. First Recevier File:
recevier.php
ignore_user_abort(true); //continue script if connetions become close by webbrowser(client) within working script
ob_end_clean(); // this 4 lines just extra sending to web about close connect it just in case
header("Connection: close\r\n"); //send to website close connect
header("Content-Encoding: none\r\n");
header("Content-Length: 1"); //
fastcgi_finish_request(); //close nginx,apache connect to php-fpm (php working but nginx or apache stop communication with php)
//continue scripting
// ...DO HERE WHAT YOU WANT ...
//check test with your mongo or mysql to sure php still keep connection with db
FRONTGROUND by PHP request to HTTP:
this solution is better than background and you need wait only 1ms
sender.php:
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS, 1); //HERE MAGIC (We wait only 1ms on connection) Script waiting but (processing of send package to $curl is continue up to successful) so after 1ms we continue scripting and in background php continue already package to destiny. This is like apple on tree, we cut and go, but apple still fallow to destiny but we don't care what happened when fall down :)
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL, 1); // i'dont know just it works together read manual ;)
--------- Check next answer to complete solution ------------
BACKGROUND By Server Request to HTTP: This will execute $cmd in the background (no cmd window) without PHP waiting for it to finish, on both Windows and Unix. #source https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.exec.php
<?php
function execInBackground($cmd) {
if (substr(php_uname(), 0, 7) == "Windows"){
pclose(popen("start /B ". $cmd, "r"));
}
else {
exec($cmd . " > /dev/null &");
}
}
?>
If you really don't care about the response you're probably best off exec-ing a wget command. This is mentioned in passing in some of the other answers, but here's a super easy function for sending a _POST package via this approach (which is asynchronous and takes 1-2ms):
function wget_request($url, $post_array, $check_ssl=true) {
$cmd = "curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json'";
$cmd.= " -d '" . json_encode($post_array) . "' '" . $url . "'";
if (!$check_ssl){
$cmd.= "' --insecure"; // this can speed things up, though it's not secure
}
$cmd .= " > /dev/null 2>&1 &"; //just dismiss the response
exec($cmd, $output, $exit);
return $exit == 0;
}
Credits: Function was adapted from
https://segment.com/blog/how-to-make-async-requests-in-php/
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2002-05/0090.html
libcurl has no asynchronous interface.
You can do that yourself either by
using threads or by using the
non-blocking "multi interface" that
libcurl offers. Read up on the multi
interface here:
http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/libcurl-multi.html
PHP example of multi interface is here:
http://www.phpied.com/simultaneuos-http-requests-in-php-with-curl/
I have never tried this, but setting the CURLOPT_TIMEOUT to a very low value might do the trick. Try 0 or 0.1.
However, I don't know how cURL and the client will behave with this, whether the connection will be actively cancelled when the connection is already established, and the timeout is reached. You would have to try out. If you're calling PHP scripts, maybe ignore_user_abort() can make sure your scripts run through either way.
If you have 2 PHP servers communicating with each other, e.g. server 1 wants to send JSON data to a server 2, the server 2 is doing some heavy work and terminates the connection right after it receives the data so the server 1 doesn't have to wait for the result. You can do it like this:
Server 1 (client creating POST request with JSON data):
Use CURL, don't use file_get_contents() because in my experience, file_get_contents() doesn't handle Connection: close HTTP header correctly and doesn't terminate the connection as it should.
$curl = curl_init('http://server2.com/');
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_HEADER, false);
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, ["Content-type: application/json"]);
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_POST, true);
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, json_encode(['some data']));
$response = curl_exec($curl);
$status = curl_getinfo($curl, CURLINFO_HTTP_CODE);
if ($status !== 200) {
exit("Failed with status {$status}, response {$response}, curl_error " . curl_error($curl) . ", curl_errno " . curl_errno($curl));
}
curl_close($curl);
echo $response;
Server 2:
Modified code from bubba-h57 used.
// Cause we are clever and don't want the rest of the script to be bound by a timeout.
// Set to zero so no time limit is imposed from here on out.
set_time_limit(0);
// Client disconnect should NOT abort our script execution
ignore_user_abort(true);
// Clean (erase) the output buffer and turn off output buffering
// in case there was anything up in there to begin with.
ob_end_clean();
// Turn on output buffering, because ... we just turned it off ...
// if it was on.
ob_start();
echo 'I received the data, closing connection now, bye.';
// Return the length of the output buffer
$size = ob_get_length();
// Send headers to tell the browser to close the connection
// Remember, the headers must be called prior to any actual
// input being sent via our flush(es) below.
header("Connection: close");
// Hack how to turn off mod deflate in Apache (gzip compression).
header("Content-Encoding: none");
header("Content-Length: {$size}");
// Set the HTTP response code
http_response_code(200);
// Flush (send) the output buffer and turn off output buffering
ob_end_flush();
// Flush (send) the output buffer
// This looks like overkill, but trust me. I know, you really don't need this
// unless you do need it, in which case, you will be glad you had it!
#ob_flush();
// Flush system output buffer
// I know, more over kill looking stuff, but this
// Flushes the system write buffers of PHP and whatever backend PHP is using
// (CGI, a web server, etc). This attempts to push current output all the way
// to the browser with a few caveats.
flush();
// Close current session.
session_write_close();
// Here, you can proceed with some heavy work.
echo "This won't be sent, the connection should be already closed";
In Laravel
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Http;
...Some Code here
$prom = Http::timeout(1)->async()->post($URL_STRING, $ARRAY_DATA)->wait();
... Some more important code here
return "Request sent"; //OR whatever you need to return
This works for me as I don't need to know the response always.
As other people says when you make a http request you have to wait the response.
In PHP what you can do is make the request using the exec function.
Check this link: php exec command (or similar) to not wait for result