#Uhura
A communications officer for RESTful APIs
Uhura is a dead simple RESTful API client for just about anything. No need to set up schemas or configure API endpoints, just tell Uhura what you want and go get it.
$github = new Uhura('https://api.github.com');
$response = $github->users->colindecarlo->repos->get();
##Installation
Install Uhura using composer.
$ composer require uhura/uhura
##Making Requests
Uhura maps what you ask for in your Demeter chain over to the URL that is used to access the resource you want.
####Examples
Send a GET request to https://someapi.com/users
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$response = $uhura->users->get();
Send a GET request to https://someapi.com/users/1
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$response = $uhura->users(1)->get();
Send a GET request to https://someapi.com/users/1/blogs/some-blog/comments
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$response = $uhura->users(1)->blogs('some-blog')->comments->get();
###CRUD
CRUD operations are super simple with Uhura and are mapped to the create
, get
, update
and
delete
methods respectively.
Operation | Method Signature |
---|---|
Create | create($payload) |
Read | get() |
Update | update($payload) |
Delete | delete() |
create(array $payload)
Use Uhura's create
method to create resources. The create
method accepts an associative array
of attributes which are sent to the API in the request body as a x-www-form-urlencoded
string.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->users->create(['email' => '[email protected]']);
get()
Use Uhura's get
method to get API resources.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$response = $uhura->users->get();
update($payload)
Use Uhura's update
method to update a resource. The update
method accepts an associative array
of attributes which are sent to the API in the request body as a x-www-form-urlencoded
string.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->users(1)->update(['name' => 'John Doe']);
delete()
Use Uhura's delete
method to delete a resource.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->users(1)->delete();
###Authentication
Uhura makes authenticated requests by adding the Authorization
header to each request that is
made.
Using HTTP Basic Auth
Tell Uhura to use HTTP Basic Auth with the useBasicAuthentication($username, $password)
method.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->useBasicAuthentication('someuser', 'somepassword');
$uhura->user->update(['email' => '[email protected]']);
Explicitly Setting the Authorization Header
You can explicitly set the value of the Authorization
header by using Uhura's
authenticate($token)
method.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->authenticate('Bearer somebearertoken');
$uhura->user->update(['email' => '[email protected]']);
##Working With Responses
By default, Uhura returns PSR7 compliant response objects.
Working with them would be as simple as, oh I don't know, a GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Response
object.
###Response Handlers
You can tell Uhura to pass API responses through a Response Handler to augment the return value of
the various request methods. For instance, Uhura ships with a Json
Response Handler which consumes
the response and returns the decoded JSON response body.
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->useResponseHandler(new Uhura\ResponseHandler\Json);
$uhura->users(1)->get();
/*
[
'email' => '[email protected]',
'name' => 'John Doe'
]
*/
Writing Custom Response Handlers
Writing your own custom response handler is super simple. Response Handlers are just simple classes
which define a handle($response)
method. Whatever is returned from the handle
method is what
Uhura will return to you.
// XML Response Handler
class XmlHandler
{
public function handle($response)
{
return new SimpleXMLElement($response->getBody()->getContents());
}
}
$uhura = new Uhura('https://someapi.com');
$uhura->useResponseHandler(new XmlHandler);
echo (string)($uhura->users(1)->get());
/*
<?xml version='1.0' standalone='yes'?>
<user>
<email>[email protected]</email>
<name>John Doe</name>
</user>
*/
Colin DeCarlo, [email protected]
Uhura is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details