Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Aug 13, 2021. It is now read-only.

erezlife/transloadit-php-sdk

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

54 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Transloadit PHP SDK

Purpose

This is the official PHP SDK for the transloadit.com API.

You can use it to setup file upload forms for your users, or to upload existing files from your server.

Examples

To get started, each of our examples requires that you create a new Transloadit instance like this

<?php
require_once '/path/to/php-sdk/lib/transloadit/Transloadit.php';
$Transloadit = new Transloadit(array(
  'key' => 'your-key',
  'secret' => 'your-secret',
));

// Example code goes here!

Note: All of the examples below can be found and run from within the example/ folder.

1. Upload and resize an image from your server

This example demonstrates how you can use the sdk to create an assembly on your server.

It takes a sample image file, uploads it to transloadit, and starts a resizing job on it.

<?php
$response = $Transloadit->createAssembly(array(
  'files' => array(dirname(__FILE__).'/fixture/straw-apple.jpg'),
  'params' => array(
    'steps' => array(
      'resize' => array(
        'robot' => '/image/resize',
        'width' => 200,
        'height' => 100,
      )
    )
  ),
));

// Show the results of the assembly we spawned
echo '<pre>';
print_r($response);
echo '</pre>';

2. Create a simple end-user upload form

This example shows you how to create a simple Transloadit upload form that redirects back to your site after the upload is done.

Once the script receives the redirect request, the current status for this assembly is shown using Transloadit::response().

Note: There is no guarantee that the assembly has already finished executing by the time the $response is fetched. You should use the notify_url parameter for this.

<?php
// Check if this request is a Transloadit redirect_url notification.
// If so fetch the response and output the current assembly status:
$Response = Transloadit::response();
if ($Response) {
  echo '<h1>Assembly status:</h1>';
  echo '<pre>';
  print_r($response);
  echo '</pre>';
  exit;
}

// This should work on most environments, but you might have to modify
// this for your particular setup.
$redirectUrl = sprintf(
  'http:https://%s%s',
  $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'],
  $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
);

// Setup a simple file upload form that resizes an image to 200x100px
echo $Transloadit->createAssemblyForm(array(
  'params' => array(
    'steps' => array(
      'resize' => array(
        'robot' => '/image/resize',
        'width' => 200,
        'height' => 100,
      )
    ),
    'redirect_url' => $redirectUrl
  )
));
?>
<h1>Pick an image to resize</h1>
<input name="example_upload" type="file">
<input type="submit" value="Upload">
</form>

3. Integrate the jQuery plugin into the previous example

Integrating the jQuery plugin simply means adding a few lines of JavaScript to the previous example. Check the HTML comments below to see what changed.

<?php
$response = Transloadit::response();
if ($response) {
  echo '<h1>Assembly status:</h1>';
  echo '<pre>';
  print_r($response);
  echo '</pre>';
  exit;
}

$redirectUrl = sprintf(
  'http:https://%s%s',
  $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'],
  $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
);

echo $Transloadit->createAssemblyForm(array(
  'params' => array(
    'steps' => array(
      'resize' => array(
        'robot' => '/image/resize',
        'width' => 200,
        'height' => 100,
      )
    ),
    'redirect_url' => $redirectUrl
  )
));
?>
<!--
Including the jQuery plugin is as simple as adding jQuery and including the
JS snippet for the plugin. See http:https://transloadit.com/docs/jquery-plugin
-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="http:https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.4/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
var tlProtocol = (('https:' == document.location.protocol) ? 'https://' : 'http:https://');
document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + tlProtocol + "assets.transloadit.com/js/jquery.transloadit2.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
</script>
<script type="text/javascript">
 $(document).ready(function() {
   // Tell the Transloadit plugin to bind itself to our form
   $('form').transloadit();
 });
</script>
<!-- Nothing changed below here -->
<h1>Pick an image to resize</h1>
<input name="example_upload" type="file">
<input type="submit" value="Upload">
</form>

API

$Transloadit = new Transloadit($properties = array());

Creates a new Transloadit instance and applies the given $properties.

$Transloadit->key = null;

The auth key of your Transloadit account.

$Transloadit->secret = null;

The auth secret of your Transloadit account.

$Transloadit->request($options = array(), $execute = true);

Creates a new TransloaditRequest using the $Transloadit->key and $Transloadit->secret properties.

If $execute is set to true, $TransloaditRequest->execute() will be called and used as the return value.

Otherwise the new TransloaditRequest instance is being returned.

$Transloadit->createAssemblyForm($options = array());

Creates a new Transloadit assembly form including the hidden 'params' and 'signature' fields. A closing form tag is not included.

$options is an array of TransloaditRequest properties to be used. For example: "params", "expires", "protocol", etc..

In addition to that, you can also pass an "attributes" key, which allows you to set custom form attributes. For example:

$Transloadit->createAssemblyForm(array(
  'attributes' => array(
    'id' => 'my_great_upload_form',
    'class' => 'transloadit_form',
  ),
));

$Transloadit->createAssembly($options);

Sends a new assembly request to Transloadit. This is the preferred way of uploading files from your server.

$options is an array of TransloaditRequest properties to be used.

Check example #1 above for more information.

Transloadit::response()

This static method is used to parse the notifications Transloadit sends to your server.

There are two kinds of notifications this method handles:

  • When using the "redirect_url" parameter, and Transloadit redirects back to your site, a $_GET['assembly_url'] query parameter gets added. This method detects the presence of this parameter and fetches the current assembly status from that url and returns it as a TransloaditResponse.
  • When using the "notify_url" parameter, Transloadit sends a $_POST['transloadit'] parameter. This method detects this, and parses the notification JSON into a TransloaditResponse object for you.

If the current request does not seem to be invoked by Transloadit, this method returns false.

$TransloaditRequest = new TransloaditRequest($properties = array());

Creates a new TransloaditRequest instance and applies the given $properties.

$TransloaditRequest->key = null;

The auth key of your Transloadit account.

$TransloaditRequest->secret = null;

The auth secret of your Transloadit account.

$TransloaditRequest->protocol = 'http';

The protocol to use when making this request. Valid values are 'http' and 'https'.

$TransloaditRequest->method = 'GET';

Inherited from CurlRequest. Can be used to set the type of request to be made.

$TransloaditRequest->host = 'api2.transloadit.com';

The host to send this request to.

$TransloaditRequest->path = null;

The url path to request.

$TransloaditRequest->url = null;

Inherited from CurlRequest. Lets you overwrite the above host / path properties with a fully custom url alltogether.

$TransloaditRequest->fields = array();

A list of additional fields to send along with your request. Transloadit will include those in all assembly related notifications.

$TransloaditRequest->files = array();

An array of paths to local files you would like to upload. For example:

$TransloaditRequest->files = array('/my/file.jpg');

or

$TransloaditRequest->files = array('my_upload' => '/my/file.jpg');

The first example would automatically give your file a field name of 'file_1' when executing the request.

$TransloaditRequest->params = array();

An array representing the JSON params to be send to Transloadit. You do not have to include an 'auth' key here, as this class handles that for you as part of $TransloaditRequest->prepare().

$TransloaditRequest->expires = '+2 hours';

If you have configured a '$TransloaditRequest->secret', this class will automatically sign your request. The expires property lets you configure the duration for which the signature is valid.

$TransloaditRequest->headers = array();

Lets you send additional headers along with your request. You should not have to change this property.

$TransloaditRequest->execute()

Sends this request to Transloadit and returns a TransloaditResponse instance.

$TransloaditResponse = new TransloaditResponse($properties = array());

Creates a new TransloaditResponse instance and applies the given $properties.

$TransloaditResponse->data = null;

Inherited from CurlResponse. Contains an array of the parsed JSON response from Transloadit.

You should generally only access this property after having checked for errors using $TransloaditResponse->error().

$TransloaditResponse->error();

Returns false or a string containing an explanation of what went wrong.

All of the following will cause an error string to be returned:

  • Network issues of any kind
  • The Transloadit response JSON contains an {"error": "..."} key
  • A malformed response was received

About

The official PHP Library for using Transloadit

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 100.0%