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==========
Quickstart
==========
This page provides a quick introduction to Guzzle and introductory examples.
If you have not already installed, Guzzle, head over to the :ref:`installation`
page.
Making a Request
================
You can send requests with Guzzle using a ``GuzzleHttp\ClientInterface``
object.
Creating a Client
-----------------
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Client;
$client = new Client([
// Base URI is used with relative requests
'base_uri' => 'http://httpbin.org',
// You can set any number of default request options.
'timeout' => 2.0,
]);
Clients are immutable in Guzzle, which means that you cannot change the defaults used by a client after it's created.
The client constructor accepts an associative array of options:
``base_uri``
(string|UriInterface) Base URI of the client that is merged into relative
URIs. Can be a string or instance of UriInterface. When a relative URI
is provided to a client, the client will combine the base URI with the
relative URI using the rules described in
`RFC 3986, section 5.2 <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3986#section-5.2>`_.
.. code-block:: php
// Create a client with a base URI
$client = new GuzzleHttp\Client(['base_uri' => 'https://foo.com/api/']);
// Send a request to https://foo.com/api/test
$response = $client->request('GET', 'test');
// Send a request to https://foo.com/root
$response = $client->request('GET', '/root');
Don't feel like reading RFC 3986? Here are some quick examples on how a
``base_uri`` is resolved with another URI.
======================= ================== ===============================
base_uri URI Result
======================= ================== ===============================
``http://foo.com`` ``/bar`` ``http://foo.com/bar``
``http://foo.com/foo`` ``/bar`` ``http://foo.com/bar``
``http://foo.com/foo`` ``bar`` ``http://foo.com/bar``
``http://foo.com/foo/`` ``bar`` ``http://foo.com/foo/bar``
``http://foo.com/foo/`` ``/bar`` ``http://foo.com/bar``
``http://foo.com`` ``http://baz.com`` ``http://baz.com``
``http://foo.com/?bar`` ``bar`` ``http://foo.com/bar``
======================= ================== ===============================
``handler``
(callable) Function that transfers HTTP requests over the wire. The
function is called with a ``Psr7\Http\Message\RequestInterface`` and array
of transfer options, and must return a
``GuzzleHttp\Promise\PromiseInterface`` that is fulfilled with a
``Psr7\Http\Message\ResponseInterface`` on success.
``...``
(mixed) All other options passed to the constructor are used as default
request options with every request created by the client.
Sending Requests
----------------
Magic methods on the client make it easy to send synchronous requests:
.. code-block:: php
$response = $client->get('http://httpbin.org/get');
$response = $client->delete('http://httpbin.org/delete');
$response = $client->head('http://httpbin.org/get');
$response = $client->options('http://httpbin.org/get');
$response = $client->patch('http://httpbin.org/patch');
$response = $client->post('http://httpbin.org/post');
$response = $client->put('http://httpbin.org/put');
You can create a request and then send the request with the client when you're
ready:
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Request;
$request = new Request('PUT', 'http://httpbin.org/put');
$response = $client->send($request, ['timeout' => 2]);
Client objects provide a great deal of flexibility in how request are
transferred including default request options, default handler stack middleware
that are used by each request, and a base URI that allows you to send requests
with relative URIs.
You can find out more about client middleware in the
:doc:`handlers-and-middleware` page of the documentation.
Async Requests
--------------
You can send asynchronous requests using the magic methods provided by a client:
.. code-block:: php
$promise = $client->getAsync('http://httpbin.org/get');
$promise = $client->deleteAsync('http://httpbin.org/delete');
$promise = $client->headAsync('http://httpbin.org/get');
$promise = $client->optionsAsync('http://httpbin.org/get');
$promise = $client->patchAsync('http://httpbin.org/patch');
$promise = $client->postAsync('http://httpbin.org/post');
$promise = $client->putAsync('http://httpbin.org/put');
You can also use the `sendAsync()` and `requestAsync()` methods of a client:
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Request;
// Create a PSR-7 request object to send
$headers = ['X-Foo' => 'Bar'];
$body = 'Hello!';
$request = new Request('HEAD', 'http://httpbin.org/head', $headers, $body);
$promise = $client->sendAsync($request);
// Or, if you don't need to pass in a request instance:
$promise = $client->requestAsync('GET', 'http://httpbin.org/get');
The promise returned by these methods implements the
`Promises/A+ spec <https://promisesaplus.com/>`_, provided by the
`Guzzle promises library <https://github.com/guzzle/promises>`_. This means
that you can chain ``then()`` calls off of the promise. These then calls are
either fulfilled with a successful ``Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface`` or
rejected with an exception.
.. code-block:: php
use Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface;
use GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException;
$promise = $client->requestAsync('GET', 'http://httpbin.org/get');
$promise->then(
function (ResponseInterface $res) {
echo $res->getStatusCode() . "\n";
},
function (RequestException $e) {
echo $e->getMessage() . "\n";
echo $e->getRequest()->getMethod();
}
);
Concurrent requests
-------------------
You can send multiple requests concurrently using promises and asynchronous
requests.
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Promise;
$client = new Client(['base_uri' => 'http://httpbin.org/']);
// Initiate each request but do not block
$promises = [
'image' => $client->getAsync('/image'),
'png' => $client->getAsync('/image/png'),
'jpeg' => $client->getAsync('/image/jpeg'),
'webp' => $client->getAsync('/image/webp')
];
// Wait for the requests to complete; throws a ConnectException
// if any of the requests fail
$responses = Promise\Utils::unwrap($promises);
// You can access each response using the key of the promise
echo $responses['image']->getHeader('Content-Length')[0];
echo $responses['png']->getHeader('Content-Length')[0];
// Wait for the requests to complete, even if some of them fail
$responses = Promise\Utils::settle($promises)->wait();
// Values returned above are wrapped in an array with 2 keys: "state" (either fulfilled or rejected) and "value" (contains the response)
echo $responses['image']['state']; // returns "fulfilled"
echo $responses['image']['value']->getHeader('Content-Length')[0];
echo $responses['png']['value']->getHeader('Content-Length')[0];
You can use the ``GuzzleHttp\Pool`` object when you have an indeterminate
amount of requests you wish to send.
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException;
use GuzzleHttp\Pool;
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Request;
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Response;
$client = new Client();
$requests = function ($total) {
$uri = 'http://127.0.0.1:8126/guzzle-server/perf';
for ($i = 0; $i < $total; $i++) {
yield new Request('GET', $uri);
}
};
$pool = new Pool($client, $requests(100), [
'concurrency' => 5,
'fulfilled' => function (Response $response, $index) {
// this is delivered each successful response
},
'rejected' => function (RequestException $reason, $index) {
// this is delivered each failed request
},
]);
// Initiate the transfers and create a promise
$promise = $pool->promise();
// Force the pool of requests to complete.
$promise->wait();
Or using a closure that will return a promise once the pool calls the closure.
.. code-block:: php
$client = new Client();
$requests = function ($total) use ($client) {
$uri = 'http://127.0.0.1:8126/guzzle-server/perf';
for ($i = 0; $i < $total; $i++) {
yield function() use ($client, $uri) {
return $client->getAsync($uri);
};
}
};
$pool = new Pool($client, $requests(100));
Using Responses
===============
In the previous examples, we retrieved a ``$response`` variable or we were
delivered a response from a promise. The response object implements a PSR-7
response, ``Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface``, and contains lots of
helpful information.
You can get the status code and reason phrase of the response:
.. code-block:: php
$code = $response->getStatusCode(); // 200
$reason = $response->getReasonPhrase(); // OK
You can retrieve headers from the response:
.. code-block:: php
// Check if a header exists.
if ($response->hasHeader('Content-Length')) {
echo "It exists";
}
// Get a header from the response.
echo $response->getHeader('Content-Length')[0];
// Get all of the response headers.
foreach ($response->getHeaders() as $name => $values) {
echo $name . ': ' . implode(', ', $values) . "\r\n";
}
The body of a response can be retrieved using the ``getBody`` method. The body
can be used as a string, cast to a string, or used as a stream like object.
.. code-block:: php
$body = $response->getBody();
// Implicitly cast the body to a string and echo it
echo $body;
// Explicitly cast the body to a string
$stringBody = (string) $body;
// Read 10 bytes from the body
$tenBytes = $body->read(10);
// Read the remaining contents of the body as a string
$remainingBytes = $body->getContents();
Query String Parameters
=======================
You can provide query string parameters with a request in several ways.
You can set query string parameters in the request's URI:
.. code-block:: php
$response = $client->request('GET', 'http://httpbin.org?foo=bar');
You can specify the query string parameters using the ``query`` request
option as an array.
.. code-block:: php
$client->request('GET', 'http://httpbin.org', [
'query' => ['foo' => 'bar']
]);
Providing the option as an array will use PHP's ``http_build_query`` function
to format the query string.
And finally, you can provide the ``query`` request option as a string.
.. code-block:: php
$client->request('GET', 'http://httpbin.org', ['query' => 'foo=bar']);
Uploading Data
==============
Guzzle provides several methods for uploading data.
You can send requests that contain a stream of data by passing a string,
resource returned from ``fopen``, or an instance of a
``Psr\Http\Message\StreamInterface`` to the ``body`` request option.
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7;
// Provide the body as a string.
$r = $client->request('POST', 'http://httpbin.org/post', [
'body' => 'raw data'
]);
// Provide an fopen resource.
$body = Psr7\Utils::tryFopen('/path/to/file', 'r');
$r = $client->request('POST', 'http://httpbin.org/post', ['body' => $body]);
// Use the Utils::streamFor method to create a PSR-7 stream.
$body = Psr7\Utils::streamFor('hello!');
$r = $client->request('POST', 'http://httpbin.org/post', ['body' => $body]);
An easy way to upload JSON data and set the appropriate header is using the
``json`` request option:
.. code-block:: php
$r = $client->request('PUT', 'http://httpbin.org/put', [
'json' => ['foo' => 'bar']
]);
POST/Form Requests
------------------
In addition to specifying the raw data of a request using the ``body`` request
option, Guzzle provides helpful abstractions over sending POST data.
Sending form fields
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sending ``application/x-www-form-urlencoded`` POST requests requires that you
specify the POST fields as an array in the ``form_params`` request options.
.. code-block:: php
$response = $client->request('POST', 'http://httpbin.org/post', [
'form_params' => [
'field_name' => 'abc',
'other_field' => '123',
'nested_field' => [
'nested' => 'hello'
]
]
]);
Sending form files
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can send files along with a form (``multipart/form-data`` POST requests),
using the ``multipart`` request option. ``multipart`` accepts an array of
associative arrays, where each associative array contains the following keys:
- name: (required, string) key mapping to the form field name.
- contents: (required, mixed) Provide a string to send the contents of the
file as a string, provide an fopen resource to stream the contents from a
PHP stream, or provide a ``Psr\Http\Message\StreamInterface`` to stream
the contents from a PSR-7 stream.
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7;
$response = $client->request('POST', 'http://httpbin.org/post', [
'multipart' => [
[
'name' => 'field_name',
'contents' => 'abc'
],
[
'name' => 'file_name',
'contents' => Psr7\Utils::tryFopen('/path/to/file', 'r')
],
[
'name' => 'other_file',
'contents' => 'hello',
'filename' => 'filename.txt',
'headers' => [
'X-Foo' => 'this is an extra header to include'
]
]
]
]);
Cookies
=======
Guzzle can maintain a cookie session for you if instructed using the
``cookies`` request option. When sending a request, the ``cookies`` option
must be set to an instance of ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\CookieJarInterface``.
.. code-block:: php
// Use a specific cookie jar
$jar = new \GuzzleHttp\Cookie\CookieJar;
$r = $client->request('GET', 'http://httpbin.org/cookies', [
'cookies' => $jar
]);
You can set ``cookies`` to ``true`` in a client constructor if you would like
to use a shared cookie jar for all requests.
.. code-block:: php
// Use a shared client cookie jar
$client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['cookies' => true]);
$r = $client->request('GET', 'http://httpbin.org/cookies');
Different implementations exist for the ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\CookieJarInterface``
:
- The ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\CookieJar`` class stores cookies as an array.
- The ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\FileCookieJar`` class persists non-session cookies
using a JSON formatted file.
- The ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\SessionCookieJar`` class persists cookies in the
client session.
You can manually set cookies into a cookie jar with the named constructor
``fromArray(array $cookies, $domain)``.
.. code-block:: php
$jar = \GuzzleHttp\Cookie\CookieJar::fromArray(
[
'some_cookie' => 'foo',
'other_cookie' => 'barbaz1234'
],
'example.org'
);
You can get a cookie by its name with the ``getCookieByName($name)`` method
which returns a ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\SetCookie`` instance.
.. code-block:: php
$cookie = $jar->getCookieByName('some_cookie');
$cookie->getValue(); // 'foo'
$cookie->getDomain(); // 'example.org'
$cookie->getExpires(); // expiration date as a Unix timestamp
The cookies can be also fetched into an array thanks to the `toArray()` method.
The ``GuzzleHttp\Cookie\CookieJarInterface`` interface extends
``Traversable`` so it can be iterated in a foreach loop.
Redirects
=========
Guzzle will automatically follow redirects unless you tell it not to. You can
customize the redirect behavior using the ``allow_redirects`` request option.
- Set to ``true`` to enable normal redirects with a maximum number of 5
redirects. This is the default setting.
- Set to ``false`` to disable redirects.
- Pass an associative array containing the 'max' key to specify the maximum
number of redirects and optionally provide a 'strict' key value to specify
whether or not to use strict RFC compliant redirects (meaning redirect POST
requests with POST requests vs. doing what most browsers do which is
redirect POST requests with GET requests).
.. code-block:: php
$response = $client->request('GET', 'http://github.com');
echo $response->getStatusCode();
// 200
The following example shows that redirects can be disabled.
.. code-block:: php
$response = $client->request('GET', 'http://github.com', [
'allow_redirects' => false
]);
echo $response->getStatusCode();
// 301
Exceptions
==========
**Tree View**
The following tree view describes how the Guzzle Exceptions depend
on each other.
.. code-block:: none
. \RuntimeException
└── TransferException (implements GuzzleException)
├── ConnectException (implements NetworkExceptionInterface)
└── RequestException
├── BadResponseException
│ ├── ServerException
│ └── ClientException
└── TooManyRedirectsException
Guzzle throws exceptions for errors that occur during a transfer.
- A ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\ConnectException`` exception is thrown in the
event of a networking error. This exception extends from
``GuzzleHttp\Exception\TransferException``.
- A ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\ClientException`` is thrown for 400
level errors if the ``http_errors`` request option is set to true. This
exception extends from ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\BadResponseException`` and
``GuzzleHttp\Exception\BadResponseException`` extends from
``GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException``.
.. code-block:: php
use GuzzleHttp\Psr7;
use GuzzleHttp\Exception\ClientException;
try {
$client->request('GET', 'https://github.com/_abc_123_404');
} catch (ClientException $e) {
echo Psr7\Message::toString($e->getRequest());
echo Psr7\Message::toString($e->getResponse());
}
- A ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\ServerException`` is thrown for 500 level
errors if the ``http_errors`` request option is set to true. This
exception extends from ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\BadResponseException``.
- A ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\TooManyRedirectsException`` is thrown when too
many redirects are followed. This exception extends from ``GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException``.
All of the above exceptions extend from
``GuzzleHttp\Exception\TransferException``.
Environment Variables
=====================
Guzzle exposes a few environment variables that can be used to customize the
behavior of the library.
``GUZZLE_CURL_SELECT_TIMEOUT``
Controls the duration in seconds that a curl_multi_* handler will use when
selecting on curl handles using ``curl_multi_select()``. Some systems
have issues with PHP's implementation of ``curl_multi_select()`` where
calling this function always results in waiting for the maximum duration of
the timeout.
``HTTP_PROXY``
Defines the proxy to use when sending requests using the "http" protocol.
Note: because the HTTP_PROXY variable may contain arbitrary user input on some (CGI) environments, the variable is only used on the CLI SAPI. See https://httpoxy.org for more information.
``HTTPS_PROXY``
Defines the proxy to use when sending requests using the "https" protocol.
``NO_PROXY``
Defines URLs for which a proxy should not be used. See :ref:`proxy-option` for usage.
Relevant ini Settings
---------------------
Guzzle can utilize PHP ini settings when configuring clients.
``openssl.cafile``
Specifies the path on disk to a CA file in PEM format to use when sending
requests over "https". See: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/tls-peer-verification#phpini_defaults
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