# Pusher PHP Library [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/pusher/pusher-http-php.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/pusher/pusher-http-php) PHP library for interacting with the Pusher HTTP API. Register at and use the application credentials within your app as shown below. ## Installation You can get the Pusher PHP library via a composer package called `pusher-php-server`. See ```bash $ composer require pusher/pusher-php-server ``` Or add to `composer.json`: ```json "require": { "pusher/pusher-php-server": "^2.6" } ``` and then run `composer update`. Or you can clone or download the library files. **We recommend you [use composer](http://getcomposer.org/).** ## Pusher constructor Use the credentials from your Pusher application to create a new `Pusher` instance. ```php $app_id = 'YOUR_APP_ID'; $app_key = 'YOUR_APP_KEY'; $app_secret = 'YOUR_APP_SECRET'; $app_cluster = 'YOUR_APP_CLUSTER'; $pusher = new Pusher( $app_key, $app_secret, $app_id, array('cluster' => $app_cluster) ); ``` The fourth parameter is an `$options` array. The additional options are: * `scheme` - e.g. http or https * `host` - the host e.g. api.pusherapp.com. No trailing forward slash. * `port` - the http port * `timeout` - the HTTP timeout * `encrypted` - quick option to use scheme of https and port 443. * `cluster` - specify the cluster where the application is running from. * `curl_options` - array with custom curl commands For example, by default calls will be made over a non-encrypted connection. To change this to make calls over HTTPS use: ```php $pusher = new Pusher( $app_key, $app_secret, $app_id, array( 'cluster' => $app_cluster, 'encrypted' => true ) ); ``` For example, if you want to set custom curl options, use this: ```php $pusher = new Pusher( $app_key, $app_secret, $app_id, array( 'cluster' => $app_cluster, 'encrypted' => true, 'curl_options' => array( CURLOPT_IPRESOLVE => CURL_IPRESOLVE_V4 ) ) ); ``` *Note: The `$options` parameter was introduced in version 2.2.0 of the library. Previously additional parameters could be passed for each option, but this was becoming unwieldy. However, backwards compatibility has been maintained.* *Note: The `host` option overrides the `cluster` option!* ## Publishing/Triggering events To trigger an event on one or more channels use the `trigger` function. ### A single channel ```php $pusher->trigger( 'my-channel', 'my_event', 'hello world' ); ``` ### Multiple channels ```php $pusher->trigger( [ 'channel-1', 'channel-2' ], 'my_event', 'hello world' ); ``` ### Batches It's also possible to send multiple events with a single API call (max 10 events per call on multi-tenant clusters): ```php $batch = array(); $batch[] = array('channel' => 'my-channel', 'name' => 'my_event', 'data' => array('hello' => 'world')); $batch[] = array('channel' => 'my-channel', 'name' => 'my_event', 'data' => array('myname' => 'bob')); $pusher->triggerBatch($batch); ``` ### Arrays Objects are automatically converted to JSON format: ```php $array['name'] = 'joe'; $array['message_count'] = 23; $pusher->trigger('my_channel', 'my_event', $array); ``` The output of this will be: ```json "{'name': 'joe', 'message_count': 23}" ``` ### Socket id In order to avoid duplicates you can optionally specify the sender's socket id while triggering an event ([https://pusher.com/docs/duplicates](http://pusherapp.com/docs/duplicates)): ```php $pusher->trigger('my-channel','event','data','socket_id'); ``` ### JSON format If your data is already encoded in JSON format, you can avoid a second encoding step by setting the sixth argument true, like so: ```php $pusher->trigger('my-channel', 'event', 'data', null, false, true) ``` ## Authenticating Private channels To authorise your users to access private channels on Pusher, you can use the socket_auth function: ```php $pusher->socket_auth('private-my-channel','socket_id'); ``` ## Authenticating Presence channels Using presence channels is similar to private channels, but you can specify extra data to identify that particular user: ```php $pusher->presence_auth('presence-my-channel','socket_id', 'user_id', 'user_info'); ``` ### Presence example First set this variable in your JS app: ```php Pusher.channel_auth_endpoint = '/presence_auth.php'; ``` Next, create the following in presence_auth.php: ```php prepare("SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE id = :id"); $stmt->bindValue(':id', $_SESSION['user_id'], PDO::PARAM_INT); $stmt->execute(); $user = $stmt->fetch(); } else { die('aaargh, no-one is logged in') } header('Content-Type: application/json'); $pusher = new Pusher($key, $secret, $app_id); $presence_data = array('name' => $user['name']); echo $pusher->presence_auth($_POST['channel_name'], $_POST['socket_id'], $user['id'], $presence_data); ``` Note: this assumes that you store your users in a table called `users` and that those users have a `name` column. It also assumes that you have a login mechanism that stores the `user_id` of the logged in user in the session. ## Application State Queries ### Get information about a channel ```php $pusher->get_channel_info( $name ); ``` It's also possible to get information about a channel from the Pusher REST API. ```php $info = $pusher->get_channel_info('channel-name'); $channel_occupied = $info->occupied; ``` For [presence channels](https://pusher.com/docs/presence_channels) you can also query the number of distinct users currently subscribed to this channel (a single user may be subscribed many times, but will only count as one): ```php $info = $pusher->get_channel_info('presence-channel-name', array('info' => 'user_count')); $user_count = $info->user_count; ``` If you have enabled the ability to query the `subscription_count` (the number of connections currently subscribed to this channel) then you can query this value as follows: ```php $info = $pusher->get_channel_info('presence-channel-name', array('info' => 'subscription_count')); $subscription_count = $info->subscription_count; ``` ### Get a list of application channels ```php $pusher->get_channels() ``` It's also possible to get a list of channels for an application from the Pusher REST API. ```php $result = $pusher->get_channels(); $channel_count = count($result->channels); // $channels is an Array ``` ### Get a filtered list of application channels ```php $pusher->get_channels( array( 'filter_by_prefix' => 'some_filter' ) ) ``` It's also possible to get a list of channels based on their name prefix. To do this you need to supply an $options parameter to the call. In the following example the call will return a list of all channels with a 'presence-' prefix. This is idea for fetching a list of all presence channels. ```php $results = $pusher->get_channels( array( 'filter_by_prefix' => 'presence-') ); $channel_count = count($result->channels); // $channels is an Array ``` This can also be achieved using the generic `pusher->get` function: ```php $pusher->get( '/channels', array( 'filter_by_prefix' => 'presence-' ) ); ``` ### Get user information from a presence channel ```php $response = $pusher->get( '/channels/presence-channel-name/users' ) ``` The `$response` is in the format: ```php Array ( [body] => {"users":[{"id":"a_user_id"}]} [status] => 200 [result] => Array ( [users] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [id] => a_user_id ) /* Additional users */ ) ) ) ``` ### Generic get function ```php $pusher->get( $path, $params ); ``` Used to make `GET` queries against the Pusher REST API. Handles authentication. Response is an associative array with a `result` index. The contents of this index is dependent on the REST method that was called. However, a `status` property to allow the HTTP status code is always present and a `result` property will be set if the status code indicates a successful call to the API. ```php $response = $pusher->get( '/channels' ); $http_status_code = $response[ 'status' ]; $result = $response[ 'result' ]; ``` ## Push Notifications (BETA) Pusher now allows sending native notifications to iOS and Android devices. Check out the [documentation](https://pusher.com/docs/push_notifications) for information on how to set up push notifications on Android and iOS. There is no additional setup required to use it with this library. It works out of the box with the same Pusher instance. All you need are the same pusher credentials. The native notifications API is hosted at `nativepush-cluster1.pusher.com` and only listens on HTTPS. If you wish to provide a different host you can do: ```php $pusher = new Pusher($app_key, $app_secret, $app_id, array('notification_host' => 'custom notifications host')) ``` However, note that `notification_host` defaults to `nativepush-cluster1.pusher.com` and it is the only supported endpoint. ### Sending native pushes You can send native notifications by using the `notify` method. The method takes two parameters: - `interests`: An array of strings which represents the interests your devices are subscribed to. Interests are akin to channels in the DDN. Currently, you can only publish notifications to, at most, _ten_ interests. - `data`: This represents the payload you'd like to send as part of the notification. You can supply an associative array of keys depending on which platform you'd like to send a notification to. You must include either the `gcm` or `apns` keys. For a detailed list of the acceptable keys, take a look at the docs for [iOS](https://pusher.com/docs/push_notifications/ios/server) and [Android](https://pusher.com/docs/push_notifications/android/server). It also takes a `debug` param like the `trigger` method to allow for debugging. Example: ```php $data = array( 'apns' => array( 'aps' => array( 'alert' => array( 'body' => 'tada' ), ), ), 'gcm' => array( 'notification' => array( 'title' => 'title', 'icon' => 'icon' ), ), ); $pusher->notify(array("test"), $data); ``` ### Errors Push notification requests, once submitted to the service, are executed asynchronously. To make reporting errors easier, you can supply a `webhook_url` field in the body of the request. The service will call this url with a body that contains the results of the publish request. You may also supply a `webhook_level` field in the body, which can either be `"INFO"` or `"DEBUG"`. It defaults to `"INFO"` - where `"INFO"` only reports customer facing errors, while `"DEBUG"` reports all available information about the responses. Here's an example: ```php $data = array( 'apns' => array("..."), 'gcm' => array("..."), 'webhook_url' => "http://my.company.com/pusher/nativepush/results" 'webhook_url' => "INFO" ); $pusher->notify(array("test"), $data); ``` ## Debugging & Logging The best way to debug your applications interaction with server is to set a logger for the library so you can see the internal workings within the library and interactions with the Pusher service. You set up logging by passing an object with a `log` function to the `pusher->set_logger` function: ```php class MyLogger { public function log( $msg ) { print_r( $msg . "\n" ); } } $pusher->set_logger( new MyLogger() ); ``` If you use the above example in code executed from the console/terminal the debug information will be output there. If you use this within a web app then the output will appear within the generated app output e.g. HTML. ## Running the tests Requires [phpunit](https://github.com/sebastianbergmann/phpunit/). * Go to the `test` directory * Rename `config.example.php` and replace the values with valid Pusher credentials **or** create environment variables. * Some tests require a client to be connected to the app you defined in the config; you can do this by opening https://dashboard.pusher.com/apps//console in the browser * From the root directory of the project, execute `phpunit .` to run all the tests. ## Framework Integrations - **Laravel 4** - https://github.com/artdarek/pusherer - **Laravel 5** - https://github.com/vinkla/pusher ## License Copyright 2014, Pusher. Licensed under the MIT license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php Copyright 2010, Squeeks. Licensed under the MIT license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php