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api-client-php/README.md

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RetailCRM API PHP client

This is the PHP RetailCRM API client. This library allows using of the actual API version.
You can find more info in the documentation.

Table of contents

Requirements

  • PHP 7.3 and above
  • PHP's cURL support
  • PHP's JSON support
  • Any HTTP client compatible with PSR-18 (covered by the installation instructions).
  • Any HTTP factories implementation compatible with PSR-17 (covered by the installation instructions).
  • Any HTTP messages implementation compatible with PSR-7 (covered by the installation instructions).
  • Other dependencies listed in the composer.json (covered by the installation instructions)

Installation

Follow those steps to install the library:

  1. Download and install Composer package manager.
  2. Install the library from the Packagist by executing this command:
composer require retailcrm/api-client-php:"~6.0"

During the installation, you'll see a message which will look like this:

The following packages have new compilation tasks:
 - retailcrm/api-client-php has 1 task

Allow these packages to compile? ([y]es, [a]lways, [n]o, [l]ist, [h]elp)

That's because the Client uses code generation to speed up serialization and deserialization of models in production. This code should be generated during installation or update. Without that code, the library itself will not work at all.

Choose [a]lways by typing a and pressing Enter if you don't want to see this message anymore. If you want to approve the compilation task every time - use [y]es option. The DTO cache will be generated after that.

Note: You should choose [a]lways if your application is using CI/CD pipeline because the interactive terminal is not available in that environment which will result in failure during the dependencies installation.

If you skipped the compilation task - don't worry, it can be executed manually at any time with this command:

composer compile --all
  1. Optional. Disable compilation prompt that you have seen in the previous step.

If you wish to disable the compilation prompt but didn't do that at the previous step - you can disable the prompt manually. Read the documentation to learn how to do that.

  1. Include the autoloader if it's not included, or you didn't use Composer before.
require 'path/to/vendor/autoload.php';

Replace path/to/vendor/autoload.php with the correct path to Composer's autoload.php.

Note: API client uses php-http/curl-client and nyholm/psr7 as a PSR-18, PSR-17 and PSR-7 implementation. You can replace those implementations during installation by installing this library with the implementation of your choice, like this:

composer require symfony/http-client guzzlehttp/psr7 retailcrm/api-client-php:"~6.0"

More information about that can be found in the documentation.

Usage

Firstly, you should initialize the Client. The easiest way to do this is to use the SimpleClientFactory:

$client = \RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');

The client is separated into several resource groups, all of which are accessible through the Client's public properties. You can call API methods from those groups like this:

$client->api->credentials();

For example, you can retrieve the customers list:

$client = \RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');
$response = $client->customers->list();

Or the orders list:

$client = \RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');
$response = $client->orders->list();

To handle errors you must use two types of exceptions:

  • RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ClientExceptionInterface for the network or other runtime errors.
  • RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ApiExceptionInterface for the errors from the API.

An example of error handling can be found in the next section of this document.

Each resource group is responsible for the corresponding API section. For example, costs resource group provide methods for costs manipulation and loyalty resource group allows interacting with loyalty programs, accounts, bonuses, etc.

Use annotations to determine which DTOs you need for sending the requests. If annotations are not provided by your IDE - you probably should configure them. It'll ease your work with this (and any other) library a lot.

More information about the usage including examples can be found in the documentation.

Examples

Listing orders:

<?php

use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ClientExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory;
use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ApiExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Entity\CustomersCorporate\CustomerCorporate;

$client = SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');

try {
    $response = $client->orders->list();
} catch (ApiExceptionInterface | ClientExceptionInterface $exception) {
    echo $exception; // Every ApiExceptionInterface and ClientExceptionInterface instance implements __toString() method.
    exit(-1);
}

foreach ($response->orders as $order) {
    printf("Order ID: %d\n", $order->id);
    printf("First name: %s\n", $order->firstName);
    printf("Last name: %s\n", $order->lastName);
    printf("Patronymic: %s\n", $order->patronymic);
    printf("Phone #1: %s\n", $order->phone);
    printf("Phone #2: %s\n", $order->additionalPhone);
    printf("E-Mail: %s\n", $order->email);

    if ($order->customer instanceof CustomerCorporate) {
        echo "Customer type: corporate\n";
    } else {
        echo "Customer type: individual\n";
    }

    foreach ($order->items as $item) {
        echo PHP_EOL;

        printf("Product name: %s\n", $item->productName);
        printf("Quantity: %d\n", $item->quantity);
        printf("Initial price: %f\n", $item->initialPrice);
    }

    echo PHP_EOL;

    printf("Discount: %f\n", $order->discountManualAmount);
    printf("Total: %f\n", $order->totalSumm);

    echo PHP_EOL;
}

Fetching a specific order by it's ID:

<?php

use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ClientExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ApiExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Enum\ByIdentifier;
use RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Request\BySiteRequest;

$client = SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');

try {
    $response = $client->orders->get(1234, new BySiteRequest(ByIdentifier::ID, 'site'));
} catch (ApiExceptionInterface | ClientExceptionInterface $exception) {
    echo $exception; // Every ApiExceptionInterface instance should implement __toString() method.
    exit(-1);
}

echo 'Order: ' . print_r($response->order, true);

Creating a new customer:

<?php

use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ClientExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ApiExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Entity\Customers\Customer;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Request\Customers\CustomersCreateRequest;

$client = SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');

$request = new CustomersCreateRequest();
$request->customer = new Customer();

$request->site = 'aliexpress';
$request->customer->email = 'john.doe@example.com';
$request->customer->firstName = 'John';
$request->customer->lastName = 'Doe';

try {
    $response = $client->customers->create($request);
} catch (ApiExceptionInterface | ClientExceptionInterface $exception) {
    echo $exception; // Every ApiExceptionInterface instance should implement __toString() method.
    exit(-1);
}

echo 'Customer ID: ' . $response->id;

Creating a task for the user with a specific email:

<?php

use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ClientExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Interfaces\ApiExceptionInterface;
use RetailCrm\Api\Factory\SimpleClientFactory;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Entity\Tasks\Task;use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Filter\Users\ApiUserFilter;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Request\Tasks\TasksCreateRequest;
use RetailCrm\Api\Model\Request\Users\UsersRequest;

$client = SimpleClientFactory::createClient('https://test.retailcrm.pro', 'apiKey');

$usersRequest = new UsersRequest();
$usersRequest->filter = new ApiUserFilter();
$usersRequest->filter->email = 'john.doe@example.com';

try {
    $usersResponse = $client->users->list($usersRequest);
} catch (ApiExceptionInterface | ClientExceptionInterface $exception) {
    echo $exception; // Every ApiExceptionInterface instance should implement __toString() method.
    exit(-1);
}

if (0 === count($usersResponse->users)) {
    echo 'User is not found.';
    exit(-1);
}

$tasksRequest = new TasksCreateRequest();
$tasksRequest->task = new Task();
$tasksRequest->task->performerId = $usersResponse->users[0]->id;
$tasksRequest->task->text = 'Do something!';
$tasksRequest->site = 'site';

try {
    $tasksResponse = $client->tasks->create($tasksRequest);
} catch (ApiExceptionInterface | ClientExceptionInterface $exception) {
    echo $exception; // Every ApiExceptionInterface instance should implement __toString() method.
    exit(-1);
}

echo 'Created task with ID: ' . $tasksResponse->id;

The error handling in the examples above is good enough for real production usage. You can safely assume that ApiExceptionInterface is an error from the API, and ClientExceptionInterface is a client error (e.g. network error or any runtime error, use HttpClientException to catch only PSR-18 client errors). However, you can implement more complex error handling if you want.

Also, both ApiExceptionInterface and ClientExceptionInterface implements __toString(). This means that you can just convert those exceptions to string and put the results into logs without any special treatment for the exception data.

More examples can be found in the documentation.

You can use a PSR-14 compatible event dispatcher to receive events from the client. See documentation for details.

Notes

This library uses HTTPlug abstractions. Visit official documentation to learn more about it.