Promise

A promise represents a single result of an asynchronous operation. It is not necessarily available at a specific time, but should become in the future.

The PHP-HTTP promise follows the Promises/A+ standard.

Note

Work is underway for a Promise PSR. When that PSR has been released, we will use it in HTTPlug and deprecate our Http\Promise\Promise interface.

Asynchronous requests

Asynchronous requests enable non-blocking HTTP operations. When sending asynchronous HTTP requests, a promise is returned. The promise acts as a proxy for the response or error result, which is not yet known.

To execute such a request with HTTPlug:

$request = $messageFactory->createRequest('GET', 'http://php-http.org');

// Where $client implements HttpAsyncClient
$promise = $client->sendAsyncRequest($request);

// This code will be executed right after the request is sent, but before
// the response is returned.
echo 'Wow, non-blocking!';

See HTTP Factories (deprecated) on how to use message factories.

Although the promise itself is not restricted to resolve a specific result type, in HTTP context it resolves a PSR-7 Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface or fails with an Http\Client\Exception.

Note

An asynchronous request will never throw an exception directly but always return a promise. All exceptions SHOULD implement Http\Client\Exception. See Exceptions for more information on the exceptions you might encounter.

Wait

The $promise that is returned implements Http\Promise\Promise. At this point in time, the response is not known yet. You can be polite and wait for that response to arrive:

try {
    $response = $promise->wait();
} catch (\Exception $exception) {
    echo $exception->getMessage();
}

Then

Instead of waiting, however, you can handle things asynchronously. Call the then method with two arguments: one callback that will be executed if the request turns out to be successful and/or a second callback that will be executed if the request results in an error:

$promise->then(
    // The success callback
    function (ResponseInterface $response) {
        echo 'Yay, we have a shiny new response!';

        // Write status code to some log file
        file_put_contents('responses.log', $response->getStatusCode() . "\n", FILE_APPEND);

        return $response;
    },

    // The failure callback
    function (\Exception $exception) {
        echo 'Oh darn, we have a problem';

        throw $exception;
    }
);

The failure callback can also return a Promise. This can be useful to implement a retry mechanism, as follows:

use Http\Discovery\HttpAsyncClientDiscovery;
use Http\Discovery\Psr17FactoryDiscovery;

$client = HttpAsyncClientDiscovery::find();
$requestFactory = Psr17FactoryDiscovery::findRequestFactory();
$retries = 2; // number of HTTP retries
$request = $requestFactory->createRequest("GET", "http://localhost:8080/test");

// success callback
$success = function (ResponseInterface $response) {
    return $response;
};
// failure callback
$failure = function (Exception $e) use ($client, $request) {
    // $request can be changed, e.g. using a Round-Robin algorithm

    // try another execution
    return $client->sendAsyncRequest($request);
};

$promise = $client->sendAsyncRequest($request);
for ($i=0; $i < $retries; $i++) {
    $promise = $promise->then($success, $failure);
}
// Add the last callable to manage the exceeded maximum number of retries
$promise->then($success, function(\Exception $e) {
    throw new \Exception(sprintf(
        "Exceeded maximum number of retries (%d): %s",
        $retries,
        $e->getMessage()
    ));
});