Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
131 lines (108 loc) · 5.95 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

131 lines (108 loc) · 5.95 KB

Build Status

FreshDesk.com PHP API Wrapper

The "composer-aware edition".

Highlights

Composer, obviously, but apart from that, this feature branch offers:

  • Namespace support
  • A "Rest" class, that can be extended easily
  • Will become 100% Object Oriented (no more passing around tons of strings of data)
  • Easy integration with MVC frameworks like Zend, Symfony2

Ways To Improve

  1. Still being work in progress: separation of concern is something that needs a lot of work (being tackled in the feature/beta branch ATM)
  2. Better documentation + WIKI on how to contribute
  3. Out of the box support for filters, statuses and the like (through class-constants)
  4. Tests have been added, but they can be improved on, still

Usage

Add this repo to your composer.json file to use this repository as a direct dependency.

{
    "repositories": [
        {
            "type": "vcs",
            "url": "https://github.com/EVODelavega/freshdesk-rest.git"
        }
    ],
    "require": {
        "EVODelavega/freshdesk-rest": "dev-master"
    }
}

This package has been added to packagist, too. Packagist only accepts lower-case package names, so simply adding the following will work:

{
    "require": {
        "evodelavega/freshdesk-rest": "dev-master"
    }
}

If you are going to use this wrapper to create new tickets in freshdesk, there is a postUpdate/postInstall script you can use to set the cc-email constant in the Freshdesk\Model\Ticket class. To automatically configure this constant, add the following to your scripts section in the composer.json file (Note: This feature is deprecated):

"scripts": {
    "post-install-cmd": [
        "Freshdesk\\Config\\Composer::postUpdate"
    ],
    "post-update-cmd": [
        "Freshdesk\\Config\\Composer::postUpdate"
    ]
}

Example usage (taken from the example.php file)

<?php
use Freshdesk\Config\Connection,
    Freshdesk\Rest;// for backwards compatibility with existing code, use alias: use Freshdesk\Rest as FreshdeskRest;
$fd = new Rest(
    new Connection(
        'https://<user>:<password>@<domain>'
    )
);
$apiExample = new Rest(
    new Connection(
        'http://<API_KEY>:X@<domain>'
    )
);

Notes

This code follows the coding standards as layed out by the PHP-FIG, with some Symfony2 style sprinkled on top. Exceptions' messages are returned by the sprintf and vsprintf functions, for example.

I have, however, granted myself one guilty pleasure: The entire code-base uses Allman-style indentation.

##Contributing Any contributions are, of course, greatly appreciated. If you wish to contribute, a couple of things to keep in mind

  1. Adding support for certain API calls that are currently missing is done by adding the corresponding method to the appropriate child class of Freshdesk\Rest
  2. The Coding standards used throughout this code should be respected. Pull requests that do not follow the standards will not be merged
  3. Reporting an issue without a patch or PR is fine, and welcomed, but be complete in your description of the problem and/or suggested solutions
  4. Document your code as much as possible. The code we have ATM needs some more documentation as it is. Adding code that is un-documented will only increase the problem...
  5. Use the data models (Freshdesk\Model namespace) wherever you can. The goal of this API is to offer a clear & safe interface, type-hints are a vital part of this.

As an illustration: initially, deleting and assigning tickets was not supported by this wrapper. Users had to either extend the Freshdesk\Ticket class themselves, or create a new child of Freshdesk\Rest, and write their own methods. This issue has been addressed as follows:

  • Create a feature/delete-ticket branch
  • Add methods to Freshdesk\Ticket, as deleting, restoring and assigning tickets is clearly a matter for the Ticket API class
  • Modify the Freshdesk\Model\Ticket class accordingly (adding responderId and deleted properties, each with their getter and setter methods)
  • Update the example.php file to demonstrate the usage for the new methods
  • Test the code (once the feature/tests branch is merged, provide unit-tests)
  • commit & merge

The reasons why changes like this have to go in the appropriate child of Freshdesk\Rest are twofold. Even though the methods need little else than a ticket id (and in the case of assignTicket, a responderId aswell), this approach forces users into using the data models. This, in turn, enables type-hinting for easier debugging and guaranteed value checking. Another advantage is that objects are passed aroudn as references, which means that passing an object to a method means that all variables, regardless of scope, will reference the most up-to-date instance of the object, and therefore, the data is far more likely to be accurate.

A quick example for completeness, and in order to convince the sceptics:

    public function someMethod()
	{
		$db = new PDO($dsn, $usr, $pass, $options);
		$stmt = $db->prepare('SELECT ticketId FROM helpdesk.tickets WHERE clientId = :cid AND status = :status');
		$stmt->execute([':cid' => 1, ':status' => \Freshdesk\Model\Ticket::STATUS_PENDING]);
		$row = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_OBJ);
		$ticket = new \Freshdesk\Model\Ticket(['displayId' => $row->ticketId]);//create instance
		//...more code
		$anotherObject->setTicket($ticket);
		//...some more calls, possibly in another method:
		$api = new \Freshdesk\Ticket(
			new \Freshdesk\Config\Connection(
				'https://<api-key>:X@<domain>'
			)
		);
		//complete the ticket via the API
		$api->getFullTicket($ticket);
		//...more code
		$anotherObject->getTicket();//<-- returns the updated ticket model
	}

In this case, the ticket instance is being used on various places. Because the entire API uses data models, we can save on expensive API calls, because each property and/or variable references a single instance.