Stream Body

Similar to the string / plain text body, the stream body allows you to send a stream or a file resource directly to the server. This is useful if the API accepts a plain-text style input but large files in the form of streams.

To get started, make change your method to POST, PUT or PATCH depending on the requirements of the API. After that, you will need to add the HasBody interface to your request. This interface is required as it tells Saloon to look for a body() method supplied by one of the body traits. Without this interface, Saloon will not send any request body to the HTTP client.

<?php

use Saloon\Http\Request;
use Saloon\Contracts\Body\HasBody;

class CreateServerRequest extends Request implements HasBody
{
    protected Method $method = Method::POST;
}

Next, you will need to add the HasBody trait to your request. This trait will implement the body() method that the HasBody interface requires. It also provides a method defaultBody() which you can extend to provide a default body on your request.

<?php

use Saloon\Http\Request;
use Saloon\Contracts\Body\HasBody;
use Saloon\Traits\Body\HasStreamBody;

class CreateServerRequest extends Request implements HasBody
{
    use HasStreamBody;

    protected Method $method = Method::POST;
    
    // Define our own Content-Type...
    
    protected function defaultHeaders(): array
    {
        return [
            'Content-Type' => 'text/plain',
        ];
    }
}

Saloon won't add a Content-Type header for you for plain stream bodies so you must define the Content-Type or the API might not accept the data.

Default Body

There are a couple of ways to interact with the request body to prepare it to be sent. You can either use the methods mentioned below to add to the body on any given instance or you can use the defaultBody method on your request. This is recommended because you could then define any requirements as constructor arguments in your request and then standardise your request even more.

<?php

use Saloon\Http\Request;
use Saloon\Contracts\Body\HasBody;
use Saloon\Traits\Body\HasStreamBody;

class CreateServerRequest extends Request implements HasBody
{
    use HasStreamBody;

    protected Method $method = Method::POST;
    
    public function __construct(
        protected mixed $stream,
    ){}
    
    protected function defaultBody(): mixed
    {
        return $this->stream;
    }
}

Saloon can accept a PHP resource or a PSR StreamInterface Stream implementation as the stream.

Interacting with the body() method

While you can define the default body on your request, it might be useful to add or modify the body at runtime on a per-request basis. Saloon has the following methods to allow you to modify the stream request body:

  • set(resource|StreamInterface $value) -> Set the stream

  • all(): StreamInterface -> Get the stream

  • isEmpty(): bool -> Check if the body is empty

  • isNotEmpty(): bool -> Check if the body is not empty

<?php

$request = new CreateServerRequest;

$request->body()->set(fopen('cowboy-hat.png', 'r'));

$body = $request->body()->all(); // Returns PSR StreamInterface

Connector Body

You can add the same interface and trait to your connector. If you have the trait on both the connector and the request, the body on the request will take priority. If you have the body on just the connector but not on the request, the request will inherit the body on the connector.

<?php

use Saloon\Http\Request;
use Saloon\Contracts\Body\HasBody;
use Saloon\Traits\Body\HasStreamBody;

class ForgeConnector extends Connector implements HasBody
{
    use HasStreamBody;

    protected function defaultBody(): mixed
    {
        return fopen('cowboy-hat.png', 'r');
    }
}

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