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Plugins
Saloon has plugins which make it easy for you to add logic to your connector or requests in a reusable and elegant way. Plugins are traits that can be added to either a request or a connector and have a special "boot" method which is invoked during the request lifecycle.
It's easy to create your own plugin for Saloon, just create a trait and add it to either your connector or request. In this example, we will create a logging plugin that when added will log the request being sent to Ray.
Our plugin will be called
HasLogging
. In order for Saloon to execute this plugin, we must create a public method that starts with boot
followed by the name of the trait. For example: bootHasLogging
. The method is given an instance of PendingRequest
.Definition (Trait)
Usage (Connector)
<?php
trait HasLogging
{
public function bootHasLogging(PendingRequest $pendingRequest): void
{
ray($pendingRequest);
}
}
You must not use
$this
inside of the trait, as mutating the original request or connector is discouraged. The PendingRequest is unique to just the request being sent.<?php
class ForgeConnector extends Connector
{
use HasLogging;
}
When you send your request, plugins are the first things that are invoked, even before the
boot
method. This is to allow maximum compatibility with middleware and authenticators. This also means that because it's the first process in the chain, other steps like middleware and the boot method will be able to overwrite anything added by a plugin.
Because we added the trait to our connector, every request will use the
HasLogging
plugin. If you would like the plugin to be applied to just one request, you can add the plugin to the request only. Be careful when adding the plugin to both the connector and the request at the same time, they will both be executed separately.
Saloon comes with a few plugins out of the box, you may have already used them.
This plugin will add the
Accept: application/json
header to your pending request. This is useful when dealing with JSON APIs.This plugin will call the
$response->throw()
method. This method will throw an exception if the response has failed, rather than just returning a failed response.This plugin allows you to define a
connectTimeout
and requestTimeout
property on your request or connector.Last modified 1mo ago