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Basic SDK Usage
This guide will take you through the basics of using the eBay SDK for PHP. By the end of it you should have enough knowledge to start using the SDK in your projects. For the purpose of this guide the Finding service is been used and for the most part the process is the same for all services. It is assumed that you have already downloaded and installed the SDK and retrieved your development keys.
No matter how the SDK was installed you include it into your code using the require
statement. The table below shows how to include the SDK for each of the installation methods. Note that you should replace /path/to/
with the actual path used on your system.
- Composer
require '/path/to/vendor/autoload.php';
- Phar
require '/path/to/ebay-sdk-php.phar';
- Zip
require '/path/to/ebay-sdk-php-autoloader.php';
Examples shown through out the guides will assume that you have used Composer to install the SDK. You can refer back to this section if you have used a different method.
To use the SDK you instaniate a service object for the eBay API service you are using. Service objects have methods that correspond to each of the operations that are available in the service's API. Each method accepts a request object that contains the parameters to be passed to the operation. Calling a method executes the corresponding operation and returns a response object.
You can create a service object by passing an associative array of configuration options to the service's constructor.
<?php
// Use the Composer autoloader to include the SDK.
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
$finding = new DTS\eBaySDK\Finding\Services\FindingService([
'apiVersion' => '1.13.0',
'globalId' => DTS\eBaySDK\Constants\GlobalIds::US
]);
The DTS\eBaySDK\Sdk
class can be used as a factory for creating services. Configuration options passed to this class are shared with any services that it creates.
// Services will use the 903 version of the api and UK site (Site ID 3).
$config = [
'apiVersion' => '903',
'siteId' => '3'
];
// Create an SDK class used to share configuration across services.
$sdk = new DTS\eBaySDK\Sdk($config);
// Create two services that share the same configuration.
$trading = $sdk->createTrading();
$shopping = $sdk->createShopping();
Configuration options that are in the root-level key-value pairs are shared across all services. You can provide service-specific options by providing a key that is the same name as the service (e.g "Finding", "Trading", etc.).
$sdk = new DTS\eBaySDK\Sdk([
'apiVersion' => '903',
'Finding' => [
'apiVersion' => '1.13.0'
]
]);
// Trading service will use the 903 api version.
$trading = $sdk->createTrading();
// Finding service will instead use the 1.13.0 api version.
$finding = $sdk->createFinding();
Service-specific configuration options are deep merged with those provided to the SDK object. Options passed to the various create
methods are also deep merged.
$sdk = new DTS\eBaySDK\Sdk([
'apiVersion' => '903',
'siteId' => '3'
]);
// Both services share options provide by the SDK.
$trading = $sdk->createTrading();
$shopping = $sdk->createShopping();
// Finding service will get additional options.
$finding = $sdk->createFinding([
'apiVersion' => '1.13.0',
'globalId' => 'EBAY-GB'
]);
Before sending data to the API you will need to instaniate a request object. This example will call the findItemsByKeywords operation and so the object will be an instance of the DTS\eBaySDK\Finding\Types\FindItemsByKeywordsRequest class.
// Create the API request object.
$request = new Types\FindItemsByKeywordsRequest();
Properties of the request object can then be assigned values that will be sent to the API. Note that you may have to create instances of other classes, such as DTS\eBaySDK\Finding\Types\PaginationInput, in order to build up a complete request.
// Assign the keywords.
$request->keywords = 'Harry Potter';
// Ask for the first 25 items.
$request->paginationInput = new Types\PaginationInput();
$request->paginationInput->entriesPerPage = 25;
$request->paginationInput->pageNumber = 1;
// Ask for the results to be sorted from high to low price.
$request->sortOrder = 'CurrentPriceHighest';
You call a service operation by calling the appropriate method on the service object. There will be one method for each operation that the service provides. All methods, such as findItemsByKeywords, accept the request object as their only parameter. The SDK takes the information assigned to the properties of the request object and uses it to construct the raw XML that is sent to the API.
// Send the request.
$response = $service->findItemsByKeywords($request);
You can call an operation asynchronously by adding Async to the method's name. This will initiate the request and return a promise that is resolved with a response object or rejected with an Exception.
// Send the request.
$promise = $service->findItemsByKeywordsAsync($request);
$promise->then(function ($response) {
echo $response->ack;
})->otherwise(function ($reason) {
echo 'An error occurred: '.$reason->getMessage();
});
You can make a promise complete synchronously by using the wait method of the promise.
// Send the request.
$promise = $service->findItemsByKeywordsAsync($request);
// Block until response is received.
$response = $promise->wait();
The result of calling a service operation is a response object that contains the data returned from the API. The SDK uses the raw XML response to assign values to the properties on the response object. The type and contents of the object depend on the service operation that was called. In this example the object will be an instance of the DTS\eBaySDK\Finding\Types\FindItemsByKeywordsResponse class.
// Output the response from the API.
if ($response->ack !== 'Success') {
foreach ($response->errorMessage->error as $error) {
printf("Error: %s\n", $error->message);
}
} else {
foreach ($response->searchResult->item as $item) {
printf("(%s) %s:%.2f\n", $item->itemId, $item->title, $item->sellingStatus->currentPrice->value);
}
}