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WordPress Rest API

GitHub Release tests Packagist Downloads

WordPress module designed for developers that want to add routes to the WordPress Rest API in a few moments.

πŸ’‘ To simplify the integration of this library, we recommend using WordPress with one of the following tools: Bedrock, Themosis or Wordplate.

Documentation

If you want to know more about how the WordPress API works, you can read the WordPress documentation :)

Installation

Requirements

The server requirements are basically the same as for WordPress with the addition of a few ones :

Installation with composer

You can use Composer. Follow the installation instructions if you do not already have composer installed.

composer require dbout/wp-module-rest-api

In your PHP script, make sure you include the autoloader:

require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';

Usage

Before creating your first route, you must initialize the module. It is advisable to add this code at the beginning of the functions.php file of your theme or in a mu-plugin.

use Dbout\WpRestApi\RouteLoader;

// One folder
$loader = new RouteLoader(__DIR__ . '/src/Api/Routes');

// Multiple folders
$loader = new RouteLoader([
    __DIR__ . '/themes/my-theme/api'
    __DIR__ . '/src/Api/Routes',
]);

// You can also use pattern
$loader = new RouteLoader(__DIR__ . '/src/Modules/*/Api/Routes');

$loader->register();

πŸ’‘ The module will automatically search for all classes that are in the folder and sub folder.

πŸ’‘ You can pass as the second argument of RouteLoader an option object: read the documentation.

Now you have initialized the module, you just need to create your first route in the routes folder.

<?php

use Dbout\WpRestApi\Attributes\Route;
use Dbout\WpRestApi\Attributes\Action;

#[Route(
    namespace: 'app/v2',
    route: 'document/(?P<documentId>\d+)'
)]
class Document 
{

    #[Action(Method::GET)]
    public function get(\WP_REST_Request $request): \WP_REST_Response
    {
        // Add your logic 
        $id = $request->get_param('documentId');
       
        return new \WP_REST_Response([
            'success' => true,
        ]);
    }

   #[Action(Method::DELETE)]
    public function delete(\WP_REST_Request $request): \WP_REST_Response
    {
        // Add your logic 
        $id = $request->get_param('documentId');
        
        return new \WP_REST_Response([
            'success' => true,
        ]);
    }
}

You just created 2 routes πŸŽ‰

  • GET:wp-json/app/v2/document/18
  • DELETE:wp-json/app/v2/document/18

The logic is extremely simple, you can use the following methods: GET, POST, PUT, PATCH and DELETE

If you need, you can define multiple methods for an action by passing a method array :

#[Action([Method::GET, Method::POST, Method::PUT])]
public function execute(\WP_REST_Request $request): \WP_REST_Response
{
    // Add your logic 

}

Callback arguments

If your route contains parameters, you can retrieve them as an argument for your function :

<?php

use Dbout\WpRestApi\Attributes\Route;
use Dbout\WpRestApi\Attributes\Action;

#[Route(
    'app/v2',
    'document/(?P<documentId>\d+)'
)]
class Document
{

    #[Action(Method::GET)]
    public function get(int $documentId): \WP_REST_Response
    {
        // Add your logic

        return new \WP_REST_Response([
            'success' => true,
        ]);
    }
}

πŸ’‘If your function contains a WP_REST_Request argument, the WP_REST_Request object will be passed as an argument.

Contributing

We encourage you to contribute to this repository, so everyone can benefit from new features, bug fixes, and any other improvements. Have a look at our contributing guidelines to find out how to raise a pull request.