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Adyen online payment integration demos

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NOTE: To allow the Adyen Drop-In and Components to load, you have to add https://*.gitpod.io as allowed origin for your chosen set of API Credentials

Details

This repository includes examples of PCI-compliant UI integrations for online payments with Adyen. Within this demo app, you'll find a simplified version of an e-commerce website, complete with commented code to highlight key features and concepts of Adyen's API. Check out the underlying code to see how you can integrate Adyen to give your shoppers the option to pay with their preferred payment methods, all in a seamless checkout experience.

Card checkout demo

Supported Integrations

Kotlin + Spring Boot + Thymeleaf demos of the following client-side integrations are currently available in this repository:

  • Drop-in
  • Component
    • ACH
    • Alipay
    • Card (3DS2)
    • Dotpay
    • giropay
    • iDEAL
    • Klarna (Pay now, Pay later, Slice it)
    • SOFORT

The Demo leverages Adyen's API Library for Java (GitHub | Docs).

Requirements

  • Java 17
  • Kotlin 1.3
  • Network access to maven central

Installation

  1. Clone this repo:
git clone https://github.com/adyen-examples/adyen-kotlin-spring-online-payments.git

Usage

  1. Set environment variables for your API key, Client Key - Remember to add http://localhost:8080 as an origin for client key, and merchant account name:
export ADYEN_API_KEY=yourAdyenApiKey
export ADYEN_MERCHANT_ACCOUNT=yourAdyenMerchantAccount
export ADYEN_CLIENT_KEY=yourAdyenClientKey
export ADYEN_HMAC_KEY=yourHmacKey

On Windows CMD you can use below commands instead

set ADYEN_API_KEY=yourAdyenApiKey
set ADYEN_MERCHANT_ACCOUNT=yourAdyenMerchantAccount
set ADYEN_CLIENT_KEY=yourAdyenClientKey
set ADYEN_HMAC_KEY=yourHmacKey
  1. Start the server:
./gradlew bootRun
  1. Visit http://localhost:8080/ to select an integration type.

To try out integrations with test card numbers and payment method details, see Test card numbers.

Testing webhooks

Webhooks deliver asynchronous notifications and it is important to test them during the setup of your integration. You can find more information about webhooks in this detailed blog post.

This sample application provides a simple webhook integration exposed at /api/webhooks/notifications. For it to work, you need to:

  1. Provide a way for the Adyen platform to reach your running application
  2. Add a Standard webhook in your Customer Area

Making your server reachable

Your endpoint that will consume the incoming webhook must be publicly accessible.

There are typically 3 options:

  • deploy on your own cloud provider
  • deploy on Gitpod
  • expose your localhost with tunneling software (i.e. ngrok)

Option 1: cloud deployment

If you deploy on your cloud provider (or your own public server) the webhook URL will be the URL of the server

  https://{cloud-provider}/api/webhooks/notifications

Option 2: Gitpod

If you use Gitpod the webhook URL will be the host assigned by Gitpod

  https://myorg-myrepo-y8ad7pso0w5.ws-eu75.gitpod.io/api/webhooks/notifications

Note: when starting a new Gitpod workspace the host changes, make sure to update the Webhook URL in the Customer Area

Option 3: localhost via tunneling software

If you use a tunneling service like ngrok the webhook URL will be the generated URL (ie https://c991-80-113-16-28.ngrok.io)

  $ ngrok http 8080
  
  Session Status                online                                                                                           
  Account                       ############                                                                      
  Version                       #########                                                                                          
  Region                        United States (us)                                                                                 
  Forwarding                    http://c991-80-113-16-28.ngrok.io -> http://localhost:8080                                       
  Forwarding                    https://c991-80-113-16-28.ngrok.io -> http://localhost:8080           

Note: when restarting ngrok a new URL is generated, make sure to update the Webhook URL in the Customer Area

Set up a webhook

  • In the Customer Area go to Developers -> Webhooks and create a new 'Standard notification' webhook.
  • Enter the URL of your application/endpoint (see options above)
  • Define username and password for Basic Authentication
  • Generate the HMAC Key
  • Optionally, in Additional Settings, add the data you want to receive. A good example is 'Payment Account Reference'.
  • Make sure the webhook is Enabled (therefore it can receive the notifications)

That's it! Every time you perform a new payment, your application will receive a notification from the Adyen platform.

Making your server reachable

Your application runs on the cloud: this is normally enough (your server accepts incoming requests)

Your application runs on your local machine: you need to use a service like ngrok to "tunnel" the webhook notifications.

Once you have set up ngrok, make sure to add the provided ngrok URL to the list of Allowed Origins in the “API Credentials" of your Customer Area.

Setting up a webhook

  • In the “Developers" -> “Webhooks" section create a new ‘Standard notification' webhook.
  • In “Additional Settings” section configure (if necessary) the additional data you want to receive (i.e. 'Payment Account Reference’).

That's it! Every time you perform a payment method, your server will receive a notification from Adyen's server.

You can find more information in the Webhooks documentation and in this blog post.

Contributing

We commit all our new features directly into our GitHub repository. Feel free to request or suggest new features or code changes yourself as well!

Find out more in our Contributing guidelines.

License

MIT license. For more information, see the LICENSE file in the root directory.

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Accept payments on your Kotlin Spring Boot based website with cards, wallets, and key local payment methods

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