8

I'm trying to develop a RESTful API with PHP without using frameworks. While processing the request, the client data cannot be read using this: parse_str(file_get_contents("php://input"), $put_vars);

Here's the full code:

public static function processRequest() {

    //get the verb
    $method = strtolower($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']);

    $request = new Request();

    $data = array();
    $put_vars = array();

    switch ($method) {
        case 'get':
            $data = $_GET;
            break;
        case 'post':
            $data = $_POST;
            break;
        case 'put':
            parse_str(file_get_contents("php://input"), $put_vars);
            $data = $put_vars;
            echo $data;
            break;
    }

    $request->setMethod($method);
    $request->setRequestVars($data);

    if (isset($data['data'])) {
        $request->setData(json_decode($data));
        echo 'data exists';
    }

    return $request;
}

I'm using cURL to rest the API and when I type this command: curl -i -X PUT -d '{"name":"a","data":"data1"}' http://localhost/my-rest-api/api/ I only get this back:

Array""

Why isn't the proper data returned?

EDIT

I also tested another piece of code that is supposed to be an API and file_get_contents('php://input', true) still returns null. Could it be that there's something wrong with the web server?

2
  • don't use echo $data for testing, use either var_dump($data) or print_r($data) Sep 30, 2013 at 15:23
  • I recreated your code on my server and was able to run it using your curl command and it produces required result. Sep 30, 2013 at 15:27

2 Answers 2

16

The parse_str is used to parse a query string(in form arg1=xyz&arg2=abc) and not JSON. You need to use json_decode to parse JSON strings.

$data = json_decode(file_get_contents("php://input"), true);

Here is the code that works:

$method = strtolower($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']);
$data = array();

switch ($method) {
    case 'get':
        $data = $_GET;
        break;
    case 'post':
        $data = $_POST;
        break;
    case 'put':
        $data = json_decode(file_get_contents("php://input"), true);
        break;
}

var_dump($data);

Curl command:

curl -i -X PUT -d '{"name":"a","data":"data1"}' http://my-server/my.php

Response:

array(2) {
  ["name"]=>
  string(1) "a"
  ["data"]=>
  string(5) "data1"
}
13
  • @ShimoRachlenko I Just edited the code and still get the same results
    – Igor
    Sep 30, 2013 at 14:53
  • Can you confirm that file_get_contents("php://input") give you the data you send? And another thing - how do you output the result? Sep 30, 2013 at 14:55
  • How can it be confirmed? So far the output is printed using 'echo', as shown above.
    – Igor
    Sep 30, 2013 at 15:00
  • 2
    @Igor If you are sending JSON data via POST, it will also not be parsed into $_POST. What you need to do is set you HTTP Content header for the request to be application/json, such that PHP will not try to parse the data as a query string, and then you need to json_decode the raw input data as suggested here. This applies to any cases where you are sending data via JSON.
    – Mike Brant
    Sep 30, 2013 at 15:54
  • 1
    @MikeBrant Did you also try this code to see if it's working?
    – Igor
    Oct 1, 2013 at 10:56
2

Could it be that there's something wrong with the web server?

Actually yes. After banging my head on this for a few hours, I found that the culprit for the missing data was this:

Note: Prior to PHP 5.6, a stream opened with php://input could only be read once

Another piece of code was accessing the php://input before my code, and on servers with php < 5.6, this caused the input to be lost.

Only on PUT requests that is.

1
  • This was very helpful. Thank you for sharing. Jan 26, 2018 at 20:18

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