Difference between revisions of "Receive JSON POST Data"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Michael.mast (talk | contribs) |
Michael.mast (talk | contribs) |
||
| Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
file_put_contents($myFile,$data); | file_put_contents($myFile,$data); | ||
?> | ?> | ||
| + | </pre> | ||
| + | Another way of doing this would be the following<ref>https://gist.github.com/techslides/5df05f62f2a034ee537c</ref> | ||
| + | <pre> | ||
| + | <?php | ||
| + | $today = date("mdY_His"); | ||
| + | $file = "file_$today"; | ||
| + | $dir = '/var/www/html/recevied/'; | ||
| + | $full = $dir.$file.'.txt'; | ||
| + | echo $full; | ||
| + | $data = file_get_contents('php://input'); | ||
| + | $forwriting = fopen($full, "w"); | ||
| + | fwrite($forwriting, $data); | ||
| + | fclose($forwriting); | ||
| + | file_put_contents($full,$data); | ||
| + | ?> | ||
| + | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 08:43, 1 August 2018
Purpose
Request came across my desk for a web server to receive JSON POST data, providing web hooks for another system to parse. On my end things were simple enough.
- Simple Apache server to receive requests.
- Basic Authentication
- Save the POST data to file (For now, but I feel this will be expanded in the near future)
Process
Apache Config
Very simple and clean vhost.
<VirtualHost *:80> DocumentRoot /var/www/html/ <Directory /var/www/html/> AuthType Basic AuthName "Restricted" AuthBasicProvider file AuthUserFile "/etc/httpd/password" Require valid-user </Directory> </VirtualHost>
Quick and dirty password file
htpasswd -bc /etc/httpd/password test test
PHP Script
[1][2]This example will echo the posted data back to the client during testing, as well as save the file to disk.
<?php
$myFile = "testFile.txt";
$data = file_get_contents('php://input');
echo $data;
file_put_contents($myFile,$data);
?>
To further build on this, and to keep track of the received hooks, I wanted to add a date/time stamp to the file[3].
<?php
$today = date("mdY_His");
$myFile = "testFile_$today.txt";
$data = file_get_contents('php://input');
file_put_contents($myFile,$data);
?>
Another way of doing this would be the following[4]
<?php
$today = date("mdY_His");
$file = "file_$today";
$dir = '/var/www/html/recevied/';
$full = $dir.$file.'.txt';
echo $full;
$data = file_get_contents('php://input');
$forwriting = fopen($full, "w");
fwrite($forwriting, $data);
fclose($forwriting);
file_put_contents($full,$data);
?>
Testing
Used the following POST method with curl to test with.
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data '{"test":"1"}' http://localhost
Again, but with a username/password[5]
curl --user test:test -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data '{"test":"1"}' http://localhost
- ↑ https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16931804/recording-a-json-post-to-file-using-php
- ↑ https://stackoverflow.com/questions/18866571/receive-json-post-with-php
- ↑ http://php.net/manual/en/function.date.php
- ↑ https://gist.github.com/techslides/5df05f62f2a034ee537c
- ↑ https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3044315/how-to-set-the-authorization-header-using-curl