A webhook is a way for an app to provide information to another app about a particular event. The way the two apps communicate is with a simple HTTP request.
This package allows you to configure and send webhooks in a Laravel app easily. It has support for signing calls, retrying calls and backoff strategies.
If you need to receive and process webhooks take a look at our laravel-webhook-client package.
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You can install the package via composer:
composer require spatie/laravel-webhook-server
You can publish the config file with:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Spatie\WebhookServer\WebhookServerServiceProvider"
This is the contents of the file that will be published at config/webhook-server.php
:
return [
/*
* The default queue that should be used to send webhook requests.
*/
'queue' => 'default',
/*
* The default http verb to use.
*/
'http_verb' => 'post',
/*
* This class is responsible for calculating the signature that will be added to
* the headers of the webhook request. A webhook client can use the signature
* to verify the request hasn't been tampered with.
*/
'signer' => \Spatie\WebhookServer\Signer\DefaultSigner::class,
/*
* This is the name of the header where the signature will be added.
*/
'signature_header_name' => 'Signature',
/*
* These are the headers that will be added to all webhook requests.
*/
'headers' => [],
/*
* If a call to a webhook takes longer this amount of seconds
* the attempt will be considered failed.
*/
'timeout_in_seconds' => 3,
/*
* The amount of times the webhook should be called before we give up.
*/
'tries' => 3,
/*
* This class determines how many seconds there should be between attempts.
*/
'backoff_strategy' => \Spatie\WebhookServer\BackoffStrategy\ExponentialBackoffStrategy::class,
/*
* This class is used to dispatch webhooks onto the queue.
*/
'webhook_job' => \Spatie\WebhookServer\CallWebhookJob::class,
/*
* By default we will verify that the ssl certificate of the destination
* of the webhook is valid.
*/
'verify_ssl' => true,
/*
* When set to true, an exception will be thrown when the last attempt fails
*/
'throw_exception_on_failure' => false,
/*
* When using Laravel Horizon you can specify tags that should be used on the
* underlying job that performs the webhook request.
*/
'tags' => [],
];
By default, the package uses queues to retry failed webhook requests. Be sure to set up a real queue other than sync
in non-local environments.
This is the simplest way to call a webhook:
WebhookCall::create()
->url('https://other-app.com/webhooks')
->payload(['key' => 'value'])
->useSecret('sign-using-this-secret')
->dispatch();
This will send a post request to https://other-app.com/webhooks
. The body of the request will be JSON encoded version of the array passed to payload
. The request will have a header called Signature
that will contain a signature the receiving app can use to verify the payload hasn't been tampered with. Dispatching a webhook call will also fire a DispatchingWebhookCallEvent
.
If the receiving app doesn't respond with a response code starting with 2
, the package will retry calling the webhook after 10 seconds. If that second attempt fails, the package will attempt to call the webhook a final time after 100 seconds. Should that attempt fail, the FinalWebhookCallFailedEvent
will be raised.
If you would like to call the webhook immediately (synchronously), you may use the dispatchSync method. When using this method, the webhook will not be queued and will be run immediately. This can be helpful in situations where sending the webhook is part of a bigger job that already has been queued.
WebhookCall::create()
...
->dispatchSync();
If you would like to conditionally dispatch a webhook, you may use the dispatchIf
, dispatchUnless
, dispatchSyncIf
, and dispatchSyncUnless
methods:
WebhookCall::create()
...
->dispatchIf($condition);
WebhookCall::create()
...
->dispatchUnless($condition);
WebhookCall::create()
...
->dispatchSyncIf($condition);
WebhookCall::create()
...
->dispatchSyncUnless($condition);
When setting up, it's common to generate, store, and share a secret between your app and the app that wants to receive webhooks. Generating the secret could be done with Illuminate\Support\Str::random()
, but it's entirely up to you. The package will use the secret to sign a webhook call.
By default, the package will add a header called Signature
that will contain a signature the receiving app can use if the payload hasn't been tampered with. This is how that signature is calculated:
// payload is the array passed to the `payload` method of the webhook
// secret is the string given to the `signUsingSecret` method on the webhook.
$payloadJson = json_encode($payload);
$signature = hash_hmac('sha256', $payloadJson, $secret);
We don't recommend this, but if you don't want the webhook request to be signed call the doNotSign
method.
WebhookCall::create()
->doNotSign()
...
By calling this method, the Signature
header will not be set.
If you want to customize the signing process, you can create your own custom signer. A signer is any class that implements Spatie\WebhookServer\Signer
.
This is what that interface looks like.
namespace Spatie\WebhookServer\Signer;
interface Signer
{
public function signatureHeaderName(): string;
public function calculateSignature(array $payload, string $secret): string;
}
After creating your signer, you can specify its class name in the signer
key of the webhook-server
config file. Your signer will then be used by default in all webhook calls.
You can also specify a signer for a specific webhook call:
WebhookCall::create()
->signUsing(YourCustomSigner::class)
...
->dispatch();
If you want to customize the name of the header, you don't need to use a custom signer, but you can change the value in the signature_header_name
in the webhook-server
config file.
When the app to which we're sending the webhook fails to send a response with a 2xx
status code the package will consider the call as failed. The call will also be considered failed if the remote app doesn't respond within 3 seconds.
You can configure that default timeout in the timeout_in_seconds
key of the webhook-server
config file. Alternatively, you can override the timeout for a specific webhook like this:
WebhookCall::create()
->timeoutInSeconds(5)
...
->dispatch();
When a webhook call fails, we'll retry the call two more times. You can set the default amount of times we retry the webhook call in the tries
key of the config file. Alternatively, you can specify the number of tries for a specific webhook like this:
WebhookCall::create()
->maximumTries(5)
...
->dispatch();
To not hammer the remote app we'll wait some time between each attempt. By default, we wait 10 seconds between the first and second attempts, 100 seconds between the third and the fourth, 1000 between the fourth and the fifth, and so on. The maximum amount of seconds that we'll wait is 100 000, which is about 27 hours. This behavior is implemented in the default ExponentialBackoffStrategy
.
You can define your own backoff strategy by creating a class that implements Spatie\WebhookServer\BackoffStrategy\BackoffStrategy
. This is what that interface looks like:
namespace Spatie\WebhookServer\BackoffStrategy;
interface BackoffStrategy
{
public function waitInSecondsAfterAttempt(int $attempt): int;
}
You can make your custom strategy the default strategy by specifying its fully qualified class name in the backoff_strategy
of the webhook-server
config file. Alternatively, you can specify a strategy for a specific webhook like this.
WebhookCall::create()
->useBackoffStrategy(YourBackoffStrategy::class)
...
->dispatch();
Under the hood, the retrying of the webhook calls is implemented using delayed dispatching. Amazon SQS only has support for a small maximum delay. If you're using Amazon SQS for your queues, make sure you do not configure the package in a way so there are more than 15 minutes between each attempt.
By default, all webhooks will use the post
method. You can customize that by specifying the HTTP verb you want in the http_verb
key of the webhook-server
config file.
You can also override the default for a specific call by using the useHttpVerb
method.
WebhookCall::create()
->useHttpVerb('get')
...
->dispatch();
You can use extra headers by adding them to the headers
key in the webhook-server
config file. If you want to add additional headers for a specific webhook, you can use the withHeaders
call.
WebhookCall::create()
->withHeaders([
'Another Header' => 'Value of Another Header'
])
...
->dispatch();
You can direct webhooks through a proxy by specifying the proxy
key in the webhook-server
config file. To set a proxy for a specific
request, you can use the useProxy
call.
WebhookCall::create()
->useProxy('http://proxy.server:3128')
...
To safeguard the integrity of webhook data transmission, it's critical to authenticate the intended recipient of your webhook payload. Mutual TLS authentication serves as a robust method for this purpose. Contrary to standard TLS, where only the client verifies the server, mutual TLS requires both the webhook endpoint (acting as the client) and the webhook provider (acting as the server) to authenticate each other. This is achieved through an exchange of certificates during the TLS handshake, ensuring that both parties confirm each other's identity.
Note: If you need to include your own certificate authority, pass the certificate path to the
verifySsl()
method.
WebhookCall::create()
->mutualTls(
certPath: storage_path('path/to/cert.pem'),
certPassphrase: 'optional_cert_passphrase',
sslKeyPath: storage_path('path/to/key.pem'),
sslKeyPassphrase: 'optional_key_passphrase'
)
The proxy specification follows the guzzlehttp proxy format
When using a URL that starts with https://
the package will verify if the SSL certificate of the receiving party is valid. If it is not, we will consider the webhook call failed. We don't recommend this, but you can turn off this verification by setting the verify_ssl
key in the webhook-server
config file to false
.
You can also disable the verification per webhook call with the doNotVerifySsl
method.
WebhookCall::create()
->doNotVerifySsl()
...
->dispatch();
You can add extra meta information to the webhook. This meta information will not be transmitted, and it will only be used to pass to the events this package fires.
This is how you can add meta information:
WebhookCall::create()
->meta($arrayWithMetaInformation)
...
->dispatch();
If you're using Laravel Horizon for your queues, you'll be happy to know that we support tags.
To add tags to the underlying job that'll perform the webhook call, simply specify them in the tags
key of the webhook-server
config file or use the withTags
method:
WebhookCall::create()
->withTags($tags)
...
->dispatch();
By default, the package will not log any exceptions that are thrown when sending a webhook.
To handle exceptions you need to create listeners for the Spatie\WebhookServer\Events\WebhookCallFailedEvent
and/or Spatie\WebhookServer\Events\FinalWebhookCallFailedEvent
events.
By default, failing jobs will be ignored. To throw an exception when the last attempt of a job fails, you can call throwExceptionOnFailure
:
WebhookCall::create()
->throwExceptionOnFailure()
...
->dispatch();
or activate the throw_exception_on_failure
global option of the webhook-server
config file.
By default, all webhooks will transform the payload into JSON. Instead of sending JSON, you can send any string by using the sendRawBody(string $body)
option instead.
Due to a type mismatch in the Signer API, it is currently not supported to sign raw data requests. When using the sendRawBody option, you will receive a string payload in the WebhookEvents.
WebhookCall::create()
->sendRawBody("<root>someXMLContent</root>")
->doNotSign()
...
->dispatch();
The package fires these events:
DispatchingWebhookCallEvent
: right before the webhook call will be dispatched to the queue.WebhookCallSucceededEvent
: the remote app responded with a2xx
response code.WebhookCallFailedEvent
: the remote app responded with a non2xx
response code, or it did not respond at all.FinalWebhookCallFailedEvent
: the final attempt to call the webhook failed.
All these events have these properties:
httpVerb
: the verb used to perform the requestwebhookUrl
: the URL to where the request was sentpayload
: the used payloadheaders
: the headers that were sent. This array includes the signature headermeta
: the array of values passed to the webhook with themeta
calltags
: the array of tags useduuid
: a unique string to identify this call. This uuid will be the same for all attempts of a webhook call.
Except for the DispatchingWebhookCallEvent
, all events have these additional properties:
attempt
: the attempt numberresponse
: the response returned by the remote app. Can be an instance of\GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Response
ornull
.
composer test
When using the package in automated tests, you'll want to perform one of the following to ensure that no webhooks are sent out to genuine websites
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Bus;
use Spatie\WebhookServer\CallWebhookJob;
use Tests\TestCase;
class TestFile extends TestCase
{
public function testJobIsDispatched()
{
Bus::fake();
... Perform webhook call ...
Bus::assertDispatched(CallWebhookJob::class);
}
}
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Queue;
use Spatie\WebhookServer\CallWebhookJob;
use Tests\TestCase;
class TestFile extends TestCase
{
public function testJobIsQueued()
{
Queue::fake();
... Perform webhook call ...
Queue::assertPushed(CallWebhookJob::class);
}
}
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you discover any security-related issues, please email freek@spatie.be instead of using the issue tracker.
You're free to use this package, but if it makes it to your production environment, we highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using.
Our address is: Spatie, Kruikstraat 22, 2018 Antwerp, Belgium.
We publish all received postcards on our company website.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.