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Informations about the package php-azure-sdk
Azure SDK for PHP
This project provides a set of PHP client libraries that make it easy to access Microsoft Azure tables, blobs, queues, service bus (queues and topics), service runtime and service management APIs.
Annoucement
Microsoft archived the original Azure SDK for PHP repository. This repository is a fork of the original repository and is maintained by the community. The original repository can be found here
Features
- Tables
- create and delete tables
- create, query, insert, update, merge, and delete entities
- batch operations
- REST API Version: see https://github.com/Azure/azure-storage-php
- Blobs
- create, list, and delete containers, work with container metadata and permissions, list blobs in container
- create block and page blobs (from a stream or a string), work with blob blocks and pages, delete blobs
- work with blob properties, metadata, leases, snapshot a blob
- REST API Version: see https://github.com/Azure/azure-storage-php
- Storage Queues
- create, list, and delete queues, and work with queue metadata and properties
- create, get, peek, update, delete messages
- REST API Version: see https://github.com/Azure/azure-storage-php
- Service Bus
- Queues: create, list and delete queues; send, receive, unlock and delete messages
- Topics: create, list, and delete topics; create, list, and delete subscriptions; send, receive, unlock and delete messages; create, list, and delete rules
- Service Runtime
- discover addresses and ports for the endpoints of other role instances in your service
- get configuration settings and access local resources
- get role instance information for current role and other role instances
- query and set the status of the current role
- REST API Version: 2011-03-08
- Service Management
- storage accounts: create, update, delete, list, regenerate keys
- affinity groups: create, update, delete, list, get properties
- locations: list
- hosted services: create, update, delete, list, get properties
- deployment: create, get, delete, swap, change configuration, update status, upgrade, rollback
- role instance: reboot, reimage
- REST API Version: 2011-10-01
- Media Services
- Connection
- Ingest asset, upload files
- Encoding / process asset, create job, job templates
- Manage media services entities: create / update / read / delete / get list
- Delivery SAS and Streaming media content
- Dynamic encryption: AES and DRM (PlayReady/Widevine/FairPlay) with and without Token restriction
- Scale encoding reserved unit type
- Live streaming: live encoding and pass-through channels, programs and all their operations
- REST API Version: 2.13
Getting Started
Download Source Code
To get the source code from GitHub, type
Note
The recommended way to resolve dependencies is to install them using the Composer package manager.
Install via Composer
-
Create a file named composer.json in the root of your project and add the following code to it:
-
Download composer.phar in your project root.
-
Open a command prompt and execute this in your project root
Note
On Windows, you will also need to add the Git executable to your PATH environment variable.
Usage
Getting Started
There are four basic steps that have to be performed before you can make a call to any Microsoft Azure API when using the libraries.
-
First, include the autoloader script:
-
Include the namespaces you are going to use.
To create any Microsoft Azure service client you need to use the ServicesBuilder class:
To process exceptions you need:
-
To instantiate the service client you will also need a valid connection string. The format is:
-
For accessing a live storage service (tables, blobs, queues):
-
For accessing the emulator storage:
- For accessing the Service Bus:
Where the Endpoint is typically of the format
https://[yourNamespace].servicebus.windows.net
.- For accessing Service Management APIs:
-
-
Instantiate a "REST Proxy" - a wrapper around the available calls for the given service.
-
For the Storage services:
-
For Service Bus:
-
For Service Management:
- For Media Services:
You can find more examples for Media Services Authentication on the examples folder.
-
Table Storage
The following are examples of common operations performed with the Table service. For more please read How-to use the Table service.
Create a table
To create a table call createTable:
Error Codes and Messages for Tables
Insert an entity
To add an entity to a table, create a new Entity object and pass it to TableRestProxy->insertEntity. Note that when you create an entity you must specify a PartitionKey
and RowKey
. These are the unique identifiers for an entity and are values that can be queried much faster than other entity properties. The system uses PartitionKey
to automatically distribute the table’s entities over many storage nodes.
Query entities
To query for entities you can call queryEntities. The subset of entities you retrieve will be determined by the filter you use (for more information, see Querying Tables and Entities). You can also provide no filter at all.
Blob Storage
To get started using the Blob service you must include the BlobService
and BlobSettings
namespaces and set the ACCOUNT_NAME
and ACCOUNT_KEY
configuration settings for your credentials. Then you instantiate the wrapper using the BlobService
factory.
The following are examples of common operations performed with the Blob serivce. For more please read How-to use the Blob service.
Create a container
Error Codes and Messages for Blobs
For more information about container ACLs, see Set Container ACL (REST API).
Upload a blob
To upload a file as a blob, use the BlobRestProxy->createBlockBlob method. This operation will create the blob if it doesn’t exist, or overwrite it if it does. The code example below assumes that the container has already been created and uses fopen to open the file as a stream.
While the example above uploads a blob as a stream, a blob can also be uploaded as a string.
List blobs in a container
To list the blobs in a container, use the BlobRestProxy->listBlobs method with a foreach loop to loop through the result. The following code outputs the name and URI of each blob in a container.
Storage Queues
To get started using the Queue service you must include the QueueService
and QueueSettings
namespaces and set the ACCOUNT_NAME
and ACCOUNT_KEY
configuration settings for your credentials. Then you instantiate the wrapper using the QueueService
factory.
The following are examples of common operations performed with the Queue serivce. For more please read How-to use the Queue service.
Create a queue
A QueueRestProxy object lets you create a queue with the createQueue method. When creating a queue, you can set options on the queue, but doing so is not required.
Error Codes and Messages for Queues
Add a message to a queue
To add a message to a queue, use QueueRestProxy->createMessage. The method takes the queue name, the message text, and message options (which are optional). For compatibility with others you may need to base64 encode message.
Peek at the next message
You can peek at a message (or messages) at the front of a queue without removing it from the queue by calling QueueRestProxy->peekMessages.
De-queue the next message
Your code removes a message from a queue in two steps. First, you call QueueRestProxy->listMessages, which makes the message invisible to any other code reading from the queue. By default, this message will stay invisible for 30 seconds (if the message is not deleted in this time period, it will become visible on the queue again). To finish removing the message from the queue, you must call QueueRestProxy->deleteMessage.
Service Bus Queues
The current PHP Service Bus APIs only support ACS connection strings. You need to use PowerShell to create a new ACS Service Bus namespace at the present time. First, make sure you have Azure PowerShell installed, then in a PowerShell command prompt, run
If it is sucessful, you will get the connection string in the PowerShell output. If you get connection errors with it and the conection string looks like Endpoint=sb://..., change it to Endpoint=https://...
Create a Queue
Send a Message
To send a message to a Service Bus queue, your application will call the ServiceBusRestProxy->sendQueueMessage method. Messages sent to (and received from ) Service Bus queues are instances of the BrokeredMessage class.
Receive a Message
The primary way to receive messages from a queue is to use a ServiceBusRestProxy->receiveQueueMessage method. Messages can be received in two different modes: ReceiveAndDelete (mark message as consumed on read) and PeekLock (locks message for a period of time, but does not delete).
The example below demonstrates how a message can be received and processed using PeekLock mode (not the default mode).
Service Bus Topics
Create a Topic
Create a subscription with the default (MatchAll) filter
Send a message to a topic
Messages sent to Service Bus topics are instances of the BrokeredMessage class.
Receive a message from a topic
The primary way to receive messages from a subscription is to use a ServiceBusRestProxy->receiveSubscriptionMessage method. Received messages can work in two different modes: ReceiveAndDelete (the default) and PeekLock similarly to Service Bus Queues.
The example below demonstrates how a message can be received and processed using ReceiveAndDelete mode (the default mode).
Service Management
Set-up certificates
You need to create two certificates, one for the server (a .cer file) and one for the client (a .pem file). To create the .pem file using OpenSSL, execute this:
To create the .cer certificate, execute this:
List Available Locations
Create a Storage Service
To create a storage service, you need a name for the service (between 3 and 24 lowercase characters and unique within Microsoft Azure), a label (a base-64 encoded name for the service, up to 100 characters), and either a location or an affinity group. Providing a description for the service is optional.
Create a Cloud Service
A cloud service is also known as a hosted service (from earlier versions of Microsoft Azure). The createHostedServices method allows you to create a new hosted service by providing a hosted service name (which must be unique in Microsoft Azure), a label (the base 64-endcoded hosted service name), and a CreateServiceOptions object which allows you to set the location or the affinity group for your service.
Create a Deployment
To make a new deployment to Azure you must store the package file in a Microsoft Azure Blob Storage account under the same subscription as the hosted service to which the package is being uploaded. You can create a deployment package with the Microsoft Azure PowerShell cmdlets, or with the cspack commandline tool.
Media Services
Create new asset with file
To create an asset with a file you need to create an empty asset, create access policy with write permission, create a locator joining your asset and access policy, perform actual upload and generate file info.
Encode asset
To perform media file encoding you will need input asset ($inputAsset) with a file in it (something like in previous chapter). Also you need to create an array of task data objects and a job data object. To create a task object use a media processor, task XML body and configuration name.
Get public URL to encoded asset
After you’ve uploaded a media file and encode it you can get a download URL for that file or a streaming URL for multiple bitrate files. Create a new access policy with read permission and link it with job output asset via locator.
Manage media services entities
Media services CRUD operations are performed through media services rest proxy class. It has methods like “createAsset”, “createLocator”, “createJob” and etc. for entities creations.
To retrieve all entities list you may use methods “getAssetList”, “getAccessPolicyList”, “getLocatorList”, “getJobList” and etc. For getting single entity data use methods “getAsset”, “getJob”, “getTask” and etc. passing the entity identifier or entity data model object with non-empty identifier as a parameter.
Update entities with methods like “updateLocator”, “updateAsset”, “updateAssetFile” and etc. passing the entity data model object as a parameter. It is important to have valid entity identifier specified in data model object.
Erase entities with methods like “deleteAsset”, “deleteAccessPolicy”, “deleteJob” and etc. passing the entity identifier or entity data model object with non-empty identifier as a parameter.
Also you could get linked entities with methods “getAssetLocators”, “getAssetParentAssets”, “getAssetStorageAccount”, “getLocatorAccessPolicy”, “getJobTasks” and etc. passing the entity identifier or entity data model object with non-empty identifier as a parameter.
The complete list of all methods available you could find in IMediaServices interface.
All versions of php-azure-sdk with dependencies
pear/net_url2 Version ^2.2
pear/mail_mime Version ^1.10
firebase/php-jwt Version ^4.0 || ^5.0
microsoft/azure-storage Version ^0.19.1
guzzlehttp/guzzle Version ^6.2
laminas/laminas-mime Version ^2.12