Libraries tagged by Response HTTP
middlewares/encoder
53834 Downloads
Middleware to encode the response body to gzip or deflate
middlewares/debugbar
15627 Downloads
Middleware to insert PHP DebugBar automatically in html responses
middlewares/csp
6240 Downloads
Middleware to add the Content-Security-Policy header to the response
middlewares/content-length
11238 Downloads
Middleware to inject the Content-Length header into the response based on the body size
chillerlan/psr-7
1975 Downloads
A PSR-7 HTTP message and PSR-17 HTTP factory implementation.
signify-nz/silverstripe-security-headers
7199 Downloads
Adds configurable security headers to HTTP responses via middleware.
rekalogika/temporary-url-bundle
2583 Downloads
Symfony bundle for creating temporary URLs to your resources. You provide the resource in a plain PHP object, and a service to turn it into a HTTP response. The framework handles the rest.
guardian360/resonance
10883 Downloads
Resonance aims to make performing HTTP requests and getting responses extremely simple.
ybelenko/openapi-data-mocker-server-middleware
13932 Downloads
PSR-15 HTTP Server Middleware to create mock responses from OpenAPI Schemas(OAS 3.0).
lemric/batch-request
2723 Downloads
Send a single HTTP request that contains multiple (batch) Symfony Request calls. Once all operations are complete, a consolidated response is passed back to you and the HTTP connection is closed.
paypaplane/svix-client
8669 Downloads
Welcome to the Svix API documentation! Useful links: [Homepage](https://www.svix.com) | [Support email](mailto:[email protected]) | [Blog](https://www.svix.com/blog/) | [Slack Community](https://www.svix.com/slack/) # Introduction This is the reference documentation and schemas for the [Svix webhook service](https://www.svix.com) API. For tutorials and other documentation please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com). ## Main concepts In Svix you have four important entities you will be interacting with: - `messages`: these are the webhooks being sent. They can have contents and a few other properties. - `application`: this is where `messages` are sent to. Usually you want to create one application for each user on your platform. - `endpoint`: endpoints are the URLs messages will be sent to. Each application can have multiple `endpoints` and each message sent to that application will be sent to all of them (unless they are not subscribed to the sent event type). - `event-type`: event types are identifiers denoting the type of the message being sent. Event types are primarily used to decide which events are sent to which endpoint. ## Authentication Get your authentication token (`AUTH_TOKEN`) from the [Svix dashboard](https://dashboard.svix.com) and use it as part of the `Authorization` header as such: `Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}`. For more information on authentication, please refer to the [authentication token docs](https://docs.svix.com/api-keys). ## Code samples The code samples assume you already have the respective libraries installed and you know how to use them. For the latest information on how to do that, please refer to [the documentation](https://docs.svix.com/). ## Idempotency Svix supports [idempotency](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence) for safely retrying requests without accidentally performing the same operation twice. This is useful when an API call is disrupted in transit and you do not receive a response. To perform an idempotent request, pass the idempotency key in the `Idempotency-Key` header to the request. The idempotency key should be a unique value generated by the client. You can create the key in however way you like, though we suggest using UUID v4, or any other string with enough entropy to avoid collisions. Svix's idempotency works by saving the resulting status code and body of the first request made for any given idempotency key for any successful request. Subsequent requests with the same key return the same result. Please note that idempotency is only supported for `POST` requests. ## Cross-Origin Resource Sharing This API features Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) implemented in compliance with [W3C spec](https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/). And that allows cross-domain communication from the browser. All responses have a wildcard same-origin which makes them completely public and accessible to everyone, including any code on any site.
wotek/response-builder
8475 Downloads
HTTP Response Builder
softinvest/http-response
500 Downloads
HttpResponse Wrapper
repat/http-constants
5203 Downloads
HTTP response codes provided as defined constants.
meraki/http-router
195 Downloads
Maps HTTP requests to HTTP responses in PHP 8+.