PHP wrapper for Przelewy24.
If you are using Laravel, check out mnastalski/przelewy24-laravel.
Przelewy24's API documentation is available at https://developers.przelewy24.pl/.
- PHP >=8.1
For lower PHP versions, check the 0.x versions.
composer require mnastalski/przelewy24-php
use Przelewy24\Przelewy24;
$przelewy24 = new Przelewy24(
merchantId: 12345,
reportsKey: 'f0ae...',
crc: 'aef0...',
isLive: false,
);
Setting isLive
to false
will use the sandbox environment. Set it to true
to use production/live mode.
You may use the following method to test if the connection to Przelewy24's API using provided credentials is working:
$test = $przelewy24->tests()->testAccess();
var_dump($test->data());
bool(true)
$transaction = $przelewy24->transactions()->register(
// Required parameters:
sessionId: 'unique order identifier from your application',
amount: 125,
description: 'transaction description',
email: 'buyer email address',
urlReturn: 'url to return to after transaction',
// Optional parameters:
urlStatus: 'url to which the transaction status webhook will be sent',
// client: 'Mateusz Nastalski',
// currency: \Przelewy24\Enums\Currency::EUR,
// language: Language::ENGLISH,
// ...
);
Note that amount
is passed as an integer, so if the actual amount is 1.25 PLN
you will need to pass 125
as value.
For the complete list of available parameters check the signature of TransactionRequests::register().
$transaction->token();
$transaction->gatewayUrl();
To parse the webhook's payload, pass the whole request's POST data as an array to handleWebhook()
:
// $requestData = $request->request->all();
// $requestData = $request->post();
// $requestData = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true);
$webhook = $przelewy24->handleWebhook($requestData);
handleWebhook()
returns TransactionStatusNotification::class
, which has a bunch of useful methods you can use to check the transaction's data, as well as verify the webhook's signature:
$webhook->amount();
$webhook->currency();
$webhook->orderId();
...
$webhook->isSignValid(...);
If you would like to make sure the incoming request's IP address belongs to Przelewy24 then a list of valid IPs is available in the \Przelewy24\Constants\IpAddresses::V4
constant. A helper method that accepts a string with an IP address and returns a boolean is also available: \Przelewy24\Constants\IpAddresses::isValid($ip)
.
$przelewy24->transactions()->verify(
sessionId: 'unique order identifier from your application',
orderId: $webhook->orderId(),
amount: 125,
);
Similarly to registering a transaction, the amount
is passed as an integer.
$refund = $przelewy24->transactions()->refund(
requestId: 'unique request identifier from your application',
refundsId: 'unique refunds identifier from your application',
refunds: [
new RefundItem(
orderId: $webhook->orderId(),
sessionId: 'unique order identifier from your application',
amount: 2100,
description: 'item #1',
),
new RefundItem(
orderId: $webhook->orderId(),
sessionId: 'unique order identifier from your application',
amount: 125,
description: 'item #2',
),
],
urlStatus: 'url to which the refund status webhook will be sent',
);
$refund->refunds();
To parse the webhook's payload, pass the whole request's POST data as an array to handleRefundWebhook()
:
// $requestData = $request->request->all();
// $requestData = $request->post();
// $requestData = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true);
$webhook = $przelewy24->handleRefundWebhook($requestData);
Should Przelewy24's API return an erroneous response, an ApiResponseException::class
(which extends Przelewy24Exception::class
) will be thrown. You can therefore use a try/catch
block to handle any errors:
use Przelewy24\Exceptions\Przelewy24Exception;
try {
$przelewy24->transactions()->verify([
// ...
]);
} catch (Przelewy24Exception $e) {
// Handle the error...
}