This repository is a fork from https://github.com/landrok/activitypub.
ActivityPhp core is an implementation of the ActivityPub data layers in PHP.
It provides two layers:
- A client to server protocol, or "Social API" This protocol permits a client to act on behalf of a user.
- A server to server protocol, or "Federation Protocol" This protocol is used to distribute activities between actors on different servers, tying them into the same social graph.
As the two layers are implemented, it aims to be an ActivityPub conformant Federated Server
All normalized types are implemented too. If you need to create a new one, just extend existing types.
See the full documentation or an overview below.
- Supports PHP 7.2+ | 8.0
composer require landrok/activitypub
All core types are provided:
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\Activity;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\Collection;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\CollectionPage;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\IntransitiveActivity;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\Link;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\ObjectType;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\OrderedCollection;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Core\OrderedCollectionPage;
All extended types are provided:
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Actor\Application;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Actor\Group;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Actor\Organization;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Actor\Person;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Actor\Service;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Accept;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Add;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Announce;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Arrive;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Block;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Create;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Delete;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Dislike;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Flag;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Follow;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Ignore;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Invite;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Join;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Leave;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Like;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Listen;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Move;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Offer;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Question;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Read;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Reject;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Remove;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\TentativeAccept;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\TentativeReject;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Travel;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Undo;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\Update;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Activity\View;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Article;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Audio;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Document;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Event;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Image;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Mention;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Note;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Page;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Place;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Profile;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Relationship;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Tombstone;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Video;
You can instanciate ActivityStreams types using their short name.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$link = Type::create('Link');
$note = Type::create('Note');
Instanciating a type and setting properties is possible with the second parameter.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note', [
'content' => 'A content for my note'
]);
Starting from an array with a 'type' key, it's even possible to directly instanciate your type.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$array = [
'type' => 'Note',
'content' => 'A content for my note'
];
$note = Type::create($array);
Whatever be your object or link, you can get all properties names with
getProperties()
method.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$link = Type::create('Link');
print_r(
$link->getProperties()
);
Would output something like:
Array
(
[0] => type
[1] => id
[2] => name
[3] => nameMap
[4] => href
[5] => hreflang
[6] => mediaType
[7] => rel
[8] => height
[9] => preview
[10] => width
)
In order to dump all properties and associated values, use toArray()
method.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$link = Type::create('Link');
$link->setName('An example');
$link->setHref('http://example.com');
print_r(
$link->toArray()
);
Would output something like:
Array
(
[type] => Link
[name] => An example
[href] => http://example.com
)
There are 3 equivalent ways to get a value.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note');
// Each method returns the same value
echo $note->id;
echo $note->get('id');
echo $note->getId();
There are 3 equivalent ways to set a value.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note');
$note->id = 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1';
$note->set('id', 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1');
$note->setId('https://example.com/custom-notes/1');
Whenever you assign a value, the format of this value is checked.
This action is made by a validator. If rules are not respected an Exception is thrown.
When a property does not exist, an Exception is thrown in strict mode. You can define 3 different behaviours:
- throw an exception (default=strict)
- ignore property (ignore)
- set property (include)
use ActivityPhp\Type;
use ActivityPhp\Type\TypeConfiguration;
$note = Type::create('Note');
// Ignore mode
TypeConfiguration::set('undefined_properties', 'ignore');
$note->undefinedProperty = 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1';
echo $note->undefinedProperty; // null
// Include mode
TypeConfiguration::set('undefined_properties', 'include');
$note->undefinedProperty = 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1';
echo $note->undefinedProperty; // https://example.com/custom-notes/1
// Strict mode
TypeConfiguration::set('undefined_properties', 'strict');
$note->undefinedProperty = 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1'; // Exception
With Type factory, you can instanciate a type and set several properties.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note', [
'id' => 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1',
'name' => 'An important note',
]);
Sometimes you may use a copy in order not to affect values of the original type.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note', ['name' => 'Original name']);
$copy = $note->copy()->setName('Copy name');
echo $copy->name; // Copy name
echo $note->name; // Original name
You can copy and chain methods to affect only values of the copied type.
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note');
echo $note->has('id'); // true
echo $note->has('anotherProperty'); // false
All core and extended types are used with a classic instanciation.
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Note;
$note = new Note();
Same way with Type factory:
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('Note');
If you need some custom attributes, you can extend predefined types.
- Create your custom type:
use ActivityPhp\Type\Extended\Object\Note;
class MyNote extends Note
{
// Override basic type
protected $type = 'CustomNote';
// Custom property
protected $myProperty;
}
There are 2 ways to instanciate a type:
- A classic PHP call:
$note = new MyNote();
$note->id = 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1';
$note->myProperty = 'Custom Value';
echo $note->getMyProperty(); // Custom Value
- With the Type factory:
use ActivityPhp\Type;
$note = Type::create('MyNote', [
'id' => 'https://example.com/custom-notes/1',
'myProperty' => 'Custom Value'
]);
Extending types preserves benefits of getters, setters and their validators.
Use a custom property validator when you define custom attributes or when you want to override ActivityPub attribute default validation.
Regarding to previous example with a custom attribute $myProperty
, if
you try to set this property, it would be done without any check on
values you're providing.
You can easily cope with that implementing a custom validator using
Validator
.
use ActivityPhp\Type\ValidatorInterface;
use ActivityPhp\Type\Validator;
// Create a custom validator that implements ValidatorInterface
class MyPropertyValidator implements ValidatorInterface
{
// A public validate() method is mandatory
public function validate($value, $container)
{
return true;
}
}
// Attach this custom validator to a property
Validator::add('myProperty', MyPropertyValidator::class);
// Now all values are checked with the validate() method
// 'myProperty' is passed to the first argument
// $note is passed to the second one.
$note->myProperty = 'Custom Value';
An equivalent way is to use Type factory and addValidator()
method:
use ActivityPhp\Type;
// Attach this custom validator to a property
Type::addValidator('myProperty', MyPropertyValidator::class);