This package contains classes that allow keeping up to date git repository by
performing git pull
on every git push
to your GitHub repository. To achieve
this you have to add simple script to your git repository and configure webhook
on your GitHub repository.
For a webhook script to work you have to do 3 things:
- Add this package to your composer dependencies
- Add a simple PHP script that will actually handle calls to webhook
- Configure your GitHub repository webhook to be called every time commits are pushed to GitHub
To add dependency, simply edit your composer.json
and add to your require
block following dependency - "dintel/php-github-webhook": "0.1.*"
. This is the
simplest way to bring php-github-webhook libraries into your project.
To actually handle webhook calls, you have to add PHP script that will be
accessible publicly and it will run git pull
every time GitHub calls it.
A simplest example of such webhook script:
<?php
require(__DIR__ . "/vendor/autoload.php");
use GitHubWebhook\Handler;
$handler = new Handler("<your secret>", __DIR__);
if($handler->handle()) {
echo "OK";
} else {
echo "Wrong secret";
}
In the script above <your secret>
should be some random string you choose and
it should be later supplied to GitHub when defining webhook. For more
information about secrets and how they are used in GitHub webhook read
Webhooks | GitHub API.
NOTE: Since this script has sensitive data in it (secret
that is used to
validate requests), it is advised to not put that script under git control by
excluding it in .gitignore
file. Another option is to take secret
from some
environment variable that would be defined by other means (like SetEnv
in
apache configuration).
To set up a repository webhook on GitHub, head over to the Settings page of your repository, and click on Webhooks & services. After that, click on Add webhook.
Fill in following values in form:
- Payload URL - Enter full URL to your webhook script
- Content type - Can be either "application/json" or "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
- Secret - Same secret you pass to constructor of
Handler
object - Webhook should receive only push events and of course be active
Click Add webhook button and that's it.
Handler class actually handles webhook calls. It first checks GitHub signature
and then executes git pull
if signature and secret match.
Here is a complete list of methods:
- __construct($secret, $gitDir, $remote = null) - Constructor. Constructs new
webhook handler that will verify that requests coming to it are signed with
$secret
.$gitDir
must be set to path to git repo that must be updated. Optional$remote
specifies which remote should be pulled. - getData() - Getter. After successful validation returns parsed array of data
in payload. Otherwise returns
null
. - getDelivery() - Getter. After successful validation returns unique delivery
number coming from GitHub. Otherwise returns
null
. - getEvent - Getter. After successful validation returns name of event that
triggered this webhook. Otherwise returns
null
. - getGitDir() - Getter. Returns
$gitDir
that was passed to constructor. - getGitOutput - Getter. After successful validation returns output of git
as array of lines. Otherwise returns
null
. - getRemote() - Getter. Returns
$remote
that was passed to constructor. - getSecret() - Getter. Returns
$secret
that was passed to constructor. - handle() - Handle the request. Validates that incoming request is signed
correctly with
$secret
and executesgit pull
upon successful validation. Returnstrue
on succes orfalse
if validation failed. - validate() - Validate request only. Returns boolean that indicates whether
the request is correctly signed by
$secret
.