artesaos / laravel-linkedin
Linkedin API integration for Laravel and Lumen 5
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Requires
- php: >=5.5.9
- guzzlehttp/psr7: ^1.4
- happyr/linkedin-api-client: ~1.0
- illuminate/contracts: ~5.0
- illuminate/http: ~5.0
- illuminate/support: ~5.0
- php-http/curl-client: ^1.7
- php-http/guzzle6-adapter: ^1.1
- php-http/message: ^1.5
Requires (Dev)
- orchestra/testbench: ~3.4@dev
- phpunit/phpunit: ~5.0
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-11-09 16:11:52 UTC
README
Linkedin API integration for Laravel Framework
This package is a wrapper for Happyr/LinkedIn-API-client. You can view the documentation for php version here. Don't forget to consult the oficial LinkedIn API site.
If you need install on Lumen, go to Lumen section
Installation on Laravel
Install with composer
composer require artesaos/laravel-linkedin
Add service Provider
Artesaos\LinkedIn\LinkedinServiceProvider::class,
Facade
'LinkedIn' => \Artesaos\LinkedIn\Facades\LinkedIn::class,
Publish config file
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Artesaos\LinkedIn\LinkedinServiceProvider"
Installation on Lumen
Install with composer
composer require artesaos/laravel-linkedin
Add Service Provider, facade and config parameters to the bootstrap/app.php
file and copy the linkedin.php to the config directory of your project (create then if not exists)
$app->register(\Artesaos\LinkedIn\LinkedinServiceProvider::class); class_alias(\Artesaos\LinkedIn\Facades\LinkedIn::class,'LinkedIn'); $app->configure('linkedin');
Usage
In order to use this API client (or any other LinkedIn clients) you have to register your app
with LinkedIn to receive an API key. Once you've registered your LinkedIn app, you will be provided with
an API Key and Secret Key, please fill this values on linkedin.php
config file.
####Basic Usage
The unique difference in this package is the LinkedIn
facade. Instead of this:
$linkedIn=new Happyr\LinkedIn\LinkedIn('app_id', 'app_secret'); $linkedin->foo();
you can simple call the facade for anyone method, like this:
LinkedIn::foo();
or use the laravel container:
app('linkedin')->foo(); app()['linkedin']->foo(); App::make('linkedin')->foo(); // ...
The service container automatically return an instance of LinkedIn
class ready to use
LinkedIn login
This example below is showing how to login with LinkedIn using LinkedIn
facade.
if (LinkedIn::isAuthenticated()) { //we know that the user is authenticated now. Start query the API $user=LinkedIn::get('v1/people/~:(firstName,lastName)'); echo "Welcome ".$user['firstName']; exit(); }elseif (LinkedIn::hasError()) { echo "User canceled the login."; exit(); } //if not authenticated $url = LinkedIn::getLoginUrl(); echo "<a href='$url'>Login with LinkedIn</a>"; exit();
Get basic profile info
You can retrive information using the get()
method, like this:
LinkedIn::get('v1/people/~:(firstName,num-connections,picture-url)');
This query return an array of information. You can view all the REST
api's methods in REST API Console
How to post on LinkedIn wall
The example below shows how you can post on a users wall. The access token is fetched from the database.
LinkedIn::setAccessToken('access_token_from_db'); $options = ['json'=> [ 'comment' => 'Im testing Happyr LinkedIn client with Laravel Framework! https://github.com/artesaos/laravel-linkedin', 'visibility' => [ 'code' => 'anyone' ] ] ]; $result = LinkedIn::post('v1/people/~/shares', $options);
You may of course do the same in xml. Use the following options array.
$options = array( 'format' => 'xml', 'body' => '<share> <comment>Im testing Happyr LinkedIn client! https://github.com/Happyr/LinkedIn-API-client</comment> <visibility> <code>anyone</code> </visibility> </share>');
Configuration
The api options
The third parameter of LinkedIn::api
is an array with options. Below is a table of array keys that you may use.
Changing request format
The default format when communicating with LinkedIn API is json. You can let the API do json_encode
for you.
The following code shows you how.
$body = array( 'comment' => 'Testing the linkedin API!', 'visibility' => array('code' => 'anyone') ); LinkedIn::post('v1/people/~/shares', array('json'=>$body)); LinkedIn::post('v1/people/~/shares', array('body'=>json_encode($body)));
When using array('json'=>$body)
as option the format will always be json
. You can change the request format in three ways.
// By setter LinkedIn::setFormat('xml'); // Set format for just one request LinkedIn::post('v1/people/~/shares', array('format'=>'xml', 'body'=>$body));
Understanding response data type
The data type returned from LinkedIn::api
can be configured. You may use the
LinkedIn::setResponseDataType
or as an option for LinkedIn::api
// By setter LinkedIn::setResponseDataType('simple_xml'); // Set format for just one request LinkedIn::get('v1/people/~:(firstName,lastName)', array('response_data_type'=>'psr7'));
Below is a table that specifies what the possible return data types are when you call LinkedIn::api
.
Using different scopes
If you want to define special scopes when you authenticate the user you should specify them when you are generating the login url. If you don't specify scopes LinkedIn will use the default scopes that you have configured for the app.
$scope = 'r_fullprofile,r_emailaddress,w_share'; //or $scope = array('rw_groups', 'r_contactinfo', 'r_fullprofile', 'w_messages'); $url = LinkedIn::getLoginUrl(array('scope'=>$scope)); return "<a href='$url'>Login with LinkedIn</a>";
Changelog
You can view the latest changes here