A php library for using the Authy API.
This library requires PHP 5.6+
authy/php
package is available on Packagist.
Include it in your composer.json
as follows:
{
"require": {
"authy/php": "3.0"
}
}
To use this client you just need to use Authy_Api and initialize it with your API KEY
$authy_api = new Authy\AuthyApi('#your_api_key');
Now that you have an Authy API object you can start sending requests.
NOTE: User is matched based on cellphone and country code not e-mail. A cellphone is uniquely associated with an authy_id.
Creating users is very easy, you need to pass an email, a cellphone and optionally a country code:
$user = $authy_api->registerUser('new_user@email.com', '405-342-5699', 1); //email, cellphone, country_code
in this case 1
is the country code (USA). If no country code is specified, it defaults to USA.
You can easily see if the user was created by calling ok()
.
If request went right, you need to store the authy id in your database. Use user->id()
to get this id
in your database.
if($user->ok())
// store user->id() in your user database
if something goes wrong ok()
returns false
and you can see the errors using the following code
else
foreach($user->errors() as $field => $message) {
printf("$field = $message");
}
it returns a dictionary explaining what went wrong with the request. Errors will be in plain English and can be passed back to the user.
NOTE: Token verification is only enforced if the user has completed registration. To change this behaviour see Forcing Verification section below.
Registration is completed once the user installs and registers the Authy mobile app or logins once successfully using SMS.
To verify tokens you need the user id and the token. The token you get from the user through your login form.
$verification = $authy_api->verifyToken('authy-id', 'token-entered-by-the-user');
Once again you can use ok()
to verify whether the token was valid or not.
if($verification->ok())
// the user is valid
If you wish to verify tokens even if the user has not yet complete registration, pass force=true when verifying the token.
$verification = $authy_api->verifyToken('authy-id', 'token-entered-by-the-user', array("force" => "true"));
To be able to use this method you need to have activated the SMS plugin for your Authy App.
To request a SMS token you only need the user id.
$sms = $authy_api->requestSms('authy-id');
As always, you can use ok()
to verify if the token was sent.
This call will be ignored if the user is using the Authy Mobile App. If you still want to send
the SMS pass force=>true
as an option
$sms = $authy_api->requestSms('authy-id', array("force" => "true"));
Additional options can be passed into the array, such as custom actions:
$sms = $authy_api->requestSms('authy-id', array("action" => "login", "action_message" => "Login code"));
To check a user status, just pass the user id.
$status = $authy_api->userStatus('authy_id');
Authy has an API to verify users via phone calls or sms. Also, user phone information can be gethered for support and verification purposes.
In order to start a phone verification, we ask the API to send a token to the user via sms or call:
$authy_api->phoneVerificationStart('111-111-1111', '1', 'sms');
Optionally you can specify the language that you prefer the phone verification message to be sent. Supported
languages include: English (en
), Spanish (es
), Portuguese (pt
), German (de
), French (fr
) and
Italian (it
). If not specified, English will be used.
$authy_api->phoneVerificationStart('111-111-1111', '1', 'sms', 'es');
// This will send a message in spanish
Once you get the verification from user, you can check if it's valid with:
$authy_api->phoneVerificationCheck('111-111-1111', '1', '0000');
If you want to gather additional information about user phone, use phones info.
$authy_api->phoneInfo('111-111-1111', '1');
You will need to install composer https://getcomposer.org/download/
and install dependencies with composer install --no-dev
. Also
You will need to install phpunit https://phpunit.de/manual/current/en/installation.html
Then you can run test by executing this command make
You can use docker to run tests and develop locally without the need to install the dependencies directly in your machine:
git clone git@github.com:authy/authy-php.git
cd authy-php
make docker-build # Creates the docker image
make docker-deps # Install dependencies (in the `vendor` directory)
make docker-test # Runs the tests
To contribute, just make your changes and send a Pull Request to the authy/authy-php repo.
You can find the full API documentation in the official documentation page.
Copyright (c) 2011-2020 Authy Inc.