FAQ

Why should I use Guzzle?

Guzzle makes it easy to send HTTP requests and super simple to integrate with web services. Guzzle manages things like persistent connections, represents query strings as collections, makes it simple to send streaming POST requests with fields and files, and abstracts away the underlying HTTP transport layer. By providing an object oriented interface for HTTP clients, requests, responses, headers, and message bodies, Guzzle makes it so that you no longer need to fool around with cURL options, stream contexts, or sockets.

Asynchronous and Synchronous Requests

Guzzle allows you to send both asynchronous and synchronous requests using the same interface and no direct dependency on an event loop. This flexibility allows Guzzle to send an HTTP request using the most appropriate HTTP handler based on the request being sent. For example, when sending synchronous requests, Guzzle will by default send requests using cURL easy handles to ensure you’re using the fastest possible method for serially transferring HTTP requests. When sending asynchronous requests, Guzzle might use cURL’s multi interface or any other asynchronous handler you configure. When you request streaming data, Guzzle will by default use PHP’s stream wrapper.

Streams

Request and response message bodies use Guzzle Streams, allowing you to stream data without needing to load it all into memory. Guzzle’s stream layer provides a large suite of functionality:

  • You can modify streams at runtime using custom or a number of pre-made decorators.
  • You can emit progress events as data is read from a stream.
  • You can validate the integrity of a stream using a rolling hash as data is read from a stream.

Event System and Plugins

Guzzle’s event system allows you to completely modify the behavior of a client or request at runtime to cater them for any API. You can send a request with a client, and the client can do things like automatically retry your request if it fails, automatically redirect, log HTTP messages that are sent over the wire, emit progress events as data is uploaded and downloaded, sign requests using OAuth 1.0, verify the integrity of messages before and after they are sent over the wire, and anything else you might need.

Testable

Another important aspect of Guzzle is that it’s really easy to test clients. You can mock HTTP responses and when testing an handler implementation, Guzzle provides a mock node.js web server.

Ecosystem

Guzzle has a large ecosystem of plugins, including service descriptions which allows you to abstract web services using service descriptions. These service descriptions define how to serialize an HTTP request and how to parse an HTTP response into a more meaningful model object.

  • Guzzle Command: Provides the building blocks for service description abstraction.
  • Guzzle Services: Provides an implementation of “Guzzle Command” that utilizes Guzzle’s service description format.

Does Guzzle require cURL?

No. Guzzle can use any HTTP handler to send requests. This means that Guzzle can be used with cURL, PHP’s stream wrapper, sockets, and non-blocking libraries like React. You just need to configure a RingPHP handler to use a different method of sending requests.

Note

Guzzle has historically only utilized cURL to send HTTP requests. cURL is an amazing HTTP client (arguably the best), and Guzzle will continue to use it by default when it is available. It is rare, but some developers don’t have cURL installed on their systems or run into version specific issues. By allowing swappable HTTP handlers, Guzzle is now much more customizable and able to adapt to fit the needs of more developers.

Can Guzzle send asynchronous requests?

Yes. Pass the future true request option to a request to send it asynchronously. Guzzle will then return a GuzzleHttp\Message\FutureResponse object that can be used synchronously by accessing the response object like a normal response, and it can be used asynchronously using a promise that is notified when the response is resolved with a real response or rejected with an exception.

$request = $client->createRequest('GET', ['future' => true]);
$client->send($request)->then(function ($response) {
    echo 'Got a response! ' . $response;
});

You can force an asynchronous response to complete using the wait() method of a response.

$request = $client->createRequest('GET', ['future' => true]);
$futureResponse = $client->send($request);
$futureResponse->wait();

How can I add custom cURL options?

cURL offer a huge number of customizable options. While Guzzle normalizes many of these options across different handlers, there are times when you need to set custom cURL options. This can be accomplished by passing an associative array of cURL settings in the curl key of the config request option.

For example, let’s say you need to customize the outgoing network interface used with a client.

$client->get('/', [
    'config' => [
        'curl' => [
            CURLOPT_INTERFACE => 'xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx'
        ]
    ]
]);

How can I add custom stream context options?

You can pass custom stream context options using the stream_context key of the config request option. The stream_context array is an associative array where each key is a PHP transport, and each value is an associative array of transport options.

For example, let’s say you need to customize the outgoing network interface used with a client and allow self-signed certificates.

$client->get('/', [
    'stream' => true,
    'config' => [
        'stream_context' => [
            'ssl' => [
                'allow_self_signed' => true
            ],
            'socket' => [
                'bindto' => 'xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx'
            ]
        ]
    ]
]);

Why am I getting an SSL verification error?

You need to specify the path on disk to the CA bundle used by Guzzle for verifying the peer certificate. See verify.

What is this Maximum function nesting error?

Maximum function nesting level of ‘100’ reached, aborting

You could run into this error if you have the XDebug extension installed and you execute a lot of requests in callbacks. This error message comes specifically from the XDebug extension. PHP itself does not have a function nesting limit. Change this setting in your php.ini to increase the limit:

xdebug.max_nesting_level = 1000

Why am I getting a 417 error response?

This can occur for a number of reasons, but if you are sending PUT, POST, or PATCH requests with an Expect: 100-Continue header, a server that does not support this header will return a 417 response. You can work around this by setting the expect request option to false:

$client = new GuzzleHttp\Client();

// Disable the expect header on a single request
$response = $client->put('/', [], 'the body', [
    'expect' => false
]);

// Disable the expect header on all client requests
$client->setDefaultOption('expect', false)