PSX is an innovative PHP framework dedicated to build fully typed REST APIs.
It helps to improve the API development process by providing the following features:
- Fully typed controller classes
- Client SDK generator
- OpenAPI generator
- Generate model classes based on a TypeSchema specification
- Uses the Symfony DI container component
- Works with Doctrine DBAL and migrations
- Type-safe database interaction
- Endpoint integration testing
More information about PSX at phpsx.org.
To install the framework you can simply install this demo API project.
composer create-project psx/psx .
This repository contains already a fully working demo API build with PSX which you can use as a starting point and to better understand how PSX works. In the following we go based on the demo files through the important concepts of PSX.
A controller is the entrypoint of your app which gets invoked by the framework. A controller is a simple PHP class which
contains attributes to make specific methods invokable. In the following example we have a simple controller with a
getAll
and create
method which gets invoked if a GET
or POST
request arrives at the /population
endpoint s.
class Population extends ControllerAbstract
{
#[Get]
#[Path('/population')]
public function getAll(#[Query] ?int $startIndex = null, #[Query] ?int $count = null): Model\PopulationCollection
{
return $this->populationTable->getCollection($startIndex, $count);
}
#[Post]
#[Path('/population')]
public function create(#[Body] Model\Population $payload): Model\Message
{
$id = $this->populationService->create($payload);
$message = new Model\Message();
$message->setSuccess(true);
$message->setMessage('Population record successfully created');
$message->setId($id);
return $message;
}
}
One key concept of PSX is that the arguments of your exposed controller methods are mapped to values of the incoming
HTTP request, at the getAll
method the $startIndex
and $count
parameter are mapped to a query parameter from the
HTTP request, at the create
method the $payload
parameter is mapped to the request body. If you are familiar with
Spring or NestJS you already know this approach.
PSX uses the symfony DI container, all controller classes are automatically loaded through auto-wiring. This means you can simply define at the constructor all dependencies which are needed for your controller. Please take a look at the container.php if you want to customize which classes are loaded.
One of the greatest feature of PSX is that it can automatically generate a client SDK for the API which you have build. To generate the client SDK simply run the following command.
php bin/psx generate:sdk
This writes the SDK to the output/
folder. By default, the command generates the TypeScript SDK. Based on the
controller defined above PSX would generate the following client SDK.
const client = new Client(...);
client.population().getAll(startIndex?: number, count?: number);
client.population().create(payload: Population);
The client then contains the same schemas which are also defined at the backend but converted to TypeScript. This means you are using exactly the same schema at the backend and frontend. If you change your schema at the backend you can then regenerate the SDK and you will directly see all problems with your new schema. In this sense PSX provides similar features like tRPC but in a language neutral way.
The generate:sdk
command accepts as argument a format which defines the type of SDK which is generated. The following
list shows some supported formats.
client-php
client-typescript
spec-openapi
To enable this SDK generation PSX needs to understand the structure of the incoming or outgoing JSON payload. This is done by using DTO models for every argument and return type. PSX contains a model generator which allows you to generate those models based on a TypeSchema specification. Please take a look at the typeschema.json file which contains the models for our demo API. You can generate all models using the following command s.
php bin/psx generate:model
The command writes all models to the src/Model
folder. You can then use those models at the controller classes.
PSX recommends to move your actual business logic into a separate service class. The controller then simply invokes
methods from your service. While this is not mandatory it improves your code quality since you can easily use this
service also in another context. All classes under the service/
folder are automatically loaded thus you can specify
all dependencies through simple constructor injection.
PSX uses doctrine migrations which helps to manage your database schema. To generate a new migration you can simply run s.
php bin/psx migrations:generate
This would create a new migration file at src/Migrations
. You can then model your table schema at this migration file.
After this you can run the migrate
command to execute all needed database changes s.
php bin/psx migrations:migrate
Please take a look at the doctrine migrations project for more information how the migration system works.
PSX provides a command which generates table and row classes to interact with your database in a type-safe way. This command should be executed after you have executed all your migrations.
php bin/psx generate:table
This command then writes all files to the src/Table
folder.
Note in general we think that for API development an ORM is not needed, but it would be easy possible to integrate any existing ORM into PSX.
PSX provides a way to easily build an integration test for every controller endpoint. The following extract shows the
test which requests the /population
endpoint and simply compares the JSON payload with an existing JSON structure.
public function testGetAll(): void
{
$response = $this->sendRequest('/population', 'GET');
$actual = (string) $response->getBody();
$expect = file_get_contents(__DIR__ . '/resources/collection.json');
$this->assertEquals(200, $response->getStatusCode(), $actual);
$this->assertJsonStringEqualsJsonString($expect, $actual, $actual);
}
Through this you can easily build integration tests for every endpoint. Please take a look at the
tests/Controller/PopulationTest.php
file to see the complete test case.
Besides the framework PSX is build on various PHP components. These components are independent of the framework and can also be used in another context. The following list contains the most notable packages:
- psx/api
Parse and generate API specification formats - psx/schema
Parse and generate data schema formats - psx/data
Data processing library to read and write POPOs in different formats - psx/sql
Generate type-safe PHP classes from your database