If you want to play around with the PHP library, you can get up and running quickly with the PHP Connect Sample. This sample will start you with a little Laravel project that helps you with registration, authentication, and making a simple call to the service.
You can install the PHP SDK with Composer, either run composer require microsoft/microsoft-graph
, or edit your composer.json
file:
{
"require": {
"microsoft/microsoft-graph": "^1.5"
}
}
Register your application to use the Microsoft Graph API by using one of the following supported authentication portals:
- Microsoft Application Registration Portal (Recommended): Register a new application that authenticates using the v2.0 authentication endpoint. This endpoint authenticates both personal (Microsoft) and work or school (Azure Active Directory) accounts.
- Microsoft Azure Active Directory: Register a new application in your tenant's Active Directory to support work or school users for your tenant, or multiple tenants.
The Microsoft Graph SDK for PHP does not include any default authentication implementations. The thephpleague/oauth2-client
library will handle the OAuth2 flow for you and provide a usable token for querying the Graph.
To authenticate as an application you can use the Guzzle HTTP client, which comes preinstalled with this library, for example like this:
$guzzle = new \GuzzleHttp\Client();
$url = 'https://login.microsoftonline.com/' . $tenantId . '/oauth2/token?api-version=1.0';
$token = json_decode($guzzle->post($url, [
'form_params' => [
'client_id' => $clientId,
'client_secret' => $clientSecret,
'resource' => 'https://graph.microsoft.com/',
'grant_type' => 'client_credentials',
],
])->getBody()->getContents());
$accessToken = $token->access_token;
For an integrated example on how to use Oauth2 in a Laravel application and use the Graph, see the PHP Connect Sample.
The following is an example that shows how to call Microsoft Graph.
use Microsoft\Graph\Graph;
use Microsoft\Graph\Model;
class UsageExample
{
public function run()
{
$accessToken = 'xxx';
$graph = new Graph();
$graph->setAccessToken($accessToken);
$user = $graph->createRequest("GET", "/me")
->setReturnType(Model\User::class)
->execute();
echo "Hello, I am $user->getGivenName() ";
}
}
You can use the library with a proxy such as Fiddler or Charles Proxy to debug requests and responses as they come across the wire. Set the proxy port on the Graph object like this:
$graph->setProxyPort("localhost:8888");
Then, open your proxy client to view the requests & responses sent using the library.
This is especially helpful when the library does not return the results you expected to determine whether there are bugs in the API or this SDK. Therefore, you may be asked to provide this information when attempting to triage an issue you file.
Run
vendor/bin/phpunit --exclude-group functional
from the base directory.
The set of functional tests are meant to be run against a test account. Currently, the tests to do not restore state of the account.
View or log issues on the Issues tab in the repo.
Please read our Contributing guidelines carefully for advice on how to contribute to this repo.
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the MIT license.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.