feed-io is a PHP library built to consume and serve news feeds. It features:
- JSONFeed / Atom / RSS read and write support
- Feeds auto-discovery through HTML headers
- a Command line interface to discover and read feeds
- PSR-7 Response generation with accurate cache headers
- HTTP Headers support when reading feeds in order to save network traffic
- Detection of the format (RSS / Atom) when reading feeds
- Enclosure support to handle external medias like audio content
- Feed logo support (RSS + Atom)
- PSR compliant logging
- DateTime detection and conversion
- A generic HTTP ClientInterface
- Guzzle Client integration
This library is highly extensible and is designed to adapt to many situations, so if you don't find a solution through the documentation feel free to ask in the discussions.
Use Composer to add feed-io into your project's requirements :
composer require debril/feed-io
feed-io | PHP |
---|---|
4.x | 7.1+ |
5.0 | 8.0+ |
feed-io 4 requires PHP 7.1+, feed-io 5 requires PHP 8.0+. All versions relies on psr/log
and guzzle
. it suggests monolog
for logging. Monolog is not the only library suitable to handle feed-io's logs, you can use any PSR/Log compliant library instead.
Let's suppose you installed feed-io using Composer, you can use its command line client to read feeds from your terminal :
./vendor/bin/feedio read http://php.net/feed.atom
You can specify the number of items you want to read using the --count option. The instruction below will display the latest item :
./vendor/bin/feedio read -c 1 http://php.net/feed.atom
feed-io is designed to read feeds across the internet and to publish your own. Its main class is FeedIo :
// create a simple FeedIo instance
$feedIo = \FeedIo\Factory::create()->getFeedIo();
// read a feed
$result = $feedIo->read($url);
// get title
$feedTitle = $result->getFeed()->getTitle();
// iterate through items
foreach( $result->getFeed() as $item ) {
echo $item->getTitle();
}
In order to save bandwidth, feed-io estimates the next time it will be relevant to read the feed and get new items from it.
$nextUpdate = $result->getNextUpdate();
echo "computed next update: {$nextUpdate->format(\DATE_ATOM)}";
// you may need to access the statistics
$updateStats = $result->getUpdateStats();
echo "average interval in seconds: {$updateStats->getAverageInterval()}";
feed-io calculates the next update time by first detecting if the feed was active in the last 7 days and if not we consider it as sleepy. The next update date for a sleepy feed is set to the next day at the same time. If the feed isn't sleepy we use the average interval and the median interval by adding those intervals to the feed's last modified date and compare the result to the current time. If the result is in the future, then it's returned as the next update time. If none of them are in the future, we considered the feed will be updated quite soon, so the next update time is one hour later from the moment of the calculation.
Please note: the fixed delays for sleepy and closed to be updated feeds can be set through Result::getNextUpdate()
arguments, see Result for more details.
A web page can refer to one or more feeds in its headers, feed-io provides a way to discover them :
$feedIo = \FeedIo\Factory::create()->getFeedIo();
$feeds = $feedIo->discover($url);
foreach( $feeds as $feed ) {
echo "discovered feed : {$feed}";
}
Or you can use feed-io's command line :
./vendor/bin/feedio discover https://a-website.org
You'll get all discovered feeds in the output.
// build the feed
$feed = new FeedIo\Feed;
$feed->setTitle('...');
// convert it into Atom
$atomString = $feedIo->toAtom($feed);
// or ...
$atomString = $feedIo->format($feed, 'atom');
$feed = new FeedIo\Feed;
$feed->setTitle('...');
$styleSheet = new StyleSheet('http://url-of-the-xsl-stylesheet.xsl');
$feed->setStyleSheet($styleSheet);
// build the feed
$feed = new FeedIo\Feed;
$feed->setTitle('...');
$item = $feed->newItem();
// add namespaces
$feed->setNS(
'itunes', //namespace
'http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd' //dtd for the namespace
);
$feed->set('itunes,title', 'Sample Title'); //OR any other element defined in the namespace.
$item->addElement('itunes:category', 'Education');
// build the media
$media = new \FeedIo\Feed\Item\Media
$media->setUrl('http://yourdomain.tld/medias/some-podcast.mp3');
$media->setType('audio/mpeg');
// add it to the item
$item->addMedia($media);
$feed->add($item);
You can turn a \FeedIo\FeedInstance
directly into a PSR-7 valid response using \FeedIo\FeedIo::getPsrResponse()
:
$feed = new \FeedIo\Feed;
// feed the beast ...
$item = new \FeedIo\Feed\Item;
$item->set ...
$feed->add($item);
$atomResponse = $feedIo->getPsrResponse($feed, 'atom');
$jsonResponse = $feedIo->getPsrResponse($feed, 'json');
We saw in the reading section that to get a simple FeedIo
instance we can simply call the Factory
statically and let it return a fresh FeedIo
composed of the main dependencies it needs to work. The problem is that we may want to inject configuration to its underlying components, such as configuring Guzzle to ignore SSL errors.
For that, we will inject the configuration through Factory::create()
parameters, first one being for the logging system, and the second one for the HTTP Client (well, Guzzle).
A few lines above, we talked about ignoring ssl errors, let's see how to configure Guzzle to do this:
$feedIo = \FeedIo\Factory::create(
['builder' => 'NullLogger'], // assuming you want feed-io to keep quiet
['builder' => 'GuzzleClient', 'config' => ['verify' => false]]
)->getFeedIo();
It's important to specify the "builder", as it's the class that will be in charge of actually building the instance.
feed-io natively supports PSR-3 logging, you can activate it by choosing a 'builder' in the factory :
$feedIo = \FeedIo\Factory::create(['builder' => 'monolog'])->getFeedIo();
feed-io only provides a builder to create Monolog\Logger instances. You can write your own, as long as the Builder implements BuilderInterface.
To create a new FeedIo instance you only need to inject two dependencies :
- an HTTP Client implementing FeedIo\Adapter\ClientInterface. It can be wrapper for an external library like FeedIo\Adapter\Guzzle\Client
- a PSR-3 logger implementing Psr\Log\LoggerInterface
// first dependency : the HTTP client
// here we use Guzzle as a dependency for the client
$guzzle = new GuzzleHttp\Client();
// Guzzle is wrapped in this adapter which is a FeedIo\Adapter\ClientInterface implementation
$client = new FeedIo\Adapter\Guzzle\Client($guzzle);
// second dependency : a PSR-3 logger
$logger = new Psr\Log\NullLogger();
// now create FeedIo's instance
$feedIo = new FeedIo\FeedIo($client, $logger);
Another example with Monolog configured to write on the standard output :
use FeedIo\FeedIo;
use FeedIo\Adapter\Guzzle\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Client as GuzzleClient;
use Monolog\Logger;
use Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler;
$client = new Client(new GuzzleClient());
$logger = new Logger('default', [new StreamHandler('php://stdout')]);
$feedIo = new FeedIo($client, $logger);
You can configure Guzzle before injecting it to FeedIo
:
use FeedIo\FeedIo;
use FeedIo\Adapter\Guzzle\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Client as GuzzleClient;
use \Psr\Log\NullLogger;
// We want to timeout after 3 seconds
$guzzle = new GuzzleClient(['timeout' => 3]);
$client = new Client($guzzle);
$logger = new NullLogger();
$feedIo = new \FeedIo\FeedIo($client, $logger);
Please read Guzzle's documentation to get more information about its configuration.
To prevent your application from hitting the same feeds multiple times, you can inject Kevin Rob's cache middleware into Guzzle's instance :
use FeedIo\FeedIo;
use FeedIo\Adapter\Guzzle\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Client As GuzzleClient;
use GuzzleHttp\HandlerStack;
use Kevinrob\GuzzleCache\CacheMiddleware;
use Psr\Log\NullLogger;
// Create default HandlerStack
$stack = HandlerStack::create();
// Add this middleware to the top with `push`
$stack->push(new CacheMiddleware(), 'cache');
// Initialize the client with the handler option
$guzzle = new GuzzleClient(['handler' => $stack]);
$client = new Client($guzzle);
$logger = new NullLogger();
$feedIo = new \FeedIo\FeedIo($client, $logger);
As feeds' content may vary often, caching may result in unwanted behaviors.
You can inject any Logger you want as long as it implements Psr\Log\LoggerInterface
. Monolog does, but it's not the only library : https://packagist.org/providers/psr/log-implementation
use FeedIo\FeedIo;
use FeedIo\Adapter\Guzzle\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Client as GuzzleClient;
use Custom\Logger;
$client = new Client(new GuzzleClient());
$logger = new Logger();
$feedIo = new FeedIo($client, $logger);
Warning : it is highly recommended to use the default Guzzle Client integration.
If you really want to use another library to read feeds, you need to create your own FeedIo\Adapter\ClientInterface
class to embed interactions with the library :
use FeedIo\FeedIo;
use Custom\Adapter\Client;
use Library\Client as LibraryClient;
use Psr\Log\NullLogger;
$client = new Client(new LibraryClient());
$logger = new NullLogger();
$feedIo = new FeedIo($client, $logger);
Choosing between using the Factory or build FeedIo
without it is a question you must ask yourself at some point of your project. The Factory is mainly designed to let you use feed-io with the lesser efforts and get your first results in a small amount of time. However, it doesn't let you benefit of all Monolog's and Guzzle's features, which could be annoying. Dependency injection will also let you choose another library to handle logs if you need to.
Sometimes you have to consume feeds in which the timezone is missing from the dates. In some use-cases, you may need to specify the feed's timezone to get an accurate value, so feed-io offers a workaround for that :
$feedIo->getDateTimeBuilder()->setFeedTimezone(new \DateTimeZone($feedTimezone));
$result = $feedIo->read($feedUrl);
$feedIo->getDateTimeBuilder()->resetFeedTimezone();
Don't forget to reset feedTimezone
after fetching the result, or you'll end up with all feeds located in the same timezone.
Most of feed-io's code was written using PHP Storm courtesy of Jetbrains.