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WorldPay

A PHP 5.4+ wrapper for the WorldPay payment gateway.

Build Status Code Coverage Scrutinizer Code Quality

WorldPay is an easy to use payment gateway that is widely recognised and trusted. However, just about everything about the service is out of date. One of the most frustrating things about using WorldPay is the woeful lack of good documentation or official libraries. The result of this is, WorldPay's documentation is fragmented or incomplete and code examples are completely inadequate.

WorldPay also seems to make everything a lot more complicated than it needs to be.

I decided to make this package to abstract a lot of these complications away and instead provide a clear and easy to use API for creating WorldPay requests and listening for responses. This package will also be well unit tested and available through PHP Composer as a framework agnostic package.

Note: If you are looking to integrate many payment gateways into your application, and you aren't going to be using all of WorldPay's features (e.g FuturePay or custom parameters) you should probably use Omnipay instead.

Installation

Add philipbrown/worldpay as a requirement to composer.json:

{
  "require": {
    "philipbrown/worldpay": "~3.0"
  }
}

Update your packages with composer update.

How does WorldPay work?

Creating a new payment using the WorldPay gateway basically follows these three steps:

  1. You create a Request with information about the transaction. This could be as little as the basic details of the transaction all the way up to a complete profile of your customer.
  2. The customer is redirected to WorldPay's secure servers to enter their payment details. No customer details are ever stored on your server.
  3. WorldPay will then send an optional Response back to your server as a callback. You can use this callback to update your database or set any processes you need to run after the transaction has been completed.

This WorldPay package allows you to easily create a new Request and capture the resulting Response

WorldPay Environments, Routes and Callbacks

By default, WorldPay has development and production environments. This allows you to test your application using the development environment without having to process real payments.

However, it is often the case that you need to have multiple environments beyond just development and production.

For example, you might want to have a local environment or a test environment that do not actually hit the WorldPay servers.

If you send a WorldPay request in the production environment, your request body must include a testMode parameter of 0. In every other environment, this parameter must be set to 100.

To set your environment:

use PhilipBrown\WorldPay\Environment;

$env = Environment::set('production');
$env->asInt(); // 0

$env = Environment::set('development');
$env->asInt(); // 100

$env = Environment::set('local');
$env->asInt(); // 100

You must state where you want the request to be sent to by creating a new route and passing it to the request.

Installation and Cart Ids

When you create a new installation in your WorldPay account, it will be automatically assigned an instId. When making a request to WorldPay you need to provide this id.

WorldPay also allows you to set a cartId that will be attached to the request. This will make it easier to dertermine where transactions originate from.

Currencies

When you send a request to WorldPay you are required to include a string representation of the currency of the transaction. A list of these currencies can be found under /src/currencies.php.

To set the currency:

use PhilipBrown\WorldPay\Currency;

$currency = Currency::set('GBP');

Transaction Value

A request should include the total value of the transaction as a single amount. This should be set as an string value.

Transaction Secret

To prevent unauthorised tampering of transaction requests, WorldPay allows you to set a secret key. This key is then used as part of the hashing of the transaction signature that you must send to WorldPay for each request.

To set a secret, go into your WorldPay Account and choose Installations from the menu.

Next choose your installation and complete the field marked MD5 secret for transactions.

Callback Password

After a transaction, WorldPay will (optionally) send a callback request to your server. This allows you to run any after-transaction processes you might have.

In order to authenticate this request, WorldPay will include a callback password in the body of the request. You can set this password through your installation dashboard in your merchant account.

Creating a Request

To send a request to WorldPay, create a new instance of PhilipBrown\WorldPay\Request:

$request = new Request(
  Environment::set('testing'),          // Environment
  '123',                                // InstId
  'My shop',                            // CartId
  'my secret',                          // Secret
  '10.00',                              // Value
  Currency::set('GBP'),                 // Currency
  http://shop.test/callbacks/worldpay', // Route
  ['name' => 'Philip Brown']            // Data
);

Setting the Signature Fields

By default you will be required to include instId, cartId, currency, amount fields in your transaction signature hash.

You can add additional fields to the signature by passing an array of field names to the setSignatureFields() method:

$request->setSignatureFields(['name']);

Sending the request to WorldPay

There are two ways you can send a request to WorldPay.

Firstly, you can automatically redirect the customer straight to WorldPay once you have created the Request object:

$request->send();

This will return an instance of Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\RedirectResponse.

Secondly, you can prepare the request so you can display a confirmation page to the customer before they are redirected to WorldPay. This confirmation page must have a hidden form with a submit button that will take the customer to WorldPay:

$body = $request->prepare();

This will return an instance of PhilipBrown\WorldPay\Body, which is an immutable object.

You can now create a confirmation page like the one below:

<h1>Confirm your purchase</h1>

<p>Thank you {{ $customer->first_name }} for choosing to buy with us.</p>
<p>To confirm your purchase click the button below.</p>
<p>You will be taken to WorldPay's secure server where you can complete your transaction.</p>

<form action="{{ $body->route }}" method="POST">
  @foreach ($body->data as $key => $value)
    <input type="hidden" name="{{ $key }}" value="{{ $value }}">
  @endforeach
  <input type="hidden" name="signature" value="{{ $body->signature }}">
  <input type="submit" value="Complete your purchase!">
</form>

Accepting a Response

WorldPay can optionally send you a payment response whenever a transaction occurs. This payment response is sent as a POST request to an endpoint on your server.

WorldPay will include your callback password in the body of the response so that you can authenticate that the request is actually from WorldPay.

To create a new response, instantiate a new instance of Response, pass it your callback password and the body of the POST request:

use PhilipBrown\WorldPay\Response;

$response = new Response('qwerty', $_POST);

The Response is an immutable object that gives you access to the body of the POST request:

echo $response->name; // 'Philip Brown'

The Response object also has a number of helper methods:

// Asserts the response is from WorldPay
$response->isValid();

// Asserts the transaction was successful
$response->isSuccess();

// Asserts the transaction was cancelled
$response->isCancelled();

// Asserts the transaction was in the production environment
$response->isProduction();

// Asserts the transaction was in the development environment
$response->isDevelopment();

All of the above methods return a bool response.