For yesterday’s homework, you should have generated the following migration:

<?php use Phinx\Migration\AbstractMigration; class WebookUrl extends AbstractMigration { public function change() { $table = $this->table('comments'); $table ->addColumn('webhook_url', 'string', [ 'limit' => '255', 'null' => '1', 'default' => '', ]) ->save(); } } ?>

A couple other notes (while CakePHP 3 is still in beta):

Using the field unsigned is currently invalid. You can either remove those designations from your initial migration, or make them the inverse and use signed .

is currently invalid. You can either remove those designations from your initial migration, or make them the inverse and use . In order to properly disable the automatic id field that phinx does, you’ll need to remove the following from the initial schema $table instantiations: ->addColumn('id', 'integer', [ 'limit' => '11', 'null' => '', 'default' => '', ])

To actually start using migrations from now on, you should drop your existing tables (which is okay since we’re starting fresh): and run the following command:

bin/cake migrations migrate bin/cake orm_cache clear

You will also need to make the webhook_url to the $_accessible property in your src/Model/Entity/Issue.php file. You can do this manually (if you have customizations) or with the bake shell:

bin/cake bake model comments --force --no-table

In future tutorials, we’ll avoid these issues, but just keep this in mind for now.

Webhooks are actually pretty easy to setup. Whenever a comment is created, we’ll want to notify all other comment webhooks that the issue was updated. To do so, we can hook into the CommentsTable::afterSave() method.

A Table::afterSave() call takes the following arguments:

Event $event : The actual event that is occurring

: The actual event that is occurring Entity $entity : The entity that was just saved

: The entity that was just saved ArrayObject $options : An array of options that was passed into the Table::save() call.

If you don’t create a concrete afterSave() method, the event isn’t fired on the Table class, so unfortunately we can’t bind to the global event easily. Instead, we’ll fire a custom CommentsTable.afterSave event from our own custom afterSave() method:

public function afterSave(Event $event, Entity $entity, ArrayObject $options) { $this->dispatchEvent('CommentsTable.afterSave', compact('entity', 'options')); }

You also will want to include the following classes at the top of your table class:

use ArrayObject; use Cake\Event\Event; use Cake\Orm\Entity;

In the future, it may be possible to use custom bake events to insert elements into Table and Entity classes. Stay tuned for bake updates!

Now that we’ve fired our custom event, we can add a new event for it! What I like doing is centralizing my global events in an app/config/events.php file, so lets add the following line to the app/config/bootstrap.php file:

require __DIR__ . '/events.php';

Next, we’ll add the following event to our app/config/events.php file:

<?php use Cake\Event\Event; use Cake\Event\EventManager; use Cake\Network\Http\Client; use Cake\ORM\Entity; use Cake\ORM\TableRegistry; EventManager::instance()->attach(function (Event $event, Entity $entity, ArrayObject $options) { $table = TableRegistry::get('Comments'); $comments = $table->find('all')->where([ 'Comments.id !=' => $entity->id, 'Comments.issue_id' => $entity->issue_id, 'Comments.webhook_url IS NOT' => null, ]); foreach ($comments as $comment) { $data = $comment->toArray(); unset($data['email_address']); unset($data['webhook_url']); $http = new Client(); $http->post($comment->webhook_url, json_encode($data), [ 'type' => 'json' ]); } }, 'CommentsTable.afterSave'); ?>

A lot of new code. Lets disect this a bit:

When you want an arbitrary Table class, you can use TableRegistry::get() to retrieve it.

to retrieve it. The new ORM uses method chaining in order to change the query being used. Note that it is a lazy query, so you need to iterate over the result or call the methods count() , all() , first() , or firstOrFail() in order to execute the query. Consult the query builder docs for more details.

, , , or in order to execute the query. Consult the query builder docs for more details. Every entity has a toArray() method, which uses the Entity::visibleProperties() method to decide what to expose. You can limit this by adding fields to the $_hidden Entity property. Out of laziness, we didn’t use any entity features to remove the email_address field from the array output. See array/json conversion docs if you’d like to do so.

method, which uses the method to decide what to expose. You can limit this by adding fields to the Entity property. Out of laziness, we didn’t use any entity features to remove the field from the array output. See array/json conversion docs if you’d like to do so. Every entity is json serializable by default. The EntityTrait class - included in the Entity class - has a jsonSerialize method which calls toArray() . Pretty nifty.

method which calls . Pretty nifty. CakePHP includes a simple HttpClient that you can use to interact with external webservices. It’s quite useful. In our case, we’re specifying that we should post json to the api.

At this point, you’ll want to regenerate your src/Template/Issues/view.ctp file in order to add the webhook_url field to test. You can do so via the following command:

bin/cake bake view issues --force

Now all you need to do is test your integration. You can do so by creating a new issue and adding comments to that issue. If you want to generate a test url, I recommend using the excellent http://requestb.in/ to make a url that captures your response.

Homework Time!

There is no homework, it’s the weekend :) . Go forth and use your new knowledge to extend your app however you please.