PHP Mapping for Operations

On this page:

Basic PHP Mapping for Operations

As we saw in the PHP mapping for interfaces, for each operation on an interface, a proxy object narrowed to that type supports a corresponding method with the same name. To invoke an operation, you call it via the proxy. For example, here is part of the definitions for our file system:

Slice
module Filesystem
{
    interface Node
    {
        idempotent string name();
    }
    // ...
}

The name operation returns a value of type string. Given a proxy to an object of type Node, the client can invoke the operation as follows:

PHP
$node = ...             // Initialize proxy
$name = $node->name();  // Get name via RPC

Normal and idempotent Operations in PHP

You can add an idempotent qualifier to a Slice operation. As far as the signature for the corresponding proxy method is concerned, idempotent has no effect.

Passing Parameters in PHP

In-Parameters in PHP

The PHP mapping for in parameters guarantees that the value of a parameter will not be changed by the invocation.

Here is an interface with operations that pass parameters of various types from client to server:

Slice
struct NumberAndString
{
    int x;
    string str;
}

sequence<string> StringSeq;

dictionary<long, StringSeq> StringTable;

interface ClientToServer
{
    void op1(int i, float f, bool b, string s);
    void op2(NumberAndString ns, StringSeq ss, StringTable st);
    void op3(ClientToServer* proxy);
}

A proxy object narrowed to the ClientToServer interface supports the following methods:

PHP
function op1($i, $f, $b, $s, $context=null);
function op2($ns, $ss, $st, $context=null);
function op3($proxy, $context=null);

Given a proxy to a ClientToServer interface, the client code can pass parameters as in the following example:

PHP
$p = ...                                 // Get proxy...

$p->op1(42, 3.14, true, "Hello world!"); // Pass simple literals

$i = 42;
$f = 3.14;
$b = true;
$s = "Hello world!";
$p->op1($i, $f, $b, $s);                 // Pass simple variables

$ns = new NumberAndString;
$ns->x = 42;
$ns->str = "The Answer";
$ss = array("Hello world!");
$st = array();
$st[0] = $ns;
$p->op2($ns, $ss, $st);                  // Pass complex variables

$p->op3($p);                             // Pass proxy

Out-Parameters in PHP

Out parameters are passed by reference. Here is the same Slice definition we saw earlier, but this time with all parameters being passed in the out direction:

Slice
struct NumberAndString
{
    int x;
    string str;
}

sequence<string> StringSeq;

dictionary<long, StringSeq> StringTable;

interface ServerToClient
{
    int op1(out float f, out bool b, out string s);
    void op2(out NumberAndString ns,
             out StringSeq ss,
             out StringTable st);
    void op3(out ServerToClient* proxy);
}

The PHP mapping looks the same as it did for the in-parameters version:

PHP
function op1($i, $f, $b, $s, $context=null);
function op2($ns, $ss, $st, $context=null);
function op3($proxy, $context=null);

Given a proxy to a ServerToClient interface, the client code can receive the results as in the following example:

PHP
$p = ...                 // Get proxy...
$p->op1($i, $f, $b, $s);
$p->op2($ns, $ss, $st);
$p->op3($stcp);

Note that it is not necessary to use the reference operator (&) before each argument because the Ice run time forces each out parameter to have reference semantics.

Parameter Type Mismatches in PHP

The Ice run time performs validation on the arguments to a proxy invocation and reports any type mismatches as InvalidArgumentException.

Null Parameters in PHP

Some Slice types naturally have "empty" or "not there" semantics. Specifically, sequences, dictionaries, and strings all can be null, but the corresponding Slice types do not have the concept of a null value. To make life with these types easier, whenever you pass null as a parameter or return value of type sequence, dictionary, or string, the Ice run time automatically sends an empty sequence, dictionary, or string to the receiver.

This behavior is useful as a convenience feature: especially for deeply-nested data types, members that are sequences, dictionaries, or strings automatically arrive as an empty value at the receiving end. This saves you having to explicitly initialize, for example, every string element in a large sequence before sending the sequence in order to avoid a run-time error. Note that using null parameters in this way does not create null semantics for Slice sequences, dictionaries, or strings. As far as the object model is concerned, these do not exist (only empty sequences, dictionaries, and strings do). For example, it makes no difference to the receiver whether you send a string as null or as an empty string: either way, the receiver sees an empty string.

Optional Parameters in PHP

Optional parameters use the same mapping as required parameters. The only difference is that \Ice\None can be passed as the value of an optional parameter or return value. Consider the following operation:

Slice
optional(1) int execute(optional(2) string params, out optional(3) float value);

A client can invoke this operation as shown below:

PHP
$i = $proxy->execute("--file log.txt", $v);
$i = $proxy->execute(\Ice\None, $v);
 
if($v != Ice_Unset)
{
    echo "value = " . $v . "\n";
}

A well-behaved program must always compare an optional parameter to \Ice\None prior to using its value. Keep in mind that the \Ice\None marker value has different semantics than null. Since null is a legal value for certain Slice types, the Ice run time requires a separate marker value so that it can determine whether an optional parameter is set. An optional parameter set to null is considered to be set. If you need to distinguish between an unset parameter and a parameter set to null, you can do so as follows:

PHP
if($optionalParam == \Ice\None)
{
    echo "optionalParam is unset\n";
}
else if($optionalParam == null)
{
    echo "optionalParam is null\n";
}
else
{
    echo "optionalParam = " . $optionalParam . "\n";
}

Exception Handling in PHP

Any operation invocation may throw a run-time exception and, if the operation has an exception specification, may also throw user exceptions. Suppose we have the following simple interface:

Slice
exception Tantrum
{
    string reason;
}

interface Child
{
    void askToCleanUp() throws Tantrum;
}

Slice exceptions are thrown as PHP exceptions, so you can simply enclose one or more operation invocations in a try-catch block:

PHP
$child = ...        // Get child proxy...

try
{
    $child->askToCleanUp();
}
catch(Tantrum $t)
{
    echo "The child says: " . $t->reason . "\n";
}

Typically, you will catch only a few exceptions of specific interest around an operation invocation; other exceptions, such as unexpected run-time errors, will usually be handled by exception handlers higher in the hierarchy. For example:

PHP
try
{
    $child = ...          // Get child proxy...
    try
    {
        $child->askToCleanUp();
        $child->praise(); // Give positive feedback...
    }
    catch(Tantrum $t)
    {
        echo "The child says: " . $t->reason . "\n";
        $child->scold();  // Recover from error...
    }
}
catch(\Ice\LocalException $ex)
{
    echo $ex->__toString() . "\n";
}

See Also