silverstripe / silverstripe-omnipay

Silverstripe integration with Omnipay PHP payments library.
BSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" License
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SilverStripe Payments via Omnipay

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The aim of this module is to make it easy for developers to add online payments to their SilverStripe application. In a nutshell, it wraps the PHP Omnipay payments library and provides some additional functionality. To understand more about omnipay, see: https://github.com/thephpleague/omnipay

Requirements

Features

Compatible Payment Gateways

There are many gateways available, which you can install separately.

Searching packagist is useful: https://packagist.org/search/?q=omnipay

It is not too difficult to write your own gateway integration either, if needed.

Installation

Composer is currently the only supported way to set up this module:

composer require silverstripe/silverstripe-omnipay ^3@dev

You will also need to pull in your payment adapter of choice. Have a look at http://omnipay.thephpleague.com/gateways/official/ where the second column is the package name.

For example, if your site uses PayPal you would also need to run:

composer require omnipay/paypal

There's also short guide how to enable manual payments or PayPal Express available.

Configuration

Silverstripe Omnipay offers a lot of configuration options. A full list can be found in our dedicated configuration documentation.

Gateway naming conventions

The way gateways are named is dictated by the Omnipay module. Since there might be different gateways in one Omnipay-Payment-Driver, we need a way to address these via different names.

The rules are pretty simple: Class names beginning with a namespace marker (\) are left intact. Non-namespaced classes are expected to be in the \Omnipay namespace. In non-namespaced classes, underscores or slashes (\) are used to denote a specific gateway instance.

Examples:

And another example: Omnipay PayPal comes with three different gateway implementations: ExpressGateway, ProGateway and RestGateway. The gateway names for these gateways would be: PayPal_Express, PayPal_Pro and PayPal_Rest.

Please follow the rules above to choose the correct gateway name in your configuration files.

Throughout the documentation and examples of this module, you'll find the syntax with underscores. It's easier to read and less error-prone (escaping) than the syntax with namespace markers (\).

Usage

We have produced a comprehensive getting started guide in our documentation pages

The Payment Services and Service Factory

There are currently five payment services available, which map to methods exposed by Omnipay. Which one you can use in practice depends on the capabilities of the individual gateway. Some gateways will support all services, while some support only a few (eg. the "Manual" gateway doesn't support "purchase").

The services are:

Each of these services implements an initiate and a complete method. The initiate method is always required and initiates a service. Depending on how the gateway handles requests, you might also need the complete method.

This is the case with offsite payment forms, where initiate will redirect the user to the payment form and once he returns from the offsite form, complete will be called to finalize the payment.

Another (less common) case is, when the payment provider uses asynchronous notifications to confirm changes to payments.

While you can instantiate the services explicitly, the recommended approach is to use the ServiceFactory. The service factory allows easy customization of which classes should be instantiated for which intent. The service-factory can also automatically return an AuthorizeService or PurchaseService, depending on what was configured for the chosen Gateway.

The following constants are available to instantiate Services:

In code:

$payment = Payment::create()->init("PxPayGateway", 100, "NZD");

// The service will be a `PurchaseService`
$service = ServiceFactory::create()->getService($payment, ServiceFactory::INTENT_PURCHASE);

// Initiate the payment
$response = $service->initiate($data);

Passing correct data to the purchase function

The omnipay library has a defined set of parameters that need to be passed in. Here is a list of parameters that you should map your data to:

transactionId
firstName
lastName
email
company
billingAddress1
billingAddress2
billingCity
billingPostcode
billingState
billingCountry
billingPhone
shippingAddress1
shippingAddress2
shippingCity
shippingPostcode
shippingState
shippingCountry
shippingPhone

Note: transactionId can be a reference that identifies the thing you are paying for, such as an order reference id. It usually shows up on bank statements for reconciliation purposes, but ultimately depends how the gateway uses it.

Security

When customizing the payment flow (e.g. subclassing PaymentForm or OrderProcessor), please take care to only pass whitelisted user input to PurchaseService and the underlying omnipay gateways. The easiest way to ensure no arbitrary data can be injected is by using Form->getData() rather than acessing $_REQUEST directly, since this will only return you data for fields originally defined in the form.

Debugging payments

Please read the logging documentation on how to set up logging.

Renaming gateways and translation

You can change the front-end visible name of a gateway using the translation system. The gateway name must match what you entered in the allowed_gateways YAML config.

For example, inside mysite/lang/en.yml:

en:
  Gateway:
    Paystation_Hosted: "Credit Card"
    PayPal_Express: "PayPal"

This approach can also be used to provide different translations. For further information about module translations, please read docs/en/Translating.md

Further Documentation

https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-omnipay/blob/master/docs/en/index.md