How can I detect which request type was used (GET, POST, PUT or DELETE) in PHP?
13 Answers
By using
$_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']
Example
if ($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] === 'POST') {
// The request is using the POST method
}
For more details please see the documentation for the $_SERVER variable.
REST in PHP can be done pretty simple. Create http://example.com/test.php (outlined below). Use this for REST calls, e.g. http://example.com/test.php/testing/123/hello. This works with Apache and Lighttpd out of the box, and no rewrite rules are needed.
<?php
$method = $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'];
$request = explode("/", substr(@$_SERVER['PATH_INFO'], 1));
switch ($method) {
case 'PUT':
do_something_with_put($request);
break;
case 'POST':
do_something_with_post($request);
break;
case 'GET':
do_something_with_get($request);
break;
default:
handle_error($request);
break;
}
Detecting the HTTP method or so called REQUEST METHOD
can be done using the following code snippet.
$method = $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'];
if ($method == 'POST'){
// Method is POST
} elseif ($method == 'GET'){
// Method is GET
} elseif ($method == 'PUT'){
// Method is PUT
} elseif ($method == 'DELETE'){
// Method is DELETE
} else {
// Method unknown
}
You could also do it using a switch
if you prefer this over the if-else
statement.
If a method other than GET
or POST
is required in an HTML form, this is often solved using a hidden field in the form.
<!-- DELETE method -->
<form action='' method='POST'>
<input type="hidden" name'_METHOD' value="DELETE">
</form>
<!-- PUT method -->
<form action='' method='POST'>
<input type="hidden" name'_METHOD' value="PUT">
</form>
For more information regarding HTTP methods I would like to refer to the following StackOverflow question:
We can also use the input_filter to detect the request method while also providing security through input sanitation.
$request = filter_input(INPUT_SERVER, 'REQUEST_METHOD', FILTER_SANITIZE_ENCODED);
Since this is about REST, just getting the request method from the server is not enough. You also need to receive RESTful route parameters. The reason for separating RESTful parameters and GET/POST/PUT parameters is that a resource needs to have its own unique URL for identification.
Here's one way of implementing RESTful routes in PHP using Slim:
https://github.com/codeguy/Slim
$app = new \Slim\Slim();
$app->get('/hello/:name', function ($name) {
echo "Hello, $name";
});
$app->run();
And configure the server accordingly.
Here's another example using AltoRouter:
https://github.com/dannyvankooten/AltoRouter
$router = new AltoRouter();
$router->setBasePath('/AltoRouter'); // (optional) the subdir AltoRouter lives in
// mapping routes
$router->map('GET|POST','/', 'home#index', 'home');
$router->map('GET','/users', array('c' => 'UserController', 'a' => 'ListAction'));
$router->map('GET','/users/[i:id]', 'users#show', 'users_show');
$router->map('POST','/users/[i:id]/[delete|update:action]', 'usersController#doAction', 'users_do');
It is Very Simple just use $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'];
Example:
<?php
$method = $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'];
switch ($method) {
case 'GET':
//Here Handle GET Request
break;
case 'POST':
//Here Handle POST Request
break;
case 'DELETE':
//Here Handle DELETE Request
break;
case 'PUT':
//Here Handle PUT Request
break;
}
?>
In core php you can do like this :
<?php
$method = $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'];
switch ($method) {
case 'GET':
//Here Handle GET Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'POST':
//Here Handle POST Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'PUT':
//Here Handle PUT Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'PATCH':
//Here Handle PATCH Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'DELETE':
//Here Handle DELETE Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'COPY':
//Here Handle COPY Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'OPTIONS':
//Here Handle OPTIONS Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'LINK':
//Here Handle LINK Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'UNLINK':
//Here Handle UNLINK Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'PURGE':
//Here Handle PURGE Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'LOCK':
//Here Handle LOCK Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'UNLOCK':
//Here Handle UNLOCK Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'PROPFIND':
//Here Handle PROPFIND Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
case 'VIEW':
//Here Handle VIEW Request
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
Default:
echo 'You are using '.$method.' Method';
break;
}
?>
It is valuable to additionally note, that PHP will populate all the $_GET
parameters even when you send a proper request of other type.
Methods in above replies are completely correct, however if you want to additionaly check for GET
parameters while handling POST
, DELETE
, PUT
, etc. request, you need to check the size of $_GET
array.
I used this code. It should work.
function get_request_method() {
$request_method = strtolower($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']);
if($request_method != 'get' && $request_method != 'post') {
return $request_method;
}
if($request_method == 'post' && isset($_POST['_method'])) {
return strtolower($_POST['_method']);
}
return $request_method;
}
This above code will work with REST calls
and will also work with html form
<form method="post">
<input name="_method" type="hidden" value="delete" />
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
PATCH
? – Pmpr$_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] === 'PATCH'
– ursuleacv