package Business::PayPal::API; use 5.008001; use strict; use warnings; use SOAP::Lite 0.67; # +trace => 'all'; use Carp qw(carp); our $VERSION = '0.69'; our $Debug = 0; ## NOTE: This package exists only until I can figure out how to use ## NOTE: SOAP::Lite's WSDL support for complex types and importing ## NOTE: type definitions, at which point this module will become much ## NOTE: smaller (or non-existent). sub C_api_sandbox () { 'https://api.sandbox.paypal.com/2.0/' } sub C_api_sandbox_3t () { 'https://api-3t.sandbox.paypal.com/2.0/' } sub C_api_live () { 'https://api.paypal.com/2.0/' } sub C_api_live_3t () { 'https://api-3t.paypal.com/2.0/' } sub C_xmlns_pp () { 'urn:ebay:api:PayPalAPI' } sub C_xmlns_ebay () { 'urn:ebay:apis:eBLBaseComponents' } sub C_version () { '3.0' } ## 3.0 adds RecurringPayments ## this is an inside-out object. Make sure you 'delete' additional ## members in DESTROY() as you add them. my %Soap; my %Header; my %H_PKCS12File; ## path to certificate file (pkc12) my %H_PKCS12Password; ## password for certificate file (pkc12) my %H_CertFile; ## PEM certificate my %H_KeyFile; ## PEM private key sub import { my $self = shift; my @modules = @_; for my $module ( @modules ) { eval( "use Business::PayPal::API::$module;" ); if( $@ ) { warn $@; next; } ## import 'exported' subroutines into our namespace no strict 'refs'; for my $sub ( @{"Business::PayPal::API::" . $module . "::EXPORT_OK"} ) { *{"Business::PayPal::API::" . $sub} = *{"Business::PayPal::API::" . $module . "::" . $sub}; } } } sub new { my $class = shift; my %args = @_; my $self = bless \(my $fake), $class; ## if you add new args, be sure to update the test file's @variables array $args{Username} ||= ''; $args{Password} ||= ''; $args{Signature} ||= ''; $args{Subject} ||= ''; $args{sandbox} = 1 unless exists $args{sandbox}; $args{timeout} ||= 0; $H_PKCS12File{$self} = $args{PKCS12File} || ''; $H_PKCS12Password{$self} = $args{PKCS12Password} || ''; $H_CertFile{$self} = $args{CertFile} || ''; $H_KeyFile{$self} = $args{KeyFile} || ''; my $proxy = ($args{sandbox} ? ($args{Signature} ? C_api_sandbox_3t : C_api_sandbox) : ($args{Signature} ? C_api_live_3t : C_api_live) ); $Soap{$self} = SOAP::Lite->proxy( $proxy, timeout => $args{timeout} )->uri( C_xmlns_pp ); $Header{$self} = SOAP::Header ->name( RequesterCredentials => \SOAP::Header->value ( SOAP::Data->name( Credentials => \SOAP::Data->value ( SOAP::Data->name( Username => $args{Username} )->type(''), SOAP::Data->name( Password => $args{Password} )->type(''), SOAP::Data->name( Signature => $args{Signature} )->type(''), SOAP::Data->name( Subject => $args{Subject} )->type(''), ), )->attr( {xmlns => C_xmlns_ebay} ) ) )->attr( {xmlns => C_xmlns_pp} )->mustUnderstand(1); return $self; } sub DESTROY { my $self = $_[0]; delete $Soap{$self}; delete $Header{$self}; delete $H_PKCS12File{$self}; delete $H_PKCS12Password{$self}; delete $H_CertFile{$self}; delete $H_KeyFile{$self}; my $super = $self->can("SUPER::DESTROY"); goto &$super if $super; } sub version_req { return SOAP::Data->name( Version => C_version ) ->type('xs:string')->attr( {xmlns => C_xmlns_ebay} ); } sub doCall { my $self = shift; my $method_name = shift; my $request = shift; my $method = SOAP::Data->name( $method_name )->attr( {xmlns => C_xmlns_pp} ); my $som; { $H_PKCS12File{$self} and local $ENV{HTTPS_PKCS12_FILE} = $H_PKCS12File{$self}; $H_PKCS12Password{$self} and local $ENV{HTTPS_PKCS12_PASSWORD} = $H_PKCS12Password{$self}; $H_CertFile{$self} and local $ENV{HTTPS_CERT_FILE} = $H_CertFile{$self}; $H_KeyFile{$self} and local $ENV{HTTPS_KEY_FILE} = $H_KeyFile{$self}; if( $Debug ) { print STDERR SOAP::Serializer->envelope(method => $method, $Header{$self}, $request), "\n"; } # $Soap{$self}->readable( $Debug ); # $Soap{$self}->outputxml( $Debug ); no warnings 'redefine'; local *SOAP::Deserializer::typecast = sub {shift; return shift}; eval { $som = $Soap{$self}->call( $Header{$self}, $method => $request ); }; if( $@ ) { carp $@; return; } } if( $Debug ) { ## FIXME: would be nicer to dump a SOM to XML, but how to do that? require Data::Dumper; print STDERR Data::Dumper::Dumper($som->envelope); } if( ref($som) && $som->fault ) { carp "Fault: " . $som->faultstring . ( $som->faultdetail ? " (" . $som->faultdetail . ")" : '' ) . "\n"; return; } return $som; } sub getFieldsList { my $self = shift; my $som = shift; my $path = shift; my $fields = shift; return unless $som; my %trans_id = (); my @records = (); for my $rec ( $som->valueof($path) ) { my %response = (); @response{keys %$fields} = @{$rec}{keys %$fields}; ## avoid duplicates if( defined $response{TransactionID}) { if( $trans_id{$response{TransactionID}}) { next; } else { $trans_id{$response{TransactionID}} = 1; } } push @records, \%response; } return \@records; } sub getFields { my $self = shift; my $som = shift; my $path = shift; my $response = shift; my $fields = shift; return unless $som; ## kudos to Erik Aronesty via email, Drew Simpson via rt.cpan.org (#28596) ## Erik wrote: ## ## If you want me to write the code for the "flagged" version, i ## can .. i think the '/@' flag is a pretty safe, and obvious flag. ## ## the advantage of the flagged version would be that the caller ## doesn't have to check the returned value ... in the case of a ## field where multiple values are expected. ## ## ## I agree with this on principle and would prefer it, but I voted ## against a special flag, now forcing the caller to check the ## return value, but only for the sake of keeping everything ## consistent with the rest of the API. If Danny Hembree wants to ## go through and implement Erik's suggestion, I'd be in favor of ## it. for my $field ( keys %$fields ) { my @vals = grep { defined } $som->valueof("$path/$fields->{$field}"); next unless @vals; if( scalar(@vals) == 1 ) { $response->{$field} = $vals[0]; } else { $response->{$field} = \@vals; } } } sub getBasic { my $self = shift; my $som = shift; my $path = shift; my $details = shift; return unless $som; for my $field qw( Ack Timestamp CorrelationID Version Build ) { $details->{$field} = $som->valueof("$path/$field") || ''; } return $details->{Ack} =~ /Success/; } sub getErrors { my $self = shift; my $som = shift; my $path = shift; my $details = shift; return unless $som; my @errors = (); for my $enode ( $som->valueof("$path/Errors") ) { push @errors, { LongMessage => $enode->{LongMessage}, ErrorCode => $enode->{ErrorCode}, }; } $details->{Errors} = \@errors; return; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Business::PayPal::API - PayPal API =head1 SYNOPSIS use Business::PayPal::API qw( ExpressCheckout GetTransactionDetails ); ## certificate authentication my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API ( Username => 'my_api1.domain.tld', Password => 'this_is_my_password', PKCS12File => '/path/to/cert.pkcs12', PKCS12Password => '(pkcs12 password)', sandbox => 1 ); ## PEM cert authentication my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API ( Username => 'my_api1.domain.tld', Password => 'this_is_my_password', CertFile => '/path/to/cert.pem', KeyFile => '/path/to/cert.pem', sandbox => 1 ); ## 3-token (Signature) authentication my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API ( Username => 'my_api1.domain.tld', Password => 'Xdkis9k3jDFk39fj29sD9', ## supplied by PayPal Signature => 'f7d03YCpEjIF3s9Dk23F2V1C1vbYYR3ALqc7jm0UrCcYm-3ksdiDwjfSeii', ## ditto sandbox => 1 ); my %response = $pp->SetExpressCheckout( ... ); =head1 DESCRIPTION B supports both certificate authentication and the new 3-token "Signature" authentication. It also support PayPal's development I for testing. See the B parameter to B below for details. B can import other B derived classes: use Business::PayPal::API qw( RefundTransaction ); This allows for much more concise and intuitive usage. For example, these two statements are equivalent: use Business::PayPal::API::RefundTransaction; my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API::RefundTransaction( ... ); $pp->RefundTransaction( ... ); and more concisely: use Business::PayPal::API qw( RefundTransaction ); my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API( ... ); $pp->RefundTransaction( ... ); The advantage of this becomes clear when you need to use multiple API calls in your program; this allows you to use the same object to invoke the various methods, instead of creating a new object for each subclass. Here is an example of a B object used to invoke various PayPal APIs with the same object: use Business::PayPal::API qw( GetTransactionDetails TransactionSearch RefundTransaction ); my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API( ... ); my $records = $pp->TransactionSearch( ... ); my %details = $pp->GetTransactionDetails( ... ); my %resp = $pp->RefundTransaction( ... ); However, you may certainly use just the subclass if that's all you need. Every subclass should work as its own self-contained API. For details on B subclasses, see each subclass's individual documentation. =head2 new Creates a new B object. A note about certificate authentication: PayPal (and this module) support either PKCS#12 certificate authentication or PEM certificate authentication. See options below. =over 4 =item B Required. This is the PayPal API username, usually in the form of 'my_api1.mydomain.tld'. You can find or create your API credentials by logging into PayPal (if you want to do testing, as you should, you should also create a developer sandbox account) and going to: My Account -> Profile -> API Access -> Request API Credentials Please see the I and I for details on creating a PayPal business account and sandbox account for testing. =item B Required. If you use certificate authentication, this is the PayPal API password created when you setup your certificate. If you use 3-token (Signature) authentication, this is the password PayPal assigned you, along with the "API User Name" and "Signature Hash". =item B Optional. This is used by PayPal to authenticate 3rd party billers using your account. See the documents in L. =item B Required for 3-token (Signature) authentication. This is the "Signature Hash" you received when you did "Request API Credentials" in your PayPal Business Account. =item B Required for PKCS#12 certificate authentication, unless the B environment variable is already set. This contains the path to your private key for PayPal authentication. It is used to set the B environment variable. You may set this environment variable yourself and leave this field blank. =item B Required for PKCS#12 certificate authentication, unless the B environment variable is already set. This contains the PKCS#12 password for the key specified in B. It is used to set the B environment variable. You may set this environment variable yourself and leave this field blank. =item B Required for PEM certificate authentication, unless the HTTPS_CERT_FILE environment variable is already set. This contains the path to your PEM format certificate given to you from PayPal (and accessible in the same location that your Username and Password and/or Signature Hash are found) and is used to set the B environment variable. You may set this environment variable yourself and leave this field blank. You may combine both certificate and private key into one file and set B and B to the same path. =item B Required for PEM certificate authentication, unless the HTTPS_KEY_FILE environment variable is already set. This contains the path to your PEM format private key given to you from PayPal (and accessible in the same location that your Username and Password and/or Signature Hash are found) and is used to set the B environment variable. You may set this environment variable yourself and leave this field blank. You may combine both certificate and private key into one file and set B and B to the same path. =item B Required. If set to true (default), B will connect to PayPal's development sandbox, instead of PayPal's live site. *You must explicitly set this to false (0) to access PayPal's live site*. If you use PayPal's development sandbox for testing, you must have already signed up as a PayPal developer and created a Business sandbox account and a Buyer sandbox account (and make sure both of them have B status in the sandbox). When testing with the sandbox, you will use different usernames, passwords, and certificates (if using certificate authentication) than you will when accessing PayPal's live site. Please see the PayPal documentation for details. See L for references. PayPal's sandbox reference: L =back =head1 ERROR HANDLING Every API call should return an B response, whether I, I, or otherwise (depending on the API call). If it returns any non-success value, you can find an I entry in your return hash, whose value is a listref of hashrefs: [ { ErrorCode => 10002, LongMessage => "Invalid security header" }, { ErrorCode => 10030, LongMessage => "Some other error" }, ] You can retrieve these errors like this: %response = $pp->doSomeAPICall(); if( $response{Ack} ne 'Success' ) { for my $err ( @{$response{Errors}} ) { warn "Error: " . $err->{LongMessage} . "\n"; } } =head1 TESTING Testing the B modules requires that you create a file containing your PayPal Developer Sandbox authentication credentials (e.g., API certificate authentication or 3-Token authentication signature, etc.) and setting the B environment variable to point to this file. The format for this file is as follows: Username = your_api.username.com Password = your_api_password and then ONE of the following options: a) supply 3-token authentication signature Signature = xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx b) supply PEM certificate credentials CertFile = /path/to/cert_key_pem.txt KeyFile = /path/to/cert_key_pem.txt c) supply PKCS#12 certificate credentials PKCS12File = /path/to/cert.p12 PKCS12Password = pkcs12_password You may also set the appropriate HTTPS_* environment variables for b) and c) above (e.g., HTTPS_CERT_FILE, HTTPS_KEY_FILE, HTTPS_PKCS12_File, HTTPS_PKCS12_PASSWORD) in lieu of putting this information in a file. Then use "WPP_TEST=my_auth.txt make test" (for Bourne shell derivates) or "setenv WPP_TEST my_auth.txt && make test" (for C-shell derivates). See 'auth.sample.*' files in this package for an example of the file format. Variables are case-*sensitive*. Any of the following variables are recognized: Username Password Signature Subject CertFile KeyFile PKCS12File PKCS12Password BuyerEmail Note: PayPal authentication may I if you set the certificate environment variables and attempt to connect using 3-token authentication (i.e., PayPal will use the first authentication credentials presented to it, and if they fail, the connection is aborted). =head1 TROUBLESHOOTING =head2 PayPal Authentication Errors If you are experiencing PayPal authentication errors (e.g., "Security header is not valid", "SSL negotiation failed", etc.), you should make sure: * your username and password match those found in your PayPal Business account sandbox (this is not the same as your regular account. * you're not trying to use your live username and password for sandbox testing and vice versa. * if the sandbox works but "live" does not, make sure you've turned off the 'sandbox' parameter correctly. Otherwise you'll be passing your PayPal sandbox credentials to PayPal's live site (which won't work). * if you use certificate authentication, your certificate must be the correct one (live or sandbox) depending on what you're doing. * if you use 3-Token authentication (i.e., Signature), you don't have any B parameters or B or B parameters in your constructor AND that none of the corresponding B environment variables are set. PayPal prefers certificate authentication since it occurs at connection time; if it fails, it will not try Signature authentication. Try clearing your environment: ## delete all HTTPS, SSL env delete $ENV{$_} for grep { /^(HTTPS|SSL)/ } keys %ENV; ## now put our own HTTPS env back in $ENV{HTTPS_CERT_FILE} = '/var/path/to/cert.pem'; ## create our paypal object my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API... * if you have already loaded Net::SSLeay (or IO::Socket::SSL), then Net::HTTPS will prefer to use IO::Socket::SSL. I don't know how to get SOAP::Lite to work with IO::Socket::SSL (e.g., Crypt::SSLeay uses HTTPS_* environment variables), so until then, you can use this hack: local $IO::Socket::SSL::VERSION = undef; $pp->DoExpressCheckoutPayment(...); This will tell Net::HTTPS to ignore the fact that IO::Socket::SSL is already loaded for this scope and import Net::SSL (part of the Crypt::SSLeay package) for its 'configure()' method. * if you receive a message like "500 Can't connect to api.sandbox.paypal.com:443 (Illegal seek)", you'll need to make sure you have Crypt::SSLeay installed. It seems that other crypto modules don't do the certificate authentication quite as well, and LWP needs this to negotiate the SSL connection with PayPal. See the DEBUGGING section below for further hints. =head2 PayPal Munging URLs PayPal seems to be munging my URLs when it returns. SOAP::Lite follows the XML specification carefully, and encodes '&' and '<' characters before applying them to the SOAP document. PayPal does not properly URL-decode HTML entities '&' and '<' on the way back, so if you have an ampersand in your ReturnURL (for example), your customers will be redirected here: http://domain.tld/prog?arg1=foo&arg2=bar instead of here: http://domain.tld/prog?arg1=foo&arg2=bar Solution: Use CDATA tags to wrap your request: ReturnURL => '' You may also use semicolons instead of ampersands to separate your URL arguments: ReturnURL => 'http://domain.tld/prog?arg1=foo;arg2=bar' (thanks to Ollie Ready) =head1 DEBUGGING You can see the raw SOAP XML sent and received by B by setting it's B<$Debug> variable: $Business::PayPal::API::Debug = 1; $pp->SetExpressCheckout( %args ); this will print the XML being sent, and dump a Perl data structure of the SOM received on STDERR (so check your error_log if running inside a web server). If anyone knows how to turn a SOAP::SOM object into XML without setting B, let me know. =head1 DEVELOPMENT If you are a developer wanting to extend B for other PayPal API calls, you can review any of the included modules (e.g., F or F) for examples on how to do this until I have more time to write a more complete document. But in a nutshell: package Business::PayPal::API::SomeAPI; use 5.008001; use strict; use warnings; use SOAP::Lite 0.67; use Business::PayPal::API (); our @ISA = qw(Business::PayPal::API); our @EXPORT_OK = qw( SomeAPIMethod ); sub SomeAPIMethod { ... } Notice the B<@EXPORT_OK> variable. This is I used by B (we don't load Exporter at all): it is a special variable used by B to know which methods to import when B is run like this: use Business::PayPal::API qw( SomeAPI ); That is, B will import any subroutine into its own namespace from the B<@EXPORT_OK> array. Now it can be used like this: use Business::PayPal::API qw( SomeAPI ); my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API( ... ); $pp->SomeAPIMethod( ... ); Of course, we also do a 'use Business::PayPal::API' in the module so that it can be used as a standalone module, if necessary: use Business::PayPal::API::SomeAPI; my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API::SomeAPI( ... ); ## same args as superclass $pp->SomeAPIMethod( ... ); Adding the B<@EXPORT_OK> array in your module allows your module to be used in the most convenient way for the given circumstances. =head1 EXAMPLES Andy Spiegl has kindly donated some example code (in German) for the ExpressCheckout API which may be found in the F directory of this archive. Additional code examples for other APIs may be found in the F test directory. =head1 EXPORT None by default. =head1 CAVEATS Because I haven't figured out how to make SOAP::Lite read the WSDL definitions directly and simply implement those (help, anyone?), I have essentially recreated all of those WSDL structures internally in this module. (Note - 6 Oct 2006: SOAP::Lite's WSDL support is moving ahead, but slowly. The methods used by this API are considered "best practice" and are safe to use). As with all web services, if PayPal stop supporting their API endpoint, this module *may stop working*. You can help me keep this module up-to-date if you notice such an event occuring. Also, I didn't implement a big fat class hierarchy to make this module "academically" correct. You'll notice that I fudged colliding parameter names in B and similar fudging may be found in B. The good news is that this was written quickly, works, and is dead-simple to use. The bad news is that this sort of collision might occur again as more and more data is sent in the API (call it 'eBay API bloat'). I'm willing to take the risk this will be rare (PayPal--please make it rare!). =head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Wherein I acknowledge all the good folks who have contributed to this module in some way: =over 4 =item * Daniel P. Hembree for authoring the AuthorizationRequest, CaptureRequest, DirectPayments, ReauthorizationRequest, and VoidRequest extensions. Danny's contact information may be found in the AUTHOR section of the above modules. =item * for finding some API typos in the ExpressCheckout API =item * Andy Spiegl for giving me the heads-up on PayPal's new 3-token auth URI and for a sample command-line program (found in the 'eg' directory) demonstrating the ExpressCheckout API. =item * Ollie Ready for the heads-up on the newest 3-token auth URI as well as a pile of documentation inconsistencies. =item * Michael Hendricks for a patch that adds ShippingTotal to the DirectPayments module. =item * Erik Aronesty, Drew Simpson via rt.cpan.org (#28596) for a patch to fix getFields() when multiple items are returned =item * Sebastian Böhm via email, SDC via rt.cpan.org (#38915) for a heads-up that the PayPal documentation for MassPay API was wrong regarding the I parameter. =item * Jonathon Wright via email for patches for B and B that implement I and I API calls. =back =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, L, L, L =head1 AUTHOR Scott Wiersdorf, Escott@perlcode.orgE =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (C) 2006, 2007 by Scott Wiersdorf This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. =cut