Get Started with PHP Using PHP Server

Start by signing up for a free trial account that you can use to experiment with and learn about our services. The free trial account comes with free credits, and you can add more as you go along. You can also add a phone number to your account to start testing the full range of our voice and SMS features. A page in our support portal walks you through the signup process.

You can start making and receiving calls either by using our PHLO visual workflow builder or our APIs and XML documents. Follow the instructions in one of the tabs below.

Set up your PHP dev environment

You must set up and install PHP and Plivo’s PHP SDK before you make your first call.

Install PHP

Follow the official PHP instructions to download and install PHP on macOS or Windows or Debian Linux, or use your favorite package manager to install PHP on any Linux distro.

Install Composer

We recommend using Composer, a dependency manager for PHP, as the package manager for your PHP projects.

  • Download the latest version of Composer.
  • Run this command in Terminal to run Composer.

     $ php ~/Downloads/composer.phar --version
    

    Note: PHAR (PHP archive) is an archive format for PHP that can be run on the command line.

  • Make it executable.

     $ cp ~/Downloads/composer.phar /usr/local/bin/composer
     $ sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/composer
    
    Move the file to bin directory.
  • To check whether the path includes /usr/local/bin, type

     $ echo $PATH
    

    If the path is different, update it.

     $ export PATH = $PATH:/usr/local/bin
     $ source ~/.bash_profile
    

    Note: If your path doesn’t include /usr/local/bin, we recommend adding it so that you can access it globally.

  • Download the Composer installer.

     $ curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
    
  • Make the composer.phar file executable.

     $ chmod +x composer.phar
    

    Note: PHAR (PHP archive) is an archive format for PHP that can be run on the command line.

  • Make Composer globally available for all system users.

     $ mv composer.phar /usr/local/bin/composer
    

  • Download and run the Windows Installer for Composer.

    Note: Allow the installer to make changes to your php.ini file.

  • If you have any terminal windows open, close them all and open a fresh terminal instance.
  • Run the Composer command.

     $ composer -V
    

Install the Plivo PHP SDK

  • Create a project directory and change into it.

    $ mkdir myphpapp
    $ cd myphpapp
    
  • To install the most recent release of the Plivo PHP SDK, run

    $ composer require plivo/plivo-php
    
  • Alternatively, download this source and run

    $ composer install
    

    This command generates autoload files, which you can include in your PHP source code to start using the SDK.

    <?php
    require 'vendor/autoload.php'
    

Once you’ve set up your development environment, you can start making and receiving calls using PHLO, our visual workflow design studio, or using our APIs and XML documents. Here are three common use cases to get you started.

Make your first outbound call

You can create and deploy a PHLO to make an outbound call with a few clicks on the PHLO canvas, and trigger it with some simple code.

Create the PHLO

To create a PHLO, visit the PHLO page of the Plivo console. If this is your first PHLO, the PHLO page will be empty.

Create a PHLO for outbound calls

  • Click Create New PHLO.

  • In the Choose your use case pop-up, click Build my own. The PHLO canvas will appear with the Start node.

    Note: The Start node is the starting point of any PHLO. It lets you trigger a PHLO to start upon one of three actions: incoming SMS message, incoming call, or API request.
  • From the list of components on the left side, drag and drop the Initiate Call component onto the canvas. When a component is placed on the canvas it becomes a node.

  • Draw a line to connect the Start node’s API Request trigger state to the Initiate Call node.

  • In the Configuration pane at the right of the canvas, configure the Initiate Call node with a caller ID in the From field. Enter the destination number you wish to call in the To field.

    Note: You can define a static payload by specifying values when you create the PHLO, or define a dynamic payload by passing values through Liquid templating parameters when you trigger the PHLO from your application.
  • Once you’ve configured the node, click Validate to save the configuration.

  • Similarly, create a node from the Play Audio component. Connect the Initiate Call node to the Play Audio node using the Answered trigger state.

  • Configure the Play Audio node to play a message to the user by entering text in the Speak Text box in the Prompt section of the Configuration pane — for example, “Hello, you just received your first call.”

  • Connect the Initiate Call node’s Answered trigger state to the Play Audio node.

  • After you complete the configuration, give the PHLO a name by clicking in the upper left, then click Save.

Your PHLO is now ready to test.

Trigger the PHLO

You integrate a PHLO into your application workflow by making an API request to trigger the PHLO with the required payload — the set of parameters you pass to the PHLO. You can define a static payload by specifying values when you create the PHLO, or define a dynamic payload by passing values through parameters when you trigger the PHLO from your application.

In either case, you need your Auth ID and Auth Token, which you can get from the overview page of the Plivo console.

AUTHID

You also need the PHLO ID, which you can copy from the PHLO list page.

PHLO List

With a static payload

When you configure values when creating the PHLO, they act as a static payload.

With Static Payload

Code

Create a file called TriggerPhlo.php and paste into it this code.

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<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use Plivo\Resources\PHLO\PhloRestClient;
use Plivo\Exceptions\PlivoRestException;
$client = new PhloRestClient("<auth_id>", "<auth_token>");

$phlo = $client->phlo->get("<phlo_id>");
try {
    $response = $phlo->run();
    print_r($response);
} catch (PlivoRestException $ex) {
    print_r($ex);
}

Replace the auth placeholders with your authentication credentials from the Plivo console. Replace the phlo_id placeholder with your PHLO ID from the Plivo console.

With a dynamic payload

To use dynamic values for the parameters, use Liquid templating parameters when you create the PHLO and pass the values from your code when you trigger it.

With Dynamic Payload

Code

Create a file called TriggerPhlo.php and paste into it this code.

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<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use Plivo\Resources\PHLO\PhloRestClient;
use Plivo\Exceptions\PlivoRestException;
$client = new PhloRestClient("<auth_id>", "<auth_token>");

$phlo = $client->phlo->get("<phlo_id>");
try {
    $response = $phlo->run(["from" => "<caller_id>", "to" => "<destination_number>"]);
    print_r($response);
} catch (PlivoRestException $ex) {
    print_r($ex);
}

Replace the auth placeholders with your authentication credentials from the Plivo console. Replace the phlo_id placeholder with your PHLO ID from the Plivo console. Replace the phone number placeholders with actual phone numbers in E.164 format (for example, +12025551234).

Test

Save the file and run it.

$ php TriggerPhlo.php
Note: If you’re using a Plivo Trial account, you can make calls only to phone numbers that have been verified with Plivo. You can verify (sandbox) a number by going to the console’s Phone Numbers > Sandbox Numbers page.

Receive your first inbound call

You can create and deploy a PHLO to receive an inbound call with a few clicks on the PHLO canvas, without writing a single line of code.

Prerequisite

To receive incoming calls, you must have a voice-enabled Plivo phone number. You can rent numbers from the Numbers page of the Plivo console, or by using the Numbers API.

Create the PHLO

To create a PHLO, visit the PHLO page of the Plivo console. If this is your first PHLO, the PHLO page will be empty.

Create a PHLO to receive incoming call

  • Click Create New PHLO.
  • In the Choose your use case pop-up, click Build my own. The PHLO canvas will appear with the Start node.
    Note: The Start node is the starting point of any PHLO. It lets you trigger a PHLO to start upon one of three actions: incoming SMS message, incoming call, or API request.
  • From the list of components on the left side, drag and drop the Play Audio component onto the canvas. When a component is placed on the canvas it becomes a node.
  • Draw a line to connect the Start node’s Incoming Call trigger state to the Play Audio node.
  • In the Configuration pane at the right of the canvas, configure the Play Audio node to play a message to the caller.
  • Once you’ve configured the node, click Validate to save the configuration.
  • Give the PHLO a name by clicking in the upper left, then click Save.

Assign the PHLO to a Plivo number

Once you’ve created and configured your PHLO, assign it to a Plivo number.

  • On the Numbers page of the console, under Your Numbers, click the phone number you want to use for the PHLO.
  • In the Number Configuration box, select PHLO from the Application Type drop-down.
  • From the PHLO Name drop-down, select the PHLO you want to use with the number, then click Update Number.

Assign PHLO to a Plivo Number

Test

You can now make a call to your Plivo phone number and see how the inbound call is handled.

For more information about creating a PHLO application, see the PHLO Getting Started guide. For information on components and their variables, see the PHLO Components Library.

Forward an inbound call

You can create and deploy a workflow to implement call forwarding with a few clicks on the PHLO canvas.

Prerequisite

To receive incoming calls, you must have a voice-enabled Plivo phone number. You can rent numbers from the Numbers page of the Plivo console, or by using the Numbers API.

Create the PHLO

To create a PHLO, visit the PHLO page of the Plivo console. If this is your first PHLO, the PHLO page will be empty.

Create a PHLO to receive incoming call

  • Click Create New PHLO.
  • In the Choose your use case pop-up, click Build my own. The PHLO canvas will appear with the Start node.
    Note: The Start node is the starting point of any PHLO. It lets you trigger a PHLO to start upon one of three actions: incoming SMS message, incoming call, or API request.
  • From the list of components on the left side, drag and drop the Call Forward component onto the canvas. When a component is placed on the canvas it becomes a node.

  • Draw a line to connect the Start node‘s Incoming Call trigger state to the Call Forward node.

  • In the Configuration tab at the right of the canvas, configure the Call Forward node to select the From number using a variable. Enter two curly brackets to view all available variables, and choose the appropriate one. Enter all the numbers you want to call in the To field, separated with commas.

  • Once you’ve configured the node, click Validate to save the configuration.
  • Give the PHLO a name by clicking in the upper left, then click Save.

Assign the PHLO to a Plivo number

Once you’ve created and configured your PHLO, assign your PHLO to a Plivo number.

  • On the Numbers page of the console, under Your Numbers, click the phone number you want to use for the PHLO.
  • In the Number Configuration box, select PHLO from the Application Type drop-down.
  • From the PHLO Name drop-down, select the PHLO you want to use with the phone number, then click Update Number.

Assign PHLO to a Plivo Number

Test

You can now call your Plivo phone number and see how the inbound call is forwarded.

For more information about creating a PHLO application, see the PHLO Getting Started guide. For information on components and their variables, see the PHLO Components Library.

More use cases

We illustrate more than 20 use cases with code for both PHLO and API/XML on our documentation pages.

Install PHP and the Plivo PHP SDK

You must set up and install PHP and Plivo’s PHP SDK before you make your first call.

Install PHP

Follow the official PHP instructions to download and install PHP on macOS, Windows, or Debian Linux, or use your favorite package manager to install PHP on any Linux distro.

Install Composer

We recommend using Composer, a dependency manager for PHP, as the package manager for your PHP projects.

  • Download the latest version of Composer.
  • Run this command in Terminal to run Composer.

     $ php ~/Downloads/composer.phar --version
    

    Note: PHAR (PHP archive) is an archive format for PHP that can be run on the command line.

  • Make it executable.

     $ cp ~/Downloads/composer.phar /usr/local/bin/composer
     $ sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/composer
    
    Move the file to bin directory.
  • To check whether the path includes /usr/local/bin, type

     $ echo $PATH
    

    If the path is different, update it.

     $ export PATH = $PATH:/usr/local/bin
     $ source ~/.bash_profile
    

    Note: If your path doesn’t include /usr/local/bin, we recommend adding it so that you can access it globally.

  • Download the Composer installer.

     $ curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
    
  • Make the composer.phar file executable.

     $ chmod +x composer.phar
    

    Note: PHAR (PHP archive) is an archive format for PHP that can be run on the command line.

  • Make Composer globally available for all system users.

     $ mv composer.phar /usr/local/bin/composer
    

  • Download and run the Windows Installer for Composer.

    Note: Allow the installer to make changes to your php.ini file.

  • If you have any terminal windows open, close them all and open a fresh terminal instance.
  • Run the Composer command.

     $ composer -V
    

Install the Plivo PHP SDK

Create a project directory and change into it.

$ mkdir myphpapp
$ cd myphpapp

To install the most recent release of the Plivo PHP SDK, run

$ composer require plivo/plivo-php

Alternatively, download the source and run

$ composer install

This command generates autoload files, which you can include in your PHP source code to start using the SDK.

<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php'

Once you’ve set up your development environment, you can start making and receiving calls using our APIs and XML documents. Here are three common use cases to get you started.

Make your first outbound call

Outbound Call Flow

Plivo requests an answer URL when the call is answered (step 4) and expects the file at that address to hold a valid XML response from the application with instructions on how to handle the call. To see how this works, you can use https://s3.amazonaws.com/static.plivo.com/answer.xml as an answer URL to test your first outgoing call. The file contains this XML code:

<Response> 
<Speak>Congratulations! You've made your first outbound call!</Speak> 
</Response>

This code instructs Plivo to say, “Congratulations! You’ve made your first outbound call!” to the call recipient. You can find the entire list of valid Plivo XML verbs in our XML Reference documentation.

Set up a PHP server to handle outbound calls

Create a file called MakeCall.php and paste into it this code.

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<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use Plivo\RestClient;

$auth_id    = "<auth_id>";
$auth_token = "<auth_token>";
$client     = new RestClient($auth_id, $auth_token);

$response = $client->calls->create('<caller_id>',
                                 ['<destination_number>'],
                                 'https://s3.amazonaws.com/static.plivo.com/answer.xml',);
print_r($response);
Note: We recommend that you store your credentials in the auth_id and auth_token environment variables to avoid the possibility of accidentally committing them to source control. If you do this, you can initialize the client with no arguments and Plivo will automatically fetch the values from the environment variables. You can use $_ENV or putenv/getenv to store environment variables and retrieve them when initializing the client.

Test

Save the file and run it.

$ php MakeCall.php
Note: If you’re using a Plivo Trial account, you can make calls only to phone numbers that have been verified with Plivo. You can verify (sandbox) a number by going to the console’s Phone Numbers > Sandbox Numbers page.

Receive your first inbound call

Inbound Call Flow

Plivo requests an answer URL when it answers the call (step 2) and expects the file at that address to hold a valid XML response from the application with instructions on how to handle the call. In this example, when an incoming call is received, Plivo’s text-to-speech engine plays a message using the Speak XML element.

You must have a voice-enabled Plivo phone number to receive incoming calls; you can rent numbers from the Numbers page of the Plivo console, or by using the Numbers API.

Set up a PHP server to handle incoming calls

Create a file called receive_call.php and paste into it this code.

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<?php
    require '../vendor/autoload.php';
    use Plivo\XML\Response;

    $response = new Response();
    $speak_body = "Hello, you just received your first call";
    $response->addSpeak($speak_body);
    
    Header('Content-type: text/xml');
    echo($response->toXML());
?>

Save the the file and start the server.

$ php -S localhost:8000

You should see your basic server application in action at http://localhost:8000/receive_call.php.

Expose your local server to the internet

To receive incoming calls, your local server must connect with Plivo API services. For that, we recommend using ngrok, which exposes local servers running behind NATs and firewalls to the public internet over secure tunnels. Using ngrok, you can set webhooks that can talk to the Plivo server.

ngrok block diagram

Install ngrok and run it on the command line, specifying the port that hosts the application on which you want to receive calls (80 in this case):

./ngrok http 80

This starts the ngrok server on your local server. Ngrok will display a forwarding link that you can use as a webhook to access your local server over the public network.

Sample ngrok CLI

Create a Plivo application to receive calls

Associate the controller you created with Plivo by creating a Plivo application. Visit Voice > Applications and click Add New Application. You can also use Plivo’s Application API.

Give your application a name — we called ours Receive_call. Enter the server URL you want to use (for example https://<yourdomain>.com/receivecall/) in the Primary Answer URL field and set the method to POST. Click Create Application to save your application.

Create Application

Assign a Plivo number to your application

Navigate to the Numbers page and select the phone number you want to use for this application.

From the Application Type drop-down, select XML Application.

From the Plivo Application drop-down, select Receive Call (the name we gave the application).

Click Update Number to save.

Assign Phone Number to Receive Call App

Test

Make a call to your Plivo number using any phone.

Forward an incoming call

Call Forward Call Flow

Plivo requests an answer URL when the call is answered (step 4) and expects the file at that address to hold a valid XML response from the application with instructions on how to handle the call. In this example, when an incoming call is received, Plivo forwards the call using the Dial XML element.

You must have a voice-enabled Plivo phone number to receive incoming calls; you can rent numbers from the Numbers page of the Plivo console, or by using the Numbers API.

Set up a PHP server to forward calls

Create a file called forward_call.php and paste into it this code.

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<?php
    require '../vendor/autoload.php';
    use Plivo\XML\Response;

    $response = new Response();
    
    $params = array(
        'action' => "https://<yourdomain>.com/dial_status/",
        'method' => "POST",
        'redirect' => "true"
    );
    
    $dial = $response->addDial($params);
    $number = "<destination_number>";
    $dial->addNumber($number);
    
    Header('Content-type: text/xml');
    echo($response->toXML());

Replace the destination number placeholder with an actual phone number (for example, 12025551234).

If you haven’t done so already, expose your local server to the internet.

Create a Plivo application to forward calls

Associate the PHP application you created with Plivo by creating a Plivo application. Visit Voice > Applications in the Plivo console and click on Add New Application, or use Plivo’s Application API.

Give your application a name — we called ours Forward Call. Enter the server URL you want to use (for example https://<yourdomain>.com/forward_call/) in the Answer URL field and set the method to POST. Click Create Application to save your application.

Assign a Plivo number to your application

Navigate to the Numbers page and select the phone number you want to use for this application.

From the Application Type drop-down, select XML Application.

From the Plivo Application drop-down, select Forward Call (the name we gave the application).

Click Update Number to save.

Assign call forward application

Test

Make a call to your Plivo number using any phone. Plivo will send a request to the answer URL you provided requesting an XML response and then forward the call according to the instructions in the XML document the server provides.

More use cases

We illustrate more than 20 use cases with code for both API/XML and PHLO on our documentation pages.