Appends a rejection handler callback to the promise, and returns a new promise resolving to the return value of the callback if it is called, or to its original fulfillment value if the promise is instead fulfilled.
-`wait($unwrap = true) : mixed`
Synchronously waits on the promise to complete.
`$unwrap` controls whether or not the value of the promise is returned for a
fulfilled promise or if an exception is thrown if the promise is rejected.
This is set to `true` by default.
-`cancel()`
Attempts to cancel the promise if possible. The promise being cancelled and
the parent most ancestor that has not yet been resolved will also be
cancelled. Any promises waiting on the cancelled promise to resolve will also
be cancelled.
-`getState() : string`
Returns the state of the promise. One of `pending`, `fulfilled`, or
`rejected`.
-`resolve($value)`
Fulfills the promise with the given `$value`.
-`reject($reason)`
Rejects the promise with the given `$reason`.
## FulfilledPromise
A fulfilled promise can be created to represent a promise that has been
fulfilled.
```php
use GuzzleHttp\Promise\FulfilledPromise;
$promise = new FulfilledPromise('value');
// Fulfilled callbacks are immediately invoked.
$promise->then(function ($value) {
echo $value;
});
```
## RejectedPromise
A rejected promise can be created to represent a promise that has been
rejected.
```php
use GuzzleHttp\Promise\RejectedPromise;
$promise = new RejectedPromise('Error');
// Rejected callbacks are immediately invoked.
$promise->then(null, function ($reason) {
echo $reason;
});
```
# Promise interop
This library works with foreign promises that have a `then` method. This means
you can use Guzzle promises with [React promises](https://github.com/reactphp/promise)
for example. When a foreign promise is returned inside of a then method
callback, promise resolution will occur recursively.
```php
// Create a React promise
$deferred = new React\Promise\Deferred();
$reactPromise = $deferred->promise();
// Create a Guzzle promise that is fulfilled with a React promise.
$guzzlePromise = new GuzzleHttp\Promise\Promise();
$guzzlePromise->then(function ($value) use ($reactPromise) {
// Do something something with the value...
// Return the React promise
return $reactPromise;
});
```
Please note that wait and cancel chaining is no longer possible when forwarding
a foreign promise. You will need to wrap a third-party promise with a Guzzle
promise in order to utilize wait and cancel functions with foreign promises.
## Event Loop Integration
In order to keep the stack size constant, Guzzle promises are resolved
asynchronously using a task queue. When waiting on promises synchronously, the
task queue will be automatically run to ensure that the blocking promise and
any forwarded promises are resolved. When using promises asynchronously in an
event loop, you will need to run the task queue on each tick of the loop. If
you do not run the task queue, then promises will not be resolved.
You can run the task queue using the `run()` method of the global task queue
instance.
```php
// Get the global task queue
$queue = GuzzleHttp\Promise\Utils::queue();
$queue->run();
```
For example, you could use Guzzle promises with React using a periodic timer:
```php
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
$loop->addPeriodicTimer(0, [$queue, 'run']);
```
*TODO*: Perhaps adding a `futureTick()` on each tick would be faster?
# Implementation notes
## Promise resolution and chaining is handled iteratively
By shuffling pending handlers from one owner to another, promises are
resolved iteratively, allowing for "infinite" then chaining.
```php
<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use GuzzleHttp\Promise\Promise;
$parent = new Promise();
$p = $parent;
for ($i = 0; $i <1000;$i++){
$p = $p->then(function ($v) {
// The stack size remains constant (a good thing)
echo xdebug_get_stack_depth() . ', ';
return $v + 1;
});
}
$parent->resolve(0);
var_dump($p->wait()); // int(1000)
```
When a promise is fulfilled or rejected with a non-promise value, the promise
then takes ownership of the handlers of each child promise and delivers values
down the chain without using recursion.
When a promise is resolved with another promise, the original promise transfers
all of its pending handlers to the new promise. When the new promise is
eventually resolved, all of the pending handlers are delivered the forwarded
value.
## A promise is the deferred.
Some promise libraries implement promises using a deferred object to represent
a computation and a promise object to represent the delivery of the result of
the computation. This is a nice separation of computation and delivery because
consumers of the promise cannot modify the value that will be eventually
delivered.
One side effect of being able to implement promise resolution and chaining
iteratively is that you need to be able for one promise to reach into the state
of another promise to shuffle around ownership of handlers. In order to achieve
this without making the handlers of a promise publicly mutable, a promise is
also the deferred value, allowing promises of the same parent class to reach
into and modify the private properties of promises of the same type. While this
does allow consumers of the value to modify the resolution or rejection of the
deferred, it is a small price to pay for keeping the stack size constant.
// The promise is the deferred value, so you can deliver a value to it.
$promise->resolve('foo');
// prints "foo"
```
## Upgrading from Function API
A static API was first introduced in 1.4.0, in order to mitigate problems with functions conflicting between global and local copies of the package. The function API will be removed in 2.0.0. A migration table has been provided here for your convenience:
| Original Function | Replacement Method |
|----------------|----------------|
| `queue` | `Utils::queue` |
| `task` | `Utils::task` |
| `promise_for` | `Create::promiseFor` |
| `rejection_for` | `Create::rejectionFor` |
| `exception_for` | `Create::exceptionFor` |
| `iter_for` | `Create::iterFor` |
| `inspect` | `Utils::inspect` |
| `inspect_all` | `Utils::inspectAll` |
| `unwrap` | `Utils::unwrap` |
| `all` | `Utils::all` |
| `some` | `Utils::some` |
| `any` | `Utils::any` |
| `settle` | `Utils::settle` |
| `each` | `Each::of` |
| `each_limit` | `Each::ofLimit` |
| `each_limit_all` | `Each::ofLimitAll` |
| `!is_fulfilled` | `Is::pending` |
| `is_fulfilled` | `Is::fulfilled` |
| `is_rejected` | `Is::rejected` |
| `is_settled` | `Is::settled` |
| `coroutine` | `Coroutine::of` |
## Security
If you discover a security vulnerability within this package, please send an email to security@tidelift.com. All security vulnerabilities will be promptly addressed. Please do not disclose security-related issues publicly until a fix has been announced. Please see [Security Policy](https://github.com/guzzle/promises/security/policy) for more information.
## License
Guzzle is made available under the MIT License (MIT). Please see [License File](LICENSE) for more information.
## For Enterprise
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