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  • Language
    PHP
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 9 years ago
  • Updated over 2 years ago

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Repository Details

PHP Rule Engine - Parses & Evaluates JavaScript-like expressions

PHP Rule Engine

Latest Stable Version Build status Code Quality StyleCI

Total Downloads Latest Stable Version

You're looking at a standalone PHP library to parse and evaluate text based rules with a Javascript-like syntax. This project was born out of the necessity to evaluate hundreds of rules that were originally written and evaluated in JavaScript, and now needed to be evaluated on the server-side, using PHP.

This library has initially been used to change and configure the behavior of certain "Workflows" (without changing actual code) in an intranet application, but it may serve a purpose elsewhere.

Find me on Twitter: @nicoSWD

(If you're using PHP 5, you might want to take a look at version 0.4.0)

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Install

Via Composer

$ composer require nicoswd/php-rule-parser

Bundles

This library works best with one of these bundles below, but they're not required

Bundle Framework Packagist
nicoSWD/rule-engine-bundle Symfony Latest Stable Version

Usage Examples

Test if a value is in a given array

$variables = ['foo' => 6];

$rule = new Rule('foo in [4, 6, 7]', $variables);
var_dump($rule->isTrue()); // bool(true)

Simple array manipulation

$rule = new Rule('[1, 4, 3].join(".") === "1.4.3"');
var_dump($rule->isTrue()); // bool(true)

Test if a value is between a given range

$variables = ['threshold' => 80];

$rule = new Rule('threshold >= 50 && threshold <= 100', $variables);
var_dump($rule->isTrue()); // bool(true)

Call methods on objects from within rules

class User
{
    // ...

    public function points(): int
    {
        return 1337;    
    }
}

$variables = [
    'user' => new User(),
];

$rule = new Rule('user.points() > 300', $variables);
var_dump($rule->isTrue()); // bool(true)

For security reasons, PHP's magic methods like __construct and __destruct cannot be called from within rules. However, __call will be invoked automatically if available, unless the called method is defined.

Built-in Methods

Name Example
charAt "foo".charAt(2) === "o"
concat "foo".concat("bar", "baz") === "foobarbaz"
endsWith "foo".endsWith("oo") === true
startsWith "foo".startsWith("fo") === true
indexOf "foo".indexOf("oo") === 1
join ["foo", "bar"].join(",") === "foo,bar"
replace "foo".replace("oo", "aa") === "faa"
split "foo-bar".split("-") === ["foo", "bar"]
substr "foo".substr(1) === "oo"
test "foo".test(/oo$/) === true
toLowerCase "FOO".toLowerCase() === "foo"
toUpperCase "foo".toUpperCase() === "FOO"

Built-in Functions

Name Example
parseInt parseInt("22aa") === 22
parseFloat parseFloat("3.1") === 3.1

Supported Operators

Type Description Operator
Comparison greater than >
Comparison greater than or equal to >=
Comparison less than <
Comparison less or equal to <=
Comparison equal to ==
Comparison not equal to !=
Comparison identical ===
Comparison not identical !==
Containment contains in
Containment does not contain not in
Logical and &&
Logical or ||

Error Handling

Both, $rule->isTrue() and $rule->isFalse() will throw an exception if the syntax is invalid. These calls can either be placed inside a try / catch block, or it can be checked prior using $rule->isValid().

$ruleStr = '
    (2 == 2) && (
        1 < 3 && 3 == 2 ( // Missing and/or before parentheses
            1 == 1
        )
    )';

$rule = new Rule($ruleStr);

try {
    $rule->isTrue();
} catch (\Exception $e) {
    echo $e->getMessage();
}

Or alternatively:

if (!$rule->isValid()) {
    echo $rule->getError();
}

Both will output: Unexpected token "(" at position 25 on line 3

Syntax Highlighting

A custom syntax highlighter is also provided.

use nicoSWD\Rule;

$ruleStr = '
    // This is true
    2 < 3 && (
        // This is false
        foo in [4, 6, 7] ||
        // True
        [1, 4, 3].join("") === "143"
    ) && (
        // True
        "foo|bar|baz".split("|" /* uh oh */) === ["foo", /* what */ "bar", "baz"] &&
        // True
        bar > 6
    )';

$highlighter = new Rule\Highlighter\Highlighter(new Rule\Tokenizer());

// Optional custom styles
$highlighter->setStyle(
    Rule\Constants::GROUP_VARIABLE,
    'color: #007694; font-weight: 900;'
);

echo $highlighter->highlightString($ruleStr);

Outputs:

Syntax preview

Notes

  • Parentheses can be nested, and will be evaluated from right to left.
  • Only value/variable comparison expressions with optional logical ANDs/ORs, are supported.

Security

If you discover any security related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.

Testing

$ composer test

Contributing

Pull requests are very welcome! If they include tests, even better. This project follows PSR-2 coding standards, please make sure your pull requests do too.

To Do

  • Support for object properties (foo.length)
  • Support for returning actual results, other than true or false
  • Support for array / string dereferencing: "foo"[1]
  • Don't force boolean comparison for tokens that are already booleans. my_func() && 2 > 1 should work
  • Change regex and implementation for method calls. ".split(" should not be the token
  • Add / implement missing methods
  • Add "typeof" construct
  • Do math (?)
  • Allow string concatenating with "+"
  • Invalid regex modifiers should not result in an unknown token
  • Duplicate regex modifiers should throw an error
  • Add support for function calls
  • Support for regular expressions
  • Fix build on PHP 7 / Nightly
  • Allow variables in arrays
  • Verify function and method name spelling (.tOuPpErCAse() is currently valid)
  • ...

License

License