An OpenGraph image generator written purely in PHP, so you don't need to install another runtime somewhere or a whole browser instance just to create a dynamic PNG.
The OG is completely free to use for personal or commercial use. If it's making your job easier, or you just want to make sure it keeps being supported and improved, I'd really appreciate your donations!
Donate now via GitHub Sponsors
If you're using The OG, I'd love to see your creations! Please send me a tweet/toot (@simonhamp, @[email protected]) with some links so I can see how you're using The OG in the wild.
Thank you π
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Install via Composer:
composer require simonhamp/the-og
Using The OG is really simple. Here's a basic example:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Background;
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Image;
(new Image())
->accentColor('#cc0000')
->border()
->url('https://example.com/blog/some-blog-post-url')
->title('Some blog post title that is quite big and quite long')
->description(<<<'TEXT'
Some slightly smaller but potentially much longer subtext. It could be really long so we might need to trim it completely after many words.
Some slightly smaller but potentially much longer subtext. It could be really long so we might need to trim it completely after many words.
TEXT)
->background(Background::JustWaves, 0.2)
->save(__DIR__.'/test.png');
And here's the image that generates:
The Image
class provides an elegant and fluent API for
configuring the content, style and layout of your image, as well as helpers to render the image and save it to a file.
Want to see how your images will look when shared on social media? Check out SEOToolkit's Social Share preview
Conveniently, you can use the save()
method to store your image on the local filesystem:
$image = new Image;
$image->save('/path/to/your/image.png');
If you prefer to store your image somewhere other than the local filesystem (e.g. storing it on Amazon S3) you can use
the toString()
method.
toString()
will return the rendered image as a binary string:
$image = (new Image())->toString();
// $service here could be an AWS\S3\S3Client, for example
$service->putObject([
'Key' => 'example-image.png',
'Body' => $image,
'ContentType' => 'image/png',
]);
This will send the raw binary data directly to the external service without needing to write the image to a file on the local disk first.
By default, The OG encodes images in PNG format.
If you wish to use a different format, however, you can! Simply
pass an instance of the relevant
intervention/image
encoder
to the save()
or toString()
methods:
use Intervention\Image\Encoders\WebpEncoder;
$image->toString(encoder: new WebpEncoder);
Throughout The OG, colors can be expressed as hex codes, rgba, or HTML named colors.
The OG comes with a number of built-in background patterns that you can use to add some texture to your image. You can
find all of these defined in the Background
enum.
Backgrounds can be set to Repeat
or Cover
and have opacity too:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Background;
use SimonHamp\TheOg\BackgroundPlacement;
(new Image)->background(
background: Background::JustWaves,
opacity: 0.5,
placement: BackgroundPlacement::Cover
);
It also supports custom background images from local or remote sources. See the Custom Background Images section below.
Borders provide a subtle variation of color and texture to your image by framing one, or multiple edges of the image
with a single band of colorβusually the theme's accentColor
.
Borders are usually defined as part of the theme, but you can override the border position, color and size on the image itself:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\BorderPosition;
$image = new Image;
$image->border(BorderPosition::Top, 'pink', 10);
The available border positions are:
BorderPosition::All
- All 4 edges will be borderedBorderPosition::Bottom
- The bottom edge will be borderedBorderPosition::Left
- The left edge will be borderedBorderPosition::Right
- The right edge will be borderedBorderPosition::None
- No edges will be borderedBorderPosition::Top
- The top edge will be borderedBorderPosition::X
- CombinesBorderPosition::Top
andBorderPosition::Bottom
BorderPosition::Y
- CombinesBorderPosition::Left
andBorderPosition::Right
You can remove the default border from the image by chaining the border()
method with the position
argument set to
BorderPosition::None
:
$image = new Image;
$image->border(BorderPosition::None);
Themes set the colors, fonts, and styles for your image. There are currently 2 themes available:
Light
and Dark
.
The default theme is Light
.
You can set the theme on your image at any point before it's rendered:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Theme;
$image = new Image;
$image->theme(Theme::Dark);
Themes are simple classes that implement the
Theme
interface.
However, you can create your own theme most easily by simply instantiating the
Theme
class:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Theme\Fonts\Inter;
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Theme\Theme;
$theme = new Theme(
accentColor: '#247BA0',
backgroundColor: '#ECEBE4',
baseColor: '#153B50',
baseFont: Inter::bold(),
callToActionBackgroundColor: '#153B50',
callToActionColor: '#ECEBE4',
descriptionColor: '#429EA6',
descriptionFont: Inter::light(),
titleFont: Inter::black(),
);
$image = new Image;
$image->theme($theme);
Currently, there are 2 fonts available (each with 4 variants):
If you think a particular font will make sense added to the core of this package, please consider contributing and open a Pull Request.
You can load custom fonts by creating a class that implements the
Font
interface:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Interfaces\Font;
class CustomFont implements Font
{
public function path(string $path): string
{
return '/path/to/your/font/source/file.ttf';
}
}
Then you can load this font when defining your theme:
$font = new CustomFont;
$theme = new Theme(
baseFont: $font,
);
If the built-in background patterns don't tickle your fancy, you can load your own simply by instantiating the
Background
class:
use SimonHamp\TheOg\Theme\Background;
$background = new Background('/path/to/your/image.png');
Then you can pass the background to your custom theme, or directly to your image:
$theme = new Theme(
background: $background,
);
$image = (new Image)->theme($theme);
// Or
$image->background($background);
If you want more customization of the background, you may create your own background classes that implement the
Background
interface.
You can override some theme settings, such as the accent color, background and background color, without having to create a whole new theme.
$image = new Image;
$image->backgroundColor('seagreen')
->background($customBackground);
While themes govern the colors and styles used within your images, layouts govern the size of your images and the size and position of the image's elements (text blocks, other images etc.), called features.
Different layouts provide different features.
There are currently 3 layouts:
The default layout is Standard
.
More layouts are coming.
Layouts are simple classes with some basic settings and features()
method to define all of your image's features.
Each layout class must implement the
Layout
interface
Take a look at the Standard layout, or any of the other built-in layouts, as an example.
In it, you'll see the basic settings for the layout, such as the dimensions of the canvas, the border size and location, and any padding.
All sizes are in pixels.
Features are the individual elements that make up your image, such as the Title, Description, URL etc.
All layouts support a background (which is always rendered first) and a border (which is always rendered last), so you do not normally need to define these as distinct features.
Beyond that, the features of the image are entirely defined by the Layout. The order in which they are defined determines their rendering order and, therefore, their layering.
Available built-in features:
TextBox
Allows you to render a constrained block of text. The size of the box serves to constrain the text; the final size of the box is determined by the length, font, size, and line height of the rendered text.PictureBox
Allows you to render an image.
See the built-in layouts for examples of how to use these features and add them to a layout.
Features can be positioned absolutely anywhere on the canvas or relatively to another feature on the canvas.
To use relative positioning, it's helpful to give your target feature a unique name, which is used when other features need to reference its final rendered position.
See the built-in layouts for examples of how to position features.
All features must implement the
Box
interface.
The key method of any feature is the render()
method, which is responsible for rendering the feature onto the image.
This method receives an instance of the underlying
Intervention\Image\Image
class, allowing you to
use Intervention's own modifiers directly, e.g.:
use Intervention\Image\Interfaces\ImageInterface;
public function render(ImageInterface $image)
{
$image->drawCircle(10, 10, function ($circle) {
$circle->radius(150);
$circle->background('lightblue');
$circle->border('b53717', 1);
});
}
You should, however, extend the Box
class as this
provides a number of useful conveniences, especially if you want to use relative positioning.
The OG uses PHPUnit with snapshot testing.
To run the integration tests, you need to install all Composer dependencies:
composer install
You will also need Node.js (version 20 or above) and to install the NPM dependencies:
npm install
Once done, you can execute the tests:
./vendor/bin/phpunit
I'd really appreciate and welcome any PRs to help improve this package!
All support is handled via GitHub Issues.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see LICENSE for more details.