Welcome to the Stark Bank PHP SDK! This tool is made for PHP developers who want to easily integrate with our API. This SDK version is compatible with the Stark Bank API v2.
If you have no idea what Stark Bank is, check out our website and discover a world where receiving or making payments is as easy as sending a text message to your client!
This library supports the following PHP versions:
- PHP 7.1
- PHP 7.2
- PHP 7.3
- PHP 7.4
Feel free to take a look at our API docs.
This project adheres to the following versioning pattern:
Given a version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, increment:
- MAJOR version when the API version is incremented. This may include backwards incompatible changes;
- MINOR version when breaking changes are introduced OR new functionalities are added in a backwards compatible manner;
- PATCH version when backwards compatible bug fixes are implemented.
1.1 Composer: To install the package with Composer, run:
composer require starkbank/sdk
To use the bindings, use Composer's autoload:
require_once('vendor/autoload.php');
1.2 Manual installation: You can also download the latest release from GitHub and then, to use the bindings, include the init.php file.
require_once('/path/to/starkbank/sdk-php/init.php');
In manual installations, you will also need to get the following dependency:
We use ECDSA. That means you need to generate a secp256k1 private key to sign your requests to our API, and register your public key with us so we can validate those requests.
You can use one of following methods:
2.1. Check out the options in our tutorial.
2.2. Use our SDK:
use StarkBank\Key;
list($privateKey, $publicKey) = Key::create();
# or, to also save .pem files in a specific path
list($privateKey, $publicKey) = Key::create("file/keys/");
NOTE: When you are creating new credentials, it is recommended that you create the keys inside the infrastructure that will use it, in order to avoid any risky internet transmissions of your private-key. Then you can export the public-key alone to the computer where it will be used in the new Project creation.
You can interact directly with our API using two types of users: Projects and Organizations.
- Projects are workspace-specific users, that is, they are bound to the workspaces they are created in. One workspace can have multiple Projects.
- Organizations are general users that control your entire organization. They can control all your Workspaces and even create new ones. The Organization is bound to your company's tax ID only. Since this user is unique in your entire organization, only one credential can be linked to it.
3.1. To create a Project in Sandbox:
3.1.1. Log into Starkbank Sandbox
3.1.2. Go to Menu > Integrations
3.1.3. Click on the "New Project" button
3.1.4. Create a Project: Give it a name and upload the public key you created in section 2
3.1.5. After creating the Project, get its Project ID
3.1.6. Use the Project ID and private key to create the object below:
use StarkBank\Project;
// Get your private key from an environment variable or an encrypted database.
// This is only an example of a private key content. You should use your own key.
$privateKeyContent = "
-----BEGIN EC PARAMETERS-----
BgUrgQQACg==
-----END EC PARAMETERS-----
-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY-----
MHQCAQEEIMCwW74H6egQkTiz87WDvLNm7fK/cA+ctA2vg/bbHx3woAcGBSuBBAAK
oUQDQgAE0iaeEHEgr3oTbCfh8U2L+r7zoaeOX964xaAnND5jATGpD/tHec6Oe9U1
IF16ZoTVt1FzZ8WkYQ3XomRD4HS13A==
-----END EC PRIVATE KEY-----
";
$project = new Project([
"environment" => "sandbox",
"id" => "5656565656565656",
"privateKey" => $privateKeyContent
]);
3.2. To create Organization credentials in Sandbox:
3.2.1. Log into Starkbank Sandbox
3.2.2. Go to Menu > Integrations
3.2.3. Click on the "Organization public key" button
3.2.4. Upload the public key you created in section 2 (only a legal representative of the organization can upload the public key)
3.2.5. Click on your profile picture and then on the "Organization" menu to get the Organization ID
3.2.6. Use the Organization ID and private key to create the object below:
use StarkBank\Organization;
// Get your private key from an environment variable or an encrypted database.
// This is only an example of a private key content. You should use your own key.
privateKeyContent = "
-----BEGIN EC PARAMETERS-----
BgUrgQQACg==
-----END EC PARAMETERS-----
-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY-----
MHQCAQEEIMCwW74H6egQkTiz87WDvLNm7fK/cA+ctA2vg/bbHx3woAcGBSuBBAAK
oUQDQgAE0iaeEHEgr3oTbCfh8U2L+r7zoaeOX964xaAnND5jATGpD/tHec6Oe9U1
IF16ZoTVt1FzZ8WkYQ3XomRD4HS13A==
-----END EC PRIVATE KEY-----
";
$organization = new Organization([
"environment" => "sandbox",
"id" => "5656565656565656",
"privateKey" => $privateKeyContent,
"workspaceId" => null // You only need to set the workspaceId when you are operating a specific workspaceId
]);
// To dynamically use your organization credentials in a specific workspaceId,
// you can use the Organization::replace() method:
$balance = Balance::get(Organization::replace($organization, "4848484848484848"));
NOTE 1: Never hard-code your private key. Get it from an environment variable or an encrypted database.
NOTE 2: We support 'sandbox'
and 'production'
as environments.
NOTE 3: The credentials you registered in sandbox
do not exist in production
and vice versa.
There are three kinds of users that can access our API: Organization, Project and Member.
Project
andOrganization
are designed for integrations and are the ones meant for our SDKs.Member
is the one you use when you log into our webpage with your e-mail.
There are two ways to inform the user to the SDK:
4.1 Passing the user as argument in all functions:
use StarkBank\Balance;
$balance = Balance::get($project); # or organization
4.2 Set it as a default user in the SDK:
use StarkBank\Settings;
use StarkBank\Balance;
Settings::setUser($project); # or organization
$balance = Balance::get();
Just select the way of passing the user that is more convenient to you. On all following examples we will assume a default user has been set.
The error language can also be set in the same way as the default user:
use StarkBank\Settings;
Settings::setLanguage("en-US");
Language options are "en-US" for english and "pt-BR" for brazilian portuguese. English is default.
Almost all SDK resources provide a query
and a page
function.
- The
query
function provides a straight forward way to efficiently iterate through all results that match the filters you inform, seamlessly retrieving the next batch of elements from the API only when you reach the end of the current batch. If you are not worried about data volume or processing time, this is the way to go.
use StarkBank\Transaction;
$transactions = Transaction::query([
"after" => "2020-01-01",
"before" => "2020-03-01"
]);
foreach($transactions as $transaction){
print_r($transaction);
}
- The
page
function gives you full control over the API pagination. With each function call, you receive up to 100 results and the cursor to retrieve the next batch of elements. This allows you to stop your queries and pick up from where you left off whenever it is convenient. When there are no more elements to be retrieved, the returned cursor will beNone
.
use StarkBank\Transaction;
$cursor = null;
while (true) {
list($page, $cursor) = Transaction::page($options = ["limit" => 5, "cursor" => $cursor]);
foreach ($page as $transaction) {
print_r($transaction);
}
if ($cursor == null) {
break;
}
}
To simplify the following SDK examples, we will only use the query
function, but feel free to use page
instead.
Your initial balance is zero. For many operations in Stark Bank, you'll need funds in your account, which can be added to your balance by creating an Invoice or a Boleto.
In the Sandbox environment, most of the created Invoices and Boletos will be automatically paid, so there's nothing else you need to do to add funds to your account. Just create a few Invoices and wait around a bit.
In Production, you (or one of your clients) will need to actually pay this Invoice or Boleto for the value to be credited to your account.
Here are a few examples on how to use the SDK. If you have any doubts, check out the function or class docstring to get more info or go straight to our [API docs].
To send money between Stark Bank accounts, you can create transactions:
use StarkBank\Transaction;
$transactions = Transaction::create([
new Transaction([
"amount" => 100, # (R$ 1.00)
"receiverId" => "1029378109327810",
"description" => "Transaction to dear provider",
"externalId" => "12345", # so we can block anything you send twice by mistake
"tags" => ["provider"]
]),
new Transaction([
"amount" => 234, # (R$ 2.34)
"receiverId" => "2093029347820947",
"description" => "Transaction to the other provider",
"externalId" => "12346", # so we can block anything you send twice by mistake
"tags" => ["provider"]
]),
]);
foreach($transactions as $transaction){
print_r($transaction);
}
Note: Instead of using Transaction objects, you can also pass each transaction element directly in array format, without using the constructor
To understand your balance changes (bank statement), you can query transactions. Note that our system creates transactions for you when you receive boleto payments, pay a bill or make transfers, for example.
use StarkBank\Transaction;
$transactions = Transaction::query([
"after" => "2020-01-01",
"before" => "2020-03-01"
]);
foreach($transactions as $transaction){
print_r($transaction);
}
You can get a specific transaction by its id:
use StarkBank\Transaction;
$transaction = Transaction::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($transaction);
To know how much money you have in your workspace, run:
use StarkBank\Balance;
$balance = Balance::get();
print_r($balance);
You can also create transfers in the SDK (TED/Pix).
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$transfers = Transfer::create([
new Transfer([
"amount" => 100,
"bankCode" => "033", # TED
"branchCode" => "0001",
"accountNumber" => "10000-0",
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"name" => "Tony Stark",
"tags" => ["iron", "suit"]
]),
new Transfer([
"amount" => 200,
"bankCode" => "20018183", # Pix
"branchCode" => "1234",
"accountNumber" => "123456-7",
"accountType" => "salary",
"externalId" => "my-internal-id-12345",
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"name" => "Jon Snow",
"scheduled" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P1D")),
"description" => "Transaction to dear provider",
"tags" => []
])
]);
foreach($transfers as $transfer){
print_r($transfer);
}
Note: Instead of using Transfer objects, you can also pass each transfer element directly in array format, without using the constructor
You can query multiple transfers according to filters.
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$transfers = Transfer::query([
"after" => "2020-01-01",
"before" => "2020-04-01"
]);
foreach($transfers as $transfer){
print_r($transfer->name);
}
To get a single transfer by its id, run:
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$transfer = Transfer::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($transfer);
To cancel a single scheduled transfer by its id, run:
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$transfer = Transfer::delete("5155165527080960");
print_r($transfer);
A transfer PDF may also be retrieved by passing its id. This operation is only valid if the transfer status is "processing" or "success".
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$pdf = Transfer::pdf("5155165527080960");
$fp = fopen('transfer.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can query transfer logs to better understand transfer life cycles.
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$logs = Transfer\Log::query(["limit" => 50]);
foreach($logs as $log){
print_r($log->id);
}
You can also get a specific log by its id.
use StarkBank\Transfer;
$log = Transfer\Log::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($log);
You can query institutions registered by the Brazilian Central Bank for Pix and TED transactions.
use StarkBank\Institution;
$institutions = Institution::query(["search" => "stark"]);
foreach($institutions as $institution){
print_r($institution);
}
You can create dynamic QR Code invoices to charge customers or to receive money from accounts you have in other banks.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$invoices = [
new Invoice([
"amount" => 400000,
"due" => ((new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P5D"))),
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"name" => "Mr Meeseks",
"expiration" => new DateInterval("P2D"),
"fine" => 2.5,
"interest" => 1.3,
"discounts" => [
[
"percentage" => 5,
"due" => ((new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P1D")))
],
[
"percentage" => 3,
"due" => ((new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P2D")))
]
],
"tags" => [
'War supply',
'Invoice #1234'
],
"descriptions" => [
[
"key" => "product A",
"value" => "big"
],
[
"key" => "product B",
"value" => "medium"
],
[
"key" => "product C",
"value" => "small"
]
],
])
];
$invoice = Invoice::create($invoices)[0];
print_r($invoice);
Note: Instead of using Invoice objects, you can also pass each invoice element directly in array format, without using the constructor
After its creation, information on an invoice may be retrieved by its id. Its status indicates whether it's been paid.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$invoice = Invoice::get("5656565656565656");
print_r($invoice);
After its creation, an Invoice QR Code may be retrieved by its id.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$png = Invoice::qrcode("5881614903017472");
$fp = fopen('qrcode.png', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $png);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw png content, as it may corrupt the file.
After its creation, an invoice PDF may be retrieved by its id.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$pdf = Invoice::pdf("5656565656565656");
$fp = fopen('invoice.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can also cancel an invoice by its id. Note that this is not possible if it has been paid already.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$invoice = Invoice::update("5656565656565656", ["status" => "canceled"]);
print_r($invoice);
You can update an invoice's amount, due date and expiration by its id. Note that this is not possible if it has been paid already.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$updatedInvoice = Invoice::update(
"5656565656565656",
[
"amount" => 4321,
"due" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P5D")),
"expiration" => 123456789
]
);
print_r($updatedInvoice);
You can get a list of created invoices given some filters.
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$invoices = iterator_to_array(Invoice::query(["limit" => 10, "before" => new DateTime("now")]));
foreach($invoices as $invoice) {
print_r($invoice);
}
Whenever an Invoice is successfully reversed, a reversed log will be created. To retrieve a specific reversal receipt, you can request the corresponding log PDF:
use StarkBank\Invoice\Log;
$pdf = Log::pdf("5155165527080960");
$fp = fopen('invoice-log.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
Once an invoice has been paid, you can get the payment information using the Invoice.Payment sub-resource:
use StarkBank\Invoice;
$paymentInformation = Invoice::payment("5656565656565656");
print_r($paymentInformation);
Logs are pretty important to understand the life cycle of an invoice.
use StarkBank\Invoice\Log;
$invoiceLogs = iterator_to_array(Log::query(["limit" => 10, "types" => ["created"]]));
foreach($invoiceLogs as $log) {
print_r($log);
}
You can get a single log by its id.
use StarkBank\Invoice\Log;
$invoiceLog = Log::get("5656565656565656");
print_r($invoice);
You can get a list of created deposits given some filters.
use StarkBank\Deposit;
$deposits = iterator_to_array(Deposit::query(["limit" => 10, "before" => new DateTime("now")]));
foreach($deposits as $deposit) {
print_r($deposit);
}
After its creation, information on a deposit may be retrieved by its id.
use StarkBank\Deposit;
$deposit = Deposit::get("5656565656565656");
print_r($deposit);
Logs are pretty important to understand the life cycle of a deposit.
use StarkBank\Deposit\Log;
$depositLogs = iterator_to_array(Log::query(["limit" => 10, "types" => ["created"]]));
foreach($depositLogs as $log) {
print_r($log);
}
You can get a single log by its id.
use StarkBank\Deposit\Log;
$depositLog = Log::get("5656565656565656");
print_r($deposit);
You can create boletos to charge customers or to receive money from accounts you have in other banks.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$boletos = Boleto::create([
new Boleto([
"amount" => 23571, # R$ 235,71
"name" => "Buzz Aldrin",
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"streetLine1" => "Av. Paulista, 200",
"streetLine2" => "10 andar",
"district" => "Bela Vista",
"city" => "São Paulo",
"stateCode" => "SP",
"zipCode" => "01310-000",
"due" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P30D")),
"fine" => 5, # 5%
"interest" => 2.5 # 2.5% per month
])
]);
foreach($boletos as $boleto){
print_r($boleto);
}
Note: Instead of using Boleto objects, you can also pass each boleto element directly in array format, without using the constructor
After its creation, information on a boleto may be retrieved by passing its id. Its status indicates whether it's been paid.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$boleto = Boleto::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($boleto);
After its creation, a boleto PDF may be retrieved by passing its id.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$pdf = Boleto::pdf("5155165527080960", ["layout" => "default"]);
$fp = fopen('boleto.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can also cancel a boleto by its id. Note that this is not possible if it has been processed already.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$boleto = Boleto::delete("5155165527080960");
print_r($boleto);
You can get an array of created boletos given some filters.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$boletos = Boleto::query([
"after" => "2020-01-01",
"before" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P1D"))
]);
foreach($boletos as $boleto){
print_r($boleto);
}
Logs are pretty important to understand the life cycle of a boleto.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$logs = Boleto\Log::query(["limit" => 150]);
foreach($logs as $log){
print_r($log);
}
You can get a single log by its id.
use StarkBank\Boleto;
$log = Boleto\Log::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($log);
You can discover if a StarkBank boleto has been recently paid before we receive the response on the next day. This can be done by creating a BoletoHolmes object, which fetches the updated status of the corresponding Boleto object according to CIP to check, for example, whether it is still payable or not. The investigation happens asynchronously and the most common way to retrieve the results is to register a "boleto-holmes" webhook subscription, although polling is also possible.
use StarkBank\BoletoHolmes;
$holmes = [new BoletoHolmes([
"boletoId" => "5976467733217280"
])];
$sherlock = BoletoHolmes::create($holmes)[0];
foreach($holmes as $sherlock){
print_r($sherlock);
}
Note: Instead of using BoletoHolmes objects, you can also pass each payment element directly in array format, without using the constructor
To get a single Holmes by its id, run:
use StarkBank\BoletoHolmes;
$sherlock = Boleto::get("5976467733217280");
print_r($sherlock)
You can search for boleto Holmes using filters.
use StarkBank\BoletoHolmes;
$holmes = iterator_to_array(Boleto::query(["limit" => 10, "before" => new DateTime("now")]));
foreach($holmes as $sherlock){
print_r($sherlock);
}
Searches are also possible with boleto holmes logs:
use StarkBank\BoletoHolmes\Log;
$logs = iterator_to_array(Log::query(["limit" => 10, "types" => ["solving"]]));
foreach($logs as $log){
print_r($log);
}
You can also get a boleto holmes log by specifying its id.
use StarkBank\BoletoHolmes\Log;
$log = Log::get("5976467733217280");
print_r($log)
You can confirm the information on the BR Code payment before creating it with this preview method:
use StarkBank\BrcodePreview;
$previews = BrcodePreview::query([
"brcodes" => ["00020126580014br.gov.bcb.pix0136a629532e-7693-4846-852d-1bbff817b5a8520400005303986540510.005802BR5908T'Challa6009Sao Paulo62090505123456304B14A"],
]);
foreach($previews as $preview){
print_r($preview);
}
Paying a BR Code is also simple.
use StarkBank\BrcodePayment;
$payments = BrcodePayment::create([
new BrcodePayment([
"brcode" => "00020126580014br.gov.bcb.pix0136a629532e-7693-4846-852d-1bbff817b5a8520400005303986540510.005802BR5908T'Challa6009Sao Paulo62090505123456304B14A",
"taxId" => "20.018.183/0001-80",
"description" => "Tony Stark's Suit",
"amount" => 7654321,
"scheduled" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P5D")),
"tags" => ["Stark", "Suit"]
])
]);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
Note: Instead of using BrcodePayment objects, you can also pass each payment element directly in array format, without using the constructor
To get a single BR Code payment by its id, run:
use StarkBank\BrcodePayment;
$payment = BrcodePayment::get("19278361897236187236");
print_r($payment);
After its creation, a BR Code payment PDF may be retrieved by its id.
use StarkBank\BrcodePayment;
$pdf = BrcodePayment::pdf("5155165527080960");
$fp = fopen('brcodePayment.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can search for BR Code payments using filters.
use StarkBank\BrcodePayment;
$payments = BrcodePayment::query([
"tags" => ["company_1", "company_2"]
]);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
Searches are also possible with BR Code payment logs:
use StarkBank\BrcodePayment;
$logs = BrcodePayment\Log::query([
"paymentIds" => ["5155165527080960", "76551659167801921"],
]);
foreach($logs as $log){
print_r($log);
}
You can also get a BR Code payment log by specifying its id.
use StarkBank\BrcodePayment;
$log = BrcodePayment\Log::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($log);
Paying a boleto is also simple.
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$payments = BoletoPayment::create([
new BoletoPayment([
"line" => "34191.09008 64694.017308 71444.640008 1 96610000014500",
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"scheduled" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P2D")),
"description" => "take my money",
"tags" => ["take", "my", "money"],
]),
new BoletoPayment([
"barCode" => "34191972300000289001090064694197307144464000",
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"scheduled" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P1D")),
"description" => "take my money one more time",
"tags" => ["again"],
]),
]);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
Note: Instead of using BoletoPayment objects, you can also pass each payment element directly in array format, without using the constructor
To get a single boleto payment by its id, run:
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$payment = BoletoPayment::get("19278361897236187236");
print_r($payment);
After its creation, a boleto payment PDF may be retrieved by passing its id.
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$pdf = BoletoPayment::pdf("5155165527080960");
$fp = fopen('boletoPayment.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can also cancel a boleto payment by its id. Note that this is not possible if it has been processed already.
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$payment = BoletoPayment::delete("5155165527080960");
print_r($payment);
You can search for boleto payments using filters.
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$payments = BoletoPayment::query([
"tags" => ["company_1", "company_2"]
]);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
Searches are also possible with boleto payment logs:
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$logs = BoletoPayment\Log::query([
"paymentIds" => ["5155165527080960", "76551659167801921"],
]);
foreach($logs as $log){
print_r($log);
}
You can also get a boleto payment log by specifying its id.
use StarkBank\BoletoPayment;
$log = BoletoPayment\Log::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($log);
It's also simple to pay utility bills (such as electricity and water bills) in the SDK.
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$payments = UtilityPayment::create([
new UtilityPayment([
"line" => "83680000001 7 08430138003 0 71070987611 8 00041351685 7",
"scheduled" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P2D")),
"description" => "take my money",
"tags" => ["take", "my", "money"],
]),
new UtilityPayment([
"barCode" => "83600000001522801380037107172881100021296561",
"scheduled" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P1D")),
"description" => "take my money one more time",
"tags" => ["again"],
]),
]);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
Note: Instead of using UtilityPayment objects, you can also pass each payment element directly in array format, without using the constructor
To search for utility payments using filters, run:
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$payments = UtilityPayment::query([
"tags" => ["electricity", "gas"]
]);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
You can get a specific bill by its id:
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$payment = UtilityPayment::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($payment);
After its creation, a utility payment PDF may also be retrieved by passing its id.
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$pdf = UtilityPayment::pdf("5155165527080960");
$fp = fopen('electricity.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can also cancel a utility payment by its id. Note that this is not possible if it has been processed already.
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$payment = UtilityPayment::delete("5155165527080960");
print_r($payment);
You can search for payments by specifying filters. Use this to understand the bills life cycles.
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$logs = UtilityPayment\Log::query([
"paymentIds" => ["102893710982379182", "92837912873981273"],
]);
foreach($logs as $log){
print_r($log);
}
If you want to get a specific payment log by its id, just run:
use StarkBank\UtilityPayment;
$log = UtilityPayment\Log::get("1902837198237992");
print_r($log);
It is also simple to pay taxes (such as ISS and DAS) using this SDK.
use StarkBank\TaxPayment;
$payments = [
new TaxPayment([
"barCode" => "85660000001549403280074119002551100010601813",
"description" => "33ff6f90de30c7f60526dbe6a1bb3d0cd1f751c89a2fc9a8aad087d4efdc0bce",
"tags" => ["test2"],
"scheduled" => "2021-07-13"
])];
$payments = TaxPayment::create($payment);
foreach($payments as $payment){
print_r($payment);
}
Note: Instead of using TaxPayment objects, you can also pass each payment element in dictionary format
To search for tax payments using filters, run:
use StarkBank\TaxPayment;
$payments = iterator_to_array(TaxPayment::query(["limit" => 10]));
print_r($payments);
You can get a specific tax payment by its id:
use StarkBank\TaxPayment;
$payment = TaxPayment::get("5155165527080960");
print_r($payment);
After its creation, a tax payment PDF may also be retrieved by its id.
use StarkBank\TaxPayment;
$pdf = TaxPayment::pdf("5155165527080960");
$fp = fopen('taxPayment.pdf', 'w');
fwrite($fp, $pdf);
fclose($fp);
Be careful not to accidentally enforce any encoding on the raw pdf content, as it may yield abnormal results in the final file, such as missing images and strange characters.
You can also cancel a tax payment by its id. Note that this is not possible if it has been processed already.
use StarkBank\TaxPayment;
$payment = TaxPayment::delete("5155165527080960");
print_r($payment);
You can search for payment logs by specifying filters. Use this to understand each payment life cycle.
use StarkBank\TaxPayment\Log;
$paymentLogs = iterator_to_array(Log::query(["limit" => 10, "types" => ["created"]]));
print_r($paymentLogs);
If you want to get a specific payment log by its id, just run:
use StarkBank\TaxPayment\Log;
$paymentLog = Log::get("1902837198237992");
print_r($paymentLog);
Note: Some taxes can't be payed with bar codes. Since they have specific parameters, each one of them has its own resource and routes, which are all analogous to the TaxPayment resource. The ones we currently support are:
- DarfPayment, for DARFs
You can also request payments that must pass through a specific cost center approval flow to be executed. In certain structures, this allows double checks for cash-outs and also gives time to load your account with the required amount before the payments take place. The approvals can be granted at our website and must be performed according to the rules specified in the cost center.
Note: The value of the centerId parameter can be consulted by logging into our website and going to the desired cost center page.
use StarkBank\PaymentRequest;
$requests = PaymentRequest::create([
new PaymentRequest([
"centerId" => "5967314465849344",
"payment" => new Transfer([
"amount" => 100,
"bankCode" => "033",
"branchCode" => "0001",
"accountNumber" => "10000-0",
"taxId" => "012.345.678-90",
"name" => "Tony Stark",
"tags" => ["iron", "suit"]
]),
"due" => (new DateTime("now"))->add(new DateInterval("P30D"))
])
]);
foreach($requests as $request){
print_r($request);
}
Note: Instead of using PaymentRequest objects, you can also pass each request element directly in array format, without using the constructor
To search for payment requests, run:
use StarkBank\PaymentRequest;
$requests = PaymentRequest::query(["centerId" => "5967314465849344", "limit" => 10]);
foreach($requests as $request){
print_r($request);
}
To create a webhook subscription and be notified whenever an event occurs, run:
use StarkBank\Webhook;
$webhook = Webhook::create([
"url" => "https://webhook.site/dd784f26-1d6a-4ca6-81cb-fda0267761ec",
"subscriptions" => ["transfer", "invoice", "deposit", "brcode-payment", "boleto", "boleto-payment", "utility-payment", "tax-payment"]
]);
print_r($webhook);
To search for registered webhooks, run:
use StarkBank\Webhook;
$webhooks = Webhook::query();
foreach($webhooks as $webhook){
print_r($webhook);
}
You can get a specific webhook by its id.
use StarkBank\Webhook;
$webhook = Webhook::get("10827361982368179");
print_r($webhook);
You can also delete a specific webhook by its id.
use StarkBank\Webhook;
$webhook = Webhook::delete("10827361982368179");
print_r($webhook);
It's easy to process events that arrived in your webhook. Remember to pass the signature header so the SDK can make sure it's really StarkBank that sent you the event.
use StarkBank\Event;
$response = listen() # this is the method you made to get the events posted to your webhook
$event = Event::parse($response->content, $response->headers["Digital-Signature"]);
if ($event->subscription == "transfer"){
print_r($event->log->transfer);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "deposit"){
print_r($event->log->deposit);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "invoice"){
print_r($event->log->invoice);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "brcode-payment"){
print_r($event->log->payment);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "boleto"){
print_r($event->log->boleto);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "boleto-payment"){
print_r($event->log->payment);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "utility-payment"){
print_r($event->log->payment);
} elseif ($event->subscription == "tax-payment"){
print_r($event->log->payment);
}
To search for webhooks events, run:
use StarkBank\Event;
$events = Event::query(["after" => "2020-03-20", "isDelivered" => false]);
foreach($events as $event){
print_r($event);
}
You can get a specific webhook event by its id.
use StarkBank\Event;
$event = Event::get("10827361982368179");
print_r($event);
You can also delete a specific webhook event by its id.
use StarkBank\Event;
$event = Event::delete("10827361982368179");
print_r($event);
This can be used in case you've lost events.
With this function, you can manually set events retrieved from the API as
"delivered" to help future event queries with isDelivered=false
.
use StarkBank\Event;
$event = Event::update("129837198237192", ["isDelivered" => true]);
print_r($event);
You can also get information on failed webhook event delivery attempts.
use StarkBank\Event\Attempt;
$attempts = Attempt::query(["eventIds" => $event->id, "limit" => 1]);
foreach($attempts as $attempt){
print_r($attempt);
}
To retrieve information on a single attempt, use the following function:
use StarkBank\Event\Attempt;
$attempt = Attempt::get("1616161616161616");
print_r($attempt);
You can get Pix key's parameters by its id.
use StarkBank\DictKey;
$dictKey = DictKey::get();
print_r($dictKey);
To take a look at the Pix keys linked to your workspace, just run the following:
use StarkBank\DictKey;
$dictKeys = iterator_to_array(DictKey::query(["limit" => 1, "type" => "evp", "status" => "registered"]));
foreach($dictKeys as $dictKey) {
print_r($dictKey);
}
The Organization user allows you to create new Workspaces (bank accounts) under your organization. Workspaces have independent balances, statements, operations and users. The only link between your Workspaces is the Organization that controls them.
Note: This route will only work if the Organization user is used with workspaceId=null
.
use StarkBank\Workspace;
$workspace = Workspace::create(
[
"username" => "iron-bank-workspace-1",
"name" => "Iron Bank Workspace 1",
"allowedTaxIds" => ["96448045031", "26312286002"]
],
$organization
);
print_r($workspace)
This route lists Workspaces. If no parameter is passed, all the workspaces the user has access to will be listed, but you can also find other Workspaces by searching for their usernames or IDs directly.
use StarkBank\Workspace;
$workspaces = Workspace::query(["limit" => 30]);
foreach($workspaces as $workspace){
print_r($workspace);
}
You can get a specific Workspace by its id.
use StarkBank\Workspace;
$workspace = Workspace::get("10827361982368179");
print_r($workspace);
You can update a specific Workspace by its id.
use StarkBank\Workspace;
$workspace = Workspace::update(
"10827361982368179",
[
"username" => "new-username",
"name" => "New name",
"allowedTaxIds" => ["96448045031", "26312286002"]
],
$organization
);
print_r($workspace);
The SDK may raise one of four types of errors: InputErrors, InternalServerError, UnknownError, InvalidSignatureError
InputErrors will be raised whenever the API detects an error in your request (status code 400). If you catch such an error, you can get its elements to verify each of the individual errors that were detected in your request by the API. For example:
use StarkBank\Transaction;
use StarkBank\Error\InputErrors;
try {
$transactions = Transaction::create([
new Transaction([
"amount" => 99999999999999, # (R$ 999,999,999,999.99)
"receiverId" => "1029378109327810",
"description" => ".",
"externalId" => "12345", # so we can block anything you send twice by mistake
"tags" => ["provider"]
]),
]);
} catch (InputErrors $e) {
foreach($e->errors as $error){
echo "\n\ncode: " . $error->errorCode;
echo "\nmessage: " . $error->errorMessage;
}
}
InternalServerError will be raised if the API runs into an internal error. If you ever stumble upon this one, rest assured that the development team is already rushing in to fix the mistake and get you back up to speed.
UnknownError will be raised if a request encounters an error that is neither InputErrors nor an InternalServerError, such as connectivity problems.
InvalidSignatureError will be raised specifically by StarkBank\Event::parse() when the provided content and signature do not check out with the Stark Bank public key.