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In this tutorial, we'll set up a PHP Laravel application that uses the WhatsApp Channel to:
The code samples in this tutorial use Twilio's PHP helper library and Laravel Lumen.
Want to take a look at this PHP app in its entirety? You can clone our sample repository on GitHub to your machine and follow the README.md steps to get it up and running.
Just like when sending an MMS, sending an outbound WhatsApp message uses Twilio's Message resource. This section walks you through the setting up and sending media in a WhatsApp message. Media can consist of images, audio files, and PDF documents.
Before you can send a WhatsApp message from your web language, you'll need to sign up for a Twilio account or sign into your existing account and activate the Twilio Sandbox for WhatsApp. The Sandbox allows you to prototype with WhatsApp immediately using a shared phone number without waiting for your Twilio number to be approved by WhatsApp.
To get started, select a number from the available sandbox numbers to activate your sandbox.
Be sure to take note of the phone number you choose in the Sandbox. You will need this later when we're ready to send some messages.
Before you can send any messages, you'll need to gather your Twilio account credentials. You can find these in the Twilio Console.
For all of our code snippets and PHP examples, you need to authenticate with the Account SID and Auth Token.
This tutorial uses hard-coded credentials at the top of the code; you should follow best practices regarding credential protection in production.
To send an outgoing media message via WhatsApp from your Twilio account you'll need to make an HTTP POST
to Twilio's Message resource.
Sending a media message through WhatsApp is similar to sending a text-based message over WhatsApp with one important addition: the media_url
parameter. The media_url
parameter in this code tells Twilio where to retrieve the media that we want to include in the WhatsApp message. (You can prevent unauthorized access to your media by turning on HTTP Basic Auth for media URLs in the Twilio Console.)
If you joined your Sandbox more than 24 hours ago, you will need to send a fresh inbound message to your WhatsApp number in order to then send yourself a media message. WhatsApp currently does not support media in "template" messages that take place outside of a 24-hour session.
Twilio's PHP helper library helps you to create a new instance of the Message resource. When you do this, you'll specify the to
, from
, and mediaUrl
parameters of your message.
If you don't already have the PHP helper library installed you can install it using composer:
composer require twilio/sdk
If you're not using composer
, you can find manual installation instructions here.
Now, create a file named send_whatsapp_media.php
and include the following code:
1<?php23// Update the path below to your autoload.php,4// see https://getcomposer.org/doc/01-basic-usage.md5require_once "/path/to/vendor/autoload.php";67use Twilio\Rest\Client;89// Find your Account SID and Auth Token at twilio.com/console10// and set the environment variables. See http://twil.io/secure11$sid = getenv("TWILIO_ACCOUNT_SID");12$token = getenv("TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN");13$twilio = new Client($sid, $token);1415$message = $twilio->messages->create(16"whatsapp:+15017122661", // To17[18"mediaUrl" => [19"https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1545093149-618ce3bcf49d?ixlib=rb-1.2.1&ixid=eyJhcHBfaWQiOjEyMDd9&auto=format&fit=crop&w=668&q=80",20],21"from" => "whatsapp:+14155238886",22]23);2425print $message->sid;
1{2"account_sid": "ACaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa",3"api_version": "2010-04-01",4"body": "Hello! 👍",5"date_created": "Thu, 24 Aug 2023 05:01:45 +0000",6"date_sent": "Thu, 24 Aug 2023 05:01:45 +0000",7"date_updated": "Thu, 24 Aug 2023 05:01:45 +0000",8"direction": "outbound-api",9"error_code": null,10"error_message": null,11"from": "whatsapp:+14155238886",12"num_media": "0",13"num_segments": "1",14"price": null,15"price_unit": null,16"messaging_service_sid": "MGaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa",17"sid": "SMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa",18"status": "queued",19"subresource_uris": {20"media": "/2010-04-01/Accounts/ACaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa/Messages/SMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa/Media.json"21},22"tags": {23"campaign_name": "Spring Sale 2022",24"message_type": "cart_abandoned"25},26"to": "whatsapp:+15017122661",27"uri": "/2010-04-01/Accounts/ACaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa/Messages/SMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.json"28}
Replace the placeholder values for $sid
and $token
with your unique values. You can find these in your Twilio console.
Please note: it's okay to hard-code your credentials when getting started, but you should use environment variables to keep them secret before deploying to production. Check out how to keep your Twilio credentials secure.
The to number (whatsapp:
) should be the phone number for the destination WhatsApp account in the E.164 format. If you are using the WhatsApp Sandbox, you can only send messages to numbers that have joined the Sandbox.
You'll tell Twilio which phone number to use to send this message by replacing the from
number with the whatsapp:
channel identifier followed by the Sandbox number in E.164 format.
Save the file and run it from the command line:
php send_whatsapp_media.php
In a few moments, you should receive a WhatsApp message with an image!
Please note that WhatsApp does not support including a text body in the same message as a video, audio file, document, contact (vCard), or location. If you pass the Body
parameter on a message with one of these media types, the body will be ignored and not delivered to the device.
When you send an outbound WhatsApp media message, Twilio sends data about the message in its response to your request. The JSON response contains the unique SID and URI for your media resource:
"subresource_uris": {"media": "/2010-04 01/Accounts/ACxxxxxxxx/Messages/SMxxxxxxxxxxxxx/Media.json"}
When the Twilio REST API creates your new Message resource, it saves the image found at the specified mediaUrl
as a Media resource. Once created, you can access this resource at any time via the API.
To reply using media to incoming WhatsApp messages, you'll need to provide Twilio with a webhook URL that points to a server that runs code to inspect and save the media files.
WhatsApp media content is currently only supported in Session Messages. If the WhatsApp session with a user expires, you must wait for an inbound message to create a new session before you can send them a media message.
Webhooks are user-defined HTTP callbacks. They are usually triggered by some event, such as receiving an SMS message or an incoming phone call. When that event occurs, Twilio makes an HTTP request (usually a POST
or a GET
) to the URL configured for the webhook.
To handle a webhook, you only need to build a small web application that can accept the HTTP requests. Almost all server-side programming languages offer some framework for you to do this. Laravel is a popular PHP web development frameworks. In this tutorial, we'll be setting up our web application with Lumen that is Laravel micro-framework.
Webhook functionality is the same for every Twilio application. First, a webhook makes an HTTP request to a URI that you provide to Twilio. When it receives this request, your application performs pre-defined logic. This could be something like database read/writes or calling another API. Finally, your application sends a TwiML response to Twilio in which it specifies the instructions for Twilio to follow.
TwiML is the Twilio Markup Language, which is just to say that it's an XML document with special tags defined by Twilio to help you build your messaging and voice applications.
TwiML is easier shown than explained:
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>2<Response>3<Message>Thanks for the message!</Message>4</Response>
Every TwiML document has the <Response> element, which can contain one or more verbs. Verbs are actions you'd like Twilio to take, such as <Say> a greeting to a caller, or send an SMS <Message> in reply to an incoming message. For a full reference on everything you can do with TwiML, refer to our TwiML API Reference.
To send back a media in your WhatsApp reply, you need to include the media TwiML element with the URL to the media file. One media attachment is supported per message, with a size limit of 5MB.
To reply to an incoming WhatsApp message, you can either write raw TwiML or use a helper library. When you use the helper library, you don't have to worry about generating the raw XML yourself.
Now that you have a URL for your web application's TwiML reply generating routine, you can configure your Twilio phone number to call your webhook URL whenever a new WhatsApp message comes in for you.
You can set the webhook URL for incoming messages to your server in the Sandbox.
Make sure you choose HTTP POST
or HTTP GET
to correspond to what your web application is expecting. Usually, the default of POST
is fine.
Twilio supports HTTP Basic and Digest Authentication. Authentication allows you to password protect your TwiML URLs on your web server so that only you and Twilio can access them.
Learn more here, and check out our guide to securing your Lumen application by validating incoming Twilio requests.
Viewing, saving, or manipulating the media files on incoming WhatsApp messages also involves configuring a Webhook URL. The URL points to a server generating TwiML instructions including the media you want to send.
When Twilio calls your webhook, it sends a number of parameters about the message you just received. Most of these, such as the To
phone number, the From
phone number, and the Body
of the message are available as properties of the request parameter to our action method.
Twilio sends form variables named MediaUrlX
, where X is a zero-based index. WhatsApp messages will only contain one media file per incoming message, so you can access the file at MediaUrl0
on the incoming request from Twilio to your webhook URL.
Attachments to WhatsApp messages can be of many different file types, including JPG, MP3, and PDF. (See more about the supported file types in the FAQs.) Twilio handles the determination of the file type for you and you can get the standard mime type from the MediaContentTypeX
parameter. If you are expecting photos and images, then you will likely see a lot of attachments with the mime type image/jpeg.
And that's all there is to it; receiving and responding is exactly the same as you would do in any SMS app with our Messaging API. Cool, right?
All the code, in a complete working project, is available on GitHub. To dig deeper, head over to the Messaging API Reference and learn more about the Twilio webhook request and the REST API Media resource. Also, you should be aware of the pricing for storage of all the media files that you keep on Twilio's servers.
We'd love to hear what you build with this!