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PAYONE Commerce Platform Java SDK

Quality Gate Status Coverage Maven Central Version

Welcome to the Java SDK for the PAYONE Commerce Platform! This repository contains a powerful, easy-to-use software development kit (SDK) designed to simplify the integration of online payment processing into your applications.

Table of Contents

Features

  • Easy Integration: Seamlessly integrate online payment processing into your application.
  • Secure Transactions: Built with security best practices to ensure safe transactions.
  • Extensive Documentation: Detailed documentation to help you get started quickly.
  • Open Source: Fully open source and community-driven.

Installation

dependencies {
    implementation group: 'io.github.payone-gmbh', name: 'pcp-serversdk-java', version: '1.0.0'
}

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Usage

You can find examples and detailed usage in the examples directory.

General

To use this SDK you need to construct a CommunicatorConfiguration which encapsulate everything needed to connect to the PAYONE Commerce Platform.

package org.usage.app;

import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.CommunicatorConfiguration;

class App {
    private Strint merchantId;

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String apiKey = System.getenv("API_KEY");
        String apiSecret = System.getenv("API_SECRET");
        this.merchantId = System.getenv("MERCHANT_ID");

        this.config = new CommunicatorConfiguration(apiKey, apiSecret, "api.preprod.commerce.payone.com");
    }
}

With the configuration you can create an API client for each reource you want to interact with. For example to create a commerce case you can use the CommerceCaseApiClient.

package org.usage.app;

import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.CommunicatorConfiguration;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.endpoints.CommerceCaseApiClient;

class App {
    private CommunicatorConfiguration config;
    private CommerceCaseApiClient client;

    public void initCommerceCaseClient() {
        this.client = new CommerceCaseApiClient(this.config);
    }
}

All payloads and reponses are availabe as java classes within the com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.* package. The serialization and deserialization is handled by the SDK internally. For example, to create an empty commerce case you can pass a CreateCommerceCaseRequest instance:

package org.usage.app;

import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.CommunicatorConfiguration;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.endpoints.CommerceCaseApiClient;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.CreateCommerceCaseRequest;

class App {
    private String merchantId;
    private CommunicatorConfiguration config;
    private CommerceCaseApiClient client;

    public void createCommerceCase() {
        CreateCommerceCaseRequest createCommerceCaseRequest = new CreateCommerceCaseRequest();
        // this commerce case will be empty, but you can of course add some data
        CreateCommerceCaseResponse commerceCase = commerceCaseClient.createCommerceCaseRequest(this.merchantId, createCommerceCaseRequest);
    }
}

The models directly map to the API as described in PAYONE Commerce Platform API Reference. For an in depth example you can take a look at the demo app.

Error Handling

When making a request any client may throw a ApiException. There two subtypes of this exception:

  • ApiErrorReponseException: This exception is thrown when the API returns an well-formed error response. The given errors are deserialized into APIError objects which are availble via the getErrors() method on the exception. They usually contain useful information about what is wrong in your request or the state of the resource.
  • ApiResponseRetrievalException: This exception is a catch-all exception for any error that cannot be turned into a helpful error response. This includes malformed responses or unknown responses.

Network errors are not wrap, you can should handle the standard IOExeption.

Client Side

For most payment methods some information from the client is needed, e.g. payment information given by Apple when a payment via ApplePay suceeds. PAYONE provides client side SDKs which helps you interact the third party payment providers. You can find the SDKs under the PAYONE GitHub organization. Either way ensure to never store or even send credit card information to your server. The PAYONE Commerce Platform never needs access to the credit card information. The client side is responsible for safely retrieving a credit card token. This token must be used with this SDK.

This SDKs makes no assumption about how the networking between the client and your PHP server is done. If need to serialize a model to JSON or deserialize a client side request from a JSON string to a model you can use the static serializeToJson() and deserializeFromJson() methods on the JsonSerializer class:

package org.usage.app;

import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonProcessingException;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.serializer.JsonSerializer;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.AmountOfMoney;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.applepay.ApplePayPayment;

class App {
    public void handleClientResponse(String clientMessage) throws JsonProcessingException {
       // apple pay payment from json string
       ApplePayPayment payment = JsonSerializer.deserializeFromJson(clientMessage, ApplePayPayment.class);
    }

    public String amountOfMoneyJson() throws JsonProcessingException {
        AmountOfMoney amountOfMoney = new AmountOfMoney()
            .amount(3199L)
            .currencyCode('EUR');

        // returns:
        //      '{ "amount": 3199, currencyCode: "EUR" }'
        return JsonSerializer.serializeToJson(amountOfMoney);
    }
}

Apple Pay

When a client is successfully made a payment via ApplePay it receives a ApplePayPayment. This structure is accessible as the ApplePayPayment class. You can use the ApplePayTransformer to map an ApplePayPayment to a MobilePaymentMethodSpecificInput which can be used for payment executions or order requests. The transformer has a static method transformApplePayPaymentToMobilePaymentMethodSpecificInput() which takes an ApplePayPayment and returns a MobilePaymentMethodSpecificInput. The transformer does not check if the reponse is complete, if anything is missing the field will be set to null.

package org.usage.app;

import com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonProcessingException;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.serializer.JsonSerializer;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.AmountOfMoney;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.applepay.ApplePayPayment;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.models.MobilePaymentMethodSpecificInput;
import com.payone.commerce.platform.lib.transformer.ApplePayTransformer;

class App {
    public String getJsonStringFromRequestSomehow() {
        // commmunicate with the client...
        String message = "";
        return message;
    }

    public void preparePaymentForApplePayPayment() {
        ApplePayPayment payment = JsonSerializer.deserializeFromJson(this.getJsonStringFromRequestSomehow(), ApplePayPayment.class);
        MobilePaymentMethodSpecificInput input = ApplePayTransformer.transformApplePayPaymentToMobilePaymentMethodSpecificInput(payment);
        // wrap input into a larger request and send to PCP API
        // ...
    }
}

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Demo App

This repo contains a demo app that showcases how to implement common use cases, like a Step-by-Step Checkout and an One-Stop-Checkout. For each use case the demo app contains a private method in the top level class App. You can run the app to execute the code within in the sandbox API. This is a good way to test, if your setup is correct.

If you're using grald can run it within the demo app directory via:

API_KEY=api_key API_SECRET=api_secret MERCHANT_ID=123 COMMERCE_CASE_ID=234 CHECKOUT_ID=345 ./gradlew :app:run

Make sure to provide all necessary environment variables:

  1. API_KEY a valid api key for the PAYONE Commerce Platform
  2. API_SECRET a valid api secret for the PAYONE Commerce Platform
  3. MERCHANT_ID the merchant id which is needed to identify entities, e.g. commerce cases and checkouts, that belong to you.

Jump to the demo app

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Contributing

See Contributing

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Releasing the library

Preparing the Release

  • Checkout develop branch
  • Create release branch (release/0.1.0)
git checkout -b release/0.1.0
  • Run prepare-release.sh script to set correct version
./prepare-release.sh 0.1.0

Changelog Generation with Conventional Changelog

After calling the prepare_release.sh script, it is recommended to manually trigger the changelog generation script (which uses conventional-changelog).

  1. Conventional Commit Messages:

    • Ensure all commit messages follow the conventional commit format, which helps in automatic changelog generation.
    • Commit messages should be in the format: type(scope): subject.
  2. Enforcing Commit Messages:

    • We enforce conventional commit messages using Lefthook with commitlint.
    • This setup ensures that all commit messages are validated before they are committed.
  3. Generate Changelog:

    • Run the changelog generation script to update the CHANGELOG.md file:
      npm run changelog
    • Review and commit the updated changelog before proceeding with the release.

Merging the Release Branch

  • Create PR on develop branch
  • Merge develop in main branch

GitHub Action for Release

After successfully merging all changes to the main branch, an admin can trigger a GitHub Action to finalize and publish the release. This action ensures that the release process is automated, consistent, and deploys the new release from the main branch.

Triggering the GitHub Action:

  • Only admins can trigger the release action.
  • Ensure that all changes are committed to the main branch.
  • Navigate to the Actions tab on your GitHub repository and manually trigger the release action for the main branch.

Optional: Creating a GitHub Release

Once the release has been published to maven central, developers can start using the latest version of the SDK. However, if you want to make the release more visible and include detailed release notes, you can optionally create a GitHub release.

  1. Navigate to the Releases Page: Go to the "Releases" section of your repository on GitHub.
  2. Draft a New Release: Click "Draft a new release".
  3. Tag the Release: Select the version tag that corresponds to the version you just published on npm (e.g., v0.1.0).
  4. Release Title: Add a descriptive title for the release (e.g., v0.1.0 - Initial Release).
  5. Auto-Generated Release Notes: GitHub can automatically generate release notes based on merged pull requests and commit history. You can review these notes, adjust the content, and highlight important changes.
  6. Publish the Release: Once you're satisfied with the release notes, click "Publish release".

Creating a GitHub release is optional, but it can provide additional context and visibility for your users. For detailed guidance, refer to the GitHub documentation on managing releases.

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License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.


Thank you for using our SDK for Online Payments! If you have any questions or need further assistance, feel free to open an issue or contact us.