Anthropic PHP is a community-maintained PHP API client that allows you to interact with the Anthropic API. This package is based on the excellent work of Nuno Maduro and Sandro Gehri.
Note: If you want to use the Anthropic PHP in Laravel, take a look at the mozex/anthropic-laravel repository.
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Creating and maintaining open-source projects requires significant time and effort. Your support will help enhance the project and enable further contributions to the PHP community.
Sponsorship can be made through the GitHub Sponsors program. Just click the "Sponsor" button at the top of this repository. Any amount is greatly appreciated, even a contribution as small as $1 can make a big difference and will go directly towards developing and improving this package.
Thank you for considering sponsoring. Your support truly makes a difference!
Requires PHP 8.1+
First, install Anthropic via the Composer package manager:
composer require mozex/anthropic-php
Ensure that the php-http/discovery
composer plugin is allowed to run or install a client manually if your project does not already have a PSR-18 client integrated.
composer require guzzlehttp/guzzle
Then, interact with Anthropic's API:
$yourApiKey = getenv('YOUR_API_KEY');
$client = Anthropic::client($yourApiKey);
$result = $client->messages()->create([
'model' => 'claude-3-opus-20240229',
'max_tokens' => 1024,
'messages' => [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'Hello!'],
],
]);
echo $result->content[0]->text; // Hello! How can I assist you today?
If necessary, it is possible to configure and create a separate client.
$yourApiKey = getenv('YOUR_API_KEY');
$client = Anthropic::factory()
->withApiKey($yourApiKey)
->withHttpHeader('anthropic-version', '2023-06-01')
->withBaseUri('anthropic.example.com/v1') // default: api.anthropic.com/v1
->withHttpClient($client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client([])) // default: HTTP client found using PSR-18 HTTP Client Discovery
->withHttpHeader('X-My-Header', 'foo')
->withQueryParam('my-param', 'bar')
->withStreamHandler(fn (RequestInterface $request): ResponseInterface => $client->send($request, [
'stream' => true // Allows to provide a custom stream handler for the http client.
]))
->make();
Creates a completion for the provided prompt and parameters.
$response = $client->completions()->create([
'model' => 'claude-2.1',
'prompt' => '\n\nHuman: Hello, Claude\n\nAssistant:',
'max_tokens_to_sample' => 100,
'temperature' => 0
]);
$response->type; // 'completion'
$response->id; // 'compl_01EKm5HZ9y6khqaSZjsX44fS'
$response->completion; // ' Hello! Nice to meet you.'
$response->stop_reason; // 'stop_sequence'
$response->model; // 'claude-2.1'
$response->stop; // '\n\nHuman:'
$response->log_id; // 'compl_01EKm5HZ9y6khqaSZjsX44fS'
$response->toArray(); // ['id' => 'compl_01EKm5HZ9y6khqaSZjsX44fS', ...]
Creates a streamed completion for the provided prompt and parameters.
$stream = $client->completions()->createStreamed([
'model' => 'claude-2.1',
'prompt' => 'Hi',
'max_tokens_to_sample' => 70,
]);
foreach($stream as $response){
$response->completion;
}
// 1. iteration => 'I'
// 2. iteration => ' am'
// 3. iteration => ' very'
// 4. iteration => ' excited'
// ...
Creates a completion for structured list of input messages.
$response = $client->messages()->create([
'model' => 'claude-3-opus-20240229',
'max_tokens' => 1024,
'messages' => [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'Hello, world'],
],
]);
$response->id; // 'msg_01BSy0WCV7QR2adFBauynAX7'
$response->type; // 'message'
$response->role; // 'assistant'
$response->model; // 'claude-3-opus-20240229'
$response->stop_sequence; // null
$response->stop_reason; // 'end_turn'
foreach ($response->content as $result) {
$result->type; // 'text'
$result->text; // 'Hello! It's nice to meet you. How can I assist you today?'
}
$response->usage->inputTokens; // 10,
$response->usage->outputTokens; // 19,
$response->toArray(); // ['id' => 'msg_01BSy0WCV7QR2adFBauynAX7', ...]
Creates a streamed completion for structured list of input messages.
$stream = $client->messages()->createStreamed([
'model' => 'claude-3-haiku-20240307',
'max_tokens' => 1024,
'messages' => [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'Hello!'],
],
]);
foreach($stream as $response){
$response->toArray();
}
// 1. iteration
[
'type' => 'message_start',
'message' => [
'id' => 'msg_01SX1jLtTXgtJwB2EpSRNutG',
'type' => 'message',
'role' => 'assistant',
'content' => [],
'model' => 'claude-3-haiku-20240307',
'stop_reason' => null,
'stop_sequence' => null,
],
'usage' => [
'input_tokens' => 9,
'output_tokens' => 1,
]
]
// 2. iteration
[
'type' => 'content_block_delta',
'index' => 0,
'delta' => [
'type' => 'text_delta',
'text' => 'Hello',
]
]
// 3. iteration
[
'type' => 'content_block_delta',
'index' => 0,
'delta' => [
'type' => 'text_delta',
'text' => '!',
]
]
// ...
// last iteration
[
'type' => 'message_delta',
'delta' => [
'stop_reason' => 'end_turn',
'stop_sequence' => null,
],
'usage' => [
'output_tokens' => 12,
]
]
On messages response object you can access the meta information returned by the API via the meta()
method.
$response = $client->messages()->create([
'model' => 'claude-3-sonnet-20240229',
'max_tokens' => 1024,
'messages' => [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'Hello, world'],
],
]);
$meta = $response->meta();
$meta->requestId; // 'req_012nTzj6kLoP8vZ1SGANvcgR'
$meta->requestLimit->limit; // 3000
$meta->requestLimit->remaining; // 2999
$meta->requestLimit->reset; // '2024-05-01T13:29:17Z'
$meta->tokenLimit->limit; // 250000
$meta->tokenLimit->remaining; // 249984
$meta->tokenLimit->reset; // '2024-05-01T13:29:17Z'
The toArray()
method returns the meta information in the form originally returned by the API.
$meta->toArray();
// [
// 'request-id' => 'req_012nTzj6kLoP8vZ1SGANvcgR',
// 'anthropic-ratelimit-requests-limit' => 3000,
// 'anthropic-ratelimit-requests-remaining' => 2999,
// 'anthropic-ratelimit-requests-reset' => '2024-05-01T13:29:17Z',
// 'anthropic-ratelimit-tokens-limit' => 250000,
// 'anthropic-ratelimit-tokens-remaining' => 249983,
// 'anthropic-ratelimit-tokens-reset' => '2024-05-01T13:29:17Z',
// ]
On streaming responses you can access the meta information on the reponse stream object.
$stream = $client->messages()->createStreamed([
'model' => 'claude-3-sonnet-20240229',
'max_tokens' => 1024,
'messages' => [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'Hello, world'],
],
]);
$stream->meta();
For further details about the rates limits and what to do if you hit them visit the Anthropic documentation.
You may run into a timeout when sending requests to the API. The default timeout depends on the HTTP client used.
You can increase the timeout by configuring the HTTP client and passing in to the factory.
This example illustrates how to increase the timeout using Guzzle.
Anthropic::factory()
->withApiKey($apiKey)
->withHttpHeader('anthropic-version', '2023-06-01')
->withHttpClient(new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['timeout' => $timeout]))
->make();
The package provides a fake implementation of the Anthropic\Client
class that allows you to fake the API responses.
To test your code ensure you swap the Anthropic\Client
class with the Anthropic\Testing\ClientFake
class in your test case.
The fake responses are returned in the order they are provided while creating the fake client.
All responses are having a fake()
method that allows you to easily create a response object by only providing the parameters relevant for your test case.
use Anthropic\Testing\ClientFake;
use Anthropic\Responses\Completions\CreateResponse;
$client = new ClientFake([
CreateResponse::fake([
'completion' => 'awesome!',
]),
]);
$completion = $client->completions()->create([
'model' => 'claude-2.1',
'prompt' => '\n\nHuman: PHP is \n\nAssistant:',
'max_tokens_to_sample' => 100,
]);
expect($completion['completion'])->toBe('awesome!');
In case of a streamed response you can optionally provide a resource holding the fake response data.
use Anthropic\Testing\ClientFake;
use Anthropic\Responses\Messages\CreateStreamedResponse;
$client = new ClientFake([
CreateStreamedResponse::fake(fopen('file.txt', 'r'););
]);
$completion = $client->messages()->createStreamed([
'model' => 'claude-3-haiku-20240307',
'max_tokens' => 1024,
'messages' => [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'Hello!'],
],
]);
expect($response->getIterator()->current())
->type->toBe('message_start');
After the requests have been sent there are various methods to ensure that the expected requests were sent:
// assert completion create request was sent
$client->assertSent(Completions::class, function (string $method, array $parameters): bool {
return $method === 'create' &&
$parameters['model'] === 'claude-2.1' &&
$parameters['prompt'] === 'PHP is ';
});
// or
$client->completions()->assertSent(function (string $method, array $parameters): bool {
// ...
});
// assert 2 completion create requests were sent
$client->assertSent(Completions::class, 2);
// assert no completion create requests were sent
$client->assertNotSent(Completions::class);
// or
$client->completions()->assertNotSent();
// assert no requests were sent
$client->assertNothingSent();
To write tests expecting the API request to fail you can provide a Throwable
object as the response.
$client = new ClientFake([
new \Anthropic\Exceptions\ErrorException([
'message' => 'Overloaded',
'type' => 'overloaded_error',
])
]);
// the `ErrorException` will be thrown
$completion = $client->completions()->create([
'model' => 'claude-2.1',
'prompt' => '\n\nHuman: PHP is \n\nAssistant:',
'max_tokens_to_sample' => 100,
]);
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
Please review our security policy on how to report security vulnerabilities.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.