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Faakolore USSD Adapter

This package is a fork of tnmdev/ussd.

This package creates an adapter, boilerplate code and functionality that lets you interact with USSD and offer USSD channel to your API. The interface is open and documentated for implementation with various USSD interfaces.

Table of contents generated with markdown-toc

Installation

composer require faakolore/ussd

Then install the ussd scaffold. This will also run migrations to create session tracking tables

php artisan ussd:install

Once you install the package, the USSD app will be accessible on /api/ussd endpoint. A landing screen will be created for you at App\USSD\Screens\Welcome.php.

Usage

Creating USSD Screens

php artisan make:ussd <name>

This will create a boilerplate USSD screen object for you. You can go ahead and edit the contents of message, options and execute methods. The screen extends Faakolore\USSD\Screen class which gives you means of accessing the request details, and encoding USSD response.

The Request object

Screen has $request as a public property. This is an object of Faakolore\USSD\Http\Request class.

The request class exposes four properties from the xml/json request passed on by USSD.

Property Description
message The message passed from USSD
type Integer value representing the type of request
session USSD session ID
msisdn The number making the USSD request

The USSD screen that is sent to the user is represented by Screens which extend the Faakolore\USSD\Screen class.

Request Payload

You can move payload from between screens using request payload. Any piece of data added to a request payload can be accessed by other request within the session.

Setting request payload

Request payload can be added by calling addPayload method on request's trail object. It takes a key-value pair of parameters.

$$this->addPayload('key', $this->value());

Retrieving request payload

$this->payload('key');

Using Arrays in Payload

There are times where you have associative arrays for options. For example, you can have a list of products, with id, price, name and humanized. Where name is what the product is referred to as in your system, and humanized is how you want it to appear on the screen.

An array of such items can be pushed to payload with a third boolean parameter. This tells the trail object to serialize the input before storing it.

$this->addPayload('products', $array, true);

Manipulating array payloads is made possible by HasBundledOptions trait of Faakolore\USSD\Traits namespace. So to use arrays in your payload, you need to use HasBundledOptions trait in your Screen.

Here are some of the uses of the bundled options trait: to list/map an associative array as USSD options, you can map to the array key of your choice using the map method.

public function options(): array 
{
    return $this->map('humanized', 'products');
}

The map method takes two arguments. First is the array key you want to map with, and the second is the payload key you want to list from.

When the user makes an option on the USSD screen, you can map back to any key of the associative array option made by calling the find method.

$this->addPayload('chosenProduct', $this->find('id', 'products'));

The implementation in the snippet above, will assign the ID of the chosen product to a payload key chosenProduct. The trait looks for the user's option passed as the second argument. You can specify the field to look in by passing a third argument, which defaults to humanized. So the assumption is that your options associative array will have a field for displaying the content. You can rename it to anything that suits you. Just make sure you pass a third argument to tell the method where to look.

In other cases you may just want to fetch the whole array on a particular payload key. The method is the same as a normal payload, again with a second boolean argument.

$this->payload('products', true);

The Mandatory Methods

The Screen class will require you to implement the following methods.

  • message() must return a string message that will be displayed on the screen.
  • options() must return an array of options which will be exposed to the user. Return an empty array for screens that require no options.
  • execute() this should be used to implement whatever the app should do with request data. The request data is returned by getRequestValue() within the screen object. You may use that to access the request data. If you want to redirect the user to another screen, return the render() method of the target screen: return (new Register($this->request))->render(). The Screen initialization takes one argument, the request object.
  • previous() this should return an object of the Screen class. It tells the session where to navigate to when the user chooses the back option.

Optional Methods

You can extend the following methods to change some properties of the screen.

  • type() should return an integer delegated to constants RELEASE and RESPONSE of the Faakolore\USSD\Response class. It defaults to RESPONSE if not overridden. RESPONSE renders a screen with an input field, while RELEASE renders a screen without an input field, used to instruct the USSD Gateway to close the USSD session.
  • acceptsResponse(), instead of the complexity of type() method, you can call acceptsResponse(). It should return a boolean which instructs the screen whether to render an input field or to send a screen that marks the end of the USSD session.
  • goesBack() return a boolean value defining if the screen should have a back navigation option. You can leave it alone unless you are defining the landing screen.

Exception Handling

The USSD adapter has a self-rendering exception handler. To use it, throw new UssdException of the Faakolore\USSD\Exceptions namespace. It takes two params: the request object and the message you want to pass to the user. The exception handler renders a USSD screen with the error message and terminates the session.

Input Data Validation

You can set rules to validate the user input by using Validates trait of the Faakolore\USSD\Http namespace. The trail will require you to implement rules() method, which should return a string of validation rules.

To validate input, call $this->validate($this->request, $label) in execute() method of your Screen class.

If the input has a validation error, ValidationException of the Faakolore\USSD\Exceptions namespace will be thrown and an error screen will be rendered for you automatically.

namespace App\Screens;

use Faakolore\USSD\Screen;
use Faakolore\USSD\Http\Validates;

class EnterPhoneNumber extends Screen
{
    use Validates;

    protected function message() : string
    {
        return 'Enter your phone number';
    }
    
    //...
    
    protected function execute()
    {
        $this->validate($this->request, 'phone');
        $this->addPayload('phone', $this->value());
        return (new NextScreen($this->request))->render();
    }

    protected function rules() : string
    {
        return 'numeric|regex:/(088)[0-9]{7}/';
    }
}      

Extending for Multiple Implementations

This adapter was designed with extendability in mind. Right now it supports Hubtel, NaloSolutions, TruRoute and Flares USSD interfaces used by Hubtel Ghana, Nalo Solutions Ghana, TNM and Airtel Malawi respectively. However, with the pluggable interface, it can be extended to support any mobile network operator or ussd aggregator.

Creating Adapters

To extend, use the

php artisan make:ussd-adapter <AggregatorName>

This creates a request and response classes in the App\USSD\Http\<AggregatorName>. folder. These classes implement the Faakolore\USSD\Http\UssdRequestInterface and Faakolore\USSD\Http\UssdResponseInterface respectively.

Implementation details of the request class may vary. However, we strongly recommend having a constructor that decodes the USSD request from the mobile operator into an array that should be assigned to $request private property and have the interface methods return their values based on the private property.

Example Request Implementation

use Faakolore\USSD\Http\UssdRequestInterface;

class HubtelRequest implements UssdRequestInterface
{
    /**
     * @var array
     */
    private $request;

    public function __construct()
    {
        $this->request = json_decode(request()->getContent(), true);
    }

    public function getMsisdn(): string
    {
        return $this->request['Mobile'];
    }
    // ...
}
Required methods

The request interface requires you to implement the following methods:

  • getSession() should return the session id assigned by the USSD gateway
  • getMsisdn() should return the msisdn making a ussd request
  • getMessage() should return the message sent with the request
  • getType() should return the type of request.

Example Response Implementation

The following is an example response class implementation. It has one required public method: respond which must return a message in a format required by the network operator.

use Faakolore\USSD\Http\UssdResponseInterface;

use Faakolore\USSD\Screen;

class HubtelResponse implements UssdResponseInterface
{
    public function respond(Screen $screen)
    {
        return $this->toJson($screen);
    }
}

Routing

You can distinguish requests from different mobile operators using a route parameter adapter.

All requests from a network that uses Hubtel adapter should be routed to api/ussd/hubtel. So when you create your own extension, the route for the operator should be api/ussd/{adapter}.

This is resolved using App\USSD\Factory\RequestFactory and App\USSD\Factory\ResponseFactory for request and response respectively.

Sample Request Factory
namespace Faakolore\USSD\Factories\RequestFactory;

class RequestFactory
{
    public function make(): UssdRequestInterface
    {
        switch (request()->route('adapter')) {
            case 'flares' :
                return resolve(FlaresRequest::class);
            case 'nalo':
                return resolve(NaloRequest::class);
           case 'hubtel':
                return resolve(HubtelRequest::class);
            default:
                return resolve(TruRouteRequest::class);
        }
    }
}
Sample Response Factory
namespace Faakolore\USSD\Factories\ResponseFactory;

class ResponseFactory
{
    public function make(): UssdResponseInterface
    {
        switch (request()->route('adapter')) {
            case 'flares':
                return resolve(FlaresResponse::class);
            case 'nalo':
                return resolve(NaloRequest::class);
           case 'hubtel':
                return resolve(HubtelRequest::class);
            default:
                return resolve(TruRouteResponse::class);
        }
    }
}

Localization

You can set the session language in any screen of the application. The following screen will come in the newly selected language.

$this->request->trail->setLocale('en');

This feature implements the Laravel's localization with language files. Refer to the Laravel docs for more detail. So your implementation can be like the following:

public function message(): string 
{
    return __("screens.welcome_message");
}

Sample Localization Implementation

public function execute()
{
    $locale = $this->value() == 'English' ? 'en' : 'fr';
    $this->request->trail->setLocale($locale);
    return (new NextScreen($this->request))->render();
}

Audit

You can track user sessions, system messages and user responses with a CLI tool.

php artisan ussd:list <phone>

This command gives you a list of all the transactions that were done by a number. The list contains session ID and timestamp.

php artisan ussd:audit <session-id>

This command gives you all the details of the transaction from the beginning of a session to the end. The trail includes system messages, user responses to each message and their timestamps in a chronological order.

When a user response was an option, it reports a string value that is represented by the number that was selected, saving you from having to lookup which option was on number 1, 2 or etc.

Session Data CleanUp

The package keeps track of sessions using a database table. This database table may need to clean-up after some time. To clean up run the following command in the application directory.

php artisan ussd:clean-up --days=30

It takes the option of number of days' data to preserve. If no option is passed, it deletes everything older than 60 days.

  • A note on audit: An audit trail will not be available for the data that has been cleaned up.

Example Screen Implementation

// app/Screens/Subscribe.php

namespace App\Screens;

use Faakolore\USSD\Screen;

class Subscribe extends Screen
{
    public function message(): string
    {
        return "Please select a plan you want to subscribe to";
    }

    public function options(): array
    {
        return ['Plan 1', 'Plan 2', 'Plan 3'];
    }

    public function execute()
    {
        // save the request value to session object 
        // to access it in the next screen with $this->payload($key) 
        $this->addPayload('plan', $this->value());

        return (new ConfirmSubscription($this->request))->render();
    }
        
    public function previous(): Screen
    {
        return new Welcome($this->request);
    }
}
// app/Screens/ConfirmSubscription.php

namespace App\Screens;

use Exception;
use Faakolore\USSD\Screen;
use Faakolore\USSD\Exceptions\UssdException;

class ConfirmSubscription extends Screen
{
    public function message(): string
    {
        return sprintf("Please confirm subscription to %s", $this->payload('plan'));
    }

    public function options(): array
    {
        return ['Confirm', 'Cancel'];
    }

    public function execute()
    {
        if ($this->value() === 'Cancel') return $this->previous()->render();
        
        $service = new SubscriptionService($this->request->msisdn);

        try {
       
            $service->subscribe($this->payload('plan'));
            return (new Subscribed($this->request))->render();
            
        } catch (Exception $exception) {
            throw new UssdException($this->request, "Subscription failed. Please try again later");
        }
    }
    
    public function previous(): Screen
    {
        return new Subscribe($this->request);
    }
}