The hlquery PHP API is the official PHP client for hlquery. It gives PHP applications a straightforward way to talk to the search engine through a small client instead of manually assembling curl calls and JSON payloads.
The library wraps hlquery's HTTP endpoints in a service-based API so you can create collections, index documents, run searches, manage lexical resources, query SAM, and call custom module routes from normal PHP code.
Use the PHP API when you want hlquery integration to feel like part of your application instead of a pile of hand-written REST calls. It reduces boilerplate, keeps authentication and request formatting consistent, and makes common operations easier to read and maintain.
Requirements:
- PHP
>= 7.0 ext-curlext-json
Composer:
$ composer require hlquery/php-clientLocal usage:
require_once __DIR__ . '/lib/autoload.php';
use Hlquery\Client;
$client = new Client(getenv('HLQ_BASE_URL') ?: (getenv('HLQUERY_BASE_URL') ?: 'http://localhost:9200'));Composer usage:
require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
use Hlquery\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost:9200');$client = new Client('http://localhost:9200', [
'token' => 'your_token_here',
'auth_method' => 'bearer',
]);
$client->setAuthToken('your_token_here', 'bearer');
$client->setAuthToken('your_api_key_here', 'api-key');require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
use Hlquery\Client;
$client = new Client('http://localhost:9200');
$health = $client->health();
if ($health->isSuccess()) {
echo "status: " . (($health->getBody()['status'] ?? 'ok')) . PHP_EOL;
}
$collections = $client->listCollections(0, 10);
print_r($collections->getBody());List collections with pagination and iterate over the result:
$response = $client->listCollections(0, 100);
if (!$response->isSuccess()) {
throw new RuntimeException('Failed to list collections: ' . $response->getStatusCode());
}
$body = $response->getBody();
$collections = $body['collections'] ?? [];
foreach ($collections as $collection) {
$name = is_array($collection) ? ($collection['name'] ?? '') : $collection;
if ($name === '') {
continue;
}
echo $name . PHP_EOL;
}The PHP client exposes all current SAM endpoints through Client::sam():
search($collectionName, $query, $params = [])callsGET /sam/search.status($collectionName = null, $params = [])callsGET /sam/status.history($collectionName = null, $limit = 100, $params = [])callsGET /sam/history.
You can also use the convenience property accessor $client->sam (same object as $client->sam()):
$status = $client->sam->status('music');Use the SAM service for search, background status, and recent query history:
SAM is separate from vector search. It performs term and intent-style lookup, not vector similarity search.
$sam = $client->sam();
$status = $sam->status('music');
$history = $sam->history('music', 5);
$results = $sam->search('music', 'queen of pop', [
'limit' => 10,
]);
print_r($status->getBody());
print_r($history->getBody());
print_r($results->getBody());$sql = $client->sql();
$rows = $sql->raw('SHOW COLLECTIONS;');
$books = $sql->query(
'books',
'SELECT id, title FROM books ORDER BY title ASC LIMIT 3;'
);
print_r($rows->getBody());
print_r($books->getBody());Use executeRequest() to call custom module routes directly:
$moduleResponse = $client->executeRequest('GET', '/modules/<name>/<route>', null, [
'q' => 'example query',
]);
print_r($moduleResponse->getBody());