Catching exceptions from Guzzle

Depending on your project, disabling exceptions for guzzle might be necessary. Sometimes coding rules disallow exceptions for flow control. You can disable exceptions for Guzzle 3 like this:

$client = new \Guzzle\Http\Client($httpBase, array(
  'request.options' => array(
     'exceptions' => false,
   )
));

This does not disable curl exceptions for something like timeouts, but now you can get every status code easily:

$request = $client->get($uri);
$response = $request->send();
$statuscode = $response->getStatusCode();

To check, if you got a valid code, you can use something like this:

if ($statuscode > 300) {
  // Do some error handling
}

... or better handle all expected codes:

if (200 === $statuscode) {
  // Do something
}
elseif (304 === $statuscode) {
  // Nothing to do
}
elseif (404 === $statuscode) {
  // Clean up DB or something like this
}
else {
  throw new MyException("Invalid response from api...");
}

For Guzzle 5.3

$client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['defaults' => [ 'exceptions' => false ]] );

Thanks to @mika

For Guzzle 6

$client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['http_errors' => false]);

To catch Guzzle errors you can do something like this:

try {
    $response = $client->get('/not_found.xml')->send();
} catch (Guzzle\Http\Exception\BadResponseException $e) {
    echo 'Uh oh! ' . $e->getMessage();
}

... but, to be able to "log" or "resend" your request try something like this:

// Add custom error handling to any request created by this client
$client->getEventDispatcher()->addListener(
    'request.error', 
    function(Event $event) {

        //write log here ...

        if ($event['response']->getStatusCode() == 401) {

            // create new token and resend your request...
            $newRequest = $event['request']->clone();
            $newRequest->setHeader('X-Auth-Header', MyApplication::getNewAuthToken());
            $newResponse = $newRequest->send();

            // Set the response object of the request without firing more events
            $event['response'] = $newResponse;

            // You can also change the response and fire the normal chain of
            // events by calling $event['request']->setResponse($newResponse);

            // Stop other events from firing when you override 401 responses
            $event->stopPropagation();
        }

});

... or if you want to "stop event propagation" you can overridde event listener (with a higher priority than -255) and simply stop event propagation.

$client->getEventDispatcher()->addListener('request.error', function(Event $event) {
if ($event['response']->getStatusCode() != 200) {
        // Stop other events from firing when you get stytus-code != 200
        $event->stopPropagation();
    }
});

thats a good idea to prevent guzzle errors like:

request.CRITICAL: Uncaught PHP Exception Guzzle\Http\Exception\ClientErrorResponseException: "Client error response

in your application.