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Payment

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Payment

Starting with version 6.4.1.0, Shopware also provides functionality for your app to be able to integrate payment providers. You can choose between just a simple request for approval in the background (synchronous payment) and the customer being forwarded to a provider for payment (asynchronous payment). You provide one or two endpoints, one for starting the payment and providing a redirect URL and one for finalization to check for the resulting status of the payment. The requests and responses of all of your endpoints will be signed and feature JSON content.

Prerequisites

You should be familiar with the concept of Apps, their registration flow as well as signing and verifying requests and responses between Shopware and the App backend server.

App Base Guide

Your app server must be also accessible for the Shopware server. You can use a tunneling service like ngrok for development.

Manifest configuration

If your app should provide one or multiple payment methods, you need to define these in your manifest. The created payment methods in Shopware will be identified by the name of your app and the identifier you define per payment method. You should therefore not change the identifier after release, otherwise new payment methods will be created.

You may choose between a synchronous and an asynchronous payment method. These two types are differentiated by defining a finalize-url or not. If no finalize-url is defined, the internal Shopware payment handler will default to a synchronous payment. If you do not want or need any communication during the payment process with your app, you can also choose not to provide a pay-url, then the payment will remain on open on checkout.

Below, you can see different definitions of payment methods.

Depending on the URLs you provide, Shopware knows which kind of payment flow your payment method supports.

xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<manifest xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/shopware/shopware/trunk/src/Core/Framework/App/Manifest/Schema/manifest-2.0.xsd">
    <meta>
        <!-- The name of the app should not change. Otherwise, all payment methods are created as duplicates. -->
        <name>PaymentApp</name>
        <!-- ... -->
    </meta>

    <payments>
        <payment-method>
            <!-- The identifier of the payment method should not change. Otherwise, a separate method is created. -->
            <identifier>asynchronousPayment</identifier>
            <name>Asynchronous payment</name>
            <name lang="de-DE">Asynchrone Zahlung</name>
            <description>This payment method requires forwarding to payment provider.</description>
            <description lang="de-DE">Diese Zahlungsmethode erfordert eine Weiterleitung zu einem Zahlungsanbieter.</description>
            <pay-url>https://payment.app/async/pay</pay-url>
            <finalize-url>https://payment.app/async/finalize</finalize-url>
            <!-- This optional path to this icon must be relative to the manifest.xml -->
            <icon>Resources/paymentLogo.png</icon>
        </payment-method>

        <payment-method>
            <!-- The identifier of the payment method should not change. Otherwise a separate method is created. -->
            <identifier>synchronousPayment</identifier>
            <name>Synchronous payment</name>
            <name lang="de-DE">Synchrone Zahlung</name>
            <description>This payment method does everything in one request.</description>
            <description lang="de-DE">Diese Zahlungsmethode arbeitet in einem Request.</description>
            <!-- This URL is optional for synchronous payments (see below). -->
            <pay-url>https://payment.app/sync/process</pay-url>
        </payment-method>

        <payment-method>
            <!-- The identifier of the payment method should not change. Otherwise a separate method is created. -->
            <identifier>simpleSynchronousPayment</identifier>
            <name>Simple Synchronous payment</name>
            <name lang="de-DE">Einfache synchrone Zahlung</name>
            <description>This payment will not do anything and stay on 'open' after order.</description>
            <description lang="de-DE">Diese Zahlungsmethode wird die Transaktion auf 'offen' belassen.</description>
            <!-- No URL is provided. -->
        </payment-method>

        <payment-method>
            <!-- The identifier of the payment method should not change. Otherwise a separate method is created. -->
            <identifier>preparedPayment</identifier>
            <name>Payment, that offers everything</name>
            <name lang="de-DE">Eine Zahlungsart, die alles kann</name>
            <validate-url>https://payment.app/prepared/validate</validate-url>
            <capture-url>https://payment.app/prepared/capture</capture-url>
            <!-- This optional path to this icon must be relative to the manifest.xml -->
            <icon>Resources/paymentLogo.png</icon>
        </payment-method>

        <payment-method>
            <!-- The identifier of the payment method should not change. Otherwise a separate method is created. -->
            <identifier>refundPayment</identifier>
            <name>Refund payments</name>
            <name lang="de-DE">Einfache Erstattungen</name>
            <refund-url>https://payment.app/refund</refund-url>
            <!-- This optional path to this icon must be relative to the manifest.xml -->
            <icon>Resources/paymentLogo.png</icon>
        </payment-method>

        <payment-method>
            <!-- The identifier of the payment method should not change. Otherwise a separate method is created. -->
            <identifier>recurringPayment</identifier>
            <name>Recurring payments</name>
            <name lang="de-DE">Einfache wiederkehrende Zahlungen</name>
            <recurring-url>https://payment.app/recurring</recurring-url>
            <!-- This optional path to this icon must be relative to the manifest.xml -->
            <icon>Resources/paymentLogo.png</icon>
        </payment-method>
    </payments>
</manifest>

Synchronous payments

INFO

Be aware, that from Shopware 6.7.0.0 onwards your app-server has to respond with a payment state in its response, if you intend to change the transaction state.

There are different types of payments. Synchronous payment is the simplest of all and does not need any additional interaction with the customer. If you have defined a pay-url, you can choose to be informed about and possibly process the payment or not. If you do not need to communicate with your app, you can stop reading here and the transaction will stay open. But if you do define a pay-url, you can respond to the request with a different transaction status like authorize, paid, or failed. This is useful if you want to add a payment provider that only needs the information if the customer has already provided it in the checkout process or not. For example, a simple credit check for payment upon invoice. Below you can see an example of a simple answer from your app to mark a payment as authorized.

Asynchronous payments

INFO

Be aware, that from Shopware 6.7.0.0 onwards your app-server has to respond with a payment state in its response, if you intend to change the transaction state.

Asynchronous payments are more complicated than synchronous payments. They require interaction with the customer and a redirect to the payment provider, such as PayPal or Stripe.

Here is how it works:

  • Shopware sends the first pay POST request to start the payment with the payment provider. The request includes all necessary data such as the order, orderTransaction, and a returnUrl, where the customer should be redirected once the payment process with the payment provider has been finished.
  • Your app server returns a response with a redirectUrl to the payment provider.
  • The browser will be redirected to this URL and processes his order, and the payment provider will redirect the customer back to the returnUrl provided in the first request.
  • Shopware sends a second POST request to the finalize-url with the orderTransaction and all the query parameters passed by the payment provider to Shopware.
  • Your app server responds with a status and, if necessary a message, like in the synchronous payment.

The second finalize POST request will be called once the customer has been redirected back to the shop. This second request is only provided with the orderTransaction for identification purposes and requestData with all query parameters passed by the payment provider. The response status value determines the outcome of the payment, e.g.:

StatusDescription
cancelCustomer has aborted the payment at the payment provider's site
failPayment has failed (e.g. missing funds)
paidSuccessful immediate payment
authorizeDelayed payment

Prepared payments

With Shopware 6.4.9.0, you can use prepared payments to enhance your checkout process beyond forwarding to a payment provider. This feature enables you to integrate more deeply into the checkout process. This method allows you to prepare the payment before placing the order, e.g., with credit card fields on the checkout confirmation page. Once you add specific parameters to the order placement request in the Storefront, which is also known as the checkout confirmation form, you can pass these parameters to your prepared payment handler. This enables your payment handler to capture the payment successfully when the order is placed.

For this, you have two calls available during the order placement, the validate call to verify, that the payment reference is valid and if not, stop the placement of the order, and the pay call, which then allows the payment to be processed to completion after the order has been placed and persisted.

Let's first talk about the validate call. Here, you will receive three items to validate your payment. The cart with all its line items, the requestData from the CartOrderRoute request and the current salesChannelContext. This allows you to validate, if the payment reference you may have given your payment handler via the Storefront implementation is valid and will be able to be used to pay the order which is about to be placed. The array data you may send as the preOrderPayment object in your response will be forwarded to your pay call, so you don't have to worry about identifying the order by looking at the cart from the validate call. If the payment is invalid, either return a response with an error response code or provide a message in your response.

INFO

Be aware, that from Shopware 6.7.0.0 onwards your app-server has to respond with a payment state in its response, if you intend to change the transaction state.

If the payment has been validated and the order has been placed, you then receive another call to your pay endpoint. You will receive the order, the orderTransaction and also the preOrderPayment array data, that you have sent in your validate call.

WARNING

Keep in mind that if the integration into the checkout process does not work as expected, your customer might not be able to use the prepared payment. This is especially valid for after order payments, since there the order already exists. For these cases, you should still offer a traditional synchronous / asynchronous payment flow. Don't worry, if you have set the transaction state in your capture call to anything but open, the asynchronous payment process will not be started immediately after the prepared payment flow.

Refund

With Shopware 6.4.12.0, we have also added basic functionality to be able to refund payments. Your app will need to register captured amounts and create and persist a refund beforehand for Shopware to be able to process a refund of a capture.

Similar to the other requests, on your refund call you will receive the data required to process your refund. This is the order with all its details and also the refund which holds the information on the amount, the referenced capture and, if provided, a reason and specific positions which items are being refunded.

INFO

Be aware, that from Shopware 6.7.0.0 onwards your app-server has to respond with a payment state in its response, if you intend to change the transaction state.

Recurring captures

INFO

Recurring orders and payments require the Subscriptions feature, available exclusively in our paid plans.

Recurring payments are a special case of payment that is used for handling recurring orders, such as subscriptions. The request and response payloads are similar to the synchronous payment flow. At this point, a valid running billing agreement between the customer and the PSP should exist. Use any of the other payment flows to capture the initial order and create such an agreement during the checkout. Afterward, this flow can capture the payment for every recurring payment order.

INFO

Be aware, that from Shopware 6.7.0.0 onwards your app-server has to respond with a payment state in its response, if you intend to change the transaction state.

All possible payment states

The following lists are all possible payment state options:

  • open - The payment is open and can be processed
  • paid - The payment has been paid
  • cancelled - The payment has been canceled
  • refunded - The payment has been refunded
  • failed - The payment has failed
  • authorize - The payment has been authorized
  • unconfirmed - The payment has not been confirmed yet
  • in_progress - The payment is in progress
  • reminded - The payment has been reminded
  • chargeback - The payment has been charged back

All possible refund states

The following lists are all possible refund state options:

  • open - The refund is open and can be processed
  • in_progress - The refund is in progress
  • cancelled - The refund has been canceled
  • failed - The refund has failed
  • completed - The refund has been refunded

API docs

You can further take a look at Payment references.