Reputation: 424
I'm integrating PayPal payment on a web application I'm developing. I need to create an authorization for a transaction where I lock an amount of money (let's say 20€), then at the end of the transaction I complete the transaction and I take only the money that I need to take (so if the transaction's final cost is 15€, I give back 5€ to the user).
This workflow is currently working on a sandbox account, but now I wanted to test some errors that may occur while starting a new transaction, like for instance when the user doesn't have the sufficient amount of money (20€) that I need to lock in order to start a new transaction.
I found this documentation (https://developer.paypal.com/docs/api/test-values/#invoke-negative-testing) where it is stated To trigger the SENDER_EMAIL_UNCONFIRMED simulation response, set the items[0]/note value to ERRPYO002 in the POST v1/payments/payouts call.
with the following code:
curl -X POST https://api.sandbox.paypal.com/v1/payments/payouts \
-H "content-type: application/json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer Access-Token" \
-d '{
"sender_batch_header": {
"sender_batch_id": "1524086406556",
"email_subject": "This email is related to simulation"
},
"items": [
{
"recipient_type": "EMAIL",
"receiver": "[email protected]",
"note": "ERRPYO002",
"sender_item_id": "15240864065560",
"amount": {
"currency": "USD",
"value": "1.00"
}
}]
}'
So I guess that I need to pass an error code (like ERRPYO002
) to a note
field in my request body.
I'm using the checkout sdk, and my js code currently looks like this:
const buttonOpts = {
env: 'sandbox',
client: { production: $scope.key, sandbox: $scope.key },
style: {
label: 'paypal',
size: 'medium',
shape: 'rect',
color: 'blue',
tagline: false,
},
validate: actions => {
// stuff
},
payment: (data, actions) => {
return actions.payment.create({
intent: 'authorize',
payer: { payment_method: 'paypal' },
transactions: [
{
amount: {
total: '20.00',
currency: 'EUR',
},
description: 'My description',
},
],
});
},
onAuthorize: data => {
// Sending data.paymentID and data.payerID to my backend to confirm the new transaction
},
onCancel: () => {
// stuff
},
onError: err => {
console.log(err);
// stuff
},
};
Paypal.Button.render(buttonOpts, '#paypal-button');
I guess that I need to pass the code needed to simulate the error to my actions.payment.create
object parameter, but I didn't find where exactly since my workflow is different that the one in the docs.
These are the codes that PayPal allows you to use for error testing: https://developer.paypal.com/docs/payouts/integrate/test-payouts/#test-values
Any help is appreciated. Thanks a lot.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 2041
Reputation: 424
Ok, I've actually found out how to solve this problem right after I posted this question. I'll just put my solution here for anyone that may have this problem in the future.
The option object I posted is actually correct as it is now, so after the user confirms that he/she wants to start a new transaction I get the payerID and the paymentID to send to my backend. On my backend function I changed my code so that it is as follows:
const paypal = require('paypal-rest-sdk');
const paymentId = event.paymentID;
const payerId = { payer_id: event.payerID };
paypal.configure({
mode: process.env.PAYPAL_ENVIRONMENT, //sandbox or live
client_id: '<MY_CLIENT_ID>',
client_secret: '<MY_CLIENT_SECRET>',
});
paypal.payment.execute(
paymentId,
payerId,
// START NEW CODE
{
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
'PayPal-Mock-Response': '{"mock_application_codes": "INSUFFICIENT_FUNDS"}',
},
},
// END NEW CODE
(error, payment) => {
console.error(JSON.stringify(error));
console.error(JSON.stringify(payment));
if (error) {
/*
{
"response": {
"name": "INSUFFICIENT_FUNDS",
"message": "Buyer cannot pay - insufficient funds.",
"information_link": "https://developer.paypal.com/docs/api/payments/#errors",
"debug_id": "a1b2c3d4e5f6g",
"details": [
{
"issue": "The buyer must add a valid funding instrument, such as a credit card or bank account, to their PayPal account."
}
],
"httpStatusCode": 400
},
"httpStatusCode": 400
}
*/
return callback('unhandled_error', null);
}
if (payment.state === 'approved' && payment.transactions && payment.transactions[0].related_resources && payment.transactions[0].related_resources[0].authorization) {
return callback(null, payment.transactions[0].related_resources[0].authorization.id);
}
console.log('payment not successful');
return callback('unhandled_error', null);
}
);
In the request headers you just have to put an header called PayPal-Mock-Response
that contains the error code you want to test, and that's it.
Hope this'll help somebody!
Upvotes: 3