File: /var/www/html/bwcsports-site/wp-content/themes/salient/stripe-php/lib/Terminal/ConnectionToken.php
<?php
// File generated from our OpenAPI spec
namespace Stripe\Terminal;
/**
* A Connection Token is used by the Stripe Terminal SDK to connect to a reader.
*
* Related guide: <a href="https://stripe.com/docs/terminal/fleet/locations">Fleet management</a>
*
* @property string $object String representing the object's type. Objects of the same type share the same value.
* @property null|string $location The id of the location that this connection token is scoped to. Note that location scoping only applies to internet-connected readers. For more details, see <a href="https://docs.stripe.com/terminal/fleet/locations-and-zones?dashboard-or-api=api#connection-tokens">the docs on scoping connection tokens</a>.
* @property string $secret Your application should pass this token to the Stripe Terminal SDK.
*/
class ConnectionToken extends \Stripe\ApiResource
{
const OBJECT_NAME = 'terminal.connection_token';
/**
* To connect to a reader the Stripe Terminal SDK needs to retrieve a short-lived
* connection token from Stripe, proxied through your server. On your backend, add
* an endpoint that creates and returns a connection token.
*
* @param null|array $params
* @param null|array|string $options
*
* @throws \Stripe\Exception\ApiErrorException if the request fails
*
* @return \Stripe\Terminal\ConnectionToken the created resource
*/
public static function create($params = null, $options = null)
{
self::_validateParams($params);
$url = static::classUrl();
list($response, $opts) = static::_staticRequest('post', $url, $params, $options);
$obj = \Stripe\Util\Util::convertToStripeObject($response->json, $opts);
$obj->setLastResponse($response);
return $obj;
}
}