The narrative that “PHP is dead” has been wrong for a decade. The narrative that “PHP can’t do Web3” is just as incorrect.
While Node.js dominates the frontend dApp ecosystem, PHP and Symfony are quietly powering the heavy lifting of the decentralized web: indexing off-chain data, managing private key orchestration for enterprise wallets, and bridging the gap between Web2 business logic and Web3 protocols.
In this guide, we will build a production-ready Web3 integration using Symfony 7.4 and PHP 8.3+. We won’t use obscure, unmaintained wrappers. We will use the industry-standard libraries to read the blockchain, interact with smart contracts, and implement a Sign-In with Ethereum (SIWE) authentication system using Symfony’s security core.
We are simulating a real-world environment. We will assume you are running Symfony 7.4 (the LTS release as of late 2025).
We will use the following strictly typed, verified libraries:
Create your project and install dependencies. Note that we explicitly allow web3p/web3.php to interface with modern Guzzle versions if needed.
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composer create-project symfony/website-skeleton my_web3_app cd my_web3_app # Install the Web3 standard library composer require web3p/web3.php:^0.3 # Install crypto utilities for signature verification composer require kornrunner/keccak:^1.1 simplito/elliptic-php:^1.0 # Install the Maker bundle for rapid prototyping composer require --dev symfony/maker-bundle
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Directly instantiating libraries in controllers is an anti-pattern. We will wrap the Web3 connection in a robust Symfony Service using Dependency Injection.
First, configure your node URL in .env:
# .env ETHEREUM_NODE_URL="https://mainnet.infura.io/v3/YOUR_INFURA_ID"
Now, create the service. We use PHP 8.2 Readonly Classes and Constructor Promotion for clean architecture.
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// src/Service/Web3Client.php namespace App\Service; use Web3\Web3; use Web3\Eth; use Web3\Contract; use Web3\Providers\HttpProvider; use Web3\RequestManagers\HttpRequestManager; use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\Autowire; readonly class Web3Client { private Web3 $web3; public function __construct( #[Autowire(env: 'ETHEREUM_NODE_URL')] private string $nodeUrl ) { // We utilize a timeout of 10 seconds for RPC calls $provider = new HttpProvider(new HttpRequestManager($this->nodeUrl, 10)); $this->web3 = new Web3($provider); } public function getEth(): Eth { return $this->web3->eth; } public function getContract(string $abi, string $address): Contract { return new Contract($this->web3->provider, $abi); } }
Let’s verify our connection by reading the native ETH balance of an address.
Note on Asynchrony: web3p/web3.php uses callbacks by default. To make this compatible with Symfony’s synchronous request/response lifecycle, we wrap the callback in a simple latch or use the returned promise if available. For simplicity and reliability in this version, we will use a referenced variable capture method which is the standard pattern for this library in PHP 8.
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// src/Controller/WalletController.php namespace App\Controller; use App\Service\Web3Client; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Attribute\Route; use Web3\Utils; #[Route('/api/wallet')] class WalletController extends AbstractController { public function __construct(private Web3Client $web3Client) {} #[Route('/balance/{address}', name: 'app_wallet_balance', methods: ['GET'])] public function balance(string $address): JsonResponse { $balance = null; $error = null; // Fetch balance via JSON-RPC $this->web3Client->getEth()->getBalance($address, function ($err, $data) use (&$balance, &$error) { if ($err !== null) { $error = $err; return; } $balance = $data; }); if ($error) { return $this->json(['error' => $error->getMessage()], 500); } // Convert BigInteger to Ether string // web3p returns PHP GMP/BigInteger objects $ethBalance = Utils::fromWei($balance, 'ether'); [$whole, $decimals] = $ethBalance; return $this->json([ 'address' => $address, 'balance_wei' => (string) $balance, 'balance_eth' => $whole . '.' . $decimals, ]); } }
Start your server (symfony server:start) and visit https://localhost:8000/api/wallet/balance/0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045 (Vitalik’s address). You should see a JSON response with his current balance.
Reading ETH is easy. Reading a token balance (like USDC) requires the ABI (Application Binary Interface).
We will create a Service method to read any ERC-20 balance.
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// src/Service/TokenService.php namespace App\Service; use Web3\Contract; use Web3\Utils; class TokenService { // Minimal ERC-20 ABI for 'balanceOf' private const ERC20_ABI = '[{"constant":true,"inputs":[{"name":"_owner","type":"address"}],"name":"balanceOf","outputs":[{"name":"balance","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"}]'; public function __construct(private Web3Client $web3Client) {} public function getBalance(string $tokenAddress, string $walletAddress): string { $contract = $this->web3Client->getContract(self::ERC20_ABI, $tokenAddress); $resultBalance = null; // The "at" method sets the contract address for the call $contract->at($tokenAddress)->call('balanceOf', $walletAddress, function ($err, $result) use (&$resultBalance) { if ($err !== null) { throw new \RuntimeException($err->getMessage()); } // Result is an array based on outputs in ABI $resultBalance = $result['balance']; }); // Assuming 18 decimals for standard ERC-20 // In production, you should fetch the 'decimals' function from the contract first $formatted = Utils::fromWei($resultBalance, 'ether'); return $formatted[0] . '.' . $formatted[1]; } }
This is the most critical part of Web3 UX. We do not want users to create passwords. We want them to sign a message with their wallet (Metamask, Rabby, etc.) to prove ownership.
The Logic:
We need a helper to perform ecrecover. PHP does not have this built-in easily, so we use simplito/elliptic-php and kornrunner/keccak.
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// src/Security/Web3/SignatureVerifier.php namespace App\Security\Web3; use Elliptic\EC; use kornrunner\Keccak; class SignatureVerifier { public function verifySignature(string $message, string $signature, string $address): bool { // 1. Hash the message according to Ethereum standard (EIP-191) $prefix = sprintf("\x19Ethereum Signed Message:\n%d", strlen($message)); $hash = Keccak::hash($prefix . $message, 256); // 2. Parse Signature (Remove 0x, split into r, s, v) $signature = substr($signature, 2); $r = substr($signature, 0, 64); $s = substr($signature, 64, 64); $v = hexdec(substr($signature, 128, 2)); // Adjust v for recovery (Ethereum uses 27/28, library expects 0/1) $recId = $v - 27; if ($recId < 0 || $recId > 1) { return false; } // 3. Recover Public Key $ec = new EC('secp256k1'); try { $pubKey = $ec->recoverPubKey($hash, ['r' => $r, 's' => $s], $recId); } catch (\Exception $e) { return false; } // 4. Derive Address from Public Key // Drop first byte (04 prefix), hash the rest, take last 20 bytes $pubKeyHex = $pubKey->encode('hex'); $pubKeyHex = substr($pubKeyHex, 2); $addressHash = Keccak::hash(hex2bin($pubKeyHex), 256); $recoveredAddress = '0x' . substr($addressHash, -40); // 5. Compare (Case insensitive) return strtolower($address) === strtolower($recoveredAddress); } }
Now we implement the Symfony 7 AbstractAuthenticator.
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// src/Security/Web3Authenticator.php namespace App\Security; use App\Repository\UserRepository; use App\Security\Web3\SignatureVerifier; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\TokenInterface; use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\AuthenticationException; use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator\AbstractAuthenticator; use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator\Passport\Badge\UserBadge; use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator\Passport\Passport; use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator\Passport\SelfValidatingPassport; class Web3Authenticator extends AbstractAuthenticator { public function __construct( private SignatureVerifier $verifier, private UserRepository $userRepository ) {} public function supports(Request $request): ?bool { return $request->isMethod('POST') && $request->getPathInfo() === '/api/login_web3'; } public function authenticate(Request $request): Passport { $data = json_decode($request->getContent(), true); $address = $data['address'] ?? ''; $message = $data['message'] ?? ''; // Contains the nonce $signature = $data['signature'] ?? ''; if (!$address || !$message || !$signature) { throw new AuthenticationException('Missing Web3 credentials.'); } // Verify the signature matches the address if (!$this->verifier->verifySignature($message, $signature, $address)) { throw new AuthenticationException('Invalid signature.'); } // Check nonce (Optional but recommended: Verify nonce exists in session/cache) // $storedNonce = $request->getSession()->get('login_nonce'); // if (!str_contains($message, $storedNonce)) throw ... return new SelfValidatingPassport( new UserBadge($address, function ($userIdentifier) { // Find user by wallet address or create new one return $this->userRepository->findOrCreateByWallet($userIdentifier); }) ); } public function onAuthenticationSuccess(Request $request, TokenInterface $token, string $firewallName): ?Response { return new JsonResponse(['message' => 'Welcome to Web3', 'user' => $token->getUser()->getUserIdentifier()]); } public function onAuthenticationFailure(Request $request, AuthenticationException $exception): ?Response { return new JsonResponse(['error' => $exception->getMessage()], 401); } }
Web3 is often about reacting to things happening off-chain. You shouldn’t make your user wait while you query the blockchain. Instead, use a worker.
We will create a command that polls for “Transfer” events and dispatches them to the Messenger bus.
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// src/Command/BlockchainListenerCommand.php namespace App\Command; use App\Service\Web3Client; use Symfony\Component\Console\Attribute\AsCommand; use Symfony\Component\Console\Command\Command; use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputInterface; use Symfony\Component\Console\Output\OutputInterface; #[AsCommand(name: 'app:blockchain:listen', description: 'Polls for ERC20 Transfer events')] class BlockchainListenerCommand extends Command { public function __construct(private Web3Client $web3Client) { parent::__construct(); } protected function execute(InputInterface $input, OutputInterface $output): int { $contractAddress = '0x...'; // USDC or your token $transferTopic = '0xddf252ad1be2c89b69c2b068fc378daa952ba7f163c4a11628f55a4df523b3ef'; // Keccak('Transfer(address,address,uint256)') $output->writeln("Listening for events on $contractAddress..."); // In a real app, you would store the 'last_scanned_block' in a DB $currentBlock = 'latest'; // Uses eth_getLogs $this->web3Client->getEth()->getLogs([ 'address' => $contractAddress, 'topics' => [$transferTopic], 'fromBlock' => '0x' . dechex(20000000) // Hex block number ], function ($err, $logs) use ($output) { if ($err) { $output->writeln("Error: " . $err->getMessage()); return; } foreach ($logs as $log) { // Dispatch to Symfony Messenger here $output->writeln("Transfer detected in transaction: " . $log->transactionHash); } }); return Command::SUCCESS; } }
Note: In production, you would run this command inside a supervisord loop or cron, maintaining state of the last scanned block to ensure no events are missed.
We have successfully bridged the gap. You now have a Symfony 7.4 application that can:
Web3 is not about rewriting your entire stack in Solidity or Rust. It’s about orchestration. Symfony is the perfect orchestrator — stable, secure and typed.
If you are looking to integrate high-value assets onto the blockchain or need a secure audit of your current Web3-PHP architecture, I can help.
Contact me to discuss your Web3 Strategy https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-mochalkin/
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