BraintreePlugin
BraintreePlugin
This plugin enables payments to be processed by Braintree, a popular payment provider.
Requirements
- You will need to create a Braintree sandbox account as outlined in https://developers.braintreepayments.com/start/overview.
- Then install
braintree
and@types/braintree
from npm. This plugin was written withv3.x
of the Braintree lib.oryarn add @vendure/payments-plugin braintree
yarn add -D @types/braintreenpm install @vendure/payments-plugin braintree
npm install -D @types/braintree
Setup
- Add the plugin to your VendureConfig
plugins
array:import { BraintreePlugin } from '@vendure/payments-plugin/package/braintree';
import { Environment } from 'braintree';
// ...
plugins: [
BraintreePlugin.init({
environment: Environment.Sandbox,
// This allows saving customer payment
// methods with Braintree (see "vaulting"
// section below for details)
storeCustomersInBraintree: true,
}),
] - Create a new PaymentMethod in the Admin UI, and select "Braintree payments" as the handler.
- Fill in the
Merchant ID
,Public Key
&Private Key
from your Braintree sandbox account.
Storefront usage
The plugin is designed to work with the Braintree drop-in UI. This is a library provided by Braintree which will handle the payment UI for you. You can install it in your storefront project with:
yarn add braintree-web-drop-in
# or
npm install braintree-web-drop-in
The high-level workflow is:
- Generate a "client token" on the server by executing the
generateBraintreeClientToken
mutation which is exposed by this plugin. - Use this client token to instantiate the Braintree Dropin UI.
- Listen for the
"paymentMethodRequestable"
event which emitted by the Dropin. - Use the Dropin's
requestPaymentMethod()
method to get the required payment metadata. - Pass that metadata to the
addPaymentToOrder
mutation. The metadata should be an object of type{ nonce: string; }
Here is an example of how your storefront code will look. Note that this example is attempting to be framework-agnostic, so you'll need to adapt it to fit to your framework of choice.
// The Braintree Dropin instance
let dropin: import('braintree-web-drop-in').Dropin;
// Used to show/hide a "submit" button, which would be bound to the
// `submitPayment()` method below.
let showSubmitButton = false;
// Used to display a "processing..." spinner
let processing = false;
//
// This method would be invoked when the payment screen is mounted/created.
//
async function renderDropin(order: Order, clientToken: string) {
// Lazy load braintree dropin because it has a reference
// to `window` which breaks SSR
dropin = await import('braintree-web-drop-in').then((module) =>
module.default.create({
authorization: clientToken,
// This assumes a div in your view with the corresponding ID
container: '#dropin-container',
card: {
cardholderName: {
required: true,
},
overrides: {},
},
// Additional config is passed here depending on
// which payment methods you have enabled in your
// Braintree account.
paypal: {
flow: 'checkout',
amount: order.totalWithTax / 100,
currency: 'GBP',
},
}),
);
// If you are using the `storeCustomersInBraintree` option, then the
// customer might already have a stored payment method selected as
// soon as the dropin script loads. In this case, show the submit
// button immediately.
if (dropin.isPaymentMethodRequestable()) {
showSubmitButton = true;
}
dropin.on('paymentMethodRequestable', (payload) => {
if (payload.type === 'CreditCard') {
showSubmitButton = true;
}
if (payload.type === 'PayPalAccount') {
this.submitPayment();
}
});
dropin.on('noPaymentMethodRequestable', () => {
// Display an error
});
}
async function generateClientToken() {
const { generateBraintreeClientToken } = await graphQlClient.query(gql`
query GenerateBraintreeClientToken {
generateBraintreeClientToken
}
`);
return generateBraintreeClientToken;
}
async submitPayment() {
if (!dropin.isPaymentMethodRequestable()) {
return;
}
showSubmitButton = false;
processing = true;
const paymentResult = await dropin.requestPaymentMethod();
const { addPaymentToOrder } = await graphQlClient.query(gql`
mutation AddPayment($input: PaymentInput!) {
addPaymentToOrder(input: $input) {
... on Order {
id
payments {
id
amount
errorMessage
method
state
transactionId
createdAt
}
}
... on ErrorResult {
errorCode
message
}
}
}`, {
input: {
method: 'braintree', // The code of you Braintree PaymentMethod
metadata: paymentResult,
},
},
);
switch (addPaymentToOrder?.__typename) {
case 'Order':
// Adding payment succeeded!
break;
case 'OrderStateTransitionError':
case 'OrderPaymentStateError':
case 'PaymentDeclinedError':
case 'PaymentFailedError':
// Display an error to the customer
dropin.clearSelectedPaymentMethod();
}
}
Storing payment details (vaulting)
Braintree has a vault feature which allows the secure storage of customer's payment information. Using the vault allows you to offer a faster checkout for repeat customers without needing to worry about how to securely store payment details.
To enable this feature, set the storeCustomersInBraintree
option to true
.
BraintreePlugin.init({
environment: Environment.Sandbox,
storeCustomersInBraintree: true,
}),
Since v1.8, it is possible to override vaulting on a per-payment basis by passing includeCustomerId: false
to the generateBraintreeClientToken
mutation:
const { generateBraintreeClientToken } = await graphQlClient.query(gql`
query GenerateBraintreeClientToken($includeCustomerId: Boolean) {
generateBraintreeClientToken(includeCustomerId: $includeCustomerId)
}
`, { includeCustomerId: false });
as well as in the metadata of the addPaymentToOrder
mutation:
const { addPaymentToOrder } = await graphQlClient.query(gql`
mutation AddPayment($input: PaymentInput!) {
addPaymentToOrder(input: $input) {
...Order
...ErrorResult
}
}`, {
input: {
method: 'braintree',
metadata: {
...paymentResult,
includeCustomerId: false,
},
}
);
class BraintreePlugin {
static options: BraintreePluginOptions = {};
init(options: BraintreePluginOptions) => Type<BraintreePlugin>;
}
BraintreePluginOptions
Options for the Braintree plugin.
interface BraintreePluginOptions {
environment?: Environment;
storeCustomersInBraintree?: boolean;
extractMetadata?: (transaction: Transaction) => PaymentMetadata;
}
environment
Environment
Environment.Sandbox
The Braintree environment being targeted, e.g. sandbox or production.
storeCustomersInBraintree
boolean
false
If set to true
, a Customer object
will be created in Braintree, which allows the secure storage ("vaulting") of previously-used payment methods.
This is done by adding a custom field to the Customer entity to store the Braintree customer ID,
so switching this on will require a database migration / synchronization.
Since v1.8, it is possible to override vaulting on a per-payment basis by passing includeCustomerId: false
to the
generateBraintreeClientToken
mutation.
extractMetadata
Allows you to configure exactly what information from the Braintree
Transaction object (which is returned by the
transaction.sale()
method of the SDK) should be persisted to the resulting Payment entity metadata.
By default, the built-in extraction function will return a metadata object that looks like this:
Example
const metadata = {
"status": "settling",
"currencyIsoCode": "GBP",
"merchantAccountId": "my_account_id",
"cvvCheck": "Not Applicable",
"avsPostCodeCheck": "Not Applicable",
"avsStreetAddressCheck": "Not Applicable",
"processorAuthorizationCode": null,
"processorResponseText": "Approved",
// for Paypal payments
"paymentMethod": "paypal_account",
"paypalData": {
"payerEmail": "michael-buyer@paypalsandbox.com",
"paymentId": "PAYID-MLCXYNI74301746XK8807043",
"authorizationId": "3BU93594D85624939",
"payerStatus": "VERIFIED",
"sellerProtectionStatus": "ELIGIBLE",
"transactionFeeAmount": "0.54"
},
// for credit card payments
"paymentMethod": "credit_card",
"cardData": {
"cardType": "MasterCard",
"last4": "5454",
"expirationDate": "02/2023"
}
// publicly-available metadata that will be
// readable from the Shop API
"public": {
"cardData": {
"cardType": "MasterCard",
"last4": "5454",
"expirationDate": "02/2023"
},
"paypalData": {
"authorizationId": "3BU93594D85624939",
}
}
}