Symfony Book 2.0
Symfony Book 2.0
The Book (2.0) This work is licensed under the Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license (http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-sa/3.0/). You are free to share (to copy, distribute and transmit the work), and to remix (to adapt the work) under the following conditions: Attribution: You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Share Alike: If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same, similar or a compatible license. For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work. The information in this book is distributed on an as is basis, without warranty. Although every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this work, neither the author(s) nor SensioLabs shall have any liability to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused or alleged to be caused directly or indirectly by the information contained in this work. If you find typos or errors, feel free to report them by creating a ticket on the Symfony ticketing system (http://github.com/symfony/symfony-docs/issues). Based on tickets and users feedback, this book is continuously updated.
Contents at a Glance
Symfony2 and HTTP Fundamentals ....................................................................................................4 Symfony2 versus Flat PHP.................................................................................................................14 Installing and Configuring Symfony...................................................................................................26 Creating Pages in Symfony2 ..............................................................................................................30 Controller.........................................................................................................................................43 Routing ............................................................................................................................................54 Creating and using Templates ...........................................................................................................65 Databases and Doctrine ("The Model")..............................................................................................81 Testing ........................................................................................................................................... 102 Validation....................................................................................................................................... 114 Forms ............................................................................................................................................. 122 Security .......................................................................................................................................... 142 HTTP Cache................................................................................................................................... 162 Translations.................................................................................................................................... 177 Service Container ............................................................................................................................ 189 Performance ................................................................................................................................... 200 Internals ......................................................................................................................................... 203 The Symfony2 Stable API ................................................................................................................ 212
Chapter 1
HTTP is Simple
HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol to the geeks) is a text language that allows two machines to communicate with each other. That's it! For example, when checking for the latest xkcd1 comic, the following (approximate) conversation takes place:
1. http://xkcd.com/
And while the actual language used is a bit more formal, it's still dead-simple. HTTP is the term used to describe this simple text-based language. And no matter how you develop on the web, the goal of your server is always to understand simple text requests, and return simple text responses. Symfony2 is built from the ground-up around that reality. Whether you realize it or not, HTTP is something you use everyday. With Symfony2, you'll learn how to master it.
In HTTP-speak, this HTTP request would actually look something like this:
GET / HTTP/1.1 Host: xkcd.com Accept: text/html User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh)
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This simple message communicates everything necessary about exactly which resource the client is requesting. The first line of an HTTP request is the most important and contains two things: the URI and the HTTP method. The URI (e.g. /, /contact, etc) is the unique address or location that identifies the resource the client wants. The HTTP method (e.g. GET) defines what you want to do with the resource. The HTTP methods are the verbs of the request and define the few common ways that you can act upon the resource:
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Retrieve the resource from the server Create a resource on the server Update the resource on the server
DELETE Delete the resource from the server With this in mind, you can imagine what an HTTP request might look like to delete a specific blog entry, for example:
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There are actually nine HTTP methods defined by the HTTP specification, but many of them are not widely used or supported. In reality, many modern browsers don't support the PUT and DELETE methods.
In addition to the first line, an HTTP request invariably contains other lines of information called request headers. The headers can supply a wide range of information such as the requested Host, the response formats the client accepts (Accept) and the application the client is using to make the request (User2 Agent). Many other headers exist and can be found on Wikipedia's List of HTTP header fields article.
Translated into HTTP, the response sent back to the browser will look something like this:
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HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Sat, 02 Apr 2011 21:05:05 GMT Server: lighttpd/1.4.19 Content-Type: text/html <html> <!-- HTML for the xkcd comic --> </html>
2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_header_fields
The HTTP response contains the requested resource (the HTML content in this case), as well as other information about the response. The first line is especially important and contains the HTTP response status code (200 in this case). The status code communicates the overall outcome of the request back to the client. Was the request successful? Was there an error? Different status codes exist that indicate success, an error, or that the client needs to do something (e.g. redirect to another page). A full list can be found on Wikipedia's List of HTTP status codes3 article. Like the request, an HTTP response contains additional pieces of information known as HTTP headers. For example, one important HTTP response header is Content-Type. The body of the same resource could be returned in multiple different formats like HTML, XML, or JSON and the Content-Type header uses Internet Media Types like text/html to tell the client which format is being returned. A list of common media types can be found on Wikipedia's List of common media types4 article. Many other headers exist, some of which are very powerful. For example, certain headers can be used to create a powerful caching system.
As strange as it sounds, this small application is in fact taking information from the HTTP request and using it to create an HTTP response. Instead of parsing the raw HTTP request message, PHP prepares superglobal variables such as $_SERVER and $_GET that contain all the information from the request. Similarly, instead of returning the HTTP-formatted text response, you can use the header() function to create response headers and simply print out the actual content that will be the content portion of the response message. PHP will create a true HTTP response and return it to the client:
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HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Sat, 03 Apr 2011 02:14:33 GMT Server: Apache/2.2.17 (Unix) Content-Type: text/html The URI requested is: /testing?foo=symfony The value of the "foo" parameter is: symfony
// the URI being requested (e.g. /about) minus any query parameters $request->getPathInfo(); // retrieve GET and POST variables respectively $request->query->get('foo'); $request->request->get('bar', 'default value if bar does not exist'); // retrieve SERVER variables $request->server->get('HTTP_HOST'); // retrieves an instance of UploadedFile identified by foo $request->files->get('foo'); // retrieve a COOKIE value $request->cookies->get('PHPSESSID'); // retrieve an HTTP request header, with normalized, lowercase keys $request->headers->get('host'); $request->headers->get('content_type');
$request->getMethod(); $request->getLanguages();
// GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, HEAD // an array of languages the client accepts
As a bonus, the Request class does a lot of work in the background that you'll never need to worry about. For example, the isSecure() method checks the three different values in PHP that can indicate whether or not the user is connecting via a secured connection (i.e. https).
8. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Request.html
Symfony also provides a Response class: a simple PHP representation of an HTTP response message. This allows your application to use an object-oriented interface to construct the response that needs to be returned to the client:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; $response = new Response(); $response->setContent('<html><body><h1>Hello world!</h1></body></html>'); $response->setStatusCode(200); $response->headers->set('Content-Type', 'text/html');
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If Symfony offered nothing else, you would already have a toolkit for easily accessing request information and an object-oriented interface for creating the response. Even as you learn the many powerful features in Symfony, keep in mind that the goal of your application is always to interpret a request and create the appropriate response based on your application logic.
The Request and Response classes are part of a standalone component included with Symfony called HttpFoundation. This component can be used entirely independent of Symfony and also provides classes for handling sessions and file uploads.
There are several problems with this approach, including the inflexibility of the URLs (what if you wanted to change blog.php to news.php without breaking all of your links?) and the fact that each file must manually include some set of core files so that security, database connections and the "look" of the site can remain consistent. A much better solution is to use a front controller: a single PHP file that handles every request coming into your application. For example:
/index.php
Using Apache's mod_rewrite (or equivalent with other web servers), the URLs can easily be cleaned up to be just /, /contact and /blog.
Now, every request is handled exactly the same. Instead of individual URLs executing different PHP files, the front controller is always executed, and the routing of different URLs to different parts of your application is done internally. This solves both problems with the original approach. Almost all modern web apps do this - including apps like WordPress.
Stay Organized
But inside your front controller, how do you know which page should be rendered and how can you render each in a sane way? One way or another, you'll need to check the incoming URI and execute different parts of your code depending on that value. This can get ugly quickly:
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// index.php
$request = Request::createFromGlobals(); $path = $request->getPathInfo(); // the URI path being requested if (in_array($path, array('', '/')) { $response = new Response('Welcome to the homepage.'); } elseif ($path == '/contact') { $response = new Response('Contact us'); } else { $response = new Response('Page not found.', 404); } $response->send();
Solving this problem can be difficult. Fortunately it's exactly what Symfony is designed to do.
Incoming requests are interpreted by the routing and passed to controller functions that return Response objects. Each "page" of your site is defined in a routing configuration file that maps different URLs to different PHP functions. The job of each PHP function, called a controller, is to use information from the request - along with many other tools Symfony makes available - to create and return a Response object. In other words, the controller is where your code goes: it's where you interpret the request and create a response. It's that easy! Let's review: Each request executes a front controller file; The routing system determines which PHP function should be executed based on information from the request and routing configuration you've created; The correct PHP function is executed, where your code creates and returns the appropriate Response object.
This example uses YAML to define the routing configuration. Routing configuration can also be written in other formats such as XML or PHP.
When someone visits the /contact page, this route is matched, and the specified controller is executed. As you'll learn in the routing chapter, the AcmeDemoBundle:Main:contact string is a short syntax that points to a specific PHP method contactAction inside a class called MainController:
class MainController { public function contactAction() { return new Response('<h1>Contact us!</h1>'); } }
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In this very simple example, the controller simply creates a Response object with the HTML "<h1>Contact us!</h1>". In the controller chapter, you'll learn how a controller can render templates, allowing your "presentation" code (i.e. anything that actually writes out HTML) to live in a separate template file. This frees up the controller to worry only about the hard stuff: interacting with the database, handling submitted data, or sending email messages.
13. https://github.com/symfony/HttpFoundation 14. https://github.com/symfony/Routing 15. https://github.com/symfony/Form 16. https://github.com/symfony/Validator 17. https://github.com/symfony/ClassLoader 18. https://github.com/symfony/Templating 19. https://github.com/symfony/Security 20. https://github.com/symfony/Translation
Chapter 1
<?php // index.php $link = mysql_connect('localhost', 'myuser', 'mypassword'); mysql_select_db('blog_db', $link); $result = mysql_query('SELECT id, title FROM post', $link); ?> <html> <head> <title>List of Posts</title> </head> <body> <h1>List of Posts</h1> <ul> <?php while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)): ?> <li>
<a href="/show.php?id=<?php echo $row['id'] ?>"> <?php echo $row['title'] ?> </a> </li> <?php endwhile; ?> </ul> </body> </html> <?php mysql_close($link);
That's quick to write, fast to execute, and, as your app grows, impossible to maintain. There are several problems that need to be addressed: No error-checking: What if the connection to the database fails? Poor organization: If the application grows, this single file will become increasingly unmaintainable. Where should you put code to handle a form submission? How can you validate data? Where should code go for sending emails? Difficult to reuse code: Since everything is in one file, there's no way to reuse any part of the application for other "pages" of the blog.
Another problem not mentioned here is the fact that the database is tied to MySQL. Though not covered here, Symfony2 fully integrates Doctrine21, a library dedicated to database abstraction and mapping.
The HTML code is now stored in a separate file (templates/list.php), which is primarily an HTML file that uses a template-like PHP syntax:
<html> <head>
21. http://www.doctrine-project.org
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<title>List of Posts</title> </head> <body> <h1>List of Posts</h1> <ul> <?php foreach ($posts as $post): ?> <li> <a href="/read?id=<?php echo $post['id'] ?>"> <?php echo $post['title'] ?> </a> </li> <?php endforeach; ?> </ul> </body> </html>
By convention, the file that contains all of the application logic - index.php - is known as a "controller". The term controller is a word you'll hear a lot, regardless of the language or framework you use. It refers simply to the area of your code that processes user input and prepares the response. In this case, our controller prepares data from the database and then includes a template to present that data. With the controller isolated, you could easily change just the template file if you needed to render the blog entries in some other format (e.g. list.json.php for JSON format).
<?php // model.php function open_database_connection() { $link = mysql_connect('localhost', 'myuser', 'mypassword'); mysql_select_db('blog_db', $link); return $link; } function close_database_connection($link) { mysql_close($link); } function get_all_posts() { $link = open_database_connection(); $result = mysql_query('SELECT id, title FROM post', $link); $posts = array(); while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) { $posts[] = $row; } close_database_connection($link); return $posts; }
The filename model.php is used because the logic and data access of an application is traditionally known as the "model" layer. In a well-organized application, the majority of the code representing your "business logic" should live in the model (as opposed to living in a controller). And unlike in this example, only a portion (or none) of the model is actually concerned with accessing a database.
Now, the sole task of the controller is to get data from the model layer of the application (the model) and to call a template to render that data. This is a very simple example of the model-view-controller pattern.
You've now introduced a methodology that allows for the reuse of the layout. Unfortunately, to accomplish this, you're forced to use a few ugly PHP functions (ob_start(), ob_get_clean()) in the template. Symfony2 uses a Templating component that allows this to be accomplished cleanly and easily. You'll see it in action shortly.
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Next, create a new file called show.php - the controller for this new page:
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Finally, create the new template file - templates/show.php - to render the individual blog post:
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<?php $title = $post['title'] ?> <?php ob_start() ?> <h1><?php echo $post['title'] ?></h1> <div class="date"><?php echo $post['date'] ?></div> <div class="body"> <?php echo $post['body'] ?> </div> <?php $content = ob_get_clean() ?> <?php include 'layout.php' ?>
Creating the second page is now very easy and no code is duplicated. Still, this page introduces even more lingering problems that a framework can solve for you. For example, a missing or invalid id query parameter will cause the page to crash. It would be better if this caused a 404 page to be rendered, but this can't really be done easily yet. Worse, had you forgotten to clean the id parameter via the mysql_real_escape_string() function, your entire database would be at risk for an SQL injection attack. Another major problem is that each individual controller file must include the model.php file. What if each controller file suddenly needed to include an additional file or perform some other global task (e.g. enforce security)? As it stands now, that code would need to be added to every controller file. If you forget to include something in one file, hopefully it doesn't relate to security...
The index.php portion of the URI can be removed if using Apache rewrite rules (or equivalent). In that case, the resulting URI of the blog show page would be simply /show.
When using a front controller, a single PHP file (index.php in this case) renders every request. For the blog post show page, /index.php/show will actually execute the index.php file, which is now responsible for routing requests internally based on the full URI. As you'll see, a front controller is a very powerful tool.
// load and initialize any global libraries require_once 'model.php'; require_once 'controllers.php'; // route the request internally $uri = $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']; if ($uri == '/index.php') { list_action(); } elseif ($uri == '/index.php/show' && isset($_GET['id'])) { show_action($_GET['id']); } else { header('Status: 404 Not Found'); echo '<html><body><h1>Page Not Found</h1></body></html>'; }
For organization, both controllers (formerly index.php and show.php) are now PHP functions and each has been moved into a separate file, controllers.php:
function list_action() { $posts = get_all_posts(); require 'templates/list.php'; } function show_action($id)
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As a front controller, index.php has taken on an entirely new role, one that includes loading the core libraries and routing the application so that one of the two controllers (the list_action() and show_action() functions) is called. In reality, the front controller is beginning to look and act a lot like Symfony2's mechanism for handling and routing requests.
Another advantage of a front controller is flexible URLs. Notice that the URL to the blog post show page could be changed from /show to /read by changing code in only one location. Before, an entire file needed to be renamed. In Symfony2, URLs are even more flexible.
By now, the application has evolved from a single PHP file into a structure that is organized and allows for code reuse. You should be happier, but far from satisfied. For example, the "routing" system is fickle, and wouldn't recognize that the list page (/index.php) should be accessible also via / (if Apache rewrite rules were added). Also, instead of developing the blog, a lot of time is being spent working on the "architecture" of the code (e.g. routing, calling controllers, templates, etc.). More time will need to be spent to handle form submissions, input validation, logging and security. Why should you have to reinvent solutions to all these routine problems?
<?php // bootstrap.php require_once 'model.php'; require_once 'controllers.php'; require_once 'vendor/symfony/src/Symfony/Component/ClassLoader/UniversalClassLoader.php'; $loader = new Symfony\Component\ClassLoader\UniversalClassLoader(); $loader->registerNamespaces(array( 'Symfony' => __DIR__.'/../vendor/symfony/src', )); $loader->register();
This tells the autoloader where the Symfony classes are. With this, you can start using Symfony classes without using the require statement for the files that contain them. Core to Symfony's philosophy is the idea that an application's main job is to interpret each request and return a response. To this end, Symfony2 provides both a Request23 and a Response24 class. These classes are object-oriented representations of the raw HTTP request being processed and the HTTP response being returned. Use them to improve the blog:
<?php // index.php require_once 'app/bootstrap.php'; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; $request = Request::createFromGlobals(); $uri = $request->getPathInfo(); if ($uri == '/') { $response = list_action(); } elseif ($uri == '/show' && $request->query->has('id')) { $response = show_action($request->query->get('id')); } else { $html = '<html><body><h1>Page Not Found</h1></body></html>'; $response = new Response($html, 404); }
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The controllers are now responsible for returning a Response object. To make this easier, you can add a new render_template() function, which, incidentally, acts quite a bit like the Symfony2 templating engine:
// controllers.php use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
function list_action() { $posts = get_all_posts(); $html = render_template('templates/list.php', array('posts' => $posts)); return new Response($html); } function show_action($id) { $post = get_post_by_id($id); $html = render_template('templates/show.php', array('post' => $post)); return new Response($html); }
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// helper function to render templates function render_template($path, array $args) { extract($args); ob_start(); require $path; $html = ob_get_clean();
return $html; }
By bringing in a small part of Symfony2, the application is more flexible and reliable. The Request provides a dependable way to access information about the HTTP request. Specifically, the getPathInfo() method returns a cleaned URI (always returning /show and never /index.php/show). So, even if the user goes to /index.php/show, the application is intelligent enough to route the request through show_action().
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The Response object gives flexibility when constructing the HTTP response, allowing HTTP headers and content to be added via an object-oriented interface. And while the responses in this application are simple, this flexibility will pay dividends as your application grows.
<?php // src/Acme/BlogBundle/Controller/BlogController.php namespace Acme\BlogBundle\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; class BlogController extends Controller { public function listAction() { $posts = $this->get('doctrine')->getEntityManager() ->createQuery('SELECT p FROM AcmeBlogBundle:Post p') ->execute(); return $this->render('AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:list.html.php', array('posts' => $posts)); } public function showAction($id) { $post = $this->get('doctrine') ->getEntityManager() ->getRepository('AcmeBlogBundle:Post') ->find($id); if (!$post) { // cause the 404 page not found to be displayed throw $this->createNotFoundException(); } return $this->render('AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:show.html.php', array('post' => $post)); } }
The two controllers are still lightweight. Each uses the Doctrine ORM library to retrieve objects from the database and the Templating component to render a template and return a Response object. The list template is now quite a bit simpler:
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<h1>List of Posts</h1> <ul> <?php foreach ($posts as $post): ?> <li> <a href="<?php echo $view['router']->generate('blog_show', array('id' => $post->getId())) ?>"> <?php echo $post->getTitle() ?> </a> </li> <?php endforeach; ?> </ul>
We'll leave the show template as an exercise, as it should be trivial to create based on the list template.
When Symfony2's engine (called the Kernel) boots up, it needs a map so that it knows which controllers to execute based on the request information. A routing configuration map provides this information in a readable format:
# app/config/routing.yml blog_list: pattern: /blog defaults: { _controller: AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:list }
blog_show: pattern: /blog/show/{id} defaults: { _controller: AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:show }
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Now that Symfony2 is handling all the mundane tasks, the front controller is dead simple. And since it does so little, you'll never have to touch it once it's created (and if you use a Symfony2 distribution, you won't even need to create it!):
<?php // web/app.php require_once __DIR__.'/../app/bootstrap.php'; require_once __DIR__.'/../app/AppKernel.php'; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; $kernel = new AppKernel('prod', false); $kernel->handle(Request::createFromGlobals())->send();
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The front controller's only job is to initialize Symfony2's engine (Kernel) and pass it a Request object to handle. Symfony2's core then uses the routing map to determine which controller to call. Just like before,
the controller method is responsible for returning the final Response object. There's really not much else to it. For a visual representation of how Symfony2 handles each request, see the request flow diagram.
Better templates
If you choose to use it, Symfony2 comes standard with a templating engine called Twig29 that makes templates faster to write and easier to read. It means that the sample application could contain even less code! Take, for example, the list template written in Twig:
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{# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/Blog/list.html.twig #}
{% extends "::layout.html.twig" %} {% block title %}List of Posts{% endblock %} {% block body %} <h1>List of Posts</h1> <ul> {% for post in posts %} <li> <a href="{{ path('blog_show', { 'id': post.id }) }}"> {{ post.title }} </a> </li> {% endfor %} </ul> {% endblock %}
{# app/Resources/views/layout.html.twig #}
<html> <head> <title>{% block title %}Default title{% endblock %}</title> </head> <body> {% block body %}{% endblock %} </body> </html>
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Twig is well-supported in Symfony2. And while PHP templates will always be supported in Symfony2, we'll continue to discuss the many advantages of Twig. For more information, see the templating chapter.
Chapter 1
Symfony2 packages "distributions", which are fully-functional applications that include the Symfony2 core libraries, a selection of useful bundles, a sensible directory structure and some default configuration. When you download a Symfony2 distribution, you're downloading a functional application skeleton that can be used immediately to begin developing your application. Start by visiting the Symfony2 download page at http://symfony.com/download32. On this page, you'll see the Symfony Standard Edition, which is the main Symfony2 distribution. Here, you'll need to make two choices: Download either a .tgz or .zip archive - both are equivalent, download whatever you're more comfortable using;
Download the distribution with or without vendors. If you have Git33 installed on your computer, you should download Symfony2 "without vendors", as it adds a bit more flexibility when including third-party/vendor libraries. Download one of the archives somewhere under your local web server's root directory and unpack it. From a UNIX command line, this can be done with one of the following commands (replacing ### with your actual filename):
# for .tgz file tar zxvf Symfony_Standard_Vendors_2.0.###.tgz # for a .zip file unzip Symfony_Standard_Vendors_2.0.###.zip
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When you're finished, you should have a Symfony/ directory that looks something like this:
www/ <- your web root directory Symfony/ <- the unpacked archive app/ cache/ config/ logs/ src/ ... vendor/ ... web/ app.php ...
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Updating Vendors
Finally, if you downloaded the archive "without vendors", install the vendors by running the following command from the command line:
php bin/vendors install
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This command downloads all of the necessary vendor libraries - including Symfony itself - into the vendor/ directory. For more information on how third-party vendor libraries are managed inside Symfony2, see "Managing Vendor Libraries with bin/vendors and deps".
If there are any issues, correct them now before moving on.
33. http://git-scm.com/
Setting up Permissions
One common issue is that the app/cache and app/logs directories must be writable both by the web server and the command line user. On a UNIX system, if your web server user is different from your command line user, you can run the following commands just once in your project to ensure that permissions will be setup properly. Change www-data to your web server user: 1. Using ACL on a system that supports chmod +a Many systems allow you to use the chmod +a command. Try this first, and if you get an error - try the next method:
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rm -rf app/cache/* rm -rf app/logs/* sudo chmod +a "www-data allow delete,write,append,file_inherit,directory_inherit" app/ cache app/logs sudo chmod +a "`whoami` allow delete,write,append,file_inherit,directory_inherit" app/ cache app/logs
2. Using Acl on a system that does not support chmod +a Some systems don't support chmod +a, but do support another utility called setfacl. You may need to enable ACL support34 on your partition and install setfacl before using it (as is the case with Ubuntu), like so:
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sudo setfacl -R -m u:www-data:rwx -m u:`whoami`:rwx app/cache app/logs sudo setfacl -dR -m u:www-data:rwx -m u:`whoami`:rwx app/cache app/logs
3. Without using ACL If you don't have access to changing the ACL of the directories, you will need to change the umask so that the cache and log directories will be group-writable or world-writable (depending if the web server user and the command line user are in the same group or not). To achieve this, put the following line at the beginning of the app/console, web/app.php and web/app_dev.php files:
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// or
umask(0000); // This will let the permissions be 0777
Note that using the ACL is recommended when you have access to them on your server because changing the umask is not thread-safe.
When everything is fine, click on "Go to the Welcome page" to request your first "real" Symfony2 webpage:
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http://localhost/Symfony/web/app_dev.php/
Symfony2 should welcome and congratulate you for your hard work so far!
34. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/FilePermissionsACLs
Beginning Development
Now that you have a fully-functional Symfony2 application, you can begin development! Your distribution may contain some sample code - check the README.rst file included with the distribution (open it as a text file) to learn about what sample code was included with your distribution and how you can remove it later. If you're new to Symfony, join us in the "Creating Pages in Symfony2", where you'll learn how to create pages, change configuration, and do everything else you'll need in your new application.
Now, the vendor directory won't be committed to source control. This is fine (actually, it's great!) because when someone else clones or checks out the project, he/she can simply run the php bin/vendors install script to download all the necessary vendor libraries.
Chapter 1
http://localhost/app_dev.php/hello/Symfony
Actually, you'll be able to replace Symfony with any other name to be greeted. To create the page, follow the simple two-step process.
The tutorial assumes that you've already downloaded Symfony2 and configured your webserver. The above URL assumes that localhost points to the web directory of your new Symfony2 project. For detailed information on this process, see the documentation on the web server you are using. Here's the relevant documentation page for some web server you might be using: For Apache HTTP Server, refer to Apache's DirectoryIndex documentation35.
Behind the scenes, a directory is created for the bundle at src/Acme/HelloBundle. A line is also automatically added to the app/AppKernel.php file so that the bundle is registered with the kernel:
// app/AppKernel.php public function registerBundles() { $bundles = array( // ... new Acme\HelloBundle\AcmeHelloBundle(), ); // ...
return $bundles; }
Listing 1-3
Now that you have a bundle setup, you can begin building your application inside the bundle.
This entry is pretty basic: it tells Symfony to load routing configuration from the Resources/config/ routing.yml file that lives inside the AcmeHelloBundle. This means that you place routing configuration directly in app/config/routing.yml or organize your routes throughout your application, and import them from here. Now that the routing.yml file from the bundle is being imported, add the new route that defines the URL of the page that you're about to create:
35. http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/mod/mod_dir.html 36. http://wiki.nginx.org/HttpCoreModule#location
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The routing consists of two basic pieces: the pattern, which is the URL that this route will match, and a defaults array, which specifies the controller that should be executed. The placeholder syntax in the pattern ({name}) is a wildcard. It means that /hello/Ryan, /hello/Fabien or any other similar URL will match this route. The {name} placeholder parameter will also be passed to the controller so that you can use its value to personally greet the user.
The routing system has many more great features for creating flexible and powerful URL structures in your application. For more details, see the chapter all about Routing.
In reality, the controller is nothing more than a PHP method that you create and Symfony executes. This is where your code uses information from the request to build and prepare the resource being requested. Except in some advanced cases, the end product of a controller is always the same: a Symfony2 Response object. Create the indexAction method that Symfony will execute when the hello route is matched:
Listing 1-7
// src/Acme/HelloBundle/Controller/HelloController.php // ... class HelloController { public function indexAction($name) { return new Response('<html><body>Hello '.$name.'!</body></html>'); } }
The controller is simple: it creates a new Response object, whose first argument is the content that should be used in the response (a small HTML page in this example). Congratulations! After creating only a route and a controller, you already have a fully-functional page! If you've setup everything correctly, your application should greet you:
http://localhost/app_dev.php/hello/Ryan
Listing 1-8
You can also view your app in the "prod" environment by visiting:
http://localhost/app.php/hello/Ryan
Listing 1-9
If you get an error, it's likely because you need to clear your cache by running:
php app/console cache:clear --env=prod --no-debug
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Listing 1-12
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; class HelloController extends Controller { public function indexAction($name) { return $this->render('AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:index.html.twig', array('name' => $name));
In
order to use the render() method, your controller must extend the Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller class (API docs: Controller37), which adds shortcuts for tasks that are common inside controllers. This is done in the above example by adding the use statement on line 4 and then extending Controller on line 6.
The render() method creates a Response object filled with the content of the given, rendered template. Like any other controller, you will ultimately return that Response object.
37. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle/Controller/Controller.html
Notice that there are two different examples for rendering the template. By default, Symfony2 supports two different templating languages: classic PHP templates and the succinct but powerful Twig38 templates. Don't be alarmed - you're free to choose either or even both in the same project. The controller renders the AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:index.html.twig template, which uses the following naming convention: BundleName:ControllerName:TemplateName This is the logical name of the template, which is mapped to a physical location using the following convention. /path/to/BundleName/Resources/views/ControllerName/TemplateName In this case, AcmeHelloBundle is the bundle name, Hello is the controller, and index.html.twig the template:
Listing 1 Listing 1-13 1-14
2 3 4 5 6
Let's step through the Twig template line-by-line: line 2: The extends token defines a parent template. The template explicitly defines a layout file inside of which it will be placed. line 4: The block token says that everything inside should be placed inside a block called body. As you'll see, it's the responsibility of the parent template (base.html.twig) to ultimately render the block called body. The parent template, ::base.html.twig, is missing both the BundleName and ControllerName portions of its name (hence the double colon (::) at the beginning). This means that the template lives outside of the bundles and in the app directory:
Listing 1-15
{# app/Resources/views/base.html.twig #} <!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> <title>{% block title %}Welcome!{% endblock %}</title> {% block stylesheets %}{% endblock %} <link rel="shortcut icon" href="{{ asset('favicon.ico') }}" /> </head> <body> {% block body %}{% endblock %} {% block javascripts %}{% endblock %} </body> </html>
The base template file defines the HTML layout and renders the body block that you defined in the index.html.twig template. It also renders a title block, which you could choose to define in the index.html.twig template. Since you did not define the title block in the child template, it defaults to "Welcome!".
38. http://twig.sensiolabs.org
Templates are a powerful way to render and organize the content for your page. A template can render anything, from HTML markup, to CSS code, or anything else that the controller may need to return. In the lifecycle of handling a request, the templating engine is simply an optional tool. Recall that the goal of each controller is to return a Response object. Templates are a powerful, but optional, tool for creating the content for that Response object.
The front controller file (app.php in this example) is the actual PHP file that's executed when using a Symfony2 application and its job is to use a Kernel class, AppKernel, to bootstrap the application.
Having a front controller means different and more flexible URLs than are used in a typical flat PHP application. When using a front controller, URLs are formatted in the following way:
http://localhost/app.php/hello/Ryan
Listing 1-17
The front controller, app.php, is executed and the "internal:" URL /hello/Ryan is routed internally using the routing configuration. By using Apache mod_rewrite rules, you can force the app.php file to be executed without needing to specify it in the URL:
http://localhost/hello/Ryan
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Though front controllers are essential in handling every request, you'll rarely need to modify or even think about them. We'll mention them again briefly in the Environments section.
Autoloading
When Symfony is loading, a special file - app/autoload.php - is included. This file is responsible for configuring the autoloader, which will autoload your application files from the src/ directory and third-party libraries from the vendor/ directory. Because of the autoloader, you never need to worry about using include or require statements. Instead, Symfony2 uses the namespace of a class to determine its location and automatically includes the file on your behalf the instant you need a class. The autoloader is already configured to look in the src/ directory for any of your PHP classes. For autoloading to work, the class name and path to the file have to follow the same pattern:
Listing 1-19
Typically, the only time you'll need to worry about the app/autoload.php file is when you're including a new third-party library in the vendor/ directory. For more information on autoloading, see How to autoload Classes.
features packaged in third-party bundles39 or to distribute your own bundles. It makes it easy to pick and choose which features to enable in your application and to optimize them the way you want.
While you'll learn the basics here, an entire cookbook entry is devoted to the organization and best practices of bundles.
A bundle is simply a structured set of files within a directory that implement a single feature. You might create a BlogBundle, a ForumBundle or a bundle for user management (many of these exist already as open source bundles). Each directory contains everything related to that feature, including PHP files, templates, stylesheets, JavaScripts, tests and anything else. Every aspect of a feature exists in a bundle and every feature lives in a bundle. An application is made up of bundles as defined in the registerBundles() method of the AppKernel class:
// app/AppKernel.php public function registerBundles() { $bundles = array( new Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\FrameworkBundle(), new Symfony\Bundle\SecurityBundle\SecurityBundle(), new Symfony\Bundle\TwigBundle\TwigBundle(), new Symfony\Bundle\MonologBundle\MonologBundle(), new Symfony\Bundle\SwiftmailerBundle\SwiftmailerBundle(), new Symfony\Bundle\DoctrineBundle\DoctrineBundle(), new Symfony\Bundle\AsseticBundle\AsseticBundle(), new Sensio\Bundle\FrameworkExtraBundle\SensioFrameworkExtraBundle(), new JMS\SecurityExtraBundle\JMSSecurityExtraBundle(), );
if (in_array($this->getEnvironment(), array('dev', 'test'))) { $bundles[] = new Acme\DemoBundle\AcmeDemoBundle(); $bundles[] = new Symfony\Bundle\WebProfilerBundle\WebProfilerBundle(); $bundles[] = new Sensio\Bundle\DistributionBundle\SensioDistributionBundle(); $bundles[] = new Sensio\Bundle\GeneratorBundle\SensioGeneratorBundle(); } return $bundles; }
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With the registerBundles() method, you have total control over which bundles are used by your application (including the core Symfony bundles).
A bundle can live anywhere as long as it can be autoloaded (via the autoloader configured at app/ autoload.php).
Creating a Bundle
The Symfony Standard Edition comes with a handy task that creates a fully-functional bundle for you. Of course, creating a bundle by hand is pretty easy as well. To show you how simple the bundle system is, create a new bundle called AcmeTestBundle and enable it.
39. http://symfony2bundles.org/
The Acme portion is just a dummy name that should be replaced by some "vendor" name that represents you or your organization (e.g. ABCTestBundle for some company named ABC).
Start by creating a src/Acme/TestBundle/ directory and adding a new file called AcmeTestBundle.php:
Listing 1-21
The name AcmeTestBundle follows the standard Bundle naming conventions. You could also choose to shorten the name of the bundle to simply TestBundle by naming this class TestBundle (and naming the file TestBundle.php).
This empty class is the only piece you need to create the new bundle. Though commonly empty, this class is powerful and can be used to customize the behavior of the bundle. Now that you've created the bundle, enable it via the AppKernel class:
Listing 1-22
// app/AppKernel.php public function registerBundles() { $bundles = array( // ... // register your bundles new Acme\TestBundle\AcmeTestBundle(),
); // ... return $bundles; }
And while it doesn't do anything yet, AcmeTestBundle is now ready to be used. And as easy as this is, Symfony also provides a command-line interface for generating a basic bundle skeleton:
Listing 1-23
The bundle skeleton generates with a basic controller, template and routing resource that can be customized. You'll learn more about Symfony2's command-line tools later.
Whenever creating a new bundle or using a third-party bundle, always make sure the bundle has been enabled in registerBundles(). When using the generate:bundle command, this is done for you.
A bundle can be as small or large as the feature it implements. It contains only the files you need and nothing else. As you move through the book, you'll learn how to persist objects to a database, create and validate forms, create translations for your application, write tests and much more. Each of these has their own place and role within the bundle.
Application Configuration
An application consists of a collection of bundles representing all of the features and capabilities of your application. Each bundle can be customized via configuration files written in YAML, XML or PHP. By default, the main configuration file lives in the app/config/ directory and is called either config.yml, config.xml or config.php depending on which format you prefer:
# app/config/config.yml imports: - { resource: parameters.ini } - { resource: security.yml } framework: secret: %secret% charset: UTF-8 router: { resource: "%kernel.root_dir%/config/routing.yml" } form: true csrf_protection: true validation: { enable_annotations: true } templating: { engines: ['twig'] } #assets_version: SomeVersionScheme session: default_locale: %locale% auto_start: true # Twig Configuration twig: debug: %kernel.debug% strict_variables: %kernel.debug% # ...
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You'll learn exactly how to load each file/format in the next section Environments.
Each top-level entry like framework or twig defines the configuration for a particular bundle. For example, the framework key defines the configuration for the core Symfony FrameworkBundle and includes configuration for the routing, templating, and other core systems. For now, don't worry about the specific configuration options in each section. The configuration file ships with sensible defaults. As you read more and explore each part of Symfony2, you'll learn about the specific configuration options of each feature.
Configuration Formats
Throughout the chapters, all configuration examples will be shown in all three formats (YAML, XML and PHP). Each has its own advantages and disadvantages. The choice of which to use is up to you: YAML: Simple, clean and readable; XML: More powerful than YAML at times and supports IDE autocompletion; PHP: Very powerful but less readable than standard configuration formats.
Environments
An application can run in various environments. The different environments share the same PHP code (apart from the front controller), but use different configuration. For instance, a dev environment will log warnings and errors, while a prod environment will only log errors. Some files are rebuilt on each request in the dev environment (for the developer's convenience), but cached in the prod environment. All environments live together on the same machine and execute the same application. A Symfony2 project generally begins with three environments (dev, test and prod), though creating new environments is easy. You can view your application in different environments simply by changing the front controller in your browser. To see the application in the dev environment, access the application via the development front controller:
Listing 1-25
http://localhost/app_dev.php/hello/Ryan
If you'd like to see how your application will behave in the production environment, call the prod front controller instead:
Listing 1-26
http://localhost/app.php/hello/Ryan
Since the prod environment is optimized for speed; the configuration, routing and Twig templates are compiled into flat PHP classes and cached. When viewing changes in the prod environment, you'll need to clear these cached files and allow them to rebuild:
Listing 1-27
If you open the web/app.php file, you'll find that it's configured explicitly to use the prod environment:
Listing 1-28
You can create a new front controller for a new environment by copying this file and changing prod to some other value.
The test environment is used when running automated tests and cannot be accessed directly through the browser. See the testing chapter for more details.
Environment Configuration
The AppKernel class is responsible for actually loading the configuration file of your choice:
// app/AppKernel.php public function registerContainerConfiguration(LoaderInterface $loader) { $loader->load(__DIR__.'/config/config_'.$this->getEnvironment().'.yml'); }
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You already know that the .yml extension can be changed to .xml or .php if you prefer to use either XML or PHP to write your configuration. Notice also that each environment loads its own configuration file. Consider the configuration file for the dev environment.
# app/config/config_dev.yml imports: - { resource: config.yml }
framework: router: { resource: "%kernel.root_dir%/config/routing_dev.yml" } profiler: { only_exceptions: false }
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# ...
The imports key is similar to a PHP include statement and guarantees that the main configuration file (config.yml) is loaded first. The rest of the file tweaks the default configuration for increased logging and other settings conducive to a development environment. Both the prod and test environments follow the same model: each environment imports the base configuration file and then modifies its configuration values to fit the needs of the specific environment. This is just a convention, but one that allows you to reuse most of your configuration and customize just pieces of it between environments.
Summary
Congratulations! You've now seen every fundamental aspect of Symfony2 and have hopefully discovered how easy and flexible it can be. And while there are a lot of features still to come, be sure to keep the following basic points in mind: creating a page is a three-step process involving a route, a controller and (optionally) a template. each project contains just a few main directories: web/ (web assets and the front controllers), app/ (configuration), src/ (your bundles), and vendor/ (third-party code) (there's also a bin/ directory that's used to help updated vendor libraries); each feature in Symfony2 (including the Symfony2 framework core) is organized into a bundle, which is a structured set of files for that feature; the configuration for each bundle lives in the app/config directory and can be specified in YAML, XML or PHP; each environment is accessible via a different front controller (e.g. app.php and app_dev.php) and loads a different configuration file.
From here, each chapter will introduce you to more and more powerful tools and advanced concepts. The more you know about Symfony2, the more you'll appreciate the flexibility of its architecture and the power it gives you to rapidly develop applications.
Chapter 1
Controller
A controller is a PHP function you create that takes information from the HTTP request and constructs and returns an HTTP response (as a Symfony2 Response object). The response could be an HTML page, an XML document, a serialized JSON array, an image, a redirect, a 404 error or anything else you can dream up. The controller contains whatever arbitrary logic your application needs to render the content of a page. To see how simple this is, let's look at a Symfony2 controller in action. The following controller would render a page that simply prints Hello world!:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; public function helloAction() { return new Response('Hello world!'); }
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The goal of a controller is always the same: create and return a Response object. Along the way, it might read information from the request, load a database resource, send an email, or set information on the user's session. But in all cases, the controller will eventually return the Response object that will be delivered back to the client. There's no magic and no other requirements to worry about! Here are a few common examples: Controller A prepares a Response object representing the content for the homepage of the site. Controller B reads the slug parameter from the request to load a blog entry from the database and create a Response object displaying that blog. If the slug can't be found in the database, it creates and returns a Response object with a 404 status code. Controller C handles the form submission of a contact form. It reads the form information from the request, saves the contact information to the database and emails the contact information to the webmaster. Finally, it creates a Response object that redirects the client's browser to the contact form "thank you" page.
Chapter 1: Controller | 43
A Simple Controller
While a controller can be any PHP callable (a function, method on an object, or a Closure), in Symfony2, a controller is usually a single method inside a controller object. Controllers are also called actions.
Listing Listing 1 1-2 1-3
// src/Acme/HelloBundle/Controller/HelloController.php
namespace Acme\HelloBundle\Controller; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; class HelloController { public function indexAction($name) { return new Response('<html><body>Hello '.$name.'!</body></html>'); } }
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Note that the controller is the indexAction method, which lives inside a controller class (HelloController). Don't be confused by the naming: a controller class is simply a convenient way to group several controllers/actions together. Typically, the controller class will house several controllers/actions (e.g. updateAction, deleteAction, etc).
This controller is pretty straightforward, but let's walk through it: line 3: Symfony2 takes advantage of PHP 5.3 namespace functionality to namespace the entire controller class. The use keyword imports the Response class, which our controller must return.
Chapter 1: Controller | 44
line 6: The class name is the concatenation of a name for the controller class (i.e. Hello) and the word Controller. This is a convention that provides consistency to controllers and allows them to be referenced only by the first part of the name (i.e. Hello) in the routing configuration. line 8: Each action in a controller class is suffixed with Action and is referenced in the routing configuration by the action's name (index). In the next section, you'll create a route that maps a URI to this action. You'll learn how the route's placeholders ({name}) become arguments to the action method ($name). line 10: The controller creates and returns a Response object.
Going to /hello/ryan now executes the HelloController::indexAction() controller and passes in ryan for the $name variable. Creating a "page" means simply creating a controller method and associated route. Notice the syntax used to refer to the controller: AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:index. Symfony2 uses a flexible string notation to refer to different controllers. This is the most common syntax and tells Symfony2 to look for a controller class called HelloController inside a bundle named AcmeHelloBundle. The method indexAction() is then executed. For more details on the string format used to reference different controllers, see Controller Naming Pattern.
This example places the routing configuration directly in the app/config/ directory. A better way to organize your routes is to place each route in the bundle it belongs to. For more information on this, see Including External Routing Resources.
You can learn much more about the routing system in the Routing chapter.
// ...
} }
The controller has a single argument, $name, which corresponds to the {name} parameter from the matched route (ryan in our example). In fact, when executing your controller, Symfony2 matches each argument of the controller with a parameter from the matched route. Take the following example:
Listing 1-6
Notice that both placeholder variables ({first_name}, {last_name}) as well as the default color variable are available as arguments in the controller. When a route is matched, the placeholder variables are merged with the defaults to make one array that's available to your controller. Mapping route parameters to controller arguments is easy and flexible. Keep the following guidelines in mind while you develop. The order of the controller arguments does not matter Symfony is able to match the parameter names from the route to the variable names in the controller method's signature. In other words, it realizes that the {last_name} parameter matches up with the $last_name argument. The arguments of the controller could be totally reordered and still work perfectly:
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Each required controller argument must match up with a routing parameter The following would throw a RuntimeException because there is no foo parameter defined in the route:
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Making the argument optional, however, is perfectly ok. The following example would not throw an exception:
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Chapter 1: Controller | 46
If, for example, the last_name weren't important for your controller, you could omit it entirely:
public function indexAction($first_name, $color) { // .. }
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Every route also has a special _route parameter, which is equal to the name of the route that was matched (e.g. hello). Though not usually useful, this is equally available as a controller argument.
This doesn't actually change anything about how your controller works. In the next section, you'll learn about the helper methods that the base controller class makes available. These methods are just shortcuts to using core Symfony2 functionality that's available to you with or without the use of the base Controller class. A great way to see the core functionality in action is to look in the Controller40 class itself.
40. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle/Controller/Controller.html
Chapter 1: Controller | 47
Extending the base class is optional in Symfony; it contains useful shortcuts but nothing mandatory. You can also extend Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerAware. The service container object will then be accessible via the container property.
Redirecting
If you want to redirect the user to another page, use the redirect() method:
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The generateUrl() method is just a helper function that generates the URL for a given route. For more information, see the Routing chapter. By default, the redirect() method performs a 302 (temporary) redirect. To perform a 301 (permanent) redirect, modify the second argument:
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The redirect() method is simply a shortcut that creates a Response object that specializes in redirecting the user. It's equivalent to:
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Forwarding
You can also easily forward to another controller internally with the forward() method. Instead of redirecting the user's browser, it makes an internal sub-request, and calls the specified controller. The forward() method returns the Response object that's returned from that controller:
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Notice that the forward() method uses the same string representation of the controller used in the routing configuration. In this case, the target controller class will be HelloController inside some AcmeHelloBundle. The array passed to the method becomes the arguments on the resulting controller. This same interface is used when embedding controllers into templates (see Embedding Controllers). The target controller method should look something like the following:
public function fancyAction($name, $color) { // ... create and return a Response object }
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And just like when creating a controller for a route, the order of the arguments to fancyAction doesn't matter. Symfony2 matches the index key names (e.g. name) with the method argument names (e.g. $name). If you change the order of the arguments, Symfony2 will still pass the correct value to each variable.
Like other base Controller methods, the forward method is just a shortcut for core Symfony2 functionality. A forward can be accomplished directly via the http_kernel service. A forward returns a Response object:
$httpKernel $response = 'name' 'color' )); = $this->container->get('http_kernel'); $httpKernel->forward('AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:fancy', array( => $name, => 'green',
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Rendering Templates
Though not a requirement, most controllers will ultimately render a template that's responsible for generating the HTML (or other format) for the controller. The renderView() method renders a template and returns its content. The content from the template can be used to create a Response object:
$content = $this->renderView('AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:index.html.twig', array('name' => $name)); return new Response($content);
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This can even be done in just one step with the render() method, which returns a Response object containing the content from the template:
return $this->render('AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:index.html.twig', array('name' => $name));
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In both cases, the Resources/views/Hello/index.html.twig template inside the AcmeHelloBundle will be rendered. The Symfony templating engine is explained in great detail in the Templating chapter.
Chapter 1: Controller | 49
The renderView method is a shortcut to direct use of the templating service. The templating service can also be used directly:
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There are countless other services available and you are encouraged to define your own. To list all available services, use the container:debug console command:
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public function indexAction() { $product = // retrieve the object from database if (!$product) { throw $this->createNotFoundException('The product does not exist'); } return $this->render(...); }
The createNotFoundException() method creates a special NotFoundHttpException object, which ultimately triggers a 404 HTTP response inside Symfony. Of course, you're free to throw any Exception class in your controller - Symfony2 will automatically return a 500 HTTP response code.
Listing 1-26
In every case, a styled error page is shown to the end user and a full debug error page is shown to the developer (when viewing the page in debug mode). Both of these error pages can be customized. For details, read the "How to customize Error Pages" cookbook recipe.
Chapter 1: Controller | 50
// store an attribute for reuse during a later user request $session->set('foo', 'bar'); // in another controller for another request $foo = $session->get('foo'); // set the user locale $session->setLocale('fr');
These attributes will remain on the user for the remainder of that user's session.
Flash Messages
You can also store small messages that will be stored on the user's session for exactly one additional request. This is useful when processing a form: you want to redirect and have a special message shown on the next request. These types of messages are called "flash" messages. For example, imagine you're processing a form submit:
public function updateAction() { $form = $this->createForm(...); $form->bindRequest($this->getRequest()); if ($form->isValid()) { // do some sort of processing $this->get('session')->setFlash('notice', 'Your changes were saved!'); return $this->redirect($this->generateUrl(...)); } return $this->render(...); }
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After processing the request, the controller sets a notice flash message and then redirects. The name (notice) isn't significant - it's just what you're using to identify the type of the message. In the template of the next action, the following code could be used to render the notice message:
{% if app.session.hasFlash('notice') %} <div class="flash-notice"> {{ app.session.flash('notice') }} </div> {% endif %}
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By design, flash messages are meant to live for exactly one request (they're "gone in a flash"). They're designed to be used across redirects exactly as you've done in this example.
Chapter 1: Controller | 51
// create a simple Response with a 200 status code (the default) $response = new Response('Hello '.$name, 200); // create a JSON-response with a 200 status code $response = new Response(json_encode(array('name' => $name))); $response->headers->set('Content-Type', 'application/json');
The headers property is a HeaderBag42 object with several useful methods for reading and mutating the Response headers. The header names are normalized so that using Content-Type is equivalent to content-type or even content_type.
$request = $this->getRequest(); $request->isXmlHttpRequest(); // is it an Ajax request? $request->getPreferredLanguage(array('en', 'fr')); $request->query->get('page'); // get a $_GET parameter $request->request->get('page'); // get a $_POST parameter
Like the Response object, the request headers are stored in a HeaderBag object and are easily accessible.
Final Thoughts
Whenever you create a page, you'll ultimately need to write some code that contains the logic for that page. In Symfony, this is called a controller, and it's a PHP function that can do anything it needs in order to return the final Response object that will be returned to the user. To make life easier, you can choose to extend a base Controller class, which contains shortcut methods for many common controller tasks. For example, since you don't want to put HTML code in your controller, you can use the render() method to render and return the content from a template. In other chapters, you'll see how the controller can be used to persist and fetch objects from a database, process form submissions, handle caching and more.
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Chapter 1
Routing
Beautiful URLs are an absolute must for any serious web application. This means leaving behind ugly URLs like index.php?article_id=57 in favor of something like /read/intro-to-symfony. Having flexibility is even more important. What if you need to change the URL of a page from /blog to /news? How many links should you need to hunt down and update to make the change? If you're using Symfony's router, the change is simple. The Symfony2 router lets you define creative URLs that you map to different areas of your application. By the end of this chapter, you'll be able to: Create complex routes that map to controllers Generate URLs inside templates and controllers Load routing resources from bundles (or anywhere else) Debug your routes
Routing in Action
A route is a map from a URL pattern to a controller. For example, suppose you want to match any URL like /blog/my-post or /blog/all-about-symfony and send it to a controller that can look up and render that blog entry. The route is simple:
Listing 1-1
The pattern defined by the blog_show route acts like /blog/* where the wildcard is given the name slug. For the URL /blog/my-blog-post, the slug variable gets a value of my-blog-post, which is available for you to use in your controller (keep reading). The _controller parameter is a special key that tells Symfony which controller should be executed when a URL matches this route. The _controller string is called the logical name. It follows a pattern that points to a specific PHP class and method:
Listing 1-2
Chapter 1: Routing | 54
// src/Acme/BlogBundle/Controller/BlogController.php
namespace Acme\BlogBundle\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; class BlogController extends Controller { public function showAction($slug) { $blog = // use the $slug varible to query the database return $this->render('AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:show.html.twig', array( 'blog' => $blog, )); } }
Congratulations! You've just created your first route and connected it to a controller. Now, when you visit /blog/my-post, the showAction controller will be executed and the $slug variable will be equal to mypost. This is the goal of the Symfony2 router: to map the URL of a request to a controller. Along the way, you'll learn all sorts of tricks that make mapping even the most complex URLs easy.
The goal of the Symfony2 routing system is to parse this URL and determine which controller should be executed. The whole process looks like this: 1. The request is handled by the Symfony2 front controller (e.g. app.php); 2. The Symfony2 core (i.e. Kernel) asks the router to inspect the request; 3. The router matches the incoming URL to a specific route and returns information about the route, including the controller that should be executed; 4. The Symfony2 Kernel executes the controller, which ultimately returns a Response object.
The routing layer is a tool that translates the incoming URL into a specific controller to execute.
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Creating Routes
Symfony loads all the routes for your application from a single routing configuration file. The file is usually app/config/routing.yml, but can be configured to be anything (including an XML or PHP file) via the application configuration file:
Listing 1-4
Even though all routes are loaded from a single file, it's common practice to include additional routing resources from inside the file. See the Including External Routing Resources section for more information.
/ { _controller: AcmeDemoBundle:Main:homepage }
This route matches the homepage (/) and maps it to the AcmeDemoBundle:Main:homepage controller. The _controller string is translated by Symfony2 into an actual PHP function and executed. That process will be explained shortly in the Controller Naming Pattern section.
The pattern will match anything that looks like /blog/*. Even better, the value matching the {slug} placeholder will be available inside your controller. In other words, if the URL is /blog/hello-world, a $slug variable, with a value of hello-world, will be available in the controller. This can be used, for example, to load the blog post matching that string. The pattern will not, however, match simply /blog. That's because, by default, all placeholders are required. This can be changed by adding a placeholder value to the defaults array.
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So far, this route is as simple as possible - it contains no placeholders and will only match the exact URL /blog. But what if you need this route to support pagination, where /blog/2 displays the second page of blog entries? Update the route to have a new {page} placeholder:
blog: pattern: defaults: /blog/{page} { _controller: AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index }
Listing 1-8
Like the {slug} placeholder before, the value matching {page} will be available inside your controller. Its value can be used to determine which set of blog posts to display for the given page. But hold on! Since placeholders are required by default, this route will no longer match on simply /blog. Instead, to see page 1 of the blog, you'd need to use the URL /blog/1! Since that's no way for a rich web app to behave, modify the route to make the {page} parameter optional. This is done by including it in the defaults collection:
blog: pattern: defaults: /blog/{page} { _controller: AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index, page: 1 }
Listing 1-9
By adding page to the defaults key, the {page} placeholder is no longer required. The URL /blog will match this route and the value of the page parameter will be set to 1. The URL /blog/2 will also match, giving the page parameter a value of 2. Perfect. /blog /blog/1 /blog/2 {page} = 1 {page} = 1 {page} = 2
Adding Requirements
Take a quick look at the routes that have been created so far:
blog: pattern: defaults: blog_show: pattern: defaults: /blog/{page} { _controller: AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index, page: 1 } /blog/{slug} { _controller: AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:show }
Listing 1-10
Can you spot the problem? Notice that both routes have patterns that match URL's that look like /blog/*. The Symfony router will always choose the first matching route it finds. In other words, the blog_show route will never be matched. Instead, a URL like /blog/my-blog-post will match the first route (blog) and return a nonsense value of my-blog-post to the {page} parameter. URL /blog/2 /blog/my-blog-post route parameters blog blog {page} = 2 {page} = my-blog-post
The answer to the problem is to add route requirements. The routes in this example would work perfectly if the /blog/{page} pattern only matched URLs where the {page} portion is an integer. Fortunately, regular expression requirements can easily be added for each parameter. For example:
blog: pattern: /blog/{page}
Chapter 1: Routing | 57
Listing 1-11
The \d+ requirement is a regular expression that says that the value of the {page} parameter must be a digit (i.e. a number). The blog route will still match on a URL like /blog/2 (because 2 is a number), but it will no longer match a URL like /blog/my-blog-post (because my-blog-post is not a number). As a result, a URL like /blog/my-blog-post will now properly match the blog_show route. URL /blog/2 /blog/my-blog-post route blog parameters {page} = 2
Since the parameter requirements are regular expressions, the complexity and flexibility of each requirement is entirely up to you. Suppose the homepage of your application is available in two different languages, based on the URL:
Listing 1-12
homepage: pattern: /{culture} defaults: { _controller: AcmeDemoBundle:Main:homepage, culture: en } requirements: culture: en|fr
For incoming requests, the {culture} portion of the URL is matched against the regular expression (en|fr). / /fr /es {culture} = en {culture} = fr won't match this route
/en {culture} = en
contact: pattern: /contact defaults: { _controller: AcmeDemoBundle:Main:contact } requirements: _method: GET contact_process:
PDF brought to you by generated on April 17, 2012 Chapter 1: Routing | 58
Despite the fact that these two routes have identical patterns (/contact), the first route will match only GET requests and the second route will match only POST requests. This means that you can display the form and submit the form via the same URL, while using distinct controllers for the two actions.
If no _method requirement is specified, the route will match on all methods.
Like the other requirements, the _method requirement is parsed as a regular expression. To match GET or POST requests, you can use GET|POST.
As you've seen, this route will only match if the {culture} portion of the URL is either en or fr and if the {year} is a number. This route also shows how you can use a period between placeholders instead of a slash. URLs matching this route might look like: /articles/en/2010/my-post /articles/fr/2010/my-post.rss
// src/Acme/BlogBundle/Controller/BlogController.php
namespace Acme\BlogBundle\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; class BlogController extends Controller { public function showAction($slug) { // ... } }
Notice that Symfony adds the string Controller to the class name (Blog => BlogController) and Action to the method name (show => showAction). You could also refer to this controller using its fully-qualified class name and method: Acme\BlogBundle\Controller\BlogController::showAction. But if you follow some simple conventions, the logical name is more concise and allows more flexibility.
In addition to using the logical name or the fully-qualified class name, Symfony supports a third way of referring to a controller. This method uses just one colon separator (e.g. service_name:indexAction) and refers to the controller as a service (see How to define Controllers as Services).
In reality, the entire defaults collection is merged with the parameter values to form a single array. Each key of that array is available as an argument on the controller.
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In other words, for each argument of your controller method, Symfony looks for a route parameter of that name and assigns its value to that argument. In the advanced example above, any combination (in any order) of the following variables could be used as arguments to the showAction() method:
$culture $year $title $_format $_controller
Since the placeholders and defaults collection are merged together, even the $_controller variable is available. For a more detailed discussion, see Route Parameters as Controller Arguments.
You can also use a special $_route variable, which is set to the name of the route that was matched.
When importing resources from YAML, the key (e.g. acme_hello) is meaningless. Just be sure that it's unique so no other lines override it.
The resource key loads the given routing resource. In this example the resource is the full path to a file, where the @AcmeHelloBundle shortcut syntax resolves to the path of that bundle. The imported file might look like this:
# src/Acme/HelloBundle/Resources/config/routing.yml acme_hello: pattern: /hello/{name} defaults: { _controller: AcmeHelloBundle:Hello:index }
Listing 1-18
The routes from this file are parsed and loaded in the same way as the main routing file.
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The string /admin will now be prepended to the pattern of each route loaded from the new routing resource.
The command will print a helpful list of all the configured routes in your application:
Listing 1-21
You can also get very specific information on a single route by including the route name after the command:
Listing 1-22
Generating URLs
The routing system should also be used to generate URLs. In reality, routing is a bi-directional system: mapping the URL to a controller+parameters and a route+parameters back to a URL. The match()43 and generate()44 methods form this bi-directional system. Take the blog_show example route from earlier:
Listing 1-23
$params = $router->match('/blog/my-blog-post'); // array('slug' => 'my-blog-post', '_controller' => 'AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:show') $uri = $router->generate('blog_show', array('slug' => 'my-blog-post')); // /blog/my-blog-post
To generate a URL, you need to specify the name of the route (e.g. blog_show) and any wildcards (e.g. slug = my-blog-post) used in the pattern for that route. With this information, any URL can easily be generated:
Listing 1-24
class MainController extends Controller { public function showAction($slug) { // ... $url = $this->get('router')->generate('blog_show', array('slug' => 'my-blog-post')); } }
In an upcoming section, you'll learn how to generate URLs from inside templates.
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If the frontend of your application uses AJAX requests, you might want to be able to generate URLs in JavaScript based on your routing configuration. By using the FOSJsRoutingBundle45, you can do exactly that:
var url = Routing.generate('blog_show', { "slug": 'my-blog-post});
Listing 1-25
The host that's used when generating an absolute URL is the host of the current Request object. This is detected automatically based on server information supplied by PHP. When generating absolute URLs for scripts run from the command line, you'll need to manually set the desired host on the Request object:
$request->headers->set('HOST', 'www.example.com');
Listing 1-27
Summary
Routing is a system for mapping the URL of incoming requests to the controller function that should be called to process the request. It both allows you to specify beautiful URLs and keeps the functionality of
45. https://github.com/FriendsOfSymfony/FOSJsRoutingBundle
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your application decoupled from those URLs. Routing is a two-way mechanism, meaning that it should also be used to generate URLs.
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Chapter 1
Templates
A template is simply a text file that can generate any text-based format (HTML, XML, CSV, LaTeX ...). The most familiar type of template is a PHP template - a text file parsed by PHP that contains a mix of text and PHP code:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>Welcome to Symfony!</title> </head> <body> <h1><?php echo $page_title ?></h1> <ul id="navigation"> <?php foreach ($navigation as $item): ?> <li> <a href="<?php echo $item->getHref() ?>"> <?php echo $item->getCaption() ?> </a> </li> <?php endforeach; ?> </ul> </body> </html>
Listing 1-1
But Symfony2 packages an even more powerful templating language called Twig46. Twig allows you to write concise, readable templates that are more friendly to web designers and, in several ways, more powerful than PHP templates:
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<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>Welcome to Symfony!</title> </head> <body> <h1>{{ page_title }}</h1> <ul id="navigation"> {% for item in navigation %} <li><a href="{{ item.href }}">{{ item.caption }}</a></li> {% endfor %} </ul> </body> </html>
Twig defines two types of special syntax: {{ ... }}: "Says something": prints a variable or the result of an expression to the template; {% ... %}: "Does something": a tag that controls the logic of the template; it is used to execute statements such as for-loops for example.
There is a third syntax used for creating comments: {# this is a comment #}. This syntax can be used across multiple lines like the PHP-equivalent /* comment */ syntax.
Twig also contains filters, which modify content before being rendered. The following makes the title variable all uppercase before rendering it:
Listing 1-3
{{ title|upper }}
Twig comes with a long list of tags47 and filters48 that are available by default. You can even add your own extensions49 to Twig as needed.
Registering a Twig extension is as easy as creating a new service and tagging it with twig.extension tag.
As you'll see throughout the documentation, Twig also supports functions and new functions can be easily added. For example, the following uses a standard for tag and the cycle function to print ten div tags, with alternating odd, even classes:
Listing 1-4
{% for i in 0..10 %} <div class="{{ cycle(['odd', 'even'], i) }}"> <!-- some HTML here --> </div> {% endfor %}
Throughout this chapter, template examples will be shown in both Twig and PHP.
Why Twig?
Twig templates are meant to be simple and won't process PHP tags. This is by design: the Twig template system is meant to express presentation, not program logic. The more you use Twig, the more you'll appreciate and benefit from this distinction. And of course, you'll be loved by web designers everywhere. Twig can also do things that PHP can't, such as true template inheritance (Twig templates compile down to PHP classes that inherit from each other), whitespace control, sandboxing, and the inclusion of custom functions and filters that only affect templates. Twig contains little features that make writing templates easier and more concise. Take the following example, which combines a loop with a logical if statement:
<ul> {% for user in users %} <li>{{ user.username }}</li> {% else %} <li>No users found</li> {% endfor %} </ul>
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</head> <body> <div id="sidebar"> {% block sidebar %} <ul> <li><a href="/">Home</a></li> <li><a href="/blog">Blog</a></li> </ul> {% endblock %} </div> <div id="content"> {% block body %}{% endblock %} </div> </body> </html>
Though the discussion about template inheritance will be in terms of Twig, the philosophy is the same between Twig and PHP templates.
This template defines the base HTML skeleton document of a simple two-column page. In this example, three {% block %} areas are defined (title, sidebar and body). Each block may be overridden by a child template or left with its default implementation. This template could also be rendered directly. In that case the title, sidebar and body blocks would simply retain the default values used in this template. A child template might look like this:
Listing 1-7
The parent template is identified by a special string syntax (::base.html.twig) that indicates that the template lives in the app/Resources/views directory of the project. This naming convention is explained fully in Template Naming and Locations.
The key to template inheritance is the {% extends %} tag. This tells the templating engine to first evaluate the base template, which sets up the layout and defines several blocks. The child template is then rendered, at which point the title and body blocks of the parent are replaced by those from the child. Depending on the value of blog_entries, the output might look like this:
Listing 1-8
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> <title>My cool blog posts</title> </head> <body> <div id="sidebar">
<ul> <li><a href="/">Home</a></li> <li><a href="/blog">Blog</a></li> </ul> </div> <div id="content"> <h2>My first post</h2> <p>The body of the first post.</p> <h2>Another post</h2> <p>The body of the second post.</p> </div> </body> </html>
Notice that since the child template didn't define a sidebar block, the value from the parent template is used instead. Content within a {% block %} tag in a parent template is always used by default. You can use as many levels of inheritance as you want. In the next section, a common three-level inheritance model will be explained along with how templates are organized inside a Symfony2 project. When working with template inheritance, here are some tips to keep in mind: If you use {% extends %} in a template, it must be the first tag in that template. The more {% block %} tags you have in your base templates, the better. Remember, child templates don't have to define all parent blocks, so create as many blocks in your base templates as you want and give each a sensible default. The more blocks your base templates have, the more flexible your layout will be. If you find yourself duplicating content in a number of templates, it probably means you should move that content to a {% block %} in a parent template. In some cases, a better solution may be to move the content to a new template and include it (see Including other Templates). If you need to get the content of a block from the parent template, you can use the {{ parent() }} function. This is useful if you want to add to the contents of a parent block instead of completely overriding it:
{% block sidebar %} <h3>Table of Contents</h3> ... {{ parent() }} {% endblock %}
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AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.html.twig: This syntax is used to specify a template for a specific page. The three parts of the string, each separated by a colon (:), mean the following: AcmeBlogBundle: (bundle) the template lives inside the AcmeBlogBundle (e.g. src/Acme/BlogBundle); Blog: (controller) indicates that the template lives inside the Blog subdirectory of Resources/views; index.html.twig: (template) the actual name of the file is index.html.twig. Assuming that the AcmeBlogBundle lives at src/Acme/BlogBundle, the final path to the layout would be src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/Blog/index.html.twig. AcmeBlogBundle::layout.html.twig: This syntax refers to a base template that's specific to the AcmeBlogBundle. Since the middle, "controller", portion is missing (e.g. Blog), the template lives at Resources/views/layout.html.twig inside AcmeBlogBundle. ::base.html.twig: This syntax refers to an application-wide base template or layout. Notice that the string begins with two colons (::), meaning that both the bundle and controller portions are missing. This means that the template is not located in any bundle, but instead in the root app/Resources/views/ directory. In the Overriding Bundle Templates section, you'll find out how each template living inside the AcmeBlogBundle, for example, can be overridden by placing a template of the same name in the app/ Resources/AcmeBlogBundle/views/ directory. This gives the power to override templates from any vendor bundle.
Hopefully the template naming syntax looks familiar - it's the same naming convention used to refer to Controller Naming Pattern.
Template Suffix
The bundle:controller:template format of each template specifies where the template file is located. Every template name also has two extensions that specify the format and engine for that template. AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.html.twig - HTML format, Twig engine AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.html.php - HTML format, PHP engine AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.css.twig - CSS format, Twig engine By default, any Symfony2 template can be written in either Twig or PHP, and the last part of the extension (e.g. .twig or .php) specifies which of these two engines should be used. The first part of the extension, (e.g. .html, .css, etc) is the final format that the template will generate. Unlike the engine, which determines how Symfony2 parses the template, this is simply an organizational tactic used in case the same resource needs to be rendered as HTML (index.html.twig), XML (index.xml.twig), or any other format. For more information, read the Debugging section.
The available "engines" can be configured and even new engines added. See Templating Configuration for more details.
The template is included using the {% include %} tag. Notice that the template name follows the same typical convention. The articleDetails.html.twig template uses an article variable. This is passed in by the list.html.twig template using the with command.
The {'article': article} syntax is the standard Twig syntax for hash maps (i.e. an array with named keys). If we needed to pass in multiple elements, it would look like this: {'foo': foo, 'bar': bar}.
Embedding Controllers
In some cases, you need to do more than include a simple template. Suppose you have a sidebar in your layout that contains the three most recent articles. Retrieving the three articles may include querying the database or performing other heavy logic that can't be done from within a template. The solution is to simply embed the result of an entire controller from your template. First, create a controller that renders a certain number of recent articles:
Listing 1-12
// src/Acme/ArticleBundle/Controller/ArticleController.php
class ArticleController extends Controller { public function recentArticlesAction($max = 3) { // make a database call or other logic to get the "$max" most recent articles $articles = ...; return $this->render('AcmeArticleBundle:Article:recentList.html.twig', array('articles' => $articles)); } }
{# src/Acme/ArticleBundle/Resources/views/Article/recentList.html.twig #} {% for article in articles %} <a href="/article/{{ article.slug }}"> {{ article.title }} </a> {% endfor %}
Notice that we've cheated and hardcoded the article URL in this example (e.g. /article/*slug*). This is a bad practice. In the next section, you'll learn how to do this correctly.
To include the controller, you'll need to refer to it using the standard string syntax for controllers (i.e. bundle:controller:action):
Listing 1-14
{# app/Resources/views/base.html.twig #} ...
<div id="sidebar"> {% render "AcmeArticleBundle:Article:recentArticles" with {'max': 3} %} </div>
Whenever you find that you need a variable or a piece of information that you don't have access to in a template, consider rendering a controller. Controllers are fast to execute and promote good code organization and reuse.
Linking to Pages
Creating links to other pages in your application is one of the most common jobs for a template. Instead of hardcoding URLs in templates, use the path Twig function (or the router helper in PHP) to generate URLs based on the routing configuration. Later, if you want to modify the URL of a particular page, all you'll need to do is change the routing configuration; the templates will automatically generate the new URL.
First, link to the "_welcome" page, which is accessible via the following routing configuration:
_welcome: pattern: / defaults: { _controller: AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index }
Listing 1-15
To link to the page, just use the path Twig function and refer to the route:
<a href="{{ path('_welcome') }}">Home</a>
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As expected, this will generate the URL /. Let's see how this works with a more complicated route:
article_show: pattern: /article/{slug} defaults: { _controller: AcmeArticleBundle:Article:show }
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In this case, you need to specify both the route name (article_show) and a value for the {slug} parameter. Using this route, let's revisit the recentList template from the previous section and link to the articles correctly:
{# src/Acme/ArticleBundle/Resources/views/Article/recentList.html.twig #} {% for article in articles %} <a href="{{ path('article_show', { 'slug': article.slug }) }}"> {{ article.title }} </a> {% endfor %}
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You can also generate an absolute URL by using the url Twig function:
<a href="{{ url('_welcome') }}">Home</a>
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The same can be done in PHP templates by passing a third argument to the generate() method:
<a href="<?php echo $view['router']->generate('_welcome', array(), true) ?>">Home</a>
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Linking to Assets
Templates also commonly refer to images, Javascript, stylesheets and other assets. Of course you could hard-code the path to these assets (e.g. /images/logo.png), but Symfony2 provides a more dynamic option via the assets Twig function:
<img src="{{ asset('images/logo.png') }}" alt="Symfony!" /> <link href="{{ asset('css/blog.css') }}" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
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The asset function's main purpose is to make your application more portable. If your application lives at the root of your host (e.g. http://example.com50), then the rendered paths should be /images/logo.png. But if your application lives in a subdirectory (e.g. http://example.com/my_app51), each asset path should render with the subdirectory (e.g. /my_app/images/logo.png). The asset function takes care of this by determining how your application is being used and generating the correct paths accordingly. Additionally, if you use the asset function, Symfony can automatically append a query string to your asset, in order to guarantee that updated static assets won't be cached when deployed. For example,
50. http://example.com 51. http://example.com/my_app
/images/logo.png might look like /images/logo.png?v2. For more information, see the assets_version
configuration option.
Start by adding two blocks to your base template that will hold your assets: one called stylesheets inside the head tag and another called javascripts just above the closing body tag. These blocks will contain all of the stylesheets and Javascripts that you'll need throughout your site:
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That's easy enough! But what if you need to include an extra stylesheet or Javascript from a child template? For example, suppose you have a contact page and you need to include a contact.css stylesheet just on that page. From inside that contact page's template, do the following:
Listing 1-23
{# ... #}
In the child template, you simply override the stylesheets block and put your new stylesheet tag inside of that block. Of course, since you want to add to the parent block's content (and not actually replace it), you should use the parent() Twig function to include everything from the stylesheets block of the base template.
You can also include assets located in your bundles' Resources/public folder. You will need to run the php app/console assets:install target [--symlink] command, which moves (or symlinks) files into the correct location. (target is by default "web").
<link href="{{ asset('bundles/acmedemo/css/contact.css') }}" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" />
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The end result is a page that includes both the main.css and contact.css stylesheets.
<p>Username: {{ app.user.username }}</p> {% if app.debug %} <p>Request method: {{ app.request.method }}</p> <p>Application Environment: {{ app.environment }}</p> {% endif %}
You can add your own global template variables. See the cookbook example on Global Variables.
is equivalent to
$engine = $this->container->get('templating'); $content = $engine->render('AcmeArticleBundle:Article:index.html.twig'); return $response = new Response($content);
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The templating engine (or "service") is preconfigured to work automatically inside Symfony2. It can, of course, be configured further in the application configuration file:
Listing 1-28
52. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle/Templating/GlobalVariables.html
Several configuration options are available and are covered in the Configuration Appendix.
The twig engine is mandatory to use the webprofiler (as well as many third-party bundles).
public function indexAction() { $blogs = // some logic to retrieve the blogs $this->render('AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.html.twig', array('blogs' => $blogs)); }
When the AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.html.twig is rendered, Symfony2 actually looks in two different locations for the template: 1. app/Resources/AcmeBlogBundle/views/Blog/index.html.twig 2. src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/Blog/index.html.twig To override the bundle template, just copy the index.html.twig template from the bundle to app/ Resources/AcmeBlogBundle/views/Blog/index.html.twig (the app/Resources/AcmeBlogBundle directory won't exist, so you'll need to create it). You're now free to customize the template. This logic also applies to base bundle templates. Suppose also that each template in AcmeBlogBundle inherits from a base template called AcmeBlogBundle::layout.html.twig. Just as before, Symfony2 will look in the following two places for the template: 1. app/Resources/AcmeBlogBundle/views/layout.html.twig 2. src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/layout.html.twig Once again, to override the template, just copy it from the bundle to app/Resources/AcmeBlogBundle/ views/layout.html.twig. You're now free to customize this copy as you see fit. If you take a step back, you'll see that Symfony2 always starts by looking in the app/Resources/ {BUNDLE_NAME}/views/ directory for a template. If the template doesn't exist there, it continues by checking inside the Resources/views directory of the bundle itself. This means that all bundle templates can be overridden by placing them in the correct app/Resources subdirectory.
53. http://knpbundles.com
Three-level Inheritance
One common way to use inheritance is to use a three-level approach. This method works perfectly with the three different types of templates we've just covered: Create a app/Resources/views/base.html.twig file that contains the main layout for your application (like in the previous example). Internally, this template is called ::base.html.twig; Create a template for each "section" of your site. For example, an AcmeBlogBundle, would have a template called AcmeBlogBundle::layout.html.twig that contains only blog section-specific elements;
{# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/layout.html.twig #} {% extends '::base.html.twig' %}
{% block body %} <h1>Blog Application</h1> {% block content %}{% endblock %} {% endblock %}
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Create individual templates for each page and make each extend the appropriate section template. For example, the "index" page would be called something close to AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.html.twig and list the actual blog posts.
{# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/Blog/index.html.twig #} {% extends 'AcmeBlogBundle::layout.html.twig' %}
{% block content %} {% for entry in blog_entries %} <h2>{{ entry.title }}</h2> <p>{{ entry.body }}</p> {% endfor %} {% endblock %}
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Notice that this template extends the section template -(AcmeBlogBundle::layout.html.twig) which inturn extends the base application layout (::base.html.twig). This is the common three-level inheritance model. When building your application, you may choose to follow this method or simply make each page template extend the base application template directly (e.g. {% extends '::base.html.twig' %}). The three-template model is a best-practice method used by vendor bundles so that the base template for a bundle can be easily overridden to properly extend your application's base layout.
Output Escaping
When generating HTML from a template, there is always a risk that a template variable may output unintended HTML or dangerous client-side code. The result is that dynamic content could break the
HTML of the resulting page or allow a malicious user to perform a Cross Site Scripting54 (XSS) attack. Consider this classic example:
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Hello {{ name }}
Imagine that the user enters the following code as his/her name:
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<script>alert('hello!')</script>
Without any output escaping, the resulting template will cause a JavaScript alert box to pop up:
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Hello <script>alert('hello!')</script>
And while this seems harmless, if a user can get this far, that same user should also be able to write JavaScript that performs malicious actions inside the secure area of an unknowing, legitimate user. The answer to the problem is output escaping. With output escaping on, the same template will render harmlessly, and literally print the script tag to the screen:
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Hello <script>alert('helloe')</script>
The Twig and PHP templating systems approach the problem in different ways. If you're using Twig, output escaping is on by default and you're protected. In PHP, output escaping is not automatic, meaning you'll need to manually escape where necessary.
By default, the escape() method assumes that the variable is being rendered within an HTML context (and thus the variable is escaped to be safe for HTML). The second argument lets you change the context. For example, to output something in a JavaScript string, use the js context:
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Debugging
New in version 2.0.9: This feature is available as of Twig 1.5.x, which was first shipped with Symfony 2.0.9. When using PHP, you can use var_dump() if you need to quickly find the value of a variable passed. This is useful, for example, inside your controller. The same can be achieved when using Twig by using the debug extension. This needs to be enabled in the config:
# app/config/config.yml services: acme_hello.twig.extension.debug: class: Twig_Extension_Debug tags: - { name: 'twig.extension' }
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The variables will only be dumped if Twig's debug setting (in config.yml) is true. By default this means that the variables will be dumped in the dev environment but not the prod environment.
Template Formats
Templates are a generic way to render content in any format. And while in most cases you'll use templates to render HTML content, a template can just as easily generate JavaScript, CSS, XML or any other format you can dream of. For example, the same "resource" is often rendered in several different formats. To render an article index page in XML, simply include the format in the template name: XML template name: AcmeArticleBundle:Article:index.xml.twig XML template filename: index.xml.twig In reality, this is nothing more than a naming convention and the template isn't actually rendered differently based on its format. In many cases, you may want to allow a single controller to render multiple different formats based on the "request format". For that reason, a common pattern is to do the following:
public function indexAction() { $format = $this->getRequest()->getRequestFormat(); return $this->render('AcmeBlogBundle:Blog:index.'.$format.'.twig'); }
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The getRequestFormat on the Request object defaults to html, but can return any other format based on the format requested by the user. The request format is most often managed by the routing, where a route
can be configured so that /contact sets the request format to html while /contact.xml sets the format to xml. For more information, see the Advanced Example in the Routing chapter. To create links that include the format parameter, include a _format key in the parameter hash:
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<a href="{{ path('article_show', {'id': 123, '_format': 'pdf'}) }}"> PDF Version </a>
Final Thoughts
The templating engine in Symfony is a powerful tool that can be used each time you need to generate presentational content in HTML, XML or any other format. And though templates are a common way to generate content in a controller, their use is not mandatory. The Response object returned by a controller can be created with our without the use of a template:
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// creates a Response object whose content is the rendered template $response = $this->render('AcmeArticleBundle:Article:index.html.twig'); // creates a Response object whose content is simple text $response = new Response('response content');
Symfony's templating engine is very flexible and two different template renderers are available by default: the traditional PHP templates and the sleek and powerful Twig templates. Both support a template hierarchy and come packaged with a rich set of helper functions capable of performing the most common tasks. Overall, the topic of templating should be thought of as a powerful tool that's at your disposal. In some cases, you may not need to render a template, and in Symfony2, that's absolutely fine.
Chapter 1
;app/config/parameters.ini [parameters] database_driver = pdo_mysql database_host = localhost database_name = test_project database_user = root database_password = password
Defining the configuration via parameters.ini is just a convention. The parameters defined in that file are referenced by the main configuration file when setting up Doctrine:
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By separating the database information into a separate file, you can easily keep different versions of the file on each server. You can also easily store database configuration (or any sensitive information) outside of your project, like inside your Apache configuration, for example. For more information, see How to Set External Parameters in the Service Container.
Now that Doctrine knows about your database, you can have it create the database for you:
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The class - often called an "entity", meaning a basic class that holds data - is simple and helps fulfill the business requirement of needing products in your application. This class can't be persisted to a database yet - it's just a simple PHP class.
Once you learn the concepts behind Doctrine, you can have Doctrine create this entity class for you:
php app/console doctrine:generate:entity --entity="AcmeStoreBundle:Product" --fields="name:string(255) price:float description:text"
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For Doctrine to be able to do this, you just have to create "metadata", or configuration that tells Doctrine exactly how the Product class and its properties should be mapped to the database. This metadata can be specified in a number of different formats including YAML, XML or directly inside the Product class via annotations:
A bundle can accept only one metadata definition format. For example, it's not possible to mix YAML metadata definitions with annotated PHP entity class definitions.
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/** * @ORM\Entity * @ORM\Table(name="product") */ class Product { /** * @ORM\Id * @ORM\Column(type="integer") * @ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO") */ protected $id; /** * @ORM\Column(type="string", length=100) */
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protected $name;
The table name is optional and if omitted, will be determined automatically based on the name of the entity class.
Doctrine allows you to choose from a wide variety of different field types, each with their own options. For information on the available field types, see the Doctrine Field Types Reference section.
You can also check out Doctrine's Basic Mapping Documentation58 for all details about mapping information. If you use annotations, you'll need to prepend all annotations with ORM\ (e.g. ORM\Column(..)), which is not shown in Doctrine's documentation. You'll also need to include the use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM; statement, which imports the ORM annotations prefix.
Be careful that your class name and properties aren't mapped to a protected SQL keyword (such as group or user). For example, if your entity class name is Group, then, by default, your table name will be group, which will cause an SQL error in some engines. See Doctrine's Reserved SQL keywords documentation59 on how to properly escape these names.
When using another library or program (ie. Doxygen) that uses annotations, you should place the @IgnoreAnnotation annotation on the class to indicate which annotations Symfony should ignore. For example, to prevent the @fn annotation from throwing an exception, add the following:
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This command makes sure that all of the getters and setters are generated for the Product class. This is a safe command - you can run it over and over again: it only generates getters and setters that don't exist (i.e. it doesn't replace your existing methods).
generate the appropriate constructor for 1:n and n:m relations. The doctrine:generate:entities command saves a backup of the original Product.php named Product.php~. In some cases, the presence of this file can cause a "Cannot redeclare class" error. It can be safely removed. Note that you don't need to use this command. Doctrine doesn't rely on code generation. Like with normal PHP classes, you just need to make sure that your protected/private properties have getter and setter methods. Since this is a common thing to do when using Doctrine, this command was created.
You can also generate all known entities (i.e. any PHP class with Doctrine mapping information) of a bundle or an entire namespace:
php app/console doctrine:generate:entities AcmeStoreBundle php app/console doctrine:generate:entities Acme
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Doctrine doesn't care whether your properties are protected or private, or whether or not you have a getter or setter function for a property. The getters and setters are generated here only because you'll need them to interact with your PHP object.
Actually, this command is incredibly powerful. It compares what your database should look like (based on the mapping information of your entities) with how it actually looks, and generates the SQL statements needed to update the database to where it should be. In other words, if you add a new property with mapping metadata to Product and run this task again, it will generate the "alter table" statement needed to add that new column to the existing product table. An even better way to take advantage of this functionality is via migrations, which allow you to generate these SQL statements and store them in migration classes that can be run systematically on your production server in order to track and migrate your database schema safely and reliably.
Your database now has a fully-functional product table with columns that match the metadata you've specified.
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2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
If you're following along with this example, you'll need to create a route that points to this action to see it work.
Let's walk through this example: lines 8-11 In this section, you instantiate and work with the $product object like any other, normal PHP object; line 13 This line fetches Doctrine's entity manager object, which is responsible for handling the process of persisting and fetching objects to and from the database; line 14 The persist() method tells Doctrine to "manage" the $product object. This does not actually cause a query to be made to the database (yet). line 15 When the flush() method is called, Doctrine looks through all of the objects that it's managing to see if they need to be persisted to the database. In this example, the $product object has not been persisted yet, so the entity manager executes an INSERT query and a row is created in the product table.
In fact, since Doctrine is aware of all your managed entities, when you call the flush() method, it calculates an overall changeset and executes the most efficient query/queries possible. For example, if you persist a total of 100 Product objects and then subsequently call flush(), Doctrine will create a single prepared statement and re-use it for each insert. This pattern is called Unit of Work, and it's used because it's fast and efficient.
When creating or updating objects, the workflow is always the same. In the next section, you'll see how Doctrine is smart enough to automatically issue an UPDATE query if the record already exists in the database.
Doctrine provides a library that allows you to programmatically load testing data into your project (i.e. "fixture data"). For information, see DoctrineFixturesBundle.
When you query for a particular type of object, you always use what's known as its "repository". You can think of a repository as a PHP class whose only job is to help you fetch entities of a certain class. You can access the repository object for an entity class via:
$repository = $this->getDoctrine() ->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product');
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The AcmeStoreBundle:Product string is a shortcut you can use anywhere in Doctrine instead of the full class name of the entity (i.e. Acme\StoreBundle\Entity\Product). As long as your entity lives under the Entity namespace of your bundle, this will work.
Once you have your repository, you have access to all sorts of helpful methods:
// query by the primary key (usually "id") $product = $repository->find($id); // dynamic method names to find based on a column value $product = $repository->findOneById($id); $product = $repository->findOneByName('foo'); // find *all* products $products = $repository->findAll(); // find a group of products based on an arbitrary column value $products = $repository->findByPrice(19.99);
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Of course, you can also issue complex queries, which you'll learn more about in the Querying for Objects section.
You can also take advantage of the useful findBy and findOneBy methods to easily fetch objects based on multiple conditions:
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// query for one product matching be name and price $product = $repository->findOneBy(array('name' => 'foo', 'price' => 19.99)); // query for all products matching the name, ordered by price $product = $repository->findBy( array('name' => 'foo'), array('price' => 'ASC') );
When you render any page, you can see how many queries were made in the bottom right corner of the web debug toolbar.
If you click the icon, the profiler will open, showing you the exact queries that were made.
Updating an Object
Once you've fetched an object from Doctrine, updating it is easy. Suppose you have a route that maps a product id to an update action in a controller:
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public function updateAction($id) { $em = $this->getDoctrine()->getEntityManager(); $product = $em->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product')->find($id); if (!$product) { throw $this->createNotFoundException('No product found for id '.$id); } $product->setName('New product name!'); $em->flush(); return $this->redirect($this->generateUrl('homepage')); }
Updating an object involves just three steps: 1. fetching the object from Doctrine; 2. modifying the object; 3. calling flush() on the entity manager
Notice that calling $em->persist($product) isn't necessary. Recall that this method simply tells Doctrine to manage or "watch" the $product object. In this case, since you fetched the $product object from Doctrine, it's already managed.
Deleting an Object
Deleting an object is very similar, but requires a call to the remove() method of the entity manager:
$em->remove($product); $em->flush();
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As you might expect, the remove() method notifies Doctrine that you'd like to remove the given entity from the database. The actual DELETE query, however, isn't actually executed until the flush() method is called.
Of course, Doctrine also allows you to write more complex queries using the Doctrine Query Language (DQL). DQL is similar to SQL except that you should imagine that you're querying for one or more objects of an entity class (e.g. Product) instead of querying for rows on a table (e.g. product). When querying in Doctrine, you have two options: writing pure Doctrine queries or using Doctrine's Query Builder.
If you're comfortable with SQL, then DQL should feel very natural. The biggest difference is that you need to think in terms of "objects" instead of rows in a database. For this reason, you select from AcmeStoreBundle:Product and then alias it as p. The getResult() method returns an array of results. If you're querying for just one object, you can use the getSingleResult() method instead:
$product = $query->getSingleResult();
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The getSingleResult() method throws a Doctrine\ORM\NoResultException exception if no results are returned and a Doctrine\ORM\NonUniqueResultException if more than one result is returned. If you use this method, you may need to wrap it in a try-catch block and ensure that only one result is returned (if you're querying on something that could feasibly return more than one result):
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$query = $em->createQuery('SELECT ....') ->setMaxResults(1); try { $product = $query->getSingleResult(); } catch (\Doctrine\Orm\NoResultException $e) { $product = null; } // ...
The DQL syntax is incredibly powerful, allowing you to easily join between entities (the topic of relations will be covered later), group, etc. For more information, see the official Doctrine Doctrine Query Language60 documentation.
Setting Parameters
Take note of the setParameter() method. When working with Doctrine, it's always a good idea to set any external values as "placeholders", which was done in the above query:
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You can then set the value of the price placeholder by calling the setParameter() method:
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->setParameter('price', '19.99')
Using parameters instead of placing values directly in the query string is done to prevent SQL injection attacks and should always be done. If you're using multiple parameters, you can set their values at once using the setParameters() method:
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$repository = $this->getDoctrine() ->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product'); $query = $repository->createQueryBuilder('p') ->where('p.price > :price') ->setParameter('price', '19.99') ->orderBy('p.price', 'ASC') ->getQuery(); $products = $query->getResult();
60. http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-orm/en/2.1/reference/dql-doctrine-query-language.html
The QueryBuilder object contains every method necessary to build your query. By calling the getQuery() method, the query builder returns a normal Query object, which is the same object you built directly in the previous section. For more information on Doctrine's Query Builder, consult Doctrine's Query Builder61 documentation.
Doctrine can generate the repository class for you by running the same command used earlier to generate the missing getter and setter methods:
php app/console doctrine:generate:entities Acme
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Next, add a new method - findAllOrderedByName() - to the newly generated repository class. This method will query for all of the Product entities, ordered alphabetically.
// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Repository/ProductRepository.php namespace Acme\StoreBundle\Repository;
use Doctrine\ORM\EntityRepository; class ProductRepository extends EntityRepository { public function findAllOrderedByName() { return $this->getEntityManager() ->createQuery('SELECT p FROM AcmeStoreBundle:Product p ORDER BY p.name ASC') ->getResult(); } }
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The entity manager can be accessed via $this->getEntityManager() from inside the repository.
You can use this new method just like the default finder methods of the repository:
61. http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-orm/en/2.1/reference/query-builder.html
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When using a custom repository class, you still have access to the default finder methods such as find() and findAll().
Entity Relationships/Associations
Suppose that the products in your application all belong to exactly one "category". In this case, you'll need a Category object and a way to relate a Product object to a Category object. Start by creating the Category entity. Since you know that you'll eventually need to persist the class through Doctrine, you can let Doctrine create the class for you.
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This task generates the Category entity for you, with an id field, a name field and the associated getter and setter functions.
First, since a Category object will relate to many Product objects, a products array property is added to hold those Product objects. Again, this isn't done because Doctrine needs it, but instead because it makes sense in the application for each Category to hold an array of Product objects.
The code in the __construct() method is important because Doctrine requires the $products property to be an ArrayCollection object. This object looks and acts almost exactly like an array, but has some added flexibility. If this makes you uncomfortable, don't worry. Just imagine that it's an array and you'll be in good shape.
The targetEntity value in the decorator used above can reference any entity with a valid namespace, not just entities defined in the same class. To relate to an entity defined in a different class or bundle, enter a full namespace as the targetEntity.
Next, since each Product class can relate to exactly one Category object, you'll want to add a $category property to the Product class:
// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Entity/Product.php // ...
class Product { // ...
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Finally, now that you've added a new property to both the Category and Product classes, tell Doctrine to generate the missing getter and setter methods for you:
php app/console doctrine:generate:entities Acme
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Ignore the Doctrine metadata for a moment. You now have two classes - Category and Product with a natural one-to-many relationship. The Category class holds an array of Product objects and the Product object can hold one Category object. In other words - you've built your classes in a way that makes sense for your needs. The fact that the data needs to be persisted to a database is always secondary. Now, look at the metadata above the $category property on the Product class. The information here tells doctrine that the related class is Category and that it should store the id of the category record on a category_id field that lives on the product table. In other words, the related Category object will be stored on the $category property, but behind the scenes, Doctrine will persist this relationship by storing the category's id value on a category_id column of the product table.
The metadata above the $products property of the Category object is less important, and simply tells Doctrine to look at the Product.category property to figure out how the relationship is mapped. Before you continue, be sure to tell Doctrine to add the new category table, and product.category_id column, and new foreign key:
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This task should only be really used during development. For a more robust method of systematically updating your production database, read about Doctrine migrations.
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; // ... class DefaultController extends Controller { public function createProductAction() { $category = new Category(); $category->setName('Main Products'); $product = new Product(); $product->setName('Foo'); $product->setPrice(19.99); // relate this product to the category $product->setCategory($category); $em = $this->getDoctrine()->getEntityManager(); $em->persist($category); $em->persist($product); $em->flush(); return new Response( 'Created product id: '.$product->getId().' and category id: '.$category->getId() ); } }
Now, a single row is added to both the category and product tables. The product.category_id column for the new product is set to whatever the id is of the new category. Doctrine manages the persistence of this relationship for you.
// ...
}
In this example, you first query for a Product object based on the product's id. This issues a query for just the product data and hydrates the $product object with that data. Later, when you call $product>getCategory()->getName(), Doctrine silently makes a second query to find the Category that's related to this Product. It prepares the $category object and returns it to you.
What's important is the fact that you have easy access to the product's related category, but the category data isn't actually retrieved until you ask for the category (i.e. it's "lazily loaded"). You can also query in the other direction:
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// ...
}
In this case, the same things occurs: you first query out for a single Category object, and then Doctrine makes a second query to retrieve the related Product objects, but only once/if you ask for them (i.e. when you call ->getProducts()). The $products variable is an array of all Product objects that relate to the given Category object via their category_id value.
This proxy object extends the true Category object, and looks and acts exactly like it. The difference is that, by using a proxy object, Doctrine can delay querying for the real Category data until you actually need that data (e.g. until you call $category->getName()). The proxy classes are generated by Doctrine and stored in the cache directory. And though you'll probably never even notice that your $category object is actually a proxy object, it's important to keep in mind. In the next section, when you retrieve the product and category data all at once (via a join), Doctrine will return the true Category object, since nothing needs to be lazily loaded.
Of course, if you know up front that you'll need to access both objects, you can avoid the second query by issuing a join in the original query. Add the following method to the ProductRepository class:
// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Repository/ProductRepository.php
public function findOneByIdJoinedToCategory($id) { $query = $this->getEntityManager() ->createQuery(' SELECT p, c FROM AcmeStoreBundle:Product p JOIN p.category c WHERE p.id = :id' )->setParameter('id', $id); try { return $query->getSingleResult(); } catch (\Doctrine\ORM\NoResultException $e) { return null; } }
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Now, you can use this method in your controller to query for a Product object and its related Category with just one query:
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// ...
}
Configuration
Doctrine is highly configurable, though you probably won't ever need to worry about most of its options. To find out more about configuring Doctrine, see the Doctrine section of the reference manual.
Lifecycle Callbacks
Sometimes, you need to perform an action right before or after an entity is inserted, updated, or deleted. These types of actions are known as "lifecycle" callbacks, as they're callback methods that you need to execute during different stages of the lifecycle of an entity (e.g. the entity is inserted, updated, deleted, etc). If you're using annotations for your metadata, start by enabling the lifecycle callbacks. This is not necessary if you're using YAML or XML for your mapping:
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Now, you can tell Doctrine to execute a method on any of the available lifecycle events. For example, suppose you want to set a created date column to the current date, only when the entity is first persisted (i.e. inserted):
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/** * @ORM\PrePersist */
62. http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-orm/en/2.1/reference/association-mapping.html
The above example assumes that you've created and mapped a created property (not shown here).
Now, right before the entity is first persisted, Doctrine will automatically call this method and the created field will be set to the current date. This can be repeated for any of the other lifecycle events, which include:
preRemove postRemove prePersist postPersist preUpdate postUpdate postLoad loadClassMetadata
For more information on what these lifecycle events mean and lifecycle callbacks in general, see Doctrine's Lifecycle Events documentation63
string (used for shorter strings) text (used for larger strings) Numbers
integer smallint bigint decimal float
Dates and Times (use a DateTime64 object for these fields in PHP) date time datetime Other Types boolean object (serialized and stored in a CLOB field) array (serialized and stored in a CLOB field) For more information, see Doctrine's Mapping Types documentation65.
Field Options
Each field can have a set of options applied to it. The available options include type (defaults to string), name, length, unique and nullable. Take a few examples:
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/** * A string field with length 255 that cannot be null * (reflecting the default values for the "type", "length" and *nullable* options) * * @ORM\Column() */ protected $name; /** * A string field of length 150 that persists to an "email_address" column * and has a unique index. * * @ORM\Column(name="email_address", unique=true, length=150) */ protected $email;
There are a few more options not listed here. For more details, see Doctrine's Property Mapping documentation66
Console Commands
The Doctrine2 ORM integration offers several console commands under the doctrine namespace. To view the command list you can run the console without any arguments:
php app/console
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A list of available command will print out, many of which start with the doctrine: prefix. You can find out more information about any of these commands (or any Symfony command) by running the help command. For example, to get details about the doctrine:database:create task, run:
php app/console help doctrine:database:create
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Some notable or interesting tasks include: doctrine:ensure-production-settings - checks to see if the current environment is configured efficiently for production. This should always be run in the prod environment:
php app/console doctrine:ensure-production-settings --env=prod
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doctrine:mapping:import - allows Doctrine to introspect an existing database and create mapping information. For more information, see How to generate Entities from an Existing Database. doctrine:mapping:info - tells you all of the entities that Doctrine is aware of and whether or not there are any basic errors with the mapping. doctrine:query:dql and doctrine:query:sql - allow you to execute DQL or SQL queries directly from the command line.
To be able to load data fixtures to your database, you will need to have the DoctrineFixturesBundle bundle installed. To learn how to do it, read the "DoctrineFixturesBundle" entry of the documentation.
Summary
With Doctrine, you can focus on your objects and how they're useful in your application and worry about database persistence second. This is because Doctrine allows you to use any PHP object to hold your data and relies on mapping metadata information to map an object's data to a particular database table. And even though Doctrine revolves around a simple concept, it's incredibly powerful, allowing you to create complex queries and subscribe to events that allow you to take different actions as objects go through their persistence lifecycle. For more information about Doctrine, see the Doctrine section of the cookbook, which includes the following articles: DoctrineFixturesBundle Doctrine Extensions: Timestampable, Sluggable, Translatable, etc.
Chapter 1
Testing
Whenever you write a new line of code, you also potentially add new bugs. To build better and more reliable applications, you should test your code using both functional and unit tests.
Each test - whether it's a unit test or a functional test - is a PHP class that should live in the Tests/ subdirectory of your bundles. If you follow this rule, then you can run all of your application's tests with the following command:
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The -c option tells PHPUnit to look in the app/ directory for a configuration file. If you're curious about the PHPUnit options, check out the app/phpunit.xml.dist file.
Code coverage can be generated with the --coverage-html option.
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Unit Tests
A unit test is usually a test against a specific PHP class. If you want to test the overall behavior of your application, see the section about Functional Tests. Writing Symfony2 unit tests is no different than writing standard PHPUnit unit tests. Suppose, for example, that you have an incredibly simple class called Calculator in the Utility/ directory of your bundle:
// src/Acme/DemoBundle/Utility/Calculator.php namespace Acme\DemoBundle\Utility;
class Calculator { public function add($a, $b) { return $a + $b; } }
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To test this, create a CalculatorTest file in the Tests/Utility directory of your bundle:
// src/Acme/DemoBundle/Tests/Utility/CalculatorTest.php namespace Acme\DemoBundle\Tests\Utility;
use Acme\DemoBundle\Utility\Calculator; class CalculatorTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase { public function testAdd() { $calc = new Calculator(); $result = $calc->add(30, 12);
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// assert that our calculator added the numbers correctly! $this->assertEquals(42, $result);
} }
By convention, the Tests/ sub-directory should replicate the directory of your bundle. So, if you're testing a class in your bundle's Utility/ directory, put the test in the Tests/Utility/ directory.
Just like in your real application - autoloading is automatically enabled via the bootstrap.php.cache file (as configured by default in the phpunit.xml.dist file). Running tests for a given file or directory is also very easy:
# run all tests in the Utility directory $ phpunit -c app src/Acme/DemoBundle/Tests/Utility/ # run tests for the Calculator class $ phpunit -c app src/Acme/DemoBundle/Tests/Utility/CalculatorTest.php # run all tests for the entire Bundle $ phpunit -c app src/Acme/DemoBundle/
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Functional Tests
Functional tests check the integration of the different layers of an application (from the routing to the views). They are no different from unit tests as far as PHPUnit is concerned, but they have a very specific workflow: Make a request; Test the response; Click on a link or submit a form; Test the response; Rinse and repeat.
To run your functional tests, the WebTestCase class bootstraps the kernel of your application. In most cases, this happens automatically. However, if your kernel is in a non-standard directory, you'll need to modify your phpunit.xml.dist file to set the KERNEL_DIR environment variable to the directory of your kernel:
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<phpunit <!-- ... --> <php> <server name="KERNEL_DIR" value="/path/to/your/app/" /> </php> <!-- ... --> </phpunit>
The createClient() method returns a client, which is like a browser that you'll use to crawl your site:
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The request() method (see more about the request method) returns a Crawler69 object which can be used to select elements in the Response, click on links, and submit forms.
The Crawler only works when the response is an XML or an HTML document. To get the raw content response, call $client->getResponse()->getContent().
Click on a link by first selecting it with the Crawler using either an XPath expression or a CSS selector, then use the Client to click on it. For example, the following code finds all links with the text Greet, then selects the second one, and ultimately clicks on it:
$link = $crawler->filter('a:contains("Greet")')->eq(1)->link(); $crawler = $client->click($link);
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Submitting a form is very similar; select a form button, optionally override some form values, and submit the corresponding form:
$form = $crawler->selectButton('submit')->form();
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// set some values $form['name'] = 'Lucas'; $form['form_name[subject]'] = 'Hey there!'; // submit the form $crawler = $client->submit($form);
The form can also handle uploads and contains methods to fill in different types of form fields (e.g. select() and tick()). For details, see the Forms section below.
Now that you can easily navigate through an application, use assertions to test that it actually does what you expect it to. Use the Crawler to make assertions on the DOM:
// Assert that the response matches a given CSS selector. $this->assertTrue($crawler->filter('h1')->count() > 0);
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Or, test against the Response content directly if you just want to assert that the content contains some text, or if the Response is not an XML/HTML document:
$this->assertRegExp('/Hello Fabien/', $client->getResponse()->getContent());
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request( $method, $uri, array $parameters = array(), array $files = array(), array $server = array(), $content = null, $changeHistory = true )
The server array is the raw values that you'd expect to normally find in the PHP $_SERVER70 superglobal. For example, to set the Content-Type and Referer HTTP headers, you'd pass the following:
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$client->request( 'GET', '/demo/hello/Fabien', array(), array(), array( 'CONTENT_TYPE' => 'application/json', 'HTTP_REFERER' => '/foo/bar', ) );
The request() method takes the HTTP method and a URL as arguments and returns a Crawler instance. Use the Crawler to find DOM elements in the Response. These elements can then be used to click on links and submit forms:
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$link = $crawler->selectLink('Go elsewhere...')->link(); $crawler = $client->click($link); $form = $crawler->selectButton('validate')->form(); $crawler = $client->submit($form, array('name' => 'Fabien'));
The click() and submit() methods both return a Crawler object. These methods are the best way to browse your application as it takes care of a lot of things for you, like detecting the HTTP method from a form and giving you a nice API for uploading files.
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You will learn more about the Link and Form objects in the Crawler section below.
The request method can also be used to simulate form submissions directly or perform more complex requests:
// Directly submit a form (but using the Crawler is easier!) $client->request('POST', '/submit', array('name' => 'Fabien')); // Form submission with a file upload use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\File\UploadedFile;
$photo = new UploadedFile( '/path/to/photo.jpg', 'photo.jpg', 'image/jpeg', 123 ); // or $photo = array( 'tmp_name' => '/path/to/photo.jpg', 'name' => 'photo.jpg', 'type' => 'image/jpeg', 'size' => 123, 'error' => UPLOAD_ERR_OK ); $client->request( 'POST', '/submit', array('name' => 'Fabien'), array('photo' => $photo) );
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// Perform a DELETE requests, and pass HTTP headers $client->request( 'DELETE', '/post/12', array(), array(), array('PHP_AUTH_USER' => 'username', 'PHP_AUTH_PW' => 'pa$$word') );
Last but not least, you can force each request to be executed in its own PHP process to avoid any sideeffects when working with several clients in the same script:
$client->insulate();
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Browsing
The Client supports many operations that can be done in a real browser:
$client->back(); $client->forward(); $client->reload();
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You can also get the objects related to the latest request:
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If your requests are not insulated, you can also access the Container and the Kernel:
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$container = $client->getContainer();
Be warned that this does not work if you insulate the client or if you use an HTTP layer. For a list of services available in your application, use the container:debug console task.
If the information you need to check is available from the profiler, use it instead.
$profile = $client->getProfile();
For specific details on using the profiler inside a test, see the How to use the Profiler in a Functional Test cookbook entry.
Redirecting
When a request returns a redirect response, the client automatically follows it. If you want to examine the Response before redirecting, you can force the client to not follow redirects with the followRedirects() method:
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$client->followRedirects(false);
When the client does not follow redirects, you can force the redirection with the followRedirect() method:
$crawler = $client->followRedirect();
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The Crawler
A Crawler instance is returned each time you make a request with the Client. It allows you to traverse HTML documents, select nodes, find links and forms.
Traversing
Like jQuery, the Crawler has methods to traverse the DOM of an HTML/XML document. For example, the following finds all input[type=submit] elements, selects the last one on the page, and then selects its immediate parent element:
$newCrawler = $crawler->filter('input[type=submit]') ->last() ->parents() ->first() ;
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Description Nodes that match the CSS selector Nodes that match the XPath expression Node for the specified index First node Last node Siblings All following siblings All preceding siblings Returns the parent nodes Returns children nodes Nodes for which the callable does not return false
Since each of these methods returns a new Crawler instance, you can narrow down your node selection by chaining the method calls:
$crawler ->filter('h1') ->reduce(function ($node, $i) { if (!$node->getAttribute('class')) { return false; } }) ->first();
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Use the count() function to get the number of nodes stored in a Crawler: count($crawler)
Extracting Information
The Crawler can extract information from the nodes:
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// Returns the attribute value for the first node $crawler->attr('class'); // Returns the node value for the first node $crawler->text(); // Extracts an array of attributes for all nodes (_text returns the node value) // returns an array for each element in crawler, each with the value and href $info = $crawler->extract(array('_text', 'href')); // Executes a lambda for each node and return an array of results $data = $crawler->each(function ($node, $i) { return $node->attr('href'); });
Links
To select links, you can use the traversing methods above or the convenient selectLink() shortcut:
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$crawler->selectLink('Click here');
This selects all links that contain the given text, or clickable images for which the alt attribute contains the given text. Like the other filtering methods, this returns another Crawler object. Once you've selected a link, you have access to a special Link object, which has helpful methods specific to links (such as getMethod() and getUri()). To click on the link, use the Client's click() method and pass it a Link object:
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Forms
Just like links, you select forms with the selectButton() method:
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$buttonCrawlerNode = $crawler->selectButton('submit');
Notice that we select form buttons and not forms as a form can have several buttons; if you use the traversing API, keep in mind that you must look for a button.
The selectButton() method can select button tags and submit input tags. It uses several different parts of the buttons to find them: The value attribute value;
The id or alt attribute value for images; The id or name attribute value for button tags. Once you have a Crawler representing a button, call the form() method to get a Form instance for the form wrapping the button node:
$form = $buttonCrawlerNode->form();
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When calling the form() method, you can also pass an array of field values that overrides the default ones:
$form = $buttonCrawlerNode->form(array( 'name' => 'Fabien', 'my_form[subject]' => 'Symfony rocks!', ));
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And if you want to simulate a specific HTTP method for the form, pass it as a second argument:
$form = $buttonCrawlerNode->form(array(), 'DELETE');
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The field values can also be passed as a second argument of the submit() method:
$client->submit($form, array( 'name' => 'Fabien', 'my_form[subject]' => 'Symfony rocks!', ));
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For more complex situations, use the Form instance as an array to set the value of each field individually:
// Change the value of a field $form['name'] = 'Fabien'; $form['my_form[subject]'] = 'Symfony rocks!';
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There is also a nice API to manipulate the values of the fields according to their type:
// Select an option or a radio $form['country']->select('France'); // Tick a checkbox $form['like_symfony']->tick(); // Upload a file $form['photo']->upload('/path/to/lucas.jpg');
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You can get the values that will be submitted by calling the getValues() method on the Form object. The uploaded files are available in a separate array returned by getFiles(). The getPhpValues() and getPhpFiles() methods also return the submitted values, but in the PHP format (it converts the keys with square brackets notation - e.g. my_form[subject] - to PHP arrays).
Testing Configuration
The Client used by functional tests creates a Kernel that runs in a special test environment. Since Symfony loads the app/config/config_test.yml in the test environment, you can tweak any of your application's settings specifically for testing. For example, by default, the swiftmailer is configured to not actually deliver emails in the test environment. You can see this under the swiftmailer configuration option:
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# app/config/config_test.yml # ...
swiftmailer: disable_delivery: true
You can also use a different environment entirely, or override the default debug mode (true) by passing each as options to the createClient() method:
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If your application behaves according to some HTTP headers, pass them as the second argument of createClient():
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$client = static::createClient(array(), array( 'HTTP_HOST' => 'en.example.com', 'HTTP_USER_AGENT' => 'MySuperBrowser/1.0', ));
$client->request('GET', '/', array(), array(), array( 'HTTP_HOST' => 'en.example.com', 'HTTP_USER_AGENT' => 'MySuperBrowser/1.0', ));
The test client is available as a service in the container in the test environment (or wherever the framework.test option is enabled). This means you can override the service entirely if you need to.
PHPUnit Configuration
Each application has its own PHPUnit configuration, stored in the phpunit.xml.dist file. You can edit this file to change the defaults or create a phpunit.xml file to tweak the configuration for your local machine.
Store the phpunit.xml.dist file in your code repository, and ignore the phpunit.xml file.
By default, only the tests stored in "standard" bundles are run by the phpunit command (standard being tests in the src/*/Bundle/Tests or src/*/Bundle/*Bundle/Tests directories) But you can easily add
more directories. For instance, the following configuration adds the tests from the installed third-party bundles:
<!-- hello/phpunit.xml.dist --> <testsuites> <testsuite name="Project Test Suite"> <directory>../src/*/*Bundle/Tests</directory> <directory>../src/Acme/Bundle/*Bundle/Tests</directory> </testsuite> </testsuites>
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To include other directories in the code coverage, also edit the <filter> section:
<filter> <whitelist> <directory>../src</directory> <exclude> <directory>../src/*/*Bundle/Resources</directory> <directory>../src/*/*Bundle/Tests</directory> <directory>../src/Acme/Bundle/*Bundle/Resources</directory> <directory>../src/Acme/Bundle/*Bundle/Tests</directory> </exclude> </whitelist> </filter>
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Chapter 1
Validation
Validation is a very common task in web applications. Data entered in forms needs to be validated. Data also needs to be validated before it is written into a database or passed to a web service. Symfony2 ships with a Validator71 component that makes this task easy and transparent. This component is based on the JSR303 Bean Validation specification72. What? A Java specification in PHP? You heard right, but it's not as bad as it sounds. Let's look at how it can be used in PHP.
So far, this is just an ordinary class that serves some purpose inside your application. The goal of validation is to tell you whether or not the data of an object is valid. For this to work, you'll configure a list of rules (called constraints) that the object must follow in order to be valid. These rules can be specified via a number of different formats (YAML, XML, annotations, or PHP). For example, to guarantee that the $name property is not empty, add the following:
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Protected and private properties can also be validated, as well as "getter" methods (see validatorconstraint-targets).
If the $name property is empty, you will see the following error message:
Acme\BlogBundle\Author.name: This value should not be blank
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If you insert a value into the name property, the happy success message will appear.
Most of the time, you won't interact directly with the validator service or need to worry about printing out the errors. Most of the time, you'll use validation indirectly when handling submitted form data. For more information, see the Validation and Forms.
Inside the template, you can output the list of errors exactly as needed:
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{# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/views/Author/validate.html.twig #}
<h3>The author has the following errors</h3> <ul> {% for error in errors %} <li>{{ error.message }}</li> {% endfor %} </ul>
use Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author; use Acme\BlogBundle\Form\AuthorType; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; // ... public function updateAction(Request $request) { $author = new Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author(); $form = $this->createForm(new AuthorType(), $author); if ($request->getMethod() == 'POST') { $form->bindRequest($request); if ($form->isValid()) { // the validation passed, do something with the $author object return $this->redirect($this->generateUrl('...')); } } return $this->render('BlogBundle:Author:form.html.twig', array( 'form' => $form->createView(), )); }
This example uses an AuthorType form class, which is not shown here.
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Configuration
The Symfony2 validator is enabled by default, but you must explicitly enable annotations if you're using the annotation method to specify your constraints:
# app/config/config.yml framework: validation: { enable_annotations: true }
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Constraints
The validator is designed to validate objects against constraints (i.e. rules). In order to validate an object, simply map one or more constraints to its class and then pass it to the validator service. Behind the scenes, a constraint is simply a PHP object that makes an assertive statement. In real life, a constraint could be: "The cake must not be burned". In Symfony2, constraints are similar: they are assertions that a condition is true. Given a value, a constraint will tell you whether or not that value adheres to the rules of the constraint.
Supported Constraints
Symfony2 packages a large number of the most commonly-needed constraints:
Basic Constraints
These are the basic constraints: use them to assert very basic things about the value of properties or the return value of methods on your object. NotBlank Blank NotNull Null True False Type
String Constraints
Email MinLength MaxLength Url Regex Ip
Number Constraints
Max Min
Date Constraints
Date
DateTime Time
Collection Constraints
Choice Collection UniqueEntity Language Locale Country
File Constraints
File Image
Other Constraints
Callback All Valid You can also create your own custom constraints. This topic is covered in the "How to create a Custom Validation Constraint" article of the cookbook.
Constraint Configuration
Some constraints, like NotBlank, are simple whereas others, like the Choice constraint, have several configuration options available. Suppose that the Author class has another property, gender that can be set to either "male" or "female":
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# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/config/validation.yml Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author: properties: gender: - Choice: { choices: [male, female], message: Choose a valid gender. }
The options of a constraint can always be passed in as an array. Some constraints, however, also allow you to pass the value of one, "default", option in place of the array. In the case of the Choice constraint, the choices options can be specified in this way.
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This is purely meant to make the configuration of the most common option of a constraint shorter and quicker. If you're ever unsure of how to specify an option, either check the API documentation for the constraint or play it safe by always passing in an array of options (the first method shown above).
Constraint Targets
Constraints can be applied to a class property (e.g. name) or a public getter method (e.g. getFullName). The first is the most common and easy to use, but the second allows you to specify more complex validation rules.
Properties
Validating class properties is the most basic validation technique. Symfony2 allows you to validate private, protected or public properties. The next listing shows you how to configure the $firstName property of an Author class to have at least 3 characters.
# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/config/validation.yml Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author: properties: firstName: - NotBlank: ~ - MinLength: 3
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Getters
Constraints can also be applied to the return value of a method. Symfony2 allows you to add a constraint to any public method whose name starts with "get" or "is". In this guide, both of these types of methods are referred to as "getters". The benefit of this technique is that it allows you to validate your object dynamically. For example, suppose you want to make sure that a password field doesn't match the first name of the user (for security reasons). You can do this by creating an isPasswordLegal method, and then asserting that this method must return true:
# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/config/validation.yml Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author: getters: passwordLegal: - "True": { message: "The password cannot match your first name" }
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Now, create the isPasswordLegal() method, and include the logic you need:
public function isPasswordLegal() { return ($this->firstName != $this->password); }
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The keen-eyed among you will have noticed that the prefix of the getter ("get" or "is") is omitted in the mapping. This allows you to move the constraint to a property with the same name later (or vice versa) without changing your validation logic.
Classes
Some constraints apply to the entire class being validated. For example, the Callback constraint is a generic constraint that's applied to the class itself. When that class is validated, methods specified by that constraint are simply executed so that each can provide more custom validation.
Validation Groups
So far, you've been able to add constraints to a class and ask whether or not that class passes all of the defined constraints. In some cases, however, you'll need to validate an object against only some of the constraints on that class. To do this, you can organize each constraint into one or more "validation groups", and then apply validation against just one group of constraints. For example, suppose you have a User class, which is used both when a user registers and when a user updates his/her contact information later:
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# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/config/validation.yml Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\User: properties: email: - Email: { groups: [registration] } password: - NotBlank: { groups: [registration] } - MinLength: { limit: 7, groups: [registration] } city: - MinLength: 2
With this configuration, there are two validation groups: Default - contains the constraints not assigned to any other group; registration - contains the constraints on the email and password fields only. To tell the validator to use a specific group, pass one or more group names as the second argument to the validate() method:
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Of course, you'll usually work with validation indirectly through the form library. For information on how to use validation groups inside forms, see Validation Groups.
// ...
}
By calling validateValue on the validator, you can pass in a raw value and the constraint object that you want to validate that value against. A full list of the available constraints - as well as the full class name for each constraint - is available in the constraints reference section . The validateValue method returns a ConstraintViolationList75 object, which acts just like an array of errors. Each error in the collection is a ConstraintViolation76 object, which holds the error message on its getMessage method.
Final Thoughts
The Symfony2 validator is a powerful tool that can be leveraged to guarantee that the data of any object is "valid". The power behind validation lies in "constraints", which are rules that you can apply to properties or getter methods of your object. And while you'll most commonly use the validation framework indirectly when using forms, remember that it can be used anywhere to validate any object.
Chapter 1
Forms
Dealing with HTML forms is one of the most common - and challenging - tasks for a web developer. Symfony2 integrates a Form component that makes dealing with forms easy. In this chapter, you'll build a complex form from the ground-up, learning the most important features of the form library along the way.
The Symfony form component is a standalone library that can be used outside of Symfony2 projects. For more information, see the Symfony2 Form Component77 on Github.
77. https://github.com/symfony/Form
} public function getDueDate() { return $this->dueDate; } public function setDueDate(\DateTime $dueDate = null) { $this->dueDate = $dueDate; } }
If you're coding along with this example, create the AcmeTaskBundle first by running the following command (and accepting all of the default options):
php app/console generate:bundle --namespace=Acme/TaskBundle
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This class is a "plain-old-PHP-object" because, so far, it has nothing to do with Symfony or any other library. It's quite simply a normal PHP object that directly solves a problem inside your application (i.e. the need to represent a task in your application). Of course, by the end of this chapter, you'll be able to submit data to a Task instance (via an HTML form), validate its data, and persist it to the database.
This example shows you how to build your form directly in the controller. Later, in the "Creating Form Classes" section, you'll learn how to build your form in a standalone class, which is recommended as your form becomes reusable.
Creating a form requires relatively little code because Symfony2 form objects are built with a "form builder". The form builder's purpose is to allow you to write simple form "recipes", and have it do all the heavy-lifting of actually building the form. In this example, you've added two fields to your form - task and dueDate - corresponding to the task and dueDate properties of the Task class. You've also assigned each a "type" (e.g. text, date), which, among other things, determines which HTML form tag(s) is rendered for that field. Symfony2 comes with many built-in types that will be discussed shortly (see Built-in Field Types).
{# src/Acme/TaskBundle/Resources/views/Default/new.html.twig #}
<form action="{{ path('task_new') }}" method="post" {{ form_enctype(form) }}> {{ form_widget(form) }} <input type="submit" /> </form>
This example assumes that you've created a route called task_new that points to the AcmeTaskBundle:Default:new controller that was created earlier.
That's it! By printing form_widget(form), each field in the form is rendered, along with a label and error message (if there is one). As easy as this is, it's not very flexible (yet). Usually, you'll want to render each form field individually so you can control how the form looks. You'll learn how to do that in the "Rendering a Form in a Template" section. Before moving on, notice how the rendered task input field has the value of the task property from the $task object (i.e. "Write a blog post"). This is the first job of a form: to take data from an object and translate it into a format that's suitable for being rendered in an HTML form.
The form system is smart enough to access the value of the protected task property via the getTask() and setTask() methods on the Task class. Unless a property is public, it must have a "getter" and "setter" method so that the form component can get and put data onto the property. For a Boolean property, you can use an "isser" method (e.g. isPublished()) instead of a getter (e.g. getPublished()).
// ...
}
Now, when submitting the form, the controller binds the submitted data to the form, which translates that data back to the task and dueDate properties of the $task object. This all happens via the bindRequest() method.
As soon as bindRequest() is called, the submitted data is transferred to the underlying object immediately. This happens regardless of whether or not the underlying data is actually valid.
This controller follows a common pattern for handling forms, and has three possible paths: 1. When initially loading the page in a browser, the request method is GET and the form is simply created and rendered; 2. When the user submits the form (i.e. the method is POST) with invalid data (validation is covered in the next section), the form is bound and then rendered, this time displaying all validation errors; 3. When the user submits the form with valid data, the form is bound and you have the opportunity to perform some actions using the $task object (e.g. persisting it to the database) before redirecting the user to some other page (e.g. a "thank you" or "success" page).
Redirecting a user after a successful form submission prevents the user from being able to hit "refresh" and re-post the data.
Form Validation
In the previous section, you learned how a form can be submitted with valid or invalid data. In Symfony2, validation is applied to the underlying object (e.g. Task). In other words, the question isn't whether the "form" is valid, but whether or not the $task object is valid after the form has applied the submitted data to it. Calling $form->isValid() is a shortcut that asks the $task object whether or not it has valid data. Validation is done by adding a set of rules (called constraints) to a class. To see this in action, add validation constraints so that the task field cannot be empty and the dueDate field cannot be empty and must be a valid DateTime object.
Listing 1-6
That's it! If you re-submit the form with invalid data, you'll see the corresponding errors printed out with the form.
HTML5 Validation
As of HTML5, many browsers can natively enforce certain validation constraints on the client side. The most common validation is activated by rendering a required attribute on fields that are required. For browsers that support HTML5, this will result in a native browser message being displayed if the user tries to submit the form with that field blank. Generated forms take full advantage of this new feature by adding sensible HTML attributes that trigger the validation. The client-side validation, however, can be disabled by adding the novalidate attribute to the form tag or formnovalidate to the submit tag. This is especially useful when you want to test your server-side validation constraints, but are being prevented by your browser from, for example, submitting blank fields.
Validation is a very powerful feature of Symfony2 and has its own dedicated chapter.
Validation Groups
If you're not using validation groups, then you can skip this section.
If your object takes advantage of validation groups, you'll need to specify which validation group(s) your form should use:
Listing 1-7
))->add(...) ;
If you're creating form classes (a good practice), then you'll need to add the following to the getDefaultOptions() method:
public function getDefaultOptions(array $options) { return array( 'validation_groups' => array('registration') ); }
Listing 1-8
In both of these cases, only the registration validation group will be used to validate the underlying object.
Text Fields
text textarea email integer money number password percent search url
Choice Fields
choice entity country language locale timezone
Other Fields
checkbox file
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radio
Field Groups
collection repeated
Hidden Fields
hidden csrf
Base Fields
field form You can also create your own custom field types. This topic is covered in the "How to Create a Custom Form Field Type" article of the cookbook.
Each field type has a number of different options that can be passed to it. Many of these are specific to the field type and details can be found in the documentation for each type.
The label for a field can also be set in the template rendering the form, see below.
The "guessing" is activated when you omit the second argument to the add() method (or if you pass null to it). If you pass an options array as the third argument (done for dueDate above), these options are applied to the guessed field.
If your form uses a specific validation group, the field type guesser will still consider all validation constraints when guessing your field types (including constraints that are not part of the validation group(s) being used).
required: The required option can be guessed based off of the validation rules (i.e. is the field NotBlank or NotNull) or the Doctrine metadata (i.e. is the field nullable). This is very useful, as your client-side validation will automatically match your validation rules.
max_length: If the field is some sort of text field, then the max_length option can be guessed from the validation constraints (if MaxLength or Max is used) or from the Doctrine metadata (via the field's length).
These field options are only guessed if you're using Symfony to guess the field type (i.e. omit or pass null as the second argument to add()).
If you'd like to change one of the guessed values, you can override it by passing the option in the options field array:
Listing 1-12
{# src/Acme/TaskBundle/Resources/views/Default/new.html.twig #}
<form action="{{ path('task_new') }}" method="post" {{ form_enctype(form) }}> {{ form_errors(form) }} {{ form_row(form.task) }} {{ form_row(form.dueDate) }} {{ form_rest(form) }} <input type="submit" /> </form>
Let's take a look at each part: form_enctype(form) - If at least one field is a file upload field, this renders the obligatory enctype="multipart/form-data"; form_errors(form) - Renders any errors global to the whole form (field-specific errors are displayed next to each field); form_row(form.dueDate) - Renders the label, any errors, and the HTML form widget for the given field (e.g. dueDate) inside, by default, a div element; form_rest(form) - Renders any fields that have not yet been rendered. It's usually a good idea to place a call to this helper at the bottom of each form (in case you forgot to output a field or don't want to bother manually rendering hidden fields). This helper is also useful for taking advantage of the automatic CSRF Protection. The majority of the work is done by the form_row helper, which renders the label, errors and HTML form widget of each field inside a div tag by default. In the Form Theming section, you'll learn how the form_row output can be customized on many different levels.
You can access the current data of your form via form.vars.value:
Listing 1-14
{{ form.vars.value.task }}
If the auto-generated label for a field isn't quite right, you can explicitly specify it:
{{ form_label(form.task, 'Task Description') }}
Listing 1-16
Some field types have additional rendering options that can be passed to the widget. These options are documented with each type, but one common options is attr, which allows you to modify attributes on the form element. The following would add the task_field class to the rendered input text field:
{{ form_widget(form.task, { 'attr': {'class': 'task_field'} }) }}
Listing 1-17
If you need to render form fields "by hand" then you can access individual values for fields such as the id, name and label. For example to get the id:
{{ form.task.vars.id }}
Listing 1-18
To get the value used for the form field's name attribute you need to use the full_name value:
{{ form.task.vars.full_name }}
Listing 1-19
use Symfony\Component\Form\AbstractType; use Symfony\Component\Form\FormBuilder; class TaskType extends AbstractType { public function buildForm(FormBuilder $builder, array $options) { $builder->add('task'); $builder->add('dueDate', null, array('widget' => 'single_text')); } public function getName() { return 'task'; } }
This new class contains all the directions needed to create the task form (note that the getName() method should return a unique identifier for this form "type"). It can be used to quickly build a form object in the controller:
Listing 1-21
// src/Acme/TaskBundle/Controller/DefaultController.php // add this new use statement at the top of the class use Acme\TaskBundle\Form\Type\TaskType;
public function newAction() { $task = // ... $form = $this->createForm(new TaskType(), $task);
// ...
}
Placing the form logic into its own class means that the form can be easily reused elsewhere in your project. This is the best way to create forms, but the choice is ultimately up to you.
When mapping forms to objects, all fields are mapped. Any fields on the form that do not exist on the mapped object will cause an exception to be thrown.
In cases where you need extra fields in the form (for example: a "do you agree with these terms" checkbox) that will not be mapped to the underlying object, you need to set the property_path option to false:
public function buildForm(FormBuilder $builder, array $options) { $builder->add('task'); $builder->add('dueDate', null, array('property_path' => false)); }
Listing 1-23
Additionally, if there are any fields on the form that aren't included in the submitted data, those fields will be explicitly set to null.
If, for some reason, you don't have access to your original $task object, you can fetch it from the form:
$task = $form->getData();
Listing 1-25
For more information, see the Doctrine ORM chapter. The key thing to understand is that when the form is bound, the submitted data is transferred to the underlying object immediately. If you want to persist that data, you simply need to persist the object itself (which already contains the submitted data).
Embedded Forms
Often, you'll want to build a form that will include fields from many different objects. For example, a registration form may contain data belonging to a User object as well as many Address objects. Fortunately, this is easy and natural with the form component.
// ...
class Task { // ...
Now that your application has been updated to reflect the new requirements, create a form class so that a Category object can be modified by the user:
Listing 1-28
} }
The end goal is to allow the Category of a Task to be modified right inside the task form itself. To accomplish this, add a category field to the TaskType object whose type is an instance of the new CategoryType class:
public function buildForm(FormBuilder $builder, array $options) { // ... $builder->add('category', new CategoryType()); }
Listing 1-29
The fields from CategoryType can now be rendered alongside those from the TaskType class. Render the Category fields in the same way as the original Task fields:
{# ... #}
<h3>Category</h3> <div class="category"> {{ form_row(form.category.name) }} </div> {{ form_rest(form) }} {# ... #}
Listing 1-30
When the user submits the form, the submitted data for the Category fields are used to construct an instance of Category, which is then set on the category field of the Task instance. The Category instance is accessible naturally via $task->getCategory() and can be persisted to the database or used however you need.
Form Theming
Every part of how a form is rendered can be customized. You're free to change how each form "row" renders, change the markup used to render errors, or even customize how a textarea tag should be rendered. Nothing is off-limits, and different customizations can be used in different places. Symfony uses templates to render each and every part of a form, such as label tags, input tags, error messages and everything else. In Twig, each form "fragment" is represented by a Twig block. To customize any part of how a form renders, you just need to override the appropriate block. In PHP, each form "fragment" is rendered via an individual template file. To customize any part of how a form renders, you just need to override the existing template by creating a new one. To understand how this works, let's customize the form_row fragment and add a class attribute to the div element that surrounds each row. To do this, create a new template file that will store the new markup:
Listing 1-31
{# src/Acme/TaskBundle/Resources/views/Form/fields.html.twig #}
{% block field_row %} {% spaceless %} <div class="form_row"> {{ form_label(form) }} {{ form_errors(form) }} {{ form_widget(form) }} </div> {% endspaceless %} {% endblock field_row %}
The field_row form fragment is used when rendering most fields via the form_row function. To tell the form component to use your new field_row fragment defined above, add the following to the top of the template that renders the form:
Listing 1-32
{# src/Acme/TaskBundle/Resources/views/Default/new.html.twig #} {% form_theme form 'AcmeTaskBundle:Form:fields.html.twig' %} {% form_theme form 'AcmeTaskBundle:Form:fields.html.twig' 'AcmeTaskBundle:Form:fields2.html.twig' %} <form ...>
The form_theme tag (in Twig) "imports" the fragments defined in the given template and uses them when rendering the form. In other words, when the form_row function is called later in this template, it will use the field_row block from your custom theme (instead of the default field_row block that ships with Symfony). Your custom theme does not have to override all the blocks. When rendering a block which is not overridden in your custom theme, the theming engine will fall back to the global theme (defined at the bundle level). If several custom themes are provided they will be searched in the listed order before falling back to the global theme. To customize any portion of a form, you just need to override the appropriate fragment. Knowing exactly which block or file to override is the subject of the next section. For a more extensive discussion, see How to customize Form Rendering.
textarea_widget - used by form_widget to render a textarea field type; field_errors - used by form_errors to render errors for a field; Each fragment follows the same basic pattern: type_part. The type portion corresponds to the field type being rendered (e.g. textarea, checkbox, date, etc) whereas the part portion corresponds to what is being rendered (e.g. label, widget, errors, etc). By default, there are 4 possible parts of a form that can be rendered:
label widget errors row
renders the field's label renders the field's HTML representation renders the field's errors renders the field's entire row (label, widget & errors)
There are actually 3 other parts - rows, rest, and enctype - but you should rarely if ever need to worry about overriding them.
By knowing the field type (e.g. textarea) and which part you want to customize (e.g. widget), you can construct the fragment name that needs to be overridden (e.g. textarea_widget).
Twig
To automatically include the customized blocks from the fields.html.twig template created earlier in all templates, modify your application configuration file:
# app/config/config.yml
twig: form:
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Listing 1-33
Any blocks inside the fields.html.twig template are now used globally to define form output.
{% extends '::base.html.twig' %}
{# import "_self" as the form theme #} {% form_theme form _self %} {# make the form fragment customization #} {% block field_row %} {# custom field row output #} {% endblock field_row %}
{% block content %} {# ... #} {{ form_row(form.task) }} {% endblock %}
The {% form_theme form _self %} tag allows form blocks to be customized directly inside the template that will use those customizations. Use this method to quickly make form output customizations that will only ever be needed in a single template.
PHP
To automatically include the customized templates from the Acme/TaskBundle/Resources/views/Form directory created earlier in all templates, modify your application configuration file:
Listing 1-35
# app/config/config.yml
framework: templating: form: resources: - 'AcmeTaskBundle:Form' # ...
Any fragments inside the Acme/TaskBundle/Resources/views/Form directory are now used globally to define form output.
CSRF Protection
CSRF - or Cross-site request forgery81 - is a method by which a malicious user attempts to make your legitimate users unknowingly submit data that they don't intend to submit. Fortunately, CSRF attacks can be prevented by using a CSRF token inside your forms.
81. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery
The good news is that, by default, Symfony embeds and validates CSRF tokens automatically for you. This means that you can take advantage of the CSRF protection without doing anything. In fact, every form in this chapter has taken advantage of the CSRF protection! CSRF protection works by adding a hidden field to your form - called _token by default - that contains a value that only you and your user knows. This ensures that the user - not some other entity - is submitting the given data. Symfony automatically validates the presence and accuracy of this token. The _token field is a hidden field and will be automatically rendered if you include the form_rest() function in your template, which ensures that all un-rendered fields are output. The CSRF token can be customized on a form-by-form basis. For example:
class TaskType extends AbstractType { // ... public function getDefaultOptions(array $options) { return array( 'data_class' => 'Acme\TaskBundle\Entity\Task', 'csrf_protection' => true, 'csrf_field_name' => '_token', // a unique key to help generate the secret token 'intention' => 'task_item', ); }
Listing 1-36
// ...
}
To disable CSRF protection, set the csrf_protection option to false. Customizations can also be made globally in your project. For more information, see the form configuration reference section.
The intention option is optional but greatly enhances the security of the generated token by making it different for each form.
// data is an array with "name", "email", and "message" keys $data = $form->getData();
}
By default, a form actually assumes that you want to work with arrays of data, instead of an object. There are exactly two ways that you can change this behavior and tie the form to an object instead: 1. Pass an object when creating the form (as the first argument to createFormBuilder or the second argument to createForm); 2. Declare the data_class option on your form. If you don't do either of these, then the form will return the data as an array. In this example, since $defaultData is not an object (and no data_class option is set), $form->getData() ultimately returns an array.
You can also access POST values (in this case "name") directly through the request object, like so:
Listing 1-38
$this->get('request')->request->get('name');
Be advised, however, that in most cases using the getData() method is a better choice, since it returns the data (usually an object) after it's been transformed by the form framework.
Adding Validation
The only missing piece is validation. Usually, when you call $form->isValid(), the object is validated by reading the constraints that you applied to that class. But without a class, how can you add constraints to the data of your form? The answer is to setup the constraints yourself, and pass them into your form. The overall approach is covered a bit more in the validation chapter, but here's a short example:
Listing 1-39
// import the namespaces above your controller class use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\Email; use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\MinLength; use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\Collection;
$collectionConstraint = new Collection(array( 'name' => new MinLength(5), 'email' => new Email(array('message' => 'Invalid email address')), ));
// create a form, no default values, pass in the constraint option $form = $this->createFormBuilder(null, array( 'validation_constraint' => $collectionConstraint, ))->add('email', 'email') // ... ;
Now, when you call $form->bindRequest($request), the constraints setup here are run against your form's data. If you're using a form class, override the getDefaultOptions method to specify the option:
Listing 1-40
namespace Acme\TaskBundle\Form\Type;
class ContactType extends AbstractType { // ... public function getDefaultOptions(array $options) { $collectionConstraint = new Collection(array( 'name' => new MinLength(5), 'email' => new Email(array('message' => 'Invalid email address')), )); return array('validation_constraint' => $collectionConstraint); } }
Now, you have the flexibility to create forms - with validation - that return an array of data, instead of an object. In most cases, it's better - and certainly more robust - to bind your form to an object. But for simple forms, this is a great approach.
Final Thoughts
You now know all of the building blocks necessary to build complex and functional forms for your application. When building forms, keep in mind that the first goal of a form is to translate data from an object (Task) to an HTML form so that the user can modify that data. The second goal of a form is to take the data submitted by the user and to re-apply it to the object. There's still much more to learn about the powerful world of forms, such as how to handle file uploads with Doctrine or how to create a form where a dynamic number of sub-forms can be added (e.g. a todo list where you can keep adding more fields via Javascript before submitting). See the cookbook for these topics. Also, be sure to lean on the field type reference documentation, which includes examples of how to use each field type and its options.
Chapter 1
Security
Security is a two-step process whose goal is to prevent a user from accessing a resource that he/she should not have access to. In the first step of the process, the security system identifies who the user is by requiring the user to submit some sort of identification. This is called authentication, and it means that the system is trying to find out who you are. Once the system knows who you are, the next step is to determine if you should have access to a given resource. This part of the process is called authorization, and it means that the system is checking to see if you have privileges to perform a certain action.
Since the best way to learn is to see an example, let's dive right in.
Symfony's security component82 is available as a standalone PHP library for use inside any PHP project.
A standard Symfony distribution separates the security configuration into a separate file (e.g. app/ config/security.yml). If you don't have a separate security file, you can put the configuration directly into your main config file (e.g. app/config/config.yml).
The end result of this configuration is a fully-functional security system that looks like the following: There are two users in the system (ryan and admin); Users authenticate themselves via the basic HTTP authentication prompt; Any URL matching /admin/* is secured, and only the admin user can access it; All URLs not matching /admin/* are accessible by all users (and the user is never prompted to login).
Let's look briefly at how security works and how each part of the configuration comes into play.
Firewalls (Authentication)
When a user makes a request to a URL that's protected by a firewall, the security system is activated. The job of the firewall is to determine whether or not the user needs to be authenticated, and if he does, to send a response back to the user initiating the authentication process.
82. https://github.com/symfony/Security
A firewall is activated when the URL of an incoming request matches the configured firewall's regular expression pattern config value. In this example, the pattern (^/) will match every incoming request. The fact that the firewall is activated does not mean, however, that the HTTP authentication username and password box is displayed for every URL. For example, any user can access /foo without being prompted to authenticate.
This works first because the firewall allows anonymous users via the anonymous configuration parameter. In other words, the firewall doesn't require the user to fully authenticate immediately. And because no special role is needed to access /foo (under the access_control section), the request can be fulfilled without ever asking the user to authenticate. If you remove the anonymous key, the firewall will always make a user fully authenticate immediately.
Like before, when the user originally makes the request, the firewall doesn't ask for any identification. However, as soon as the access control layer denies the user access (because the anonymous user doesn't have the ROLE_ADMIN role), the firewall jumps into action and initiates the authentication process. The authentication process depends on the authentication mechanism you're using. For example, if you're using the form login authentication method, the user will be redirected to the login page. If you're using HTTP authentication, the user will be sent an HTTP 401 response so that the user sees the username and password box. The user now has the opportunity to submit its credentials back to the application. If the credentials are valid, the original request can be re-tried.
In this example, the user ryan successfully authenticates with the firewall. But since ryan doesn't have the ROLE_ADMIN role, he's still denied access to /admin/foo. Ultimately, this means that the user will see some sort of message indicating that access has been denied.
When Symfony denies the user access, the user sees an error screen and receives a 403 HTTP status code (Forbidden). You can customize the access denied error screen by following the directions in the Error Pages cookbook entry to customize the 403 error page.
Finally, if the admin user requests /admin/foo, a similar process takes place, except now, after being authenticated, the access control layer will let the request pass through:
The request flow when a user requests a protected resource is straightforward, but incredibly flexible. As you'll see later, authentication can be handled in any number of ways, including via a form login, X.509 certificate, or by authenticating the user via Twitter. Regardless of the authentication method, the request flow is always the same: 1. A user accesses a protected resource; 2. The application redirects the user to the login form; 3. The user submits its credentials (e.g. username/password); 4. The firewall authenticates the user; 5. The authenticated user re-tries the original request.
The exact process actually depends a little bit on which authentication mechanism you're using. For example, when using form login, the user submits its credentials to one URL that processes the form (e.g. /login_check) and then is redirected back to the originally requested URL (e.g. /admin/ foo). But with HTTP authentication, the user submits its credentials directly to the original URL (e.g. /admin/foo) and then the page is returned to the user in that same request (i.e. no redirect). These types of idiosyncrasies shouldn't cause you any problems, but they're good to keep in mind.
You'll also learn later how anything can be secured in Symfony2, including specific controllers, objects, or even PHP methods.
In this section, you'll enhance this process by allowing the user to authenticate via a traditional HTML login form. First, enable form login under your firewall:
Listing 1-2
# app/config/security.yml security: firewalls: secured_area: pattern: ^/ anonymous: ~ form_login: login_path: /login check_path: /login_check
If you don't need to customize your login_path or check_path values (the values used here are the default values), you can shorten your configuration:
Listing 1-3
form_login: ~
Now, when the security system initiates the authentication process, it will redirect the user to the login form (/login by default). Implementing this login form visually is your job. First, create two routes: one that will display the login form (i.e. /login) and one that will handle the login form submission (i.e. /login_check):
Listing 1-4
# app/config/routing.yml login: pattern: /login defaults: { _controller: AcmeSecurityBundle:Security:login } login_check: pattern: /login_check
You will not need to implement a controller for the /login_check URL as the firewall will automatically catch and process any form submitted to this URL. It's optional, but helpful, to create a route so that you can use it to generate the form submission URL in the login template below.
Notice that the name of the login route isn't important. What's important is that the URL of the route (/login) matches the login_path config value, as that's where the security system will redirect users that need to login. Next, create the controller that will display the login form:
Listing 1-5
if ($request->attributes->has(SecurityContext::AUTHENTICATION_ERROR)) { $error = $request->attributes->get(SecurityContext::AUTHENTICATION_ERROR); } else { $error = $session->get(SecurityContext::AUTHENTICATION_ERROR); $session->remove(SecurityContext::AUTHENTICATION_ERROR); } return $this->render('AcmeSecurityBundle:Security:login.html.twig', array( // last username entered by the user 'last_username' => $session->get(SecurityContext::LAST_USERNAME), 'error' => $error, )); } }
Don't let this controller confuse you. As you'll see in a moment, when the user submits the form, the security system automatically handles the form submission for you. If the user had submitted an invalid username or password, this controller reads the form submission error from the security system so that it can be displayed back to the user. In other words, your job is to display the login form and any login errors that may have occurred, but the security system itself takes care of checking the submitted username and password and authenticating the user. Finally, create the corresponding template:
{# src/Acme/SecurityBundle/Resources/views/Security/login.html.twig #} {% if error %} <div>{{ error.message }}</div> {% endif %}
<form action="{{ path('login_check') }}" method="post"> <label for="username">Username:</label> <input type="text" id="username" name="_username" value="{{ last_username }}" /> <label for="password">Password:</label> <input type="password" id="password" name="_password" />
Listing 1-6
{# If you want to control the URL the user is redirected to on success (more details below) <input type="hidden" name="_target_path" value="/account" /> #}
<button type="submit">login</button> </form>
The error variable passed into the template is an instance of AuthenticationException83. It may contain more information - or even sensitive information - about the authentication failure, so use it wisely!
The form has very few requirements. First, by submitting the form to /login_check (via the login_check route), the security system will intercept the form submission and process the form for you automatically. Second, the security system expects the submitted fields to be called _username and _password (these field names can be configured).
83. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/Exception/AuthenticationException.html
And that's it! When you submit the form, the security system will automatically check the user's credentials and either authenticate the user or send the user back to the login form where the error can be displayed. Let's review the whole process: 1. The user tries to access a resource that is protected; 2. The firewall initiates the authentication process by redirecting the user to the login form (/login); 3. The /login page renders login form via the route and controller created in this example; 4. The user submits the login form to /login_check; 5. The security system intercepts the request, checks the user's submitted credentials, authenticates the user if they are correct, and sends the user back to the login form if they are not. By default, if the submitted credentials are correct, the user will be redirected to the original page that was requested (e.g. /admin/foo). If the user originally went straight to the login page, he'll be redirected to the homepage. This can be highly customized, allowing you to, for example, redirect the user to a specific URL. For more details on this and how to customize the form login process in general, see How to customize your Form Login.
Removing the access control on the /login URL fixes the problem:
access_control: - { path: ^/login, roles: IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY } - { path: ^/, roles: ROLE_ADMIN }
Listing 1-8
Also, if your firewall does not allow for anonymous users, you'll need to create a special firewall that allows anonymous users for the login page:
firewalls: login_firewall: pattern: anonymous: secured_area: pattern: form_login:
Listing 1-9
^/login$ ~ ^/ ~
3. Be sure ``/login_check`` is behind a firewall Next, make sure that your check_path URL (e.g. /login_check) is behind the firewall you're using for your form login (in this example, the single firewall matches all URLs, including /login_check). If /login_check doesn't match any firewall, you'll receive a Unable to find the controller for path "/login_check" exception. 4. Multiple firewalls don't share security context If you're using multiple firewalls and you authenticate against one firewall, you will not be authenticated against any other firewalls automatically. Different firewalls are like different security systems. That's why, for most applications, having one main firewall is enough.
Authorization
The first step in security is always authentication: the process of verifying who the user is. With Symfony, authentication can be done in any way - via a form login, basic HTTP Authentication, or even via Facebook. Once the user has been authenticated, authorization begins. Authorization provides a standard and powerful way to decide if a user can access any resource (a URL, a model object, a method call, ...). This works by assigning specific roles to each user, and then requiring different roles for different resources. The process of authorization has two different sides: 1. The user has a specific set of roles;
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2. A resource requires a specific role in order to be accessed. In this section, you'll focus on how to secure different resources (e.g. URLs, method calls, etc) with different roles. Later, you'll learn more about how roles are created and assigned to users.
# app/config/security.yml security: # ... access_control: - { path: ^/admin/users, roles: ROLE_SUPER_ADMIN } - { path: ^/admin, roles: ROLE_ADMIN }
Prepending the path with ^ ensures that only URLs beginning with the pattern are matched. For example, a path of simply /admin (without the ^) would correctly match /admin/foo but would also match URLs like /foo/admin.
For each incoming request, Symfony2 tries to find a matching access control rule (the first one wins). If the user isn't authenticated yet, the authentication process is initiated (i.e. the user is given a chance to login). However, if the user is authenticated but doesn't have the required role, an AccessDeniedException84 exception is thrown, which you can handle and turn into a nice "access denied" error page for the user. See How to customize Error Pages for more information. Since Symfony uses the first access control rule it matches, a URL like /admin/users/new will match the first rule and require only the ROLE_SUPER_ADMIN role. Any URL like /admin/blog will match the second rule and require ROLE_ADMIN.
Securing by IP
Certain situations may arise when you may need to restrict access to a given route based on IP. This is particularly relevant in the case of Edge Side Includes (ESI), for example, which utilize a route named "_internal". When ESI is used, the _internal route is required by the gateway cache to enable different caching options for subsections within a given page. This route comes with the ^/_internal prefix by default in the standard edition (assuming you've uncommented those lines from the routing file). Here is an example of how you might secure this route from outside access:
Listing 1-11
# app/config/security.yml security: # ... access_control: - { path: ^/_internal, roles: IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY, ip: 127.0.0.1 }
Securing by Channel
Much like securing based on IP, requiring the use of SSL is as simple as adding a new access_control entry:
84. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/Exception/AccessDeniedException.html
# app/config/security.yml security: # ... access_control: - { path: ^/cart/checkout, roles: IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY, requires_channel: https }
Listing 1-12
Securing a Controller
Protecting your application based on URL patterns is easy, but may not be fine-grained enough in certain cases. When necessary, you can easily force authorization from inside a controller:
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\AccessDeniedException; // ... public function helloAction($name) { if (false === $this->get('security.context')->isGranted('ROLE_ADMIN')) { throw new AccessDeniedException(); }
Listing 1-13
// ...
}
You can also choose to install and use the optional JMSSecurityExtraBundle, which can secure your controller using annotations:
use JMS\SecurityExtraBundle\Annotation\Secure;
Listing 1-14
For more information, see the JMSSecurityExtraBundle85 documentation. If you're using Symfony's Standard Distribution, this bundle is available by default. If not, you can easily download and install it.
85. https://github.com/schmittjoh/JMSSecurityExtraBundle
The security component comes with an optional access control list (ACL) system that you can use when you need to control access to individual instances of an object in your system. Without ACL, you can secure your system so that only certain users can edit blog comments in general. But with ACL, you can restrict or allow access on a comment-by-comment basis. For more information, see the cookbook article: Access Control Lists (ACLs).
Users
In the previous sections, you learned how you can protect different resources by requiring a set of roles for a resource. In this section we'll explore the other side of authorization: users.
# app/config/security.yml security: # ... providers: default_provider: users: ryan: { password: ryanpass, roles: 'ROLE_USER' } admin: { password: kitten, roles: 'ROLE_ADMIN' }
This user provider is called the "in-memory" user provider, since the users aren't stored anywhere in a database. The actual user object is provided by Symfony (User86).
Any user provider can load users directly from configuration by specifying the users configuration parameter and listing the users beneath it.
If your username is completely numeric (e.g. 77) or contains a dash (e.g. user-name), you should use that alternative syntax when specifying users in YAML:
Listing 1-16
users: - { name: 77, password: pass, roles: 'ROLE_USER' } - { name: user-name, password: pass, roles: 'ROLE_USER' }
86. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/User.html
For smaller sites, this method is quick and easy to setup. For more complex systems, you'll want to load your users from the database.
/** * @ORM\Entity */ class User implements UserInterface { /** * @ORM\Column(type="string", length=255) */ protected $username; // ...
}
As far as the security system is concerned, the only requirement for your custom user class is that it implements the UserInterface87 interface. This means that your concept of a "user" can be anything, as long as it implements this interface.
The user object will be serialized and saved in the session during requests, therefore it is recommended that you implement the Serializable interface88 in your user object. This is especially important if your User class has a parent class with private properties.
Next, configure an entity user provider, and point it to your User class:
# app/config/security.yml security: providers: main: entity: { class: Acme\UserBundle\Entity\User, property: username }
Listing 1-18
With the introduction of this new provider, the authentication system will attempt to load a User object from the database by using the username field of that class.
This example is just meant to show you the basic idea behind the entity provider. For a full working example, see How to load Security Users from the Database (the Entity Provider).
For more information on creating your own custom provider (e.g. if you needed to load users via a web service), see How to create a custom User Provider.
87. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/UserInterface.html 88. http://php.net/manual/en/class.serializable.php
# app/config/security.yml security: # ... providers: in_memory: users: ryan: { password: bb87a29949f3a1ee0559f8a57357487151281386, roles: 'ROLE_USER' } admin: { password: 74913f5cd5f61ec0bcfdb775414c2fb3d161b620, roles: 'ROLE_ADMIN' }
encoders: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User: algorithm: sha1 iterations: 1 encode_as_base64: false
By setting the iterations to 1 and the encode_as_base64 to false, the password is simply run through the sha1 algorithm one time and without any extra encoding. You can now calculate the hashed password either programmatically (e.g. hash('sha1', 'ryanpass')) or via some online tool like functionsonline.com89 If you're creating your users dynamically (and storing them in a database), you can use even tougher hashing algorithms and then rely on an actual password encoder object to help you encode passwords. For example, suppose your User object is Acme\UserBundle\Entity\User (like in the above example). First, configure the encoder for that user:
Listing 1-20
In this case, you're using the stronger sha512 algorithm. Also, since you've simply specified the algorithm (sha512) as a string, the system will default to hashing your password 5000 times in a row and then encoding it as base64. In other words, the password has been greatly obfuscated so that the hashed password can't be decoded (i.e. you can't determine the password from the hashed password). If you have some sort of registration form for users, you'll need to be able to determine the hashed password so that you can set it on your user. No matter what algorithm you configure for your user object, the hashed password can always be determined in the following way from a controller:
Listing 1-21
$factory = $this->get('security.encoder_factory'); $user = new Acme\UserBundle\Entity\User(); $encoder = $factory->getEncoder($user); $password = $encoder->encodePassword('ryanpass', $user->getSalt()); $user->setPassword($password);
89. http://www.functions-online.com/sha1.html
Anonymous users are technically authenticated, meaning that the isAuthenticated() method of an anonymous user object will return true. To check if your user is actually authenticated, check for the IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY role.
In a Twig Template this object can be accessed via the app.user key, which calls the GlobalVariables::getUser()90 method:
<p>Username: {{ app.user.username }}</p>
Listing 1-23
Now, all authentication mechanisms will use the chain_provider, since it's the first specified. The chain_provider will, in turn, try to load the user from both the in_memory and user_db providers.
If you have no reasons to separate your in_memory users from your user_db users, you can accomplish this even more easily by combining the two sources into a single provider:
# app/config/security.yml security: providers: main_provider: users: foo: { password: test } entity: { class: Acme\UserBundle\Entity\User, property: username }
Listing 1-25
You can also configure the firewall or individual authentication mechanisms to use a specific provider. Again, unless a provider is specified explicitly, the first provider is always used:
90. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle/Templating/GlobalVariables.html#getUser()
Listing 1-26
# app/config/security.yml security: firewalls: secured_area: # ... provider: user_db http_basic: realm: "Secured Demo Area" provider: in_memory form_login: ~
In this example, if a user tries to login via HTTP authentication, the authentication system will use the in_memory user provider. But if the user tries to login via the form login, the user_db provider will be used (since it's the default for the firewall as a whole). For more information about user provider and firewall configuration, see the Security Configuration Reference.
Roles
The idea of a "role" is key to the authorization process. Each user is assigned a set of roles and then each resource requires one or more roles. If the user has the required roles, access is granted. Otherwise access is denied. Roles are pretty simple, and are basically strings that you can invent and use as needed (though roles are objects internally). For example, if you need to start limiting access to the blog admin section of your website, you could protect that section using a ROLE_BLOG_ADMIN role. This role doesn't need to be defined anywhere - you can just start using it.
All roles must begin with the ROLE_ prefix to be managed by Symfony2. If you define your own roles with a dedicated Role class (more advanced), don't use the ROLE_ prefix.
Hierarchical Roles
Instead of associating many roles to users, you can define role inheritance rules by creating a role hierarchy:
Listing 1-27
In the above configuration, users with ROLE_ADMIN role will also have the ROLE_USER role. The ROLE_SUPER_ADMIN role has ROLE_ADMIN, ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH and ROLE_USER (inherited from ROLE_ADMIN).
Logging Out
Usually, you'll also want your users to be able to log out. Fortunately, the firewall can handle this automatically for you when you activate the logout config parameter:
Listing 1-28
# app/config/security.yml security: firewalls: secured_area: # ... logout: path: /logout target: / # ...
Once this is configured under your firewall, sending a user to /logout (or whatever you configure the path to be), will un-authenticate the current user. The user will then be sent to the homepage (the value defined by the target parameter). Both the path and target config parameters default to what's specified here. In other words, unless you need to customize them, you can omit them entirely and shorten your configuration:
logout: ~
Listing 1-29
Note that you will not need to implement a controller for the /logout URL as the firewall takes care of everything. You may, however, want to create a route so that you can use it to generate the URL:
# app/config/routing.yml logout: pattern: /logout
Listing 1-30
Once the user has been logged out, he will be redirected to whatever path is defined by the target parameter above (e.g. the homepage). For more information on configuring the logout, see the Security Configuration Reference.
If you use this function and are not at a URL where there is a firewall active, an exception will be thrown. Again, it's almost always a good idea to have a main firewall that covers all URLs (as has been shown in this chapter).
A firewall must be active or an exception will be thrown when the isGranted method is called. See the note above about templates for more details.
Impersonating a User
Sometimes, it's useful to be able to switch from one user to another without having to logout and login again (for instance when you are debugging or trying to understand a bug a user sees that you can't reproduce). This can be easily done by activating the switch_user firewall listener:
Listing 1-33
To switch to another user, just add a query string with the _switch_user parameter and the username as the value to the current URL: http://example.com/somewhere?_switch_user=thomas91 To switch back to the original user, use the special _exit username: http://example.com/somewhere?_switch_user=_exit92 Of course, this feature needs to be made available to a small group of users. By default, access is restricted to users having the ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH role. The name of this role can be modified via the role setting. For extra security, you can also change the query parameter name via the parameter setting:
Listing 1-34
# app/config/security.yml security: firewalls: main: // ... switch_user: { role: ROLE_ADMIN, parameter: _want_to_be_this_user }
Stateless Authentication
By default, Symfony2 relies on a cookie (the Session) to persist the security context of the user. But if you use certificates or HTTP authentication for instance, persistence is not needed as credentials are available for each request. In that case, and if you don't need to store anything else between requests, you can activate the stateless authentication (which means that no cookie will be ever created by Symfony2):
Listing 1-35
If you use a form login, Symfony2 will create a cookie even if you set stateless to true.
Final Words
Security can be a deep and complex issue to solve correctly in your application. Fortunately, Symfony's security component follows a well-proven security model based around authentication and authorization. Authentication, which always happens first, is handled by a firewall whose job is to determine the identity of the user through several different methods (e.g. HTTP authentication, login form, etc). In the cookbook, you'll find examples of other methods for handling authentication, including how to implement a "remember me" cookie functionality. Once a user is authenticated, the authorization layer can determine whether or not the user should have access to a specific resource. Most commonly, roles are applied to URLs, classes or methods and if the current user doesn't have that role, access is denied. The authorization layer, however, is much deeper, and follows a system of "voting" so that multiple parties can determine if the current user should have access to a given resource. Find out more about this and other topics in the cookbook.
Chapter 1
HTTP Cache
The nature of rich web applications means that they're dynamic. No matter how efficient your application, each request will always contain more overhead than serving a static file. And for most Web applications, that's fine. Symfony2 is lightning fast, and unless you're doing some serious heavy-lifting, each request will come back quickly without putting too much stress on your server. But as your site grows, that overhead can become a problem. The processing that's normally performed on every request should be done only once. This is exactly what caching aims to accomplish.
Step 4: Edge Side Includes (ESI) allow HTTP cache to be used to cache page fragments (even nested fragments) independently. With ESI, you can even cache an entire page for 60 minutes, but an embedded sidebar for only 5 minutes. Since caching with HTTP isn't unique to Symfony, many articles already exist on the topic. If you're new to HTTP caching, we highly recommend Ryan Tomayko's article Things Caches Do93. Another in-depth resource is Mark Nottingham's Cache Tutorial94.
Types of Caches
But a gateway cache isn't the only type of cache. In fact, the HTTP cache headers sent by your application are consumed and interpreted by up to three different types of caches: Browser caches: Every browser comes with its own local cache that is mainly useful for when you hit "back" or for images and other assets. The browser cache is a private cache as cached resources aren't shared with anyone else. Proxy caches: A proxy is a shared cache as many people can be behind a single one. It's usually installed by large corporations and ISPs to reduce latency and network traffic. Gateway caches: Like a proxy, it's also a shared cache but on the server side. Installed by network administrators, it makes websites more scalable, reliable and performant.
Gateway caches are sometimes referred to as reverse proxy caches, surrogate caches, or even HTTP accelerators.
The significance of private versus shared caches will become more obvious as we talk about caching responses containing content that is specific to exactly one user (e.g. account information).
Each response from your application will likely go through one or both of the first two cache types. These caches are outside of your control but follow the HTTP cache directions set in the response.
// web/app.php
require_once __DIR__.'/../app/bootstrap.php.cache'; require_once __DIR__.'/../app/AppKernel.php'; require_once __DIR__.'/../app/AppCache.php'; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; $kernel = new AppKernel('prod', false); $kernel->loadClassCache(); // wrap the default AppKernel with the AppCache one $kernel = new AppCache($kernel); $kernel->handle(Request::createFromGlobals())->send();
The caching kernel will immediately act as a reverse proxy - caching responses from your application and returning them to the client.
The cache kernel has a special getLog() method that returns a string representation of what happened in the cache layer. In the development environment, use it to debug and validate your cache strategy:
Listing 1-2
error_log($kernel->getLog());
The AppCache object has a sensible default configuration, but it can be finely tuned via a set of options you can set by overriding the getOptions() method:
Listing 1-3
// app/AppCache.php
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\HttpCache\HttpCache; class AppCache extends HttpCache { protected function getOptions() { return array( 'debug' 'default_ttl' 'private_headers' 'allow_reload' 'allow_revalidate' 'stale_while_revalidate' 'stale_if_error' ); } }
Unless overridden in getOptions(), the debug option will be set to automatically be the debug value of the wrapped AppKernel.
Here is a list of the main options: default_ttl: The number of seconds that a cache entry should be considered fresh when no explicit freshness information is provided in a response. Explicit Cache-Control or Expires headers override this value (default: 0); private_headers: Set of request headers that trigger "private" Cache-Control behavior on responses that don't explicitly state whether the response is public or private via a CacheControl directive. (default: Authorization and Cookie); allow_reload: Specifies whether the client can force a cache reload by including a CacheControl "no-cache" directive in the request. Set it to true for compliance with RFC 2616 (default: false); allow_revalidate: Specifies whether the client can force a cache revalidate by including a Cache-Control "max-age=0" directive in the request. Set it to true for compliance with RFC 2616 (default: false); stale_while_revalidate: Specifies the default number of seconds (the granularity is the second as the Response TTL precision is a second) during which the cache can immediately return a stale response while it revalidates it in the background (default: 2); this setting is overridden by the stale-while-revalidate HTTP Cache-Control extension (see RFC 5861); stale_if_error: Specifies the default number of seconds (the granularity is the second) during which the cache can serve a stale response when an error is encountered (default: 60). This setting is overridden by the stale-if-error HTTP Cache-Control extension (see RFC 5861). If debug is true, Symfony2 automatically adds a X-Symfony-Cache header to the response containing useful information about cache hits and misses.
The performance of the Symfony2 reverse proxy is independent of the complexity of the application. That's because the application kernel is only booted when the request needs to be forwarded to it.
Keep in mind that "HTTP" is nothing more than the language (a simple text language) that web clients (e.g. browsers) and web servers use to communicate with each other. When we talk about HTTP caching, we're talking about the part of that language that allows clients and servers to exchange information related to caching.
HTTP specifies four response cache headers that we're concerned with:
Cache-Control Expires ETag Last-Modified
The most important and versatile header is the Cache-Control header, which is actually a collection of various cache information.
Each of the headers will be explained in full detail in the HTTP Expiration and Validation section.
// mark the response as either public or private $response->setPublic(); $response->setPrivate(); // set the private or shared max age $response->setMaxAge(600); $response->setSharedMaxAge(600); // set a custom Cache-Control directive $response->headers->addCacheControlDirective('must-revalidate', true);
Symfony conservatively defaults each response to be private. To take advantage of shared caches (like the Symfony2 reverse proxy), the response will need to be explicitly set as public.
Safe Methods
HTTP caching only works for "safe" HTTP methods (like GET and HEAD). Being safe means that you never change the application's state on the server when serving the request (you can of course log information, cache data, etc). This has two very reasonable consequences: You should never change the state of your application when responding to a GET or HEAD request. Even if you don't use a gateway cache, the presence of proxy caches mean that any GET or HEAD request may or may not actually hit your server. Don't expect PUT, POST or DELETE methods to cache. These methods are meant to be used when mutating the state of your application (e.g. deleting a blog post). Caching them would prevent certain requests from hitting and mutating your application.
Expiration
The expiration model is the more efficient and straightforward of the two caching models and should be used whenever possible. When a response is cached with an expiration, the cache will store the response and return it directly without hitting the application until it expires. The expiration model can be accomplished using one of two, nearly identical, HTTP headers: Expires or Cache-Control.
The setExpires() method automatically converts the date to the GMT timezone as required by the specification.
Note that in HTTP versions before 1.1 the origin server wasn't required to send the Date header. Consequently the cache (e.g. the browser) might need to rely onto his local clock to evaluate the Expires header making the lifetime calculation vulnerable to clock skew. Another limitation of the Expires header is that the specification states that "HTTP/1.1 servers should not send Expires dates more than one year in the future."
The Cache-Control header would take on the following format (it may have additional directives):
Cache-Control: max-age=600, s-maxage=600
Listing 1-8
Validation
When a resource needs to be updated as soon as a change is made to the underlying data, the expiration model falls short. With the expiration model, the application won't be asked to return the updated response until the cache finally becomes stale. The validation model addresses this issue. Under this model, the cache continues to store responses. The difference is that, for each request, the cache asks the application whether or not the cached response is still valid. If the cache is still valid, your application should return a 304 status code and no content. This tells the cache that it's ok to return the cached response. Under this model, you mainly save bandwidth as the representation is not sent twice to the same client (a 304 response is sent instead). But if you design your application carefully, you might be able to get the bare minimum data needed to send a 304 response and save CPU also (see below for an implementation example).
The 304 status code means "Not Modified". It's important because with this status code do not contain the actual content being requested. Instead, the response is simply a light-weight set of directions that tell cache that it should use its stored version.
Like with expiration, there are two different HTTP headers that can be used to implement the validation model: ETag and Last-Modified.
return $response; }
The Response::isNotModified() method compares the ETag sent with the Request with the one set on the Response. If the two match, the method automatically sets the Response status code to 304. This algorithm is simple enough and very generic, but you need to create the whole Response before being able to compute the ETag, which is sub-optimal. In other words, it saves on bandwidth, but not CPU cycles. In the Optimizing your Code with Validation section, we'll show how validation can be used more intelligently to determine the validity of a cache without doing so much work.
Symfony2 also supports weak ETags by passing true as the second argument to the setETag()102 method.
public function showAction($articleSlug) { // ... $articleDate = new \DateTime($article->getUpdatedAt()); $authorDate = new \DateTime($author->getUpdatedAt()); $date = $authorDate > $articleDate ? $authorDate : $articleDate; $response->setLastModified($date); $response->isNotModified($this->getRequest()); return $response; }
The Response::isNotModified() method compares the If-Modified-Since header sent by the request with the Last-Modified header set on the response. If they are equivalent, the Response will be set to a 304 status code.
The If-Modified-Since request header equals the Last-Modified header of the last response sent to the client for the particular resource. This is how the client and server communicate with each other and decide whether or not the resource has been updated since it was cached.
102. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Response.html#setETag()
// create a Response with a ETag and/or a Last-Modified header $response = new Response(); $response->setETag($article->computeETag()); $response->setLastModified($article->getPublishedAt()); // Check that the Response is not modified for the given Request if ($response->isNotModified($this->getRequest())) { // return the 304 Response immediately return $response; } else { // do more work here - like retrieving more data $comments = // ... // or render a template with the $response you've already started return $this->render( 'MyBundle:MyController:article.html.twig', array('article' => $article, 'comments' => $comments), $response );
} }
When the Response is not modified, the isNotModified() automatically sets the response status code to 304, removes the content, and removes some headers that must not be present for 304 responses (see setNotModified()103).
103. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Response.html#setNotModified()
This particular Vary header would cache different versions of each resource based on the URI and the value of the Accept-Encoding and User-Agent request header.
The Response object offers a clean interface for managing the Vary header:
Listing 1-13
// set one vary header $response->setVary('Accept-Encoding'); // set multiple vary headers $response->setVary(array('Accept-Encoding', 'User-Agent'));
The setVary() method takes a header name or an array of header names for which the response varies.
// Marks the Response stale $response->expire(); // Force the response to return a proper 304 response with no content $response->setNotModified();
Additionally, most cache-related HTTP headers can be set via the single setCache() method:
Listing 1-15
// Set cache settings in one call $response->setCache(array( 'etag' => $etag, 'last_modified' => $date, 'max_age' => 10, 's_maxage' => 10, 'public' => true, // 'private' => true, ));
Listing 1-16
<!-- Embed the content of another page here --> <esi:include src="http://..." />
More content </body> </html>
Notice from the example that each ESI tag has a fully-qualified URL. An ESI tag represents a page fragment that can be fetched via the given URL.
When a request is handled, the gateway cache fetches the entire page from its cache or requests it from the backend application. If the response contains one or more ESI tags, these are processed in the same way. In other words, the gateway cache either retrieves the included page fragment from its cache or requests the page fragment from the backend application again. When all the ESI tags have been resolved, the gateway cache merges each into the main page and sends the final content to the client. All of this happens transparently at the gateway cache level (i.e. outside of your application). As you'll see, if you choose to take advantage of ESI tags, Symfony2 makes the process of including them almost effortless.
Now, suppose we have a page that is relatively static, except for a news ticker at the bottom of the content. With ESI, we can cache the news ticker independent of the rest of the page.
public function indexAction() { $response = $this->render('MyBundle:MyController:index.html.twig'); $response->setSharedMaxAge(600); return $response; }
Listing 1-18
In this example, we've given the full-page cache a lifetime of ten minutes. Next, let's include the news ticker in the template by embedding an action. This is done via the render helper (See Embedding Controllers for more details). As the embedded content comes from another page (or controller for that matter), Symfony2 uses the standard render helper to configure ESI tags:
{% render '...:news' with {}, {'standalone': true} %}
Listing 1-19
By setting standalone to true, you tell Symfony2 that the action should be rendered as an ESI tag. You might be wondering why you would want to use a helper instead of just writing the ESI tag yourself. That's because using a helper makes your application work even if there is no gateway cache installed. Let's see how it works.
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When standalone is false (the default), Symfony2 merges the included page content within the main one before sending the response to the client. But when standalone is true, and if Symfony2 detects that it's talking to a gateway cache that supports ESI, it generates an ESI include tag. But if there is no gateway cache or if it does not support ESI, Symfony2 will just merge the included page content within the main one as it would have done were standalone set to false.
Symfony2 detects if a gateway cache supports ESI via another Akama specification that is supported out of the box by the Symfony2 reverse proxy.
The embedded action can now specify its own caching rules, entirely independent of the master page.
Listing 1-20
With ESI, the full page cache will be valid for 600 seconds, but the news component cache will only last for 60 seconds. A requirement of ESI, however, is that the embedded action be accessible via a URL so the gateway cache can fetch it independently of the rest of the page. Of course, an action can't be accessed via a URL unless it has a route that points to it. Symfony2 takes care of this via a generic route and controller. For the ESI include tag to work properly, you must define the _internal route:
Listing 1-21
Since this route allows all actions to be accessed via a URL, you might want to protect it by using the Symfony2 firewall feature (by allowing access to your reverse proxy's IP range). See the Securing by IP section of the Security Chapter for more information on how to do this.
One great advantage of this caching strategy is that you can make your application as dynamic as needed and at the same time, hit the application as little as possible.
Once you start using ESI, remember to always use the s-maxage directive instead of max-age. As the browser only ever receives the aggregated resource, it is not aware of the sub-components, and so it will obey the max-age directive and cache the entire page. And you don't want that.
The render helper supports two other useful options: alt: used as the alt attribute on the ESI tag, which allows you to specify an alternative URL to be used if the src cannot be found; ignore_errors: if set to true, an onerror attribute will be added to the ESI with a value of continue indicating that, in the event of a failure, the gateway cache will simply remove the ESI tag silently.
Cache Invalidation
"There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation and naming things." --Phil Karlton You should never need to invalidate cached data because invalidation is already taken into account natively in the HTTP cache models. If you use validation, you never need to invalidate anything by definition; and if you use expiration and need to invalidate a resource, it means that you set the expires date too far away in the future.
Since invalidation is a topic specific to each type of reverse proxy, if you don't worry about invalidation, you can switch between reverse proxies without changing anything in your application code.
Actually, all reverse proxies provide ways to purge cached data, but you should avoid them as much as possible. The most standard way is to purge the cache for a given URL by requesting it with the special PURGE HTTP method. Here is how you can configure the Symfony2 reverse proxy to support the PURGE HTTP method:
// app/AppCache.php class AppCache extends Cache { protected function invalidate(Request $request) { if ('PURGE' !== $request->getMethod()) { return parent::invalidate($request); }
$response = new Response(); if (!$this->getStore()->purge($request->getUri())) { $response->setStatusCode(404, 'Not purged'); } else { $response->setStatusCode(200, 'Purged'); } return $response; } }
Listing 1-22
You must protect the PURGE HTTP method somehow to avoid random people purging your cached data.
Summary
Symfony2 was designed to follow the proven rules of the road: HTTP. Caching is no exception. Mastering the Symfony2 cache system means becoming familiar with the HTTP cache models and using them effectively. This means that, instead of relying only on Symfony2 documentation and code examples, you have access to a world of knowledge related to HTTP caching and gateway caches such as Varnish.
Chapter 1
Translations
The term "internationalization" (often abbreviated i18n105) refers to the process of abstracting strings and other locale-specific pieces out of your application and into a layer where they can be translated and converted based on the user's locale (i.e. language and country). For text, this means wrapping each with a function capable of translating the text (or "message") into the language of the user:
// text will *always* print out in English echo 'Hello World'; // text can be translated into the end-user's language or default to English echo $translator->trans('Hello World');
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The term locale refers roughly to the user's language and country. It can be any string that your application then uses to manage translations and other format differences (e.g. currency format). We recommended the ISO639-1 language code, an underscore (_), then the ISO3166 country code (e.g. fr_FR for French/France).
In this chapter, we'll learn how to prepare an application to support multiple locales and then how to create translations for multiple locales. Overall, the process has several common steps: 1. Enable and configure Symfony's Translation component; 2. Abstract strings (i.e. "messages") by wrapping them in calls to the Translator; 3. Create translation resources for each supported locale that translate each message in the application; 4. Determine, set and manage the user's locale in the session.
Configuration
Translations are handled by a Translator service that uses the user's locale to lookup and return translated messages. Before using it, enable the Translator in your configuration:
Listing 1-2
105. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internationalization_and_localization
The fallback option defines the fallback locale when a translation does not exist in the user's locale.
When a translation does not exist for a locale, the translator first tries to find the translation for the language (fr if the locale is fr_FR for instance). If this also fails, it looks for a translation using the fallback locale.
The locale used in translations is the one stored in the user session.
Basic Translation
Translation of text is done through the translator service (Translator106). To translate a block of text (called a message), use the trans()107 method. Suppose, for example, that we're translating a simple message from inside a controller:
Listing 1-3
When this code is executed, Symfony2 will attempt to translate the message "Symfony2 is great" based on the locale of the user. For this to work, we need to tell Symfony2 how to translate the message via a "translation resource", which is a collection of message translations for a given locale. This "dictionary" of translations can be created in several different formats, XLIFF being the recommended format:
Listing 1-4
<!-- messages.fr.xliff --> <?xml version="1.0"?> <xliff version="1.2" xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:xliff:document:1.2"> <file source-language="en" datatype="plaintext" original="file.ext"> <body> <trans-unit id="1"> <source>Symfony2 is great</source> <target>J'aime Symfony2</target> </trans-unit> </body> </file> </xliff>
Now, if the language of the user's locale is French (e.g. fr_FR or fr_BE), the message will be translated into J'aime Symfony2.
they don't already exist. The end result is a large "dictionary" of translations. See Message Catalogues for more details; If the message is located in the catalog, the translation is returned. If not, the translator returns the original message. When using the trans() method, Symfony2 looks for the exact string inside the appropriate message catalog and returns it (if it exists).
Message Placeholders
Sometimes, a message containing a variable needs to be translated:
public function indexAction($name) { $t = $this->get('translator')->trans('Hello '.$name); return new Response($t); }
Listing 1-5
However, creating a translation for this string is impossible since the translator will try to look up the exact message, including the variable portions (e.g. "Hello Ryan" or "Hello Fabien"). Instead of writing a translation for every possible iteration of the $name variable, we can replace the variable with a "placeholder":
public function indexAction($name) { $t = $this->get('translator')->trans('Hello %name%', array('%name%' => $name)); new Response($t); }
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Symfony2 will now look for a translation of the raw message (Hello %name%) and then replace the placeholders with their values. Creating a translation is done just as before:
<!-- messages.fr.xliff --> <?xml version="1.0"?> <xliff version="1.2" xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:xliff:document:1.2"> <file source-language="en" datatype="plaintext" original="file.ext"> <body> <trans-unit id="1"> <source>Hello %name%</source> <target>Bonjour %name%</target> </trans-unit> </body> </file> </xliff>
Listing 1-7
The placeholders can take on any form as the full message is reconstructed using the PHP strtr function108. However, the %var% notation is required when translating in Twig templates, and is overall a sensible convention to follow.
As we've seen, creating a translation is a two-step process: 1. Abstract the message that needs to be translated by processing it through the Translator. 2. Create a translation for the message in each locale that you choose to support.
108. http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.strtr.php
The second step is done by creating message catalogues that define the translations for any number of different locales.
Message Catalogues
When a message is translated, Symfony2 compiles a message catalogue for the user's locale and looks in it for a translation of the message. A message catalogue is like a dictionary of translations for a specific locale. For example, the catalogue for the fr_FR locale might contain the following translation: Symfony2 is Great => J'aime Symfony2 It's the responsibility of the developer (or translator) of an internationalized application to create these translations. Translations are stored on the filesystem and discovered by Symfony, thanks to some conventions.
Each time you create a new translation resource (or install a bundle that includes a translation resource), be sure to clear your cache so that Symfony can discover the new translation resource:
Listing 1-8
109. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Translation/Loader/LoaderInterface.html
Creating Translations
The act of creating translation files is an important part of "localization" (often abbreviated L10n110). Translation files consist of a series of id-translation pairs for the given domain and locale. The id is the identifier for the individual translation, and can be the message in the main locale (e.g. "Symfony is great") of your application or a unique identifier (e.g. "symfony2.great" - see the sidebar below):
<!-- src/Acme/DemoBundle/Resources/translations/messages.fr.xliff --> <?xml version="1.0"?> <xliff version="1.2" xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:xliff:document:1.2"> <file source-language="en" datatype="plaintext" original="file.ext"> <body> <trans-unit id="1"> <source>Symfony2 is great</source> <target>J'aime Symfony2</target> </trans-unit> <trans-unit id="2"> <source>symfony2.great</source> <target>J'aime Symfony2</target> </trans-unit> </body> </file> </xliff>
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Symfony2 will discover these files and use them when translating either "Symfony2 is great" or "symfony2.great" into a French language locale (e.g. fr_FR or fr_BE).
110. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internationalization_and_localization
In the first method, messages are written in the language of the default locale (English in this case). That message is then used as the "id" when creating translations. In the second method, messages are actually "keywords" that convey the idea of the message. The keyword message is then used as the "id" for any translations. In this case, translations must be made for the default locale (i.e. to translate symfony2.great to Symfony2 is great). The second method is handy because the message key won't need to be changed in every translation file if we decide that the message should actually read "Symfony2 is really great" in the default locale. The choice of which method to use is entirely up to you, but the "keyword" format is often recommended. Additionally, the php and yaml file formats support nested ids to avoid repeating yourself if you use keywords instead of real text for your ids:
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symfony2: is: great: Symfony2 is great amazing: Symfony2 is amazing has: bundles: Symfony2 has bundles user: login: Login
The multiple levels are flattened into single id/translation pairs by adding a dot (.) between every level, therefore the above examples are equivalent to the following:
Listing 1-12
symfony2.is.great: Symfony2 is great symfony2.is.amazing: Symfony2 is amazing symfony2.has.bundles: Symfony2 has bundles user.login: Login
Symfony2 will now look for the message in the admin domain of the user's locale.
When using the special _locale parameter in a route, the matched locale will automatically be set on the user's session. In other words, if a user visits the URI /fr/contact, the locale fr will automatically be set as the locale for the user's session. You can now use the user's locale to create routes to other translated pages in your application.
Pluralization
Message pluralization is a tough topic as the rules can be quite complex. For instance, here is the mathematic representation of the Russian pluralization rules:
(($number % 10 == 1) && ($number % 100 != 11)) ? 0 : ((($number % 10 >= 2) && ($number % 10 <= 4) && (($number % 100 < 10) || ($number % 100 >= 20))) ? 1 : 2);
Listing 1-17
As you can see, in Russian, you can have three different plural forms, each given an index of 0, 1 or 2. For each form, the plural is different, and so the translation is also different.
When a translation has different forms due to pluralization, you can provide all the forms as a string separated by a pipe (|):
Listing 1-18
$t = $this->get('translator')->transChoice( 'There is one apple|There are %count% apples', 10, array('%count%' => 10) );
The second argument (10 in this example), is the number of objects being described and is used to determine which translation to use and also to populate the %count% placeholder. Based on the given number, the translator chooses the right plural form. In English, most words have a singular form when there is exactly one object and a plural form for all other numbers (0, 2, 3...). So, if count is 1, the translator will use the first string (There is one apple) as the translation. Otherwise it will use There are %count% apples. Here is the French translation:
Listing 1-20
Even if the string looks similar (it is made of two sub-strings separated by a pipe), the French rules are different: the first form (no plural) is used when count is 0 or 1. So, the translator will automatically use the first string (Il y a %count% pomme) when count is 0 or 1. Each locale has its own set of rules, with some having as many as six different plural forms with complex rules behind which numbers map to which plural form. The rules are quite simple for English and French, but for Russian, you'd may want a hint to know which rule matches which string. To help translators, you can optionally "tag" each string:
Listing 1-21
'one: There is one apple|some: There are %count% apples' 'none_or_one: Il y a %count% pomme|some: Il y a %count% pommes'
The tags are really only hints for translators and don't affect the logic used to determine which plural form to use. The tags can be any descriptive string that ends with a colon (:). The tags also do not need to be the same in the original message as in the translated one.
'{0} There are no apples|{1} There is one apple|]1,19] There are %count% apples|[20,Inf] There are many apples'
The intervals follow the ISO 31-11112 notation. The above string specifies four different intervals: exactly 0, exactly 1, 2-19, and 20 and higher. You can also mix explicit math rules and standard rules. In this case, if the count is not matched by a specific interval, the standard rules take effect after removing the explicit rules:
111. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Translation/Translator.html#transChoice() 112. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_%28mathematics%29#The_ISO_notation
'{0} There are no apples|[20,Inf] There are many apples|There is one apple|a_few: There are %count% apples'
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For example, for 1 apple, the standard rule There is one apple will be used. For 2-19 apples, the second standard rule There are %count% apples will be selected. An Interval113 can represent a finite set of numbers:
{1,2,3,4}
Listing 1-24
The left delimiter can be [ (inclusive) or ] (exclusive). The right delimiter can be [ (exclusive) or ] (inclusive). Beside numbers, you can use -Inf and +Inf for the infinite.
Translations in Templates
Most of the time, translation occurs in templates. Symfony2 provides native support for both Twig and PHP templates.
Twig Templates
Symfony2 provides specialized Twig tags (trans and transchoice) to help with message translation of static blocks of text:
{% trans %}Hello %name%{% endtrans %} {% transchoice count %} {0} There are no apples|{1} There is one apple|]1,Inf] There are %count% apples {% endtranschoice %}
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The transchoice tag automatically gets the %count% variable from the current context and passes it to the translator. This mechanism only works when you use a placeholder following the %var% pattern.
If you need to use the percent character (%) in a string, escape it by doubling it: {% trans %}Percent:
%percent%%%{% endtrans %}
You can also specify the message domain and pass some additional variables:
{% trans with {'%name%': 'Fabien'} from "app" %}Hello %name%{% endtrans %} {% trans with {'%name%': 'Fabien'} from "app" into "fr" %}Hello %name%{% endtrans %} {% transchoice count with {'%name%': 'Fabien'} from "app" %} {0} There is no apples|{1} There is one apple|]1,Inf] There are %count% apples {% endtranschoice %}
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The trans and transchoice filters can be used to translate variable texts and complex expressions:
{{ message|trans }}
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113. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Translation/Interval.html
Using the translation tags or filters have the same effect, but with one subtle difference: automatic output escaping is only applied to variables translated using a filter. In other words, if you need to be sure that your translated variable is not output escaped, you must apply the raw filter after the translation filter:
Listing 1-29
{# a variable translated via a filter is escaped by default #} {{ message|trans|raw }} {# but static strings are never escaped #} {{ '<h3>foo</h3>'|trans }}
PHP Templates
The translator service is accessible in PHP templates through the translator helper:
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<?php echo $view['translator']->trans('Symfony2 is great') ?> <?php echo $view['translator']->transChoice( '{0} There is no apples|{1} There is one apple|]1,Inf[ There are %count% apples', 10, array('%count%' => 10) ) ?>
$this->get('translator')->trans( 'Symfony2 is great', array(), 'messages', 'fr_FR', ); $this->get('translator')->trans( '{0} There are no apples|{1} There is one apple|]1,Inf[ There are %count% apples', 10, array('%count%' => 10), 'messages', 'fr_FR', );
Add constraints though any of the supported methods. Set the message option to the translation source text. For example, to guarantee that the $name property is not empty, add the following:
# src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/config/validation.yml Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author: properties: name: - NotBlank: { message: "author.name.not_blank" }
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Create a translation file under the validators catalog for the constraint messages, typically in the Resources/translations/ directory of the bundle. See Message Catalogues for more details.
<!-- validators.fr.xliff --> <?xml version="1.0"?> <xliff version="1.2" xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:xliff:document:1.2"> <file source-language="en" datatype="plaintext" original="file.ext"> <body> <trans-unit id="1"> <source>author.name.not_blank</source> <target>Please enter an author name.</target> </trans-unit> </body> </file> </xliff>
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Summary
With the Symfony2 Translation component, creating an internationalized application no longer needs to be a painful process and boils down to just a few basic steps: Abstract messages in your application by wrapping each in either the trans()115 or transChoice()116 methods;
Translate each message into multiple locales by creating translation message files. Symfony2 discovers and processes each file because its name follows a specific convention; Manage the user's locale, which is stored in the session.
Chapter 1
Service Container
A modern PHP application is full of objects. One object may facilitate the delivery of email messages while another may allow you to persist information into a database. In your application, you may create an object that manages your product inventory, or another object that processes data from a third-party API. The point is that a modern application does many things and is organized into many objects that handle each task. In this chapter, we'll talk about a special PHP object in Symfony2 that helps you instantiate, organize and retrieve the many objects of your application. This object, called a service container, will allow you to standardize and centralize the way objects are constructed in your application. The container makes your life easier, is super fast, and emphasizes an architecture that promotes reusable and decoupled code. And since all core Symfony2 classes use the container, you'll learn how to extend, configure and use any object in Symfony2. In large part, the service container is the biggest contributor to the speed and extensibility of Symfony2. Finally, configuring and using the service container is easy. By the end of this chapter, you'll be comfortable creating your own objects via the container and customizing objects from any third-party bundle. You'll begin writing code that is more reusable, testable and decoupled, simply because the service container makes writing good code so easy.
What is a Service?
Put simply, a Service is any PHP object that performs some sort of "global" task. It's a purposefully-generic name used in computer science to describe an object that's created for a specific purpose (e.g. delivering emails). Each service is used throughout your application whenever you need the specific functionality it provides. You don't have to do anything special to make a service: simply write a PHP class with some code that accomplishes a specific task. Congratulations, you've just created a service!
As a rule, a PHP object is a service if it is used globally in your application. A single Mailer service is used globally to send email messages whereas the many Message objects that it delivers are not services. Similarly, a Product object is not a service, but an object that persists Product objects to a database is a service.
So what's the big deal then? The advantage of thinking about "services" is that you begin to think about separating each piece of functionality in your application into a series of services. Since each service does just one job, you can easily access each service and use its functionality wherever you need it. Each service can also be more easily tested and configured since it's separated from the other functionality in your application. This idea is called service-oriented architecture117 and is not unique to Symfony2 or even PHP. Structuring your application around a set of independent service classes is a well-known and trusted object-oriented best-practice. These skills are key to being a good developer in almost any language.
This is easy enough. The imaginary Mailer class allows us to configure the method used to deliver the email messages (e.g. sendmail, smtp, etc). But what if we wanted to use the mailer service somewhere else? We certainly don't want to repeat the mailer configuration every time we need to use the Mailer object. What if we needed to change the transport from sendmail to smtp everywhere in the application? We'd need to hunt down every place we create a Mailer service and change it.
When Symfony2 initializes, it builds the service container using the application configuration (app/config/config.yml by default). The exact file that's loaded is dictated by the AppKernel::registerContainerConfiguration() method, which loads an environment-specific configuration file (e.g. config_dev.yml for the dev environment or config_prod.yml for prod).
An instance of the Acme\HelloBundle\Mailer object is now available via the service container. The container is available in any traditional Symfony2 controller where you can access the services of the container via the get() shortcut method:
Listing 1-3
When we ask for the my_mailer service from the container, the container constructs the object and returns it. This is another major advantage of using the service container. Namely, a service is never constructed until it's needed. If you define a service and never use it on a request, the service is never created. This saves memory and increases the speed of your application. This also means that there's very little or no performance hit for defining lots of services. Services that are never used are never constructed. As an added bonus, the Mailer service is only created once and the same instance is returned each time you ask for the service. This is almost always the behavior you'll need (it's more flexible and powerful), but we'll learn later how you can configure a service that has multiple instances.
Service Parameters
The creation of new services (i.e. objects) via the container is pretty straightforward. Parameters make defining services more organized and flexible:
# app/config/config.yml parameters: my_mailer.class: my_mailer.transport: services: my_mailer: class: arguments:
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Acme\HelloBundle\Mailer sendmail
%my_mailer.class% [%my_mailer.transport%]
The end result is exactly the same as before - the difference is only in how we defined the service. By surrounding the my_mailer.class and my_mailer.transport strings in percent (%) signs, the container knows to look for parameters with those names. When the container is built, it looks up the value of each parameter and uses it in the service definition.
The percent sign inside a parameter or argument, as part of the string, must be escaped with another percent sign:
<argument type="string">http://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&bar=%%d</argument>
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The purpose of parameters is to feed information into services. Of course there was nothing wrong with defining the service without using any parameters. Parameters, however, have several advantages: separation and organization of all service "options" under a single parameters key; parameter values can be used in multiple service definitions; when creating a service in a bundle (we'll show this shortly), using parameters allows the service to be easily customized in your application. The choice of using or not using parameters is up to you. High-quality third-party bundles will always use parameters as they make the service stored in the container more configurable. For the services in your application, however, you may not need the flexibility of parameters.
Array Parameters
Parameters do not need to be flat strings, they can also be arrays. For the XML format, you need to use the type="collection" attribute for all parameters that are arrays.
Listing 1-6
The service container is built using a single configuration resource (app/config/config.yml by default). All other service configuration (including the core Symfony2 and third-party bundle configuration) must be imported from inside this file in one way or another. This gives you absolute flexibility over the services in your application. External service configuration can be imported in two different ways. First, we'll talk about the method that you'll use most commonly in your application: the imports directive. In the following section, we'll introduce the second method, which is the flexible and preferred method for importing service configuration from third-party bundles.
# src/Acme/HelloBundle/Resources/config/services.yml parameters: my_mailer.class: Acme\HelloBundle\Mailer my_mailer.transport: sendmail services: my_mailer: class: arguments:
%my_mailer.class% [%my_mailer.transport%]
The definition itself hasn't changed, only its location. Of course the service container doesn't know about the new resource file. Fortunately, we can easily import the resource file using the imports key in the application configuration.
# app/config/config.yml imports: - { resource: @AcmeHelloBundle/Resources/config/services.yml }
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The imports directive allows your application to include service container configuration resources from any other location (most commonly from bundles). The resource location, for files, is the absolute path to the resource file. The special @AcmeHello syntax resolves the directory path of the AcmeHelloBundle bundle. This helps you specify the path to the resource without worrying later if you move the AcmeHelloBundle to a different directory.
When the configuration is parsed, the container looks for an extension that can handle the framework configuration directive. The extension in question, which lives in the FrameworkBundle, is invoked and the service configuration for the FrameworkBundle is loaded. If you remove the framework key from your application configuration file entirely, the core Symfony2 services won't be loaded. The point is that you're in control: the Symfony2 framework doesn't contain any magic or perform any actions that you don't have control over. Of course you can do much more than simply "activate" the service container extension of the FrameworkBundle. Each extension allows you to easily customize the bundle, without worrying about how the internal services are defined.
In this case, the extension allows you to customize the charset, error_handler, csrf_protection, router configuration and much more. Internally, the FrameworkBundle uses the options specified here to define and configure the services specific to it. The bundle takes care of creating all the necessary parameters and services for the service container, while still allowing much of the configuration to be easily customized. As an added bonus, most service container extensions are also smart enough to perform validation notifying you of options that are missing or the wrong data type. When installing or configuring a bundle, see the bundle's documentation for how the services for the bundle should be installed and configured. The options available for the core bundles can be found inside the Reference Guide.
Natively, the service container only recognizes the parameters, services, and imports directives. Any other directives are handled by a service container extension.
If you want to expose user friendly configuration in your own bundles, read the "How to expose a Semantic Configuration for a Bundle" cookbook recipe.
namespace Acme\HelloBundle\Newsletter; use Acme\HelloBundle\Mailer; class NewsletterManager { protected $mailer; public function __construct(Mailer $mailer) { $this->mailer = $mailer; }
// ...
}
Without using the service container, we can create a new NewsletterManager fairly easily from inside a controller:
Listing 1-11
This approach is fine, but what if we decide later that the NewsletterManager class needs a second or third constructor argument? What if we decide to refactor our code and rename the class? In both cases, you'd
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need to find every place where the NewsletterManager is instantiated and modify it. Of course, the service container gives us a much more appealing option:
# src/Acme/HelloBundle/Resources/config/services.yml parameters: # ... newsletter_manager.class: Acme\HelloBundle\Newsletter\NewsletterManager services: my_mailer: # ... newsletter_manager: class: %newsletter_manager.class% arguments: [@my_mailer]
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In YAML, the special @my_mailer syntax tells the container to look for a service named my_mailer and to pass that object into the constructor of NewsletterManager. In this case, however, the specified service my_mailer must exist. If it does not, an exception will be thrown. You can mark your dependencies as optional - this will be discussed in the next section. Using references is a very powerful tool that allows you to create independent service classes with welldefined dependencies. In this example, the newsletter_manager service needs the my_mailer service in order to function. When you define this dependency in the service container, the container takes care of all the work of instantiating the objects.
// ...
}
Injecting the dependency by the setter method just needs a change of syntax:
# src/Acme/HelloBundle/Resources/config/services.yml parameters: # ... newsletter_manager.class: Acme\HelloBundle\Newsletter\NewsletterManager services: my_mailer: # ... newsletter_manager: class: %newsletter_manager.class%
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Listing 1-14
The approaches presented in this section are called "constructor injection" and "setter injection". The Symfony2 service container also supports "property injection".
In YAML, the special @? syntax tells the service container that the dependency is optional. Of course, the NewsletterManager must also be written to allow for an optional dependency:
Listing 1-16
// ...
}
In Symfony2, you'll constantly use services provided by the Symfony core or other third-party bundles to perform tasks such as rendering templates (templating), sending emails (mailer), or accessing information on the request (request). We can take this a step further by using these services inside services that you've created for your application. Let's modify the NewsletterManager to use the real Symfony2 mailer service (instead of the
pretend my_mailer). Let's also pass the templating engine service to the NewsletterManager so that it can generate the email content via a template:
namespace Acme\HelloBundle\Newsletter; use Symfony\Component\Templating\EngineInterface; class NewsletterManager { protected $mailer; protected $templating; public function __construct(\Swift_Mailer $mailer, EngineInterface $templating) { $this->mailer = $mailer; $this->templating = $templating; }
Listing 1-18
// ...
}
The newsletter_manager service now has access to the core mailer and templating services. This is a common way to create services specific to your application that leverage the power of different services within the framework.
Be sure that swiftmailer entry appears in your application configuration. As we mentioned in Importing Configuration via Container Extensions, the swiftmailer key invokes the service extension from the SwiftmailerBundle, which registers the mailer service.
However, there are use-cases when you don't want a service to be public. This is common when a service is only defined because it could be used as an argument for another service.
If you use a private service as an argument to more than one other service, this will result in two different instances being used as the instantiation of the private service is done inline (e.g. new PrivateFooBar()).
Simply said: A service will be private when you do not want to access it directly from your code. Here is an example:
Listing 1-21
$container->get('foo');
However, if a service has been marked as private, you can still alias it (see below) to access this service (via the alias).
Services are by default public.
Aliasing
When using core or third party bundles within your application, you may want to use shortcuts to access some services. You can do so by aliasing them and, furthermore, you can even alias non-public services.
Listing 1-23
This means that when using the container directly, you can access the foo service by asking for the bar service like this:
Listing 1-24
Requiring files
There might be use cases when you need to include another file just before the service itself gets loaded. To do so, you can use the file directive.
Listing 1-25
Notice that symfony will internally call the PHP function require_once which means that your file will be included only once per request.
Tags (tags)
In the same way that a blog post on the Web might be tagged with things such as "Symfony" or "PHP", services configured in your container can also be tagged. In the service container, a tag implies that the service is meant to be used for a specific purpose. Take the following example:
services: foo.twig.extension: class: Acme\HelloBundle\Extension\FooExtension tags: - { name: twig.extension }
Listing 1-26
The twig.extension tag is a special tag that the TwigBundle uses during configuration. By giving the service this twig.extension tag, the bundle knows that the foo.twig.extension service should be registered as a Twig extension with Twig. In other words, Twig finds all services tagged with twig.extension and automatically registers them as extensions. Tags, then, are a way to tell Symfony2 or other third-party bundles that your service should be registered or used in some special way by the bundle. The following is a list of tags available with the core Symfony2 bundles. Each of these has a different effect on your service and many tags require additional arguments (beyond just the name parameter). assetic.filter assetic.templating.php data_collector form.field_factory.guesser kernel.cache_warmer kernel.event_listener monolog.logger routing.loader security.listener.factory security.voter templating.helper twig.extension translation.loader validator.constraint_validator
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Performance
Symfony2 is fast, right out of the box. Of course, if you really need speed, there are many ways that you can make Symfony even faster. In this chapter, you'll explore many of the most common and powerful ways to make your Symfony application even faster.
Further Optimizations
Byte code caches usually monitor the source files for changes. This ensures that if the source of a file changes, the byte code is recompiled automatically. This is really convenient, but obviously adds overhead. For this reason, some byte code caches offer an option to disable these checks. Obviously, when disabling these checks, it will be up to the server admin to ensure that the cache is cleared whenever any source files change. Otherwise, the updates you've made won't be seen. For example, to disable these checks in APC, simply add apc.stat=0 to your php.ini configuration.
When using the APC autoloader, if you add new classes, they will be found automatically and everything will work the same as before (i.e. no reason to "clear" the cache). However, if you change the location of a particular namespace or prefix, you'll need to flush your APC cache. Otherwise, the autoloader will still be looking at the old location for all classes inside that namespace.
Note that there are two disadvantages when using a bootstrap file: the file needs to be regenerated whenever any of the original sources change (i.e. when you update the Symfony2 source or vendor libraries); when debugging, one will need to place break points inside the bootstrap file. If you're using Symfony2 Standard Edition, the bootstrap file is automatically rebuilt after updating the vendor libraries via the php bin/vendors install command.
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Internals
Looks like you want to understand how Symfony2 works and how to extend it. That makes me very happy! This section is an in-depth explanation of the Symfony2 internals.
You need to read this section only if you want to understand how Symfony2 works behind the scene, or if you want to extend Symfony2.
Overview
The Symfony2 code is made of several independent layers. Each layer is built on top of the previous one.
Autoloading is not managed by the framework directly; it's done independently with the help of the UniversalClassLoader122 class and the src/autoload.php file. Read the dedicated chapter for more information.
HttpFoundation Component
The deepest level is the HttpFoundation123 component. HttpFoundation provides the main objects needed to deal with HTTP. It is an Object-Oriented abstraction of some native PHP functions and variables: The Request124 class abstracts the main PHP global variables like $_GET, $_POST, $_COOKIE, $_FILES, and $_SERVER; The Response125 class abstracts some PHP functions like header(), setcookie(), and echo;
The Session126 class and SessionStorageInterface127 interface abstract session management session_*() functions.
HttpKernel Component
On top of HttpFoundation is the HttpKernel128 component. HttpKernel handles the dynamic part of HTTP; it is a thin wrapper on top of the Request and Response classes to standardize the way requests are handled. It also provides extension points and tools that makes it the ideal starting point to create a Web framework without too much overhead. It also optionally adds configurability and extensibility, thanks to the Dependency Injection component and a powerful plugin system (bundles).
Read more about Dependency Injection and Bundles.
FrameworkBundle Bundle
The FrameworkBundle129 bundle is the bundle that ties the main components and libraries together to make a lightweight and fast MVC framework. It comes with a sensible default configuration and conventions to ease the learning curve.
Kernel
The HttpKernel130 class is the central class of Symfony2 and is responsible for handling client requests. Its main goal is to "convert" a Request131 object to a Response132 object. Every Symfony2 Kernel implements HttpKernelInterface133:
Listing 1-1
Controllers
To convert a Request to a Response, the Kernel relies on a "Controller". A Controller can be any valid PHP callable. The Kernel delegates the selection of what Controller should be executed to an implementation of ControllerResolverInterface134:
Listing 1-2
The getController()135 method returns the Controller (a PHP callable) associated with the given Request. The default implementation (ControllerResolver136) looks for a _controller request attribute that
126. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Session.html 127. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/SessionStorage/SessionStorageInterface.html 128. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel.html 129. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle.html 130. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/HttpKernel.html 131. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Request.html 132. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Response.html 133. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/HttpKernelInterface.html 134. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Controller/ControllerResolverInterface.html 135. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Controller/ControllerResolverInterface.html#getController() 136. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Controller/ControllerResolver.html
represents
the
controller
name
(a
"class::method"
string,
like
Bundle\BlogBundle\PostController:indexAction).
The default implementation uses the RouterListener137 to define the _controller Request attribute (see kernel.request Event).
The getArguments()138 method returns an array of arguments to pass to the Controller callable. The default implementation automatically resolves the method arguments, based on the Request attributes.
Handling Requests
The handle() method takes a Request and always returns a Response. To convert the Request, handle() relies on the Resolver and an ordered chain of Event notifications (see the next section for more information about each Event): 1. Before doing anything else, the kernel.request event is notified -- if one of the listeners returns a Response, it jumps to step 8 directly; 2. The Resolver is called to determine the Controller to execute; 3. Listeners of the kernel.controller event can now manipulate the Controller callable the way they want (change it, wrap it, ...); 4. The Kernel checks that the Controller is actually a valid PHP callable; 5. The Resolver is called to determine the arguments to pass to the Controller; 6. The Kernel calls the Controller; 7. If the Controller does not return a Response, listeners of the kernel.view event can convert the Controller return value to a Response; 8. Listeners of the kernel.response event can manipulate the Response (content and headers); 9. The Response is returned. If an Exception is thrown during processing, the kernel.exception is notified and listeners are given a chance to convert the Exception to a Response. If that works, the kernel.response event is notified; if not, the Exception is re-thrown. If you don't want Exceptions to be caught (for embedded requests for instance), disable the kernel.exception event by passing false as the third argument to the handle() method.
Internal Requests
At any time during the handling of a request (the 'master' one), a sub-request can be handled. You can pass the request type to the handle() method (its second argument):
137. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle/EventListener/RouterListener.html 138. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Controller/ControllerResolverInterface.html#getArguments()
HttpKernelInterface::MASTER_REQUEST; HttpKernelInterface::SUB_REQUEST. The type is passed to all events and listeners can act accordingly (some processing must only occur on the master request).
Events
Each event thrown by the Kernel is a subclass of KernelEvent139. This means that each event has access to the same basic information: getRequestType() - returns the type of the request (HttpKernelInterface::MASTER_REQUEST or HttpKernelInterface::SUB_REQUEST); getKernel() - returns the Kernel handling the request; getRequest() - returns the current Request being handled.
getRequestType()
The getRequestType() method allows listeners to know the type of the request. For instance, if a listener must only be active for master requests, add the following code at the beginning of your listener method:
Listing 1-4
If you are not yet familiar with the Symfony2 Event Dispatcher, read the The Event Dispatcher Component section first.
kernel.request Event
Event Class: GetResponseEvent140 The goal of this event is to either return a Response object immediately or setup variables so that a Controller can be called after the event. Any listener can return a Response object via the setResponse() method on the event. In this case, all other listeners won't be called. This event is used by FrameworkBundle to populate the _controller Request attribute, via the RouterListener141. RequestListener uses a RouterInterface142 object to match the Request and determine the Controller name (stored in the _controller Request attribute).
kernel.controller Event
Event Class: FilterControllerEvent143 This event is not used by FrameworkBundle, but can be an entry point used to modify the controller that should be executed:
Listing 1-5
139. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Event/KernelEvent.html 140. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Event/GetResponseEvent.html 141. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/FrameworkBundle/EventListener/RouterListener.html 142. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/Routing/RouterInterface.html 143. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Event/FilterControllerEvent.html
kernel.view Event
Event Class: GetResponseForControllerResultEvent144 This event is not used by FrameworkBundle, but it can be used to implement a view sub-system. This event is called only if the Controller does not return a Response object. The purpose of the event is to allow some other return value to be converted into a Response. The value returned by the Controller is accessible via the getControllerResult method:
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Event\GetResponseForControllerResultEvent; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; public function onKernelView(GetResponseForControllerResultEvent $event) { $val = $event->getControllerResult(); $response = new Response(); // some how customize the Response from the return value $event->setResponse($response); }
Listing 1-6
kernel.response Event
Event Class: FilterResponseEvent145 The purpose of this event is to allow other systems to modify or replace the Response object after its creation:
public function onKernelResponse(FilterResponseEvent $event) { $response = $event->getResponse(); // .. modify the response object }
Listing 1-7
144. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Event/GetResponseForControllerResultEvent.html 145. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/Event/FilterResponseEvent.html 146. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/EventListener/ProfilerListener.html 147. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Bundle/WebProfilerBundle/EventListener/WebDebugToolbarListener.html 148. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/EventListener/ResponseListener.html 149. http://api.symfony.com/2.0/Symfony/Component/HttpKernel/EventListener/EsiListener.html
kernel.exception Event
Event Class: GetResponseForExceptionEvent150
FrameworkBundle registers an ExceptionListener151 that forwards the Request to a given Controller (the value of the exception_listener.controller parameter -- must be in the class::method notation).
A listener on this event can create and set a Response object, create and set a new Exception object, or do nothing:
Listing 1-8
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Event\GetResponseForExceptionEvent; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; public function onKernelException(GetResponseForExceptionEvent $event) { $exception = $event->getException(); $response = new Response(); // setup the Response object based on the caught exception $event->setResponse($response);
// you can alternatively set a new Exception // $exception = new \Exception('Some special exception'); // $event->setException($exception);
}
Profiler
When enabled, the Symfony2 profiler collects useful information about each request made to your application and store them for later analysis. Use the profiler in the development environment to help you to debug your code and enhance performance; use it in the production environment to explore problems after the fact. You rarely have to deal with the profiler directly as Symfony2 provides visualizer tools like the Web Debug Toolbar and the Web Profiler. If you use the Symfony2 Standard Edition, the profiler, the web debug toolbar, and the web profiler are all already configured with sensible settings.
The profiler collects information for all requests (simple requests, redirects, exceptions, Ajax requests, ESI requests; and for all HTTP methods and all formats). It means that for a single URL, you can have several associated profiling data (one per external request/response pair).
When the profiler is enabled but not the web debug toolbar, or when you want to get the token for an Ajax request, use a tool like Firebug to get the value of the X-Debug-Token HTTP header.
If you want to manipulate profiling data on a different machine than the one where the information were generated, use the export() and import() methods:
// on the production machine $profile = $container->get('profiler')->loadProfile($token); $data = $profiler->export($profile); // on the development machine $profiler->import($data);
Listing 1-11
Configuration
The default Symfony2 configuration comes with sensible settings for the profiler, the web debug toolbar, and the web profiler. Here is for instance the configuration for the development environment:
Listing 1-12
# load the profiler framework: profiler: { only_exceptions: false } # enable the web profiler web_profiler: toolbar: true intercept_redirects: true verbose: true
When only-exceptions is set to true, the profiler only collects data when an exception is thrown by the application. When intercept-redirects is set to true, the web profiler intercepts the redirects and gives you the opportunity to look at the collected data before following the redirect. When verbose is set to true, the Web Debug Toolbar displays a lot of information. Setting verbose to false hides some secondary information to make the toolbar shorter. If you enable the web profiler, you also need to mount the profiler routes:
Listing 1-13
As the profiler adds some overhead, you might want to enable it only under certain circumstances in the production environment. The only-exceptions settings limits profiling to 500 pages, but what if you want to get information when the client IP comes from a specific address, or for a limited portion of the website? You can use a request matcher:
Listing 1-14
# enables the profiler only for request coming for the 192.168.0.0 network framework: profiler: matcher: { ip: 192.168.0.0/24 } # enables the profiler only for the /admin URLs framework: profiler: matcher: { path: "^/admin/" } # combine rules framework: profiler: matcher: { ip: 192.168.0.0/24, path: "^/admin/" } # use a custom matcher instance defined in the "custom_matcher" service framework: profiler: matcher: { service: custom_matcher }
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The implementation itself can change though. The only valid case for a change in the stable API is in order to fix a security issue. The stable API is based on a whitelist, tagged with @api. Therefore, everything not tagged explicitly is not part of the stable API.
Any third party bundle should also publish its own stable API.
As of Symfony 2.0, the following components have a public tagged API: BrowserKit ClassLoader Console CssSelector DependencyInjection DomCrawler EventDispatcher Finder HttpFoundation HttpKernel Locale Process Routing Templating Translation
Chapter 1: The Symfony2 Stable API | 212
Validator Yaml