When an object has a "main" many relation with related "things" (objects,
parameters, ...), the method names are normalized:
* get()
* set()
* all()
* replace()
* remove()
* clear()
* isEmpty()
* add()
* register()
* count()
* keys()
The classes below follow this method naming convention:
* BrowserKit\CookieJar -> Cookie
* BrowserKit\History -> Request
* Console\Application -> Command
* Console\Application\Helper\HelperSet -> HelperInterface
* DependencyInjection\Container -> services
* DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder -> services
* DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\ParameterBag -> parameters
* DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\FrozenParameterBag -> parameters
* DomCrawler\Form -> FormField
* EventDispatcher\Event -> parameters
* Form\FieldGroup -> Field
* HttpFoundation\HeaderBag -> headers
* HttpFoundation\ParameterBag -> parameters
* HttpFoundation\Session -> attributes
* HttpKernel\Profiler\Profiler -> DataCollectorInterface
* Routing\RouteCollection -> Route
* Security\Authentication\AuthenticationProviderManager -> AuthenticationProviderInterface
* Templating\Engine -> HelperInterface
* Translation\MessageCatalogue -> messages
The usage of these methods are only allowed when it is clear that there is a
main relation:
* a CookieJar has many Cookies;
* a Container has many services and many parameters (as services is the main
relation, we use the naming convention for this relation);
* a Console Input has many arguments and many options. There is no "main"
relation, and so the naming convention does not apply.
For many relations where the convention does not apply, the following methods
must be used instead (where XXX is the name of the related thing):
* get() -> getXXX()
* set() -> setXXX()
* all() -> getXXXs()
* replace() -> setXXXs()
* remove() -> removeXXX()
* clear() -> clearXXX()
* isEmpty() -> isEmptyXXX()
* add() -> addXXX()
* register() -> registerXXX()
* count() -> countXXX()
* keys()
* removed the __call() method in Container: it means that now, there is only
one way to get a service: via the get() method;
* removed the $shared variable in the dumped Container classes (we now use
the $services variable from the parent class directly -- this is where we
have a performance improvement);
* optimized the PHP Dumper output.
This is the case for instance when you pass a variable to a template like this:
new SafeDecorator($var);
and in the template, you pass it again to another embedded template:
$view->render('...', array('var' => $var);
The second time, $var will be escaped as the SafeDecorator wrapper will have been removed
by the escaper.
The PHP native cache limiter feature has been disabled as this is now managed
by the HeaderBag class directly instead (see below.)
The HeaderBag class uses the following rules to define a sensible and
convervative default value for the Response 'Cache-Control' header:
* If no cache header is defined ('Cache-Control', 'ETag', 'Last-Modified',
and 'Expires'), 'Cache-Control' is set to 'no-cache';
* If 'Cache-Control' is empty, its value is set to "private, max-age=0,
must-revalidate";
* But if at least one 'Cache-Control' directive is set, and no 'public' or
'private' directives have been explicitely added, Symfony2 adds the
'private' directive automatically (except when 's-maxage' is set.)
So, remember to explicitly add the 'public' directive to 'Cache-Control' when
you want shared caches to store your application resources:
// The Response is private by default
$response->setEtag($etag);
$response->setLastModified($date);
$response->setMaxAge(10);
// Change the Response to be public
$response->setPublic();
// Set cache settings in one call
$response->setCache(array(
'etag' => $etag,
'last_modified' => $date,
'max_age' => 10,
'public' => true,
));
The constraint "Valid" does not accept any options or groups anymore. As per
JSR303 1.0 final, section 3.5.1 "Object graph validation" (page 39),
properties annotated with valid should be cascaded independent of the current
group (i.e. always). Thus the group "*" is not necessary anymore and was
removed from the "Valid" constraint in the Form validation.xml.
Support for theming in PHP templates has been dropped.
True theming should support theme inheritance, e.g. mytheme <- table <- default.
Currently, the Templating component does not support such inheritance. As the
only purpose of the themes so far was to style field groups with tables or
divs, and because automatic rendering of field groups/forms through the render()
method is discouraged and only recommended for rapid prototyping, themes are
dropped for now.
Modified the framework bundle to use validation => Symfony\Component\Validator\Validator defaults.
Enhanced Framework Extension validator configuration to allow to extend this configuration with
user-specified annotations, for example:
validation:
enabled: true
annotations:
namespaces:
myprojectvalidator: MyProject\Validator\
to register @myprojectvalidator:Validator(...)
This allows the translations to be deeply nested arrays that will be flattened, allowing for namespacing of translations easily.
The following:
'key' => array('key2' => array('key3' => 'value'))
Becomes:
'key.key2.key3' => 'value'
This isn't applied to Xliff since it does not make sense within the scope of the XLIFF standard
The idea of a string port is probably semantically wrong, but it actually follows the convention of at least some web servers ($_SERVER['SERVER_PORT'] is actually a string). And since the $port variable is used as a string in getHttpHost(), it's correct to allow the types not to match.
Added ability to specify **match-all** validation group, which
constraints will runs on every specified validation group.
Added groups="*" option to `Form::data` Valid validator.
In the dumped PHP class, we must use get() and not get*Service() methods to get services.
That's because all calls must be managed by get(). From the outside, you can call
get*Service() because as they are protected, they are caught by the __call() method;
which is not the case obviously when it is used internally.
If not, if you override a service with set(), this won't work when a service
depends on this one (the default one will still be used).
Some explanations on how it works now:
* The Session is an optional dependency of the Request. If you create the
Request yourself (which is mandatory now in the front controller) and if
you don't inject a Session yourself (which is recommended if you want the
session to be configured via dependency injection), the Symfony2 Kernel
will associate the Session configured in the Container with the Request
automatically.
* When duplicating a request, the session is shared between the parent and
the child (that's because duplicated requests are sub-requests of the main
one most of the time.) Notice that when you use ::create(), the behavior is
the same as for the constructor; no session is attached to the Request.
* Symfony2 tries hard to not create a session cookie when it is not needed
but a Session object is always available (the cookie is only created when
"something" is stored in the session.)
* Symfony2 only starts a session when:
* A session already exists in the request ($_COOKIE[session_name()] is
defined -- this is done by RequestListener);
* There is something written in the session object (the cookie will be sent
to the Client).
* Notice that reading from the session does not start the session anymore (as
we don't need to start a new session to get the default values, and because
if a session exists, it has already been started by RequestListener.)
Because that's just not possible (have a look at the unit tests to see all possibilities
-- as you will notice, there is no way we can determine the context and whether the
data are already escaped or not).
So, we always escape data, which means that sometimes, we will try to escape already
escaped data. This is not a problem for everything except strings. That's because
strings are not wrapped with an object like everything else (for performance reason).
This means that all escapers must be able to avoid double-escaping (that's the case
for the default escapers as both htmlspecialchars() and htmlentities() have a flag
that does just this).
This is not really a bug or a big issue, but if you need to temporarily empty a routes node, Symfony shouldn't care - it's not an actual validation failure (a routes node still makes sense without an route or import children).
Fields can now easier support different data types in their underlying object.
These datatypes can be normalized to a single datatype using a normalization
transformer. The normalized value can then be transformed to the user's
representation with the value transformer (better name required?).
This fixes a bug in UniversalClassLoader when attempting to autoload class names with leading slashes:
$namespacedClass = "\\Foo\\Bar";
$pearlikeClass = "\\Foo_Bar";
$namespaced = new $namespacedClass();
$pearlike = new $pearlikeClass();
`UniversalClassLoader::loadClass()` was unable to load PEAR-like classes with leading slashes because it found the slash and assumed that the requested class was namespaced. It was unable to load namespaced classes with leading slashes because it would look them up in the autoloader's registered namespaces, and was unable to match '\Foo' to 'Foo'. One (ugly) workaround for the namespaced classes was to register all namespaces twice:
$loader->registerNamespaces(array(
'Foo' => __DIR__ . '/lib',
'\Foo' => __DIR__ . '/lib',
));
But that's not very pretty, nor does it solve the bug with PEAR-like classes. Stripping the leading slash before trying to autoload allows UniversalClassLoader to load both namespaced and PEAR-like classes.
When reading the last bit of a property path mapped to a missing array index, the method would initialize the value to an empty array. This makes sense for cases where readPropertyPath would again be called recursively, but not when the value would be immediately returned (null would be preferable in that case).
For example, we have an object with a property called "options" that's an array of arbitrary key/value pairs. That "options" property (and getOptions()) maps directly to a FieldGroup within the Form for this object. That FieldGroup contains multiple TextFields for a few expected keys in the array. As-is, if those keys were not defined, the default data set for those TextFields could end up being "Array" (string representation of an empty array). If readPropertyPath instead returns null for this case, the default data would be transformed into an empty string.
It's better to be able to fetch all the visible and all the hidden fields separately for display purposes (hidden fields in <ul> tags without an <li> do not validate)
Before:
/**
* @Validation({@DateTime()})
*/
After:
/**
* @validation:DateTime()
*/
The @validation:Validation() construct is not needed anymore (it is still supported
as this is useful when you have several annotations with the same class).
So, the above is equivalent to:
/**
* @validation:Validation({@validation:DateTime()})
*/
ReflectionClass doesn't list properties on stdClass objects (or objects cast
from arrays). This allows these annoymous objects to be used as field data.
Internally, ChoiceField expects both choices and preferred_choices to be a simple array, so I replaced incomplete bits of code that attempted to not modify a possible ArrayObject and instead added type checks in the configure() method (with unit tests for expected exceptions).
Property paths such as fields[group].fields[innerGroup].data were not being resolved correctly, since the second iteration of addError() (based on "group") would attempt to call get('fields') instead of get('innerGroup'). Solution is to remember to bump the propertyPath forward if we're at the fields property
<foo:bar>
<service class="Foo" />
<service class="Bar" />
</foo:bar>
In the foo:bar extension method, you can retrieve the services with:
// always an array of services
$config['_services']