Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nicolas Grekas
53b01903ce [Config] Make ClassExistenceResource throw on invalid parents 2017-07-18 16:40:06 +02:00
Maxime Steinhausser
9f877efb39 [DI] Dedup tags when using instanceof/autoconfigure 2017-06-17 21:02:43 +02:00
Ryan Weaver
037a782b91 Making tags under _defaults always apply and removing inherit_tags entirely
Now that inherit_tags has been removed, 3.3 has the same functionality as 3.2: tags
are *never* cascaded from parent to child (but you tags do inherit from defaults
to a service and instanceof to a service).
2017-05-01 09:36:02 -04:00
Ryan Weaver
a943b96d42 Not allowing autoconfigure, instanceofConditionals or defaults for ChildDefinition
Also, not allowing arguments or method calls for autoconfigure. This is a safety
mechanism, since we don't have merging logic. It will allow us to add this in the
future if we want to.

The reason is that parent-child definitions are a different mechanism for "inheritance"
than instanceofConditionas and defaults... creating some edge cases when trying to
figure out which settings "win". For example:

Suppose a child and parent definitions are defined in different YAML files. The
child receives public: false from its _defaults, and the parent receives public: true
from its _defaults. Should the final child definition be public: true (so the parent
overrides the child, even though it only came from _defaults) or public: false (where
the child wins... even though it was only set from its _defaults). Or, if the parent
is explicitly set to public: true, should that override the public: false of the
child (which it got from its _defaults)? On one hand, the parent is being explicitly
set. On the other hand, the child is explicitly in a file settings _defaults public
to false. There's no correct answer.

There are also problems with instanceof. The importance goes:
  defaults < instanceof < service definition

But how does parent-child relationships fit into that? If a child has public: false
from an _instanceof, but the parent explicitly sets public: true, which wins? Should
we assume the parent definition wins because it's explicitly set? Or would the
_instanceof win, because that's being explicitly applied to the child definition's
class by an _instanceof that lives in the same file as that class (whereas the parent
definition may live in a different file).

Because of this, @nicolas-grekas and I (we also talked a bit to Fabien) decided that
the complexity was growing too much. The solution is to not allow any of these
new feature to be used by ChildDefinition objects. In other words, when you want some
sort of "inheritance" for your service, you should *either* giving your service a
parent *or* using defaults and instanceof. And instead of silently not applying
defaults and instanceof to child definitions, I think it's better to scream that it's
not supported.
2017-04-28 17:09:21 -04:00
Ryan Weaver
ab0fd6e663 If a (non-global) instanceof does not exist, throw an exception 2017-04-28 14:07:50 -04:00
Ryan Weaver
18627bf9f6 [DI] Introducing autoconfigure: automatic _instanceof configuration 2017-04-20 11:20:30 -06:00
Nicolas Grekas
168765da0f [DI] Fix inheriting defaults with instanceof conditionals 2017-04-13 09:57:57 +02:00
Ryan Weaver
6d6116b920 Adding an integration test for the hirarchy of defaults, instanceof, child, parent definitions 2017-04-11 16:40:02 +02:00
Nicolas Grekas
ab86457b12 [DI] Rework config hierarchy: defaults > instanceof > service config 2017-04-10 18:14:18 +02:00