The parameter has been removed and the service moved to the XML file (for consistency).
The behavior is still the same as before as any non-public service
which is not referenced anywhere will be automatically removed by a
compiler pass.
* vicb/cfg_rebase:
[Config] Ability to add and override node types without having to subclass NodeBuilder
[DoctrineBundle] Fix some typos
[SwiftMailerBundle] Fix a merge issue in the configuration
Tweak PHPDocs in the extension configuration files
[Config] Component refactoring
The Config component API have changed and the extension configuration files must be updated accordingly:
1. Array nodes must enclosed their children definition in ->children() ... ->end() calls:
Before:
$treeBuilder->root('zend', 'array')
->arrayNode('logger')
->scalarNode('priority')->defaultValue('INFO')->end()
->booleanNode('log_errors')->defaultFalse()->end()
->end();
After:
$treeBuilder->root('zend', 'array')
->children()
->arrayNode('logger')
->children()
->scalarNode('priority')->defaultValue('INFO')->end()
->booleanNode('log_errors')->defaultFalse()->end()
->end()
->end()
->end();
2. The 'builder' method (in NodeBuilder) has been dropped in favor of an 'append' method (in ArrayNodeDefinition)
Before:
$treeBuilder->root('doctrine', 'array')
->arrayNode('dbal')
->builder($this->getDbalConnectionsNode())
->end();
After:
$treeBuilder->root('doctrine', 'array')
->children()
->arrayNode('dbal')
->append($this->getDbalConnectionsNode())
->end()
->end();
3. The root of a TreeBuilder is now an NodeDefinition (and most probably an ArrayNodeDefinition):
Before:
$root = $treeBuilder->root('doctrine', 'array');
$this->addDbalSection($root);
public function addDbalSection(NodeBuilder $node)
{
...
}
After:
$root = $treeBuilder->root('doctrine', 'array');
$this->addDbalSection($root);
public function addDbalSection(ArrayNodeDefinition $node)
{
...
}
4. The NodeBuilder API has changed (this is seldom used):
Before:
$node = new NodeBuilder('connections', 'array');
After:
The recommended way is to use a tree builder:
$treeBuilder = new TreeBuilder();
$node = $treeBuilder->root('connections', 'array');
An other way would be:
$builder = new NodeBuilder();
$node = $builder->node('connections', 'array');
Some notes:
- Tree root nodes should most always be array nodes, so this as been made the default:
$treeBuilder->root('doctrine', 'array') is equivalent to $treeBuilder->root('doctrine')
- There could be more than one ->children() ... ->end() sections. This could help with the readability:
$treeBuilder->root('doctrine')
->children()
->scalarNode('default_connection')->end()
->end()
->fixXmlConfig('type')
->children()
->arrayNode('types')
....
->end()
->end()
This command uses a new container pass which dumps the ContainerBuilder into a cache file by serializing it. It's possible that we don't want this to run when kernel.debug = false, but I don't see the harm of generating the file and running the container:debug in, for example, the prod environment seems to make sense.
The only missing part is ContainerAwareEventManager::addEventSubscriberService(),
because I'm not sure how to find out the class name of a service in the DIC.
Also, inline documentation of this code needs to be finished once it is accepted.
Doctrine's EventManager implementation has several advantages over the
EventDispatcher implementation of Symfony2. Therefore I suggest that we
use their implementation.
Advantages:
* Event Listeners are objects, not callbacks. These objects have handler
methods that have the same name as the event. This helps a lot when
reading the code and makes the code for adding an event listener shorter.
* You can create Event Subscribers, which are event listeners with an
additional getSubscribedEvents() method. The benefit here is that the
code that registers the subscriber doesn't need to know about its
implementation.
* All events are defined in static Events classes, so users of IDEs benefit
of code completion
* The communication between the dispatching class of an event and all
listeners is done through a subclass of EventArgs. This subclass can be
tailored to the type of event. A constructor, setters and getters can be
implemented that verify the validity of the data set into the object.
See examples below.
* Because each event type corresponds to an EventArgs implementation,
developers of event listeners can look up the available EventArgs methods
and benefit of code completion.
* EventArgs::stopPropagation() is more flexible and (IMO) clearer to use
than notifyUntil(). Also, it is a concept that is also used in other
event implementations
Before:
class EventListener
{
public function handle(EventInterface $event, $data) { ... }
}
$dispatcher->connect('core.request', array($listener, 'handle'));
$dispatcher->notify('core.request', new Event(...));
After (with listeners):
final class Events
{
const onCoreRequest = 'onCoreRequest';
}
class EventListener
{
public function onCoreRequest(RequestEventArgs $eventArgs) { ... }
}
$evm->addEventListener(Events::onCoreRequest, $listener);
$evm->dispatchEvent(Events::onCoreRequest, new RequestEventArgs(...));
After (with subscribers):
class EventSubscriber
{
public function onCoreRequest(RequestEventArgs $eventArgs) { ... }
public function getSubscribedEvents()
{
return Events::onCoreRequest;
}
}
$evm->addEventSubscriber($subscriber);
$evm->dispatchEvent(Events::onCoreRequest, new RequestEventArgs(...));
How to upgrade?
For XML configuration files:
* All extensions should now use the config tag (this is just a convention as
the YAML configurations files do not use it anymore):
* The previous change means that the doctrine and security bundles now are
wrapped under a main "config" tag:
<doctrine:config>
<doctrine:orm />
<doctrine:dbal />
</doctrine:config>
<security:config>
<security:acl />
...
</security:config>
For YAML configuration files:
* The main keys have been renamed as follows:
* assetic:config -> assetic
* app:config -> framework
* webprofiler:config -> web_profiler
* doctrine_odm.mongodb -> doctrine_mongo_db
* doctrine:orm -> doctrine: { orm: ... }
* doctrine:dbal -> doctrine: { dbal: ... }
* security:config -> security
* security:acl -> security: { acl: ... }
* twig.config -> twig
* zend.config -> zend
This allows for better conventions and better error messages if you
use the wrong configuration alias in a config file.
This is also the first step for a bigger refactoring of how the configuration
works (see next commits).
* Bundle::registerExtensions() method has been renamed to Bundle::build()
* The "main" DIC extension must be renamed to the new convention to be
automatically registered:
SensioBlogBundle -> DependencyInjection\SensioBlogExtension
* The main DIC extension alias must follow the convention:
sensio_blog for SensioBlogBundle
* If you have more than one extension for a bundle (which should really
never be the case), they must be registered manually by overriding the
build() method
* If you use YAML or PHP for your configuration, renamed the following
configuration entry points in your configs:
app -> framework
webprofiler -> web_profiler
doctrine_odm -> doctrine_mongo_db
* Remove redundant null/true equivalent array() values for array nodes
* Profiler matcher should not be deep merged; subsequent configs can simply overwrite its array
* Per lsmith's suggestion, change "isset(x) && x" to "!empty(x)"
* Templating engines node should be required, which is necessary to ensure requiresAtLeastOneElement() applies to its prototype children
In routing files, import statements allow an optional "type" option to hint the resources' type (e.g. for ambiguous file extensions). This adds the same type option to the FrameworkExtension config, which defines the main routing resource.
This reverts commit f53080860a.
Revert "[Router] config fixes"
This reverts commit 51beecc6f2.
Revert "moved duplicated files to a new Config component"
This reverts commit a8ec9b27f0.