This change allows for more flexibility if the developer wants to flush
the Response content early (the drawback being that Response listeners
won't be able to tweak the HTTP headers anymore).
There is another benefit: avoid the infamous
"Fatal error: Exception thrown without a stack frame in Unknown on line 0".
Here is a small scenario when this can happen (thanks dtee for identifying this issue):
* Call flush() in controller to output html early, then throw exception
* ExceptionHandler triggers handle() function and return new Response object to output...
* Because the header is sent (flush() call in Controller), php's E_WARNING error get raised, which gets handled by ErrorHandler->handle() and it throws new ErrorException()
* PHP fatals to prevent Exception loop: "Fatal error: Exception thrown without a stack frame in Unknown on line 0"
* lmcd/master:
Added an optimisation for PHP-FPM (FastCGI Process Manager). As soon as a full Response is dispatched to the browser, the HTTP connection is closed, but the script stays alive on FPM servers.
The Response is not available in the DIC anymore.
When you need to create a response, create an instance of
Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response instead.
As a side effect, the Controller::createResponse() and Controller::redirect()
methods have been removed and can easily be replaced as follows:
return $this->createResponse('content', 200, array('foo' => 'bar'));
return new Response('content', 200, array('foo' => 'bar'));
return $this->redirect($url);
return Response::createRedirect($url);
Without this patch, if you call __toString() on a Response,
the content-type auto-detection would never be trigerred
as __toString() changes the default content-type.
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()
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,
));