forked from GNUsocial/gnu-social
101 lines
4.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
101 lines
4.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
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Configuration
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=============
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.. note ::
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If you are using Symfony2, this section is mostly irrelevant for you as the entire integration is provided by
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JMSSerializerBundle; please see `its documentation <http://jmsyst.com/bundles/JMSSerializerBundle>`_. If you are
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using another framework, there also might be a module, or other special integration. Please check packagist, or
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whatever registry usually holds such information for your framework.
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Constructing a Serializer
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-------------------------
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This library provides a special builder object which makes constructing serializer instances a breeze in any PHP
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project. In its shortest version, it's just a single line of code::
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$serializer = JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder::create()->build();
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This serializer is fully functional, but you might want to tweak it a bit for example to configure a cache directory.
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Configuring a Cache Directory
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-----------------------------
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The serializer collects several metadata about your objects from various sources such as YML, XML, or annotations. In
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order to make this process as efficient as possible, it is encourage to let the serializer cache that information. For
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that, you can configure a cache directory::
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$builder = new JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder();
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$serializer =
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JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder::create()
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->setCacheDir($someWritableDir)
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->setDebug($trueOrFalse)
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->build();
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As you can see, we also added a call to the ``setDebug`` method. In debug mode, the serializer will perform a bit more
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filesystem checks to see whether the data that it has cached is still valid. These checks are useful during development
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so that you do not need to manually clear cache folders, however in production they are just unnecessary overhead. The
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debug setting allows you to make the behavior environment specific.
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Adding Custom Handlers
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----------------------
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If you have created custom handlers, you can add them to the serializer easily::
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$serializer =
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JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder::create()
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->addDefaultHandlers()
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->configureHandlers(function(JMS\Serializer\Handler\HandlerRegistry $registry) {
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$registry->registerHandler('serialization', 'MyObject', 'json',
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function($visitor, MyObject $obj, array $type) {
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return $obj->getName();
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}
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);
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})
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->build();
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For more complex handlers, it is advisable to extract them to dedicated classes,
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see :doc:`handlers documentation <handlers>`.
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Configuring Metadata Locations
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------------------------------
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This library supports several metadata sources. By default, it uses Doctrine annotations, but you may also store
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metadata in XML, or YML files. For the latter, it is necessary to configure a metadata directory where those files
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are located::
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$serializer =
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JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder::create()
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->addMetadataDir($someDir)
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->build();
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The serializer would expect the metadata files to be named like the fully qualified class names where all ``\`` are
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replaced with ``.``. So, if you class would be named ``Vendor\Package\Foo``, the metadata file would need to be located
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at ``$someDir/Vendor.Package.Foo.(xml|yml)``. For more information, see the :doc:`reference <reference>`.
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Setting a default SerializationContext factory
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--------------------------------------------
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To avoid to pass an instance of SerializationContext
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every time you call method ``serialize()`` (or ``toArray()``),
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you can set a ``SerializationContextFactory`` to the Serializer.
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Example using the SerializerBuilder::
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use JMS\Serializer\SerializationContext;
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$serializer = JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder::create()
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->setSerializationContextFactory(function () {
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return SerializationContext::create()
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->setSerializeNull(true)
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;
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})
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->build()
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;
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Then, calling ``$serializer->serialize($data, 'json');`` will generate
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a serialization context from your callable and use it.
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.. note ::
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You can also set a default DeserializationContextFactory with
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``->setDeserializationContextFactory(function () { /* ... */ })``
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to be used with methods ``deserialize()`` and ``fromArray()``.
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