bapcat/phi

A super-minimal inversion-of-control library

4.0.1 2023-06-13 22:33 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-10-14 01:22:22 UTC


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φhi

An efficient, easy-to-use, open-source PHP dependency injection container, boasting a tiny footprint, powerful features, 100% unit test coverage, and awesome documentation. Phi is compatible with PSR-0 and PSR-4 auto-loading standards, and open to collaboration from anyone who feels they can make an improvement.

Installation

Composer

Composer is the recommended method of installation for BapCat packages.

$ composer require bapcat/phi

GitHub

BapCat packages may be downloaded from GitHub.

Features

Phi supports several different ways to inject dependencies, which can all be used alone or in conjunction with one another.

Automatic Injection

Assume you have a class named Foo that depends on a second class, Bar:

class Foo {
  public $bar = null;
  
  public function __construct(Bar $bar) {
    $this->bar = $bar;
  }
}

You can easily get a new instance of Foo with all required dependencies by doing the following:

$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class);
// $foo->bar = new Bar

You'll get a new instance of Foo with a new instance of Bar automatically injected into the constructor. This, of course, works recursively. If Bar depends on Baz, an instance of Baz will be injected into Bar, and so on.

Passing Parameters

There will be many cases where you need to pass parameters into the constructors as well. Consider the following class (note the order of the parameters):

class Foo {
  public $a;
  public $b;
  public $first_name;
  public $last_name;
  
  public function __construct(B $b, A $a, $first_name = null, $last_name = null) {
    $this->a = $a;
    $this->b = $b;
    $this->first_name = $first_name;
    $this->last_name  = $last_name;
  }
}

There are several ways you can request this class from Phi:

$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class);
// $foo->a == new A
// $foo->b == new B
// $foo->first_name == null
// $foo->last_name  == null
$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class, ['John', 'Doe']);
// $foo->a == new A
// $foo->b == new B
// $foo->first_name == 'John'
// $foo->last_name  == 'Doe'
$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class, ['John']);
// $foo->a == new A
// $foo->b == new B
// $foo->first_name == 'John'
// $foo->last_name  == null

You may want to override an automatically injected parameter:

$a = new A;
$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class, ['John', 'Doe', $a]);
// $foo->a == $a
// $foo->b == new B
// $foo->first_name == 'John'
// $foo->last_name  == 'Doe'

Note that $a was passed in last in the previous example. Phi is smart enough to figure out the correct order to inject parameters of non-scalar types.

Multiple Same-Type Dependencies

Consider the following class:

class Foo {
  public function __construct(BarInterface $bar, A $a, BarInterface $baz, B $b) {
    // ...
  }
}
$bar = new Bar; // implements BarInterface
$baz = new Baz; // implements BarInterface
$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class, [$bar, $baz]);
// $foo->bar == $bar
// $foo->baz == $baz
// $foo->a   == new A
// $foo->b   == new B

Parameters of the same type will be passed to the constructor in the order they are given to Phi. If you would like to pass them in a different order, please see the section on named injection.

Named Injection

In some cases, it is useful to be explicit about which parameters you are passing in. Phi makes this easy. Consider the class from the "Passing Parameters" section:

class Foo {
  public function __construct(A $a, B $b, $first_name = null, $last_name = null) {
    // ...
  }
}
$a = new A;
$b = new B;
$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class, [$b, 'last_name' => 'Doe', $a]);
// $foo->a == $a
// $foo->b == $b
// $foo->first_name == null
// $foo->last_name  == 'Doe'

Binding

Many modern applications have pieces that may be swapped out. This is accomplished by using interfaces. Phi allows automatic injection of interfaces using binding:

interface BarInterface {

}

class Bar implements BarInterface {

}

class Foo {
  public function __construct(BarInterface $bar) {
    // ...
  }
}

$phi->bind(BarInterface::class, Bar::class);
$foo = $phi->make(Foo::class);
// $foo->bar == new Bar
$bar = $phi->make(BarInterface::class);
// $bar = new Bar

Binding even allows you to swap one concrete instance of a class for another:

$phi->bind(A::class, B::class);

$a = $phi->make(A::class);
// $a == new B

Dependencies With Parameters

Sometimes you may have a dependency that has required parameters. This can be done by binding a class to a callable:

$phi->bind(Person::class, function() {
  return new Person('John', 'Doe');
});

$person = $phi->make(Person::class);
// $person->first_name == 'John'
// $person->last_name  == 'Doe'

This is also useful if you need to perform logic when instanciating a class:

$id = 0;

$phi->bind(Person::class, function() use(&$id) {
  return new Person(++$id);
});

$person1 = $phi->make(Person::class); // id == 1
$person2 = $phi->make(Person::class); // id == 2

Any parameters passed to Phi will be passed directly to the callable:

$id = 0;

$phi->bind(Person::class, function($name, $age) use(&$id) {
  $names = explode(' ', $name);
  return new Person(++$id, $name[0], $name[1], $age);
});

$person = $phi->make(Person::class, ['John Doe', 21]);
// $person->id == 1
// $person->first_name == 'John'
// $person->last_name  == 'Doe'
// $person->age == 21

Singletons

Phi also allows binding to real instances of classes. This can be used to create singletons:

$default_pdo = new PDO(...); // The default database
$stats_pdo   = new PDO(...); // PDO pointing to a different database

$phi->bind(PDO::class, $default_pdo);
$pdo = $phi->make(PDO::class);
// $pdo == $default_pdo
class Table {
  public function __construct(PDO $pdo, $table_name) {
    // ...
  }
}

$users_table = $phi->make(Table::class, ['users']);
// $users_table->pdo   == $default_pdo
// $users_table->table == 'users'

$stats_table = $phi->make(Table::class, [$stats_pdo, 'stats']);
// $stats_table->pdo   == $stats_pdo
// $stats_table->table == 'stats'

Aliases

Sometimes, a codebase will have very commonly used classes with difficult-to remember names. For example, Vendor\Package\Core\Logging\Log. It may be useful to give such classes shorter and easier to type names:

$phi->bind('core.log', \Vendor\Package\Core\Logging\Log::class);

$log = $phi->make('core.log');
// $log == new Vendor\Package\Core\Logging\Log

You may also bind aliases to callables or singletons.

Custom Resolvers

There may be times when you want to match far more than a single alias. Custom resolvers were designed with this purpose in mind. When a binding is requested from Phi, any custom resolvers that are registered will be executed one by one in the order they were added, and the first one to return a non-null value is the one that will be used. If all custom resolvers return null, Phi will resolve the binding normally.

use BapCat\Interfaces\Ioc\Resolver;

class CustomResolver implements Resolver {
  public function make($alias, array $arguments = []) {
    if($alias == A::class) {
      return new B(new A());
    }
  }
}

$phi->addResolver(new CustomResolver());
$b = $phi->make(A::class);
//$b == new B

Another reason to use custom resolvers is to wrap other IoC containers. For example, if you are using Laravel, you could combine the Laravel container with Phi:

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\App;
use BapCat\Interfaces\Ioc\Resolver;

class LaravelResolver implements Resolver {
  public function make($alias, array $arguments = []) {
    if(App::bound($alias)) {
      return App::make($alias, $arguments);
    }
  }
}

$phi->addResolver(new LaravelResolver());

This way, any binding that is registered in the Laravel IoC container will be resolved by it. The rest will be passed on to Phi.

Recursive Resolution

It's possible to bind one binding to another.

$ioc->bind(FooInterface::class, Foo::class);
$ioc->bind('bap.foo', FooInterface::class);

### Singletons
While it's possible to bind an alias to an instance of a class, effectively creating a singleton, it's not always
desirable (or possible) to load all singletons at boot time.  Instead, singletons can be registered and lazy-loaded.

```php
$phi->singleton(FooInterface::class, Foo::class);

The first time an instance of FooInterface is requested, Foo will be loaded and bound. From then on, all requests for FooInterface will return the same instance of Foo.

Dependency Injection on Callables

Not only is dependency injection useful when creating objects, it may also be useful when calling methods. Phi can perform dependency injection on any method PHP will accept as a callable type hint.

$phi->call([$instance, 'method']);
$phi->call([Class::class, 'staticMethod']);
$phi->call(['Class::staticMethod']);
$phi->call($invokableClass);
$phi->call(function(FooInterface $foo) { });
$phi->call('var_dump', [$foo]);

You may pass arguments to method injections in the same way as constructor injections.