c33s/symfony-config-manipulator-bundle

This package is abandoned and no longer maintained. No replacement package was suggested.

Utilities to automatically organize Symfony2 YAML config files

v0.3.0 2016-06-20 16:56 UTC

This package is not auto-updated.

Last update: 2019-07-29 15:18:00 UTC


README

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Do you hate stuffing tons of config into a single config.yml file, losing track of all the sections inside the file? Then this is for you!

This bundle provides some general-purpose YAML and Symfony config manipulation tasks. The most important one is to split the Symfony app/config/config*.yml files into separate sections, leading to a structure like this:

# Symfony Standard Edition 2.7.3

app/config
├── config
│   ├── assetic.yml
│   ├── doctrine.yml
│   ├── framework.yml
│   ├── parameters.yml
│   ├── swiftmailer.yml
│   └── twig.yml
│
├── config_dev
│   ├── assetic.yml
│   ├── framework.yml
│   ├── monolog.yml
│   ├── swiftmailer.yml
│   └── web_profiler.yml
│
├── config_prod
│   ├── doctrine.yml
│   ├── framework.yml
│   └── monolog.yml
│
├── config_test
│   ├── framework.yml
│   ├── swiftmailer.yml
│   └── web_profiler.yml
│
├── config_dev.yml
├── config_prod.yml
├── config_test.yml
├── config.yml
│
│   # parameters.yml, routing.yml, security.yml etc. will never be touched
├── parameters.yml
├── parameters.yml.dist
├── routing_dev.yml
├── routing.yml
├── security.yml
└── services.yml

The cleaned up config.yml looks like this:

imports:
    - { resource: parameters.yml }
    - { resource: security.yml }
    - { resource: services.yml }
    - { resource: config/assetic.yml }
    - { resource: config/doctrine.yml }
    - { resource: config/framework.yml }
    - { resource: config/parameters.yml }
    - { resource: config/swiftmailer.yml }
    - { resource: config/twig.yml }

config_dev.yml content:

imports:
    - { resource: config.yml }
    - { resource: config_dev/assetic.yml }
    - { resource: config_dev/framework.yml }
    - { resource: config_dev/monolog.yml }
    - { resource: config_dev/swiftmailer.yml }
    - { resource: config_dev/web_profiler.yml }

Advantages:

  • Keep an overview which config modules are present by just looking at the sub folders
  • By keeping separate files in your git repository, you may easily follow changes for specific config sections
  • Working in larger teams becomes a little easier when the main config.yml isn't edited by several people at once
  • The configuration sections are copied as YAML text, not array data, so all your comments and formatting are preserved!
  • Manipulating specific config sections programmatically becomes a little easier

Installation

Require c33s/symfony-config-manipulator-bundle in your composer.json file:

{
    "require": {
        "c33s/symfony-config-manipulator-bundle": "@stable",
    }
}

or, if you are using 'composer-yaml':

require:
    c33s/symfony-config-manipulator-bundle:     '@stable'

Register the bundle in app/AppKernel.php:


    // app/AppKernel.php

    public function registerBundles()
    {
        return array(
            // ... existing bundles
            new C33s\SymfonyConfigManipulatorBundle\C33sSymfonyConfigManipulatorBundle(),
        );
    }

Usage

All you have to do is run a single command:

$ php app/console config:refresh-files

You may re-run it anytime you want. This is especially helpful if you are adding new configuration sections to your project. Just paste them into your main config.yml, config_dev.yml or similar files and run the command to instantly move the new configuration to separate files.

If you add a config section to your config.yml that is already present in a separate file with the same name, the command will exit with an error message. Merge your configurations manually and you're good again.

Safety

The config splitter will never overwrite any existing module config files as long as they contain parseable YAML. But as Murphy's law goes, there might be bugs where nobody expects them.

Make sure to commit your configuration files to your git repository to keep your code safe!