consistence-community / consistence-jms-serializer
Integration of Consistence library with JMS Serializer
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Requires
- php: ~8.0
- consistence-community/consistence: ^2.1.2
- jms/serializer: ~3.14
Requires (Dev)
- ext-simplexml: *
- consistence-community/coding-standard: 3.11.1
- phing/phing: 2.17.0
- php-parallel-lint/php-parallel-lint: 1.3.1
- phpunit/phpunit: 9.5.10
Conflicts
- doctrine/annotations: <1.11
Replaces
README
This package is a fork of consistence/consistence-jms-serializer
maintained by community to support new PHP versions.
This library provides integration of Consistence value objects for JMS Serializer so that you can use them in your serialization mappings.
For now, the only integration which is needed is for Enums, see the examples below.
Usage
Enums represent predefined set of values and of course, you will want to serialize and deserialize these values as well. Since Enums
are objects and you only want to (de)serialize represented value, there has to be some mapping.
You can see it in this example where you want to (de)serialize sex for your User
s:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; class Sex extends \Consistence\Enum\Enum { public const FEMALE = 'female'; public const MALE = 'male'; }
Now you can use the Sex
enum in your User
object. Type for (de)serialization is specified as enum<Your\Enum\Class>
:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; use JMS\Serializer\Annotation as JMS; class User extends \Consistence\ObjectPrototype { // ... /** * @JMS\Type("enum<Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\Sex>") * @var \Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\Sex|null */ private $sex; // ... public function __construct( // ... Sex $sex = null // ... ) { // ... $this->sex = $sex; // ... } }
Now everything is ready to be used, when you serialize the object, only female
will be returned as the value representing the enum:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; /** @var \JMS\Serializer\Serializer $serializer */ $user = new User(Sex::get(Sex::FEMALE)); var_dump($serializer->serialize($user, 'json')); /* { "sex": "female" } */
And when you deserialize the object, you will receive the Sex
enum object again:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; /** @var \JMS\Serializer\Serializer $serializer */ var_dump($serializer->deserialize('{ "sex": "female" }', User::class, 'json')); /* class Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\User#46 (1) { private $sex => class Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\Sex#5 (1) { private $value => string(6) "female" } } */
This means that the objects API is symmetrical (you get the same type as you set) and you can start benefiting from Enums advantages such as being sure, that what you get is already a valid value and having the possibility to define methods on top of the represented values.
Nullable by default
Both serialization and deserialization will accept null
values, there is no special mapping for that (by Jms Serializer
s convention), so if you are expecting a non-null value you have to enforce this by other means - either by restricting this in the API of your objects or by validation (needed especially for deserialization).
Invalid values
While serializing, there should be no invalid values, because Enums guarantee that the instance contains only valid values.
While deserializing, there can be an invalid value given, an exception will be thrown:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; /** @var \JMS\Serializer\Serializer $serializer */ var_dump($serializer->deserialize('{ "sex": "FOO" }', User::class, 'json')); // \Consistence\Enum\InvalidEnumValueException: FOO [string] is not a valid value, accepted values: female, male
If you are using this in an API, make sure you will catch this exception and send the consumer a response detailing this error, you can also write a custom message, the available values are listed in InvalidEnumValueException::getAvailableValues()
.
XML support
Unlike in JSON, in XML value types cannot be inferred directly from the values. So if you need to deserialize XML, you have to provide this type manually. You can do this by writing the type in the type definition - for the above example it would be string
:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; use JMS\Serializer\Annotation as JMS; class User extends \Consistence\ObjectPrototype { // ... /** * @JMS\Type("enum<Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\Sex, string>") * @var \Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\Sex|null */ private $sex; // ... }
Special support for mapped MultiEnums
Since the (de)serialization works only with the value the enum is representing, then in case of MultiEnums this would mean outputting the value of the internal bit mask. This could be useful if both the client and server use the same Enum objects, but otherwise this breaks the abstraction and is less readable for a human consumer as well.
If you are using a MultiEum mapped to a single Enum there is a handy solution provided, if you add to your mapping enum<Your\Enum\Class, as_single>
- notice the new as_single
parameter, then the value of MultiEnum
will be serialized as a collection of single Enum
values:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; use Consistence\Type\ArrayType\ArrayType; use JMS\Serializer\Annotation as JMS; class RoleEnum extends \Consistence\Enum\Enum { public const USER = 'user'; public const EMPLOYEE = 'employee'; public const ADMIN = 'admin'; } class RolesEnum extends \Consistence\Enum\MultiEnum { /** @var int[] format: single Enum value (string) => MultiEnum value (int) */ private static $singleMultiMap = [ RoleEnum::USER => 1, RoleEnum::EMPLOYEE => 2, RoleEnum::ADMIN => 4, ]; public static function getSingleEnumClass(): string { return RoleEnum::class; } /** * Converts value representing a value from single Enum to MultiEnum counterpart * * @param string $singleEnumValue * @return int */ protected static function convertSingleEnumValueToValue($singleEnumValue): int { return ArrayType::getValue(self::$singleMultiMap, $singleEnumValue); } /** * Converts value representing a value from MultiEnum to single Enum counterpart * * @param int $value * @return string */ protected static function convertValueToSingleEnumValue(int $value): string { return ArrayType::getKey(self::$singleMultiMap, $value); } } class User extends \Consistence\ObjectPrototype { // ... /** * @JMS\Type("enum<Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\RolesEnum, as_single>") * @var \Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\RolesEnum */ private $roles; // ... public function __construct( // ... RolesEnum $roles // ... ) { // ... $this->roles = $roles; // ... } } $user = new User(RolesEnum::getMultiByEnums([ RoleEnum::get(RoleEnum::USER), RoleEnum::get(RoleEnum::ADMIN), ])); /** @var \JMS\Serializer\Serializer $serializer */ var_dump($serializer->serialize($user, 'json')); /* { "roles": [ "user", "admin" ] } */
Deserialization then again works symmetrically - giving an array of single Enum
values will produce a MultiEnum
instance:
<?php namespace Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User; /** @var \JMS\Serializer\Serializer $serializer */ var_dump($serializer->deserialize('{ "roles": [ "user", "admin" ] }', User::class, 'json')); /* class Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\User#48 (1) { private $roles => class Consistence\JmsSerializer\Example\User\RolesEnum#37 (1) { private $value => int(5) } } */
Installation
- Install package
consistence-community/consistence-jms-serializer
with Composer:
composer require consistence-community/consistence-jms-serializer
- Register serialization handler:
<?php use Consistence\JmsSerializer\Enum\EnumSerializerHandler; use JMS\Serializer\Handler\HandlerRegistry; use JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder; $serializer = SerializerBuilder::create() ->configureHandlers(function (HandlerRegistry $registry) { $registry->registerSubscribingHandler(new EnumSerializerHandler()); }) ->build();
If you are using Symfony, you can instead register the handler in the config/services.yaml
file:
services: Consistence\JmsSerializer\Enum\EnumSerializerHandler: tags: - { name: jms_serializer.subscribing_handler }
That's all, you are good to go!