symfonyid / symfony-bundle-plugins
Allow Symfony bundles to have plugins
Installs: 5 323
Dependents: 2
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 0
Watchers: 6
Forks: 0
Open Issues: 0
Requires
- php: >=5.3
- symfony/config: ~2.3
- symfony/dependency-injection: ~2.3
- symfony/http-kernel: ~2.3
Requires (Dev)
- phpunit/phpunit: ~4.0
- satooshi/php-coveralls: ^0.6.1
- symfony/framework-bundle: ~2.3
README
By Originally Matthias Noback
This package helps you create extensible bundles, by introducing a plugin system for bundles. Each bundle plugin can define its own services and configuration. This basically makes your bundles conform to the open/closed principle.
Setup
Install this library in your project by running
composer require ihsanudin/symfony-bundle-plugins
Example
First, your bundle should extend PluginBundle
. You need to implement
the getAlias
method. It should return the name of your bundle's
configuration key (as it will be used in config.yml
for instance).
use Symfonian\Indonesia\BundlePlugins\PluginBundle; class DemoBundle extends PluginBundle { protected function getAlias() { return 'demo'; } }
Each plugin for the bundle should implement PluginBundle
:
use Symfonian\Indonesia\BundlePlugins\PluginBundle; use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\Builder\ArrayNodeDefinition; use Symfony\Component\Config\FileLocator; use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder; use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface; use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\YamlFileLoader; class FooPlugin implements PluginBundle { public function name() { return 'foo'; } public function load( array $pluginConfiguration, ContainerBuilder $container ) { // load specific service definitions for this plugin, // just like you would do in a bundle extension $loader = new YamlFileLoader($container, new FileLocator(__DIR__)); $loader->load('foo.yml'); // $pluginConfiguration contains just the values that are relevant // for this plugin } public function addConfiguration(ArrayNodeDefinition $pluginNode) { // add plugin-specific configuration nodes, // just like you would do in a bundle extension $pluginNode ->children() ->scalarNode('foo') ->isRequired() ->end(); } }
When instantiating this bundle in your AppKernel
class, you can provide any
number of PluginBundle
instances:
class AppKernel extends Kernel { public function registerBundles() { return array( ..., new DemoBundle(array(new FooPlugin())) ); } }
If some of the plugins are required, just introduce a CorePlugin
and make
sure it is always registered by overriding your bundle's
alwaysRegisteredPlugins()
method:
class DemoBundle { ... protected function alwaysRegisteredPlugins() { return array(new CorePlugin()); } }
Register compiler passes
When a bundle plugin needs to register a compiler pass, it can do so in its
build()
method.
class FooPlugin implements PluginBundle { ... public function build(ContainerBuilder $container) { $container->addCompilerPass(...); } }
Booting a plugin
Whenever the main bundle is booted, plugins are allowed to do some runtime
initialization as well. They can do this in their boot()
method. At that
time, the fully initialized service container is available:
class FooPlugin implements PluginBundle { ... public function boot(ContainerInterface $container) { // runtime initialization (will run when the kernel itself is // booted) } }
Simple plugins
If your plugin is quite simple (i.e. only needs a load()
method), just make
the plugin class extend SimplePluginBundle
which contains stub
implementations for the interface methods that you won't need.
Thanks
To @dennisdegreef for reviving the test suite of this project.