Getting Started with Symfony Framework
Start using Symfony2 in 10 minutes! This chapter will walk you through some of the most important concepts behind Symfony2 and explain how you can get started quickly by showing you a simple project in action.
If you've used a web framework before, you should feel right at home with Symfony2. If not, welcome to a whole new way of developing web applications!
If you've used a web framework before, you should feel right at home with Symfony2. If not, welcome to a whole new way of developing web applications!
Downloading Symfony2¶
First, check that you have installed and configured a Web server (such as Apache) with PHP 5.3.2 or higher.
Ready? Start by downloading the "Symfony2 Standard Edition", a Symfony distribution that is preconfigured for the most common use cases and also contains some code that demonstrates how to use Symfony2 (get the archive with the vendors included to get started even faster).
After unpacking the archive under your web server root directory, you should have a Symfony/directory that looks like this:
www/ <- your web root directory
Symfony/ <- the unpacked archive
app/
cache/
config/
logs/
Resources/
bin/
src/
Acme/
DemoBundle/
Controller/
Resources/
...
vendor/
symfony/
doctrine/
...
web/
app.php
...
If you downloaded the Standard Edition without vendors, simply run the following command to download all of the vendor libraries:
php bin/vendors install
Checking the Configuration¶
Symfony2 comes with a visual server configuration tester to help avoid some headaches that come from Web server or PHP misconfiguration. Use the following URL to see the diagnostics for your machine:
http://localhost/Symfony/web/config.php
If there are any outstanding issues listed, correct them. You might also tweak your configuration by following any given recommendations. When everything is fine, click on "Bypass configuration and go to the Welcome page" to request your first "real" Symfony2 webpage:
http://localhost/Symfony/web/app_dev.php/
Symfony2 should welcome and congratulate you for your hard work so far!
Understanding the Fundamentals¶
One of the main goals of a framework is to ensure Separation of Concerns. This keeps your code organized and allows your application to evolve easily over time by avoiding the mixing of database calls, HTML tags, and business logic in the same script. To achieve this goal with Symfony, you'll first need to learn a few fundamental concepts and terms.
Want proof that using a framework is better than mixing everything in the same script? Read the "Symfony2 versus Flat PHP" chapter of the book.
The distribution comes with some sample code that you can use to learn more about the main Symfony2 concepts. Go to the following URL to be greeted by Symfony2 (replace Fabien with your first name):
http://localhost/Symfony/web/app_dev.php/demo/hello/Fabien
What's going on here? Let's dissect the URL:
- app_dev.php: This is a front controller. It is the unique entry point of the application and it responds to all user requests;
- /demo/hello/Fabien: This is the virtual path to the resource the user wants to access.
Your responsibility as a developer is to write the code that maps the user's request(/demo/hello/Fabien) to the resource associated with it (the Hello Fabien! HTML page).
Routing¶
Symfony2 routes the request to the code that handles it by trying to match the requested URL against some configured patterns. By default, these patterns (called routes) are defined in theapp/config/routing.yml configuration file. When you're in the dev environment - indicated by the app_**dev**.php front controller - the app/config/routing_dev.yml configuration file is also loaded. In the Standard Edition, the routes to these "demo" pages are placed in that file:
# app/config/routing_dev.yml
_welcome:
pattern: /
defaults: { _controller: AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index }
_demo:
resource: "@AcmeDemoBundle/Controller/DemoController.php"
type: annotation
prefix: /demo
# ...
The first three lines (after the comment) define the code that is executed when the user requests the "/" resource (i.e. the welcome page you saw earlier). When requested, theAcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index controller will be executed. In the next section, you'll learn exactly what that means.
The Symfony2 Standard Edition uses YAML for its configuration files, but Symfony2 also supports XML, PHP, and annotations natively. The different formats are compatible and may be used interchangeably within an application. Also, the performance of your application does not depend on the configuration format you choose as everything is cached on the very first request.
Controllers¶
A controller is a fancy name for a PHP function or method that handles incoming requests and returns responses (often HTML code). Instead of using the PHP global variables and functions (like$_GET or header()) to manage these HTTP messages, Symfony uses objects: Request and Response. The simplest possible controller might create the response by hand, based on the request:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
$name = $request->query->get('name');
return new Response('Hello '.$name, 200, array('Content-Type' => 'text/plain'));
Symfony2 embraces the HTTP Specification, which are the rules that govern all communication on the Web. Read the "Symfony2 and HTTP Fundamentals" chapter of the book to learn more about this and the added power that this brings.
Symfony2 chooses the controller based on the _controller value from the routing configuration:AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index. This string is the controller logical name, and it references theindexAction method from the Acme\DemoBundle\Controller\WelcomeController class:
// src/Acme/DemoBundle/Controller/WelcomeController.php
namespace Acme\DemoBundle\Controller;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller;
class WelcomeController extends Controller
{
public function indexAction()
{
return $this->render('AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index.html.twig');
}
}
You could have used the full class and method name -Acme\DemoBundle\Controller\WelcomeController::indexAction - for the_controller value. But if you follow some simple conventions, the logical name is shorter and allows for more flexibility.
The WelcomeController class extends the built-in Controller class, which provides useful shortcut methods, like the render() method that loads and renders a template (AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index.html.twig). The returned value is a Response object populated with the rendered content. So, if the needs arise, the Response can be tweaked before it is sent to the browser:
public function indexAction()
{
$response = $this->render('AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index.txt.twig');
$response->headers->set('Content-Type', 'text/plain');
return $response;
}
No matter how you do it, the end goal of your controller is always to return the Response object that should be delivered back to the user. This Response object can be populated with HTML code, represent a client redirect, or even return the contents of a JPG image with a Content-Type header ofimage/jpg.
Extending the Controller base class is optional. As a matter of fact, a controller can be a plain PHP function or even a PHP closure. "The Controller" chapter of the book tells you everything about Symfony2 controllers.
The template name, AcmeDemoBundle:Welcome:index.html.twig, is the template logical name and it references the Resources/views/Welcome/index.html.twig file inside the AcmeDemoBundle (located at src/Acme/DemoBundle). The bundles section below will explain why this is useful.
Now, take a look at the routing configuration again and find the _demo key:
# app/config/routing_dev.yml
_demo:
resource: "@AcmeDemoBundle/Controller/DemoController.php"
type: annotation
prefix: /demo
Symfony2 can read/import the routing information from different files written in YAML, XML, PHP, or even embedded in PHP annotations. Here, the file's logical name is@AcmeDemoBundle/Controller/DemoController.php and refers to thesrc/Acme/DemoBundle/Controller/DemoController.php file. In this file, routes are defined as annotations on action methods:
// src/Acme/DemoBundle/Controller/DemoController.php
use Sensio\Bundle\FrameworkExtraBundle\Configuration\Route;
use Sensio\Bundle\FrameworkExtraBundle\Configuration\Template;
class DemoController extends Controller
{
/**
* @Route("/hello/{name}", name="_demo_hello")
* @Template()
*/
public function helloAction($name)
{
return array('name' => $name);
}
// ...
}
The @Route() annotation defines a new route with a pattern of /hello/{name} that executes thehelloAction method when matched. A string enclosed in curly brackets like {name} is called a placeholder. As you can see, its value can be retrieved through the $name method argument.
Even if annotations are not natively supported by PHP, you use them extensively in Symfony2 as a convenient way to configure the framework behavior and keep the configuration next to the code.
If you take a closer look at the controller code, you can see that instead of rendering a template and returning a Response object like before, it just returns an array of parameters. The @Template()annotation tells Symfony to render the template for you, passing in each variable of the array to the template. The name of the template that's rendered follows the name of the controller. So, in this example, the AcmeDemoBundle:Demo:hello.html.twig template is rendered (located atsrc/Acme/DemoBundle/Resources/views/Demo/hello.html.twig).
The @Route() and @Template() annotations are more powerful than the simple examples shown in this tutorial. Learn more about "annotations in controllers" in the official documentation.
Templates¶
The controller renders the src/Acme/DemoBundle/Resources/views/Demo/hello.html.twigtemplate (or AcmeDemoBundle:Demo:hello.html.twig if you use the logical name):
{# src/Acme/DemoBundle/Resources/views/Demo/hello.html.twig #}
{% extends "AcmeDemoBundle::layout.html.twig" %}
{% block title "Hello " ~ name %}
{% block content %}
<h1>Hello {{ name }}!</h1>
{% endblock %}
By default, Symfony2 uses Twig as its template engine but you can also use traditional PHP templates if you choose. The next chapter will introduce how templates work in Symfony2.
Bundles¶
You might have wondered why the bundle word is used in many names we have seen so far. All the code you write for your application is organized in bundles. In Symfony2 speak, a bundle is a structured set of files (PHP files, stylesheets, JavaScripts, images, ...) that implements a single feature (a blog, a forum, ...) and which can be easily shared with other developers. As of now, we have manipulated one bundle, AcmeDemoBundle. You will learn more about bundles in the last chapter of this tutorial.
Working with Environments¶
Now that you have a better understanding of how Symfony2 works, take a closer look at the bottom of any Symfony2 rendered page. You should notice a small bar with the Symfony2 logo. This is called the "Web Debug Toolbar" and it is the developer's best friend.
But what you see initially is only the tip of the iceberg; click on the weird hexadecimal number to reveal yet another very useful Symfony2 debugging tool: the profiler.
Of course, you won't want to show these tools when you deploy your application to production. That's why you will find another front controller in the web/ directory (app.php), which is optimized for the production environment:
http://localhost/Symfony/web/app.php/demo/hello/Fabien
And if you use Apache with mod_rewrite enabled, you can even omit the app.php part of the URL:
http://localhost/Symfony/web/demo/hello/Fabien
Last but not least, on the production servers, you should point your web root directory to the web/directory to secure your installation and have an even better looking URL:
http://localhost/demo/hello/Fabien
Note that the three URLs above are provided here only as examples of how a URL looks like when the production front controller is used (with or without mod_rewrite). If you actually try them in an out of the box installation of Symfony Standard Edition you will get a 404 error as AcmeDemoBundle is enabled only in dev environment and its routes imported in app/config/routing_dev.yml.
To make you application respond faster, Symfony2 maintains a cache under the app/cache/directory. In the development environment (app_dev.php), this cache is flushed automatically whenever you make changes to any code or configuration. But that's not the case in the production environment (app.php) where performance is key. That's why you should always use the development environment when developing your application.
Different environments of a given application differ only in their configuration. In fact, a configuration can inherit from another one:
# app/config/config_dev.yml
imports:
- { resource: config.yml }
web_profiler:
toolbar: true
intercept_redirects: false
The dev environment (which loads the config_dev.yml configuration file) imports the globalconfig.yml file and then modifies it by, in this example, enabling the web debug toolbar.
Final Thoughts¶
Congratulations! You've had your first taste of Symfony2 code. That wasn't so hard, was it? There's a lot more to explore, but you should already see how Symfony2 makes it really easy to implement web sites better and faster. If you are eager to learn more about Symfony2, dive into the next section: "The View".
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