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[#6438] Fix class names and shorten article after merging
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wouterj committed Jun 11, 2016
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112 changes: 47 additions & 65 deletions cookbook/controller/argument_value_resolver.rst
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Expand Up @@ -7,33 +7,34 @@ Extending Action Argument Resolving
.. versionadded:: 3.1
The ``ArgumentResolver`` and value resolvers were introduced in Symfony 3.1.

In the book, you've learned that you can get the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\Request`
object via an argument in your controller. This argument has to be type-hinted
by the ``Request`` class in order to be recognized. This is done via the
In the book, you've learned that you can get the
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\Request` object via an argument in
your controller. This argument has to be type-hinted by the ``Request`` class
in order to be recognized. This is done via the
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentResolver`. By
creating and registering custom argument value resolvers, you can extend
this functionality.
creating and registering custom argument value resolvers, you can extend this
functionality.

Functionality Shipped with the HttpKernel
-----------------------------------------

Symfony ships with four value resolvers in the HttpKernel component:

:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentValueResolver\\ArgumentFromAttributeResolver`
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentResolver\\RequestAttributeValueResolver`
Attempts to find a request attribute that matches the name of the argument.

:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentValueResolver\\RequestValueResolver`
Injects the current ``Request`` if type-hinted with ``Request``, or a
sub-class thereof.
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentResolver\\RequestValueResolver`
Injects the current ``Request`` if type-hinted with ``Request`` or a class
extending ``Request``.

:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentValueResolver\\DefaultValueResolver`
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentResolver\\DefaultValueResolver`
Will set the default value of the argument if present and the argument
is optional.

:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentValueResolver\\VariadicValueResolver`
Verifies in the request if your data is an array and will add all of
them to the argument list. When the action is called, the last (variadic)
argument will contain all the values of this array.
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentResolver\\VariadicValueResolver`
Verifies if the request data is an array and will add all of them to the
argument list. When the action is called, the last (variadic) argument will
contain all the values of this array.

.. note::

Expand All @@ -43,9 +44,10 @@ Symfony ships with four value resolvers in the HttpKernel component:
Adding a Custom Value Resolver
------------------------------

Adding a new value resolver requires one class and one service defintion.
In the next example, you'll create a value resolver to inject the ``User``
object from the security system. Given you write the following action::
Adding a new value resolver requires creatign one class and one service

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@linaori

linaori Jun 12, 2016

Contributor

typo: creatign

definition. In the next example, you'll create a value resolver to inject the
``User`` object from the security system. Given you write the following
controller::

namespace AppBundle\Controller;

Expand All @@ -56,12 +58,13 @@ object from the security system. Given you write the following action::
{
public function indexAction(User $user)
{
return new Response('<html><body>Hello '.$user->getUsername().'!</body></html>');
return new Response('Hello '.$user->getUsername().'!');
}
}

Somehow you will have to get the ``User`` object and inject it into the controller.
This can be done by implementing the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentValueResolverInterface`.
This can be done by implementing the
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Controller\\ArgumentValueResolverInterface`.
This interface specifies that you have to implement two methods:

``supports()``
Expand All @@ -80,7 +83,8 @@ Now that you know what to do, you can implement this interface. To get the
current ``User``, you need the current security token. This token can be
retrieved from the token storage::

namespace AppBundle\ArgumentValueResolver;
// src/AppBundle/ArgumentResolver/UserValueResolver.php
namespace AppBundle\ArgumentResolver;

use AppBundle\Entity\User;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Controller\ArgumentValueResolverInterface;
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -123,31 +127,22 @@ must fulfill the following requirements:
* A security token must be present;
* The value must be an instance of the ``User``.

When all those requirements are met and true is returned, the ``ArgumentResolver``
calls ``resolve()`` with the same values as it called ``supports()``.
When all those requirements are met and ``true`` is returned, the
``ArgumentResolver`` calls ``resolve()`` with the same values as it called
``supports()``.

That's it! Now all you have to do is add the configuration for the service
container. This can be done by tagging the service with ``controller.argument_resolver``
and adding a priority.

.. note::

While adding a priority is optional, it's recommended to add one to
make sure the expected value is injected. The ``ArgumentFromAttributeResolver``
has a priority of 100. As this one is responsible for fetching attributes
from the ``Request``, it's also recommended to trigger your custom value
resolver with a lower priority. This makes sure the argument resolvers
are not triggered in (e.g.) subrequests if you pass your user along:
``{{ render(controller('AppBundle:User:index', {'user', app.user})) }}``.

.. configuration-block::

.. code-block:: yaml
# app/config/services.yml
services:
app.value_resolver.user:
class: AppBundle\ArgumentValueResolver\UserValueResolver
class: AppBundle\ArgumentResolver\UserValueResolver
arguments:
- '@security.token_storage'
tags:
Expand All @@ -162,7 +157,9 @@ and adding a priority.
xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd">
<services>
<service id="app.value_resolver.user" class="AppBundle\ArgumentValueResolver\UserValueResolver">
<service id="app.value_resolver.user"
class="AppBundle\ArgumentResolver\UserValueResolver"
>
<argument type="service" id="security.token_storage">
<tag name="controller.argument_value_resolver" priority="50" />
</service>
Expand All @@ -176,44 +173,29 @@ and adding a priority.
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Definition;
$defintion = new Definition(
'AppBundle\ArgumentValueResolver\UserValueResolver',
'AppBundle\ArgumentResolver\UserValueResolver',
array(new Reference('security.token_storage'))
);
$definition->addTag('controller.argument_value_resolver', array('priority' => 50));
$container->setDefinition('app.value_resolver.user', $definition);
Creating an Optional User Resolver
----------------------------------

When you want your user to be optional, e.g. when your page is behind a
firewall that also allows anonymous authentication, you might not always
have a security user. To get this to work, you only have to change your
method signature to `UserInterface $user = null`.
While adding a priority is optional, it's recommended to add one to make sure
the expected value is injected. The ``RequestAttributeValueResolver`` has a
priority of 100. As this one is responsible for fetching attributes from the
``Request``, it's recommended to trigger your custom value resolver with a
lower priority. This makes sure the argument resolvers are not triggered when
the attribute is present. For instance, when passing the user along a
subrequests.

When you take the ``UserValueResolver`` from the previous example, you can
see there is no logic in case of failure to comply to the requirements. Default
values are defined in the signature and are available in the ``ArgumentMetadata``.
When a default value is available and there are no resolvers that support
the given value, the ``DefaultValueResolver`` is triggered. This Resolver
takes the default value of your argument and yields it to the argument list::
.. tip::

namespace Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Controller\ArgumentResolver;
As you see in the ``UserValueResolver::supports()`` method, the user may
not be available (e.g. when the controller is not behind a firewall). In
these cases, the resolver will not be executed. If no argument value is
resolved, an exception will be throwed.

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linaori Jun 12, 2016

Contributor

Should be "an exception will be thrown." (or perhaps "is thrown."?)

use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Controller\ArgumentValueResolverInterface;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\ControllerMetadata\ArgumentMetadata;

final class DefaultValueResolver implements ArgumentValueResolverInterface
{
public function supports(Request $request, ArgumentMetadata $argument)
{
return $argument->hasDefaultValue();
}

public function resolve(Request $request, ArgumentMetadata $argument)
{
yield $argument->getDefaultValue();
}
}
To prevent this, you can add a default value in the controller (e.g. ``User
$user = null``). The ``DefaultValueResolver`` is executed as last resolver
and will use the default value if no value is resolved already.

.. _`yield`: http://php.net/manual/en/language.generators.syntax.php

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