Symfony UX Turbo
Symfony UX Turbo is a Symfony bundle integrating the Hotwire Turbo library in Symfony applications. It is part of the Symfony UX initiative.
Symfony UX Turbo allows having the same user experience as with Single Page Applications but without having to write a single line of JavaScript!
Symfony UX Turbo also integrates with Symfony Mercure or any other transports to broadcast DOM changes to all currently connected users!
You're in a hurry? Take a look at the chat example to discover the full potential of Symfony UX Turbo.
Or watch the Turbo Screencast on SymfonyCasts.
Installation
Install the bundle using Composer and Symfony Flex:
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$ composer require symfony/ux-turbo
If you're using WebpackEncore, install your assets and restart Encore (not needed if you're using AssetMapper):
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$ npm install --force
$ npm run watch
Usage
Accelerating Navigation with Turbo Drive
Turbo Drive enhances page-level navigation. It watches for link clicks and form submissions, performs them in the background, and updates the page without doing a full reload. This gives you the "single-page-app" experience without major changes to your code!
Turbo Drive is automatically enabled when you install Symfony UX Turbo. And while you don't need to make major changes to get things to work smoothly, there are 3 things to be aware of:
1. Make sure your JavaScript is Turbo-ready
Because navigation no longer results in full page refreshes, you may need to adjust your JavaScript to work properly. The best solution is to write your JavaScript using Stimulus or something similar.
We also recommend that you place your script
tags inside your
head
tag so that they aren't reloaded on every navigation (Turbo
re-executes any script
tags inside body
on every navigation).
Add a defer
attribute to each script
tag to prevent it from
blocking the page load. See Moving <script> inside <head> and the "defer" Attribute
for more info.
2. Reloading When a JavaScript/CSS File Changes
Turbo drive can automatically perform a full refresh if the content of one of your CSS or JS files changes, to ensure that your users always have the latest version.
To enable this, first verify that you have versioning enabled in Encore so that your filenames change when the file contents change:
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// webpack.config.js
Encore.
// ...
.enableVersioning(Encore.isProduction())
Then add a data-turbo-track="reload"
attribute to all of your
script
and link
tags:
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# config/packages/webpack_encore.yaml
webpack_encore:
# ...
script_attributes:
defer: true
'data-turbo-track': reload
link_attributes:
'data-turbo-track': reload
For more info, see: Turbo Reloading When Assets Change.
3. Form Response Code Changes
Turbo Drive also converts form submissions to AJAX calls. To get it to work, you do need to adjust your code to return a 422 status code on a validation error (instead of a 200).
If you're using Symfony 6.2+, the render()
method takes
care of this automatically:
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#[Route('/product/new', name: 'product_new')]
public function newProduct(Request $request): Response
{
$form = $this->createForm(ProductFormType::class, null, [
'action' => $this->generateUrl('product_new'),
]);
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
// save...
return $this->redirectToRoute('product_list');
}
return $this->render('product/new.html.twig', [
'form' => $form,
]);
}
If you're not using Symfony 6.2+, adjust your code manually:
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#[Route('/product/new')]
public function newProduct(Request $request): Response
{
$form = $this->createForm(ProductFormType::class);
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
// save...
}
+ $response = new Response(null, $form->isSubmitted() ? 422 : 200);
return $this->render('product/new.html.twig', [
'form' => $form->createView()
- ]);
+ ], $response);
}
This changes the response status code to 422 on validation error, which
tells Turbo Drive that the form submit failed and it should re-render
with the errors. You can also choose to change the success redirect
status code from 302 (the default) to 303 (HTTP_SEE_OTHER
). That's
not required for Turbo Drive, but 303 is "more correct" for this
situation.
Note
NOTE: When your form contains more than one submit button and, you want to check which of the buttons was clicked to adapt the program flow in your controller. You need to add a value to each button because Turbo Drive doesn't send element with empty value:
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$builder
// ...
->add('save', SubmitType::class, [
'label' => 'Create Task',
'attr' => [
'value' => 'create-task'
]
])
->add('saveAndAdd', SubmitType::class, [
'label' => 'Save and Add',
'attr' => [
'value' => 'save-and-add'
]
]);
More Turbo Drive Info
Read the Turbo Drive documentation to learn about the advanced features offered by Turbo Drive.
Decomposing Complex Pages with Turbo Frames
Once Symfony UX Turbo is installed, you can also leverage Turbo Frames:
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{# home.html.twig #}
{% extends 'base.html.twig' %}
{% block body %}
<turbo-frame id="the_frame_id">
<a href="{{ path('another-page') }}">This block is scoped, the rest of the page will not change if you click here!</a>
</turbo-frame>
{% endblock %}
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{# another-page.html.twig #}
{% extends 'base.html.twig' %}
{% block body %}
<div>This will be discarded</div>
<turbo-frame id="the_frame_id">
The content of this block will replace the content of the Turbo Frame!
The rest of the HTML generated by this template (outside of the Turbo Frame) will be ignored.
</turbo-frame>
{% endblock %}
The content of a frame can be lazy loaded:
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{# home.html.twig #}
{% extends 'base.html.twig' %}
{% block body %}
<turbo-frame id="the_frame_id" src="{{ path('block') }}">
A placeholder.
</turbo-frame>
{% endblock %}
In your controller, you can detect if the request has been triggered by a Turbo Frame, and retrieve the ID of this frame:
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// src/Controller/MyController.php
namespace App\Controller;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
class MyController
{
#[Route('/')]
public function home(Request $request): Response
{
// Get the frame ID (will be null if the request hasn't been triggered by a Turbo Frame)
$frameId = $request->headers->get('Turbo-Frame');
// ...
}
}
<twig:Turbo:Frame> Twig Component
2.22
The <twig:Turbo:Frame>
Twig Component was added in Turbo 2.22.
Simple example:
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<twig:Turbo:Frame id="the_frame_id" />
{# renders as: #}
<turbo-frame id="the_frame_id"></turbo-frame>
With a HTML attribute:
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<twig:Turbo:Frame id="the_frame_id" loading="lazy" src="{{ path('block') }}" />
{# renders as: #}
<turbo-frame id="the_frame_id" loading="lazy" src="https://example.com/block"></turbo-frame>
With content:
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<twig:Turbo:Frame id="the_frame_id" src="{{ path('block') }}">
A placeholder.
</twig:Turbo:Frame>
{# renders as: #}
<turbo-frame id="the_frame_id" src="https://example.com/block">
A placeholder.
</turbo-frame>
Writing Tests
Under the hood, Symfony UX Turbo relies on JavaScript to update the HTML page. To test if your website works properly, you will have to write UI tests.
Fortunately, we've got you covered! Symfony Panther is a convenient testing tool using real browsers to test your Symfony application. It shares the same API as BrowserKit, the functional testing tool shipped with Symfony.
Install Symfony Panther and write a test for our Turbo Frame:
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// tests/TurboFrameTest.php
namespace App\Tests;
use Symfony\Component\Panther\PantherTestCase;
class TurboFrameTest extends PantherTestCase
{
public function testFrame(): void
{
$client = self::createPantherClient();
$client->request('GET', '/');
$client->clickLink('This block is scoped, the rest of the page will not change if you click here!');
$this->assertSelectorWillContain('body', 'This will replace the content of the Turbo Frame!');
}
}
Run bin/phpunit
to execute the test! Symfony Panther automatically
starts your application with a web server and tests it using Google
Chrome or Firefox!
You can even watch changes happening in the browser by using:
PANTHER_NO_HEADLESS=1 bin/phpunit --debug
Read the Turbo Frames documentation to learn everything you can do using Turbo Frames.
Coming Alive with Turbo Streams
Turbo Streams are a way for the server to send partial page updates to clients. There are two main ways to receive the updates:
- in response to a user action, for instance when the user submits a form;
- asynchronously, by sending updates to clients using Mercure, WebSocket and similar protocols.
Forms
2.1
Prior to 2.1, TurboStreamResponse::STREAM_FORMAT
was used instead of TurboBundle::STREAM_FORMAT
.
Also, one had to return a new TurboStreamResponse()
object as the third argument to $this->render()
.
Let's discover how to use Turbo Streams to enhance your Symfony forms:
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// src/Controller/TaskController.php
namespace App\Controller;
// ...
use App\Entity\Task;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\TurboBundle;
class TaskController extends AbstractController
{
public function new(Request $request): Response
{
$form = $this->createForm(TaskType::class, new Task());
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
$task = $form->getData();
// ... perform some action, such as saving the task to the database
// 🔥 The magic happens here! 🔥
if (TurboBundle::STREAM_FORMAT === $request->getPreferredFormat()) {
// If the request comes from Turbo, set the content type as text/vnd.turbo-stream.html and only send the HTML to update
$request->setRequestFormat(TurboBundle::STREAM_FORMAT);
return $this->renderBlock('task/new.html.twig', 'success_stream', ['task' => $task]);
}
// If the client doesn't support JavaScript, or isn't using Turbo, the form still works as usual.
// Symfony UX Turbo is all about progressively enhancing your applications!
return $this->redirectToRoute('task_success', [], Response::HTTP_SEE_OTHER);
}
// Symfony 6.2+
return $this->render('task/new.html.twig', [
'form' => $form,
]);
}
}
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{# bottom of new.html.twig #}
{% block success_stream %}
<turbo-stream action="replace" targets="#my_div_id">
<template>
The element having the id "my_div_id" will be replaced by this block, without a full page reload!
<div>The task "{{ task }}" has been created!</div>
</template>
</turbo-stream>
{% endblock %}
Supported actions are append
, prepend
, replace
, update
,
remove
, before
, after
and refresh
.
Read the Turbo Streams documentation for more details.
Resetting the Form
When you return a Turbo stream, only the elements in that stream template will be updated. This means that if you want to reset the form, you need to include a new form in the stream template.
To do that, first isolate your form rendering into a block so you can reuse it:
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{# new.html.twig #}
+{% block task_form %}
{{ form(form) }}
+{% endblock %}
Now, create a "fresh" form and pass it into your stream:
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// src/Controller/TaskController.php
// ...
class TaskController extends AbstractController
{
public function new(Request $request): Response
{
$form = $this->createForm(TaskType::class, new Task());
+ $emptyForm = clone $form;
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
// ...
if (TurboBundle::STREAM_FORMAT === $request->getPreferredFormat()) {
$request->setRequestFormat(TurboBundle::STREAM_FORMAT);
return $this->renderBlock('task/new.html.twig', 'success_stream', [
'task' => $task,
+ 'form' => $emptyForm,
]);
}
// ...
return $this->redirectToRoute('task_success', [], Response::HTTP_SEE_OTHER);
}
return $this->render('task/new.html.twig', [
'form' => $form,
]);
}
}
Now, in your stream template, "replace" the entire form:
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{# new.html.twig #}
{% block success_stream %}
+<turbo-stream action="replace" targets="form[name=task]">
+ <template>
+ {{ block('task_form') }}
+ </template>
+</turbo-stream>
<turbo-stream action="replace" targets="#my_div_id">
Sending Async Changes using Mercure: a Chat
Symfony UX Turbo also supports broadcasting HTML updates to all currently connected clients, using the Mercure protocol or any other.
To illustrate this, let's build a chat system with 0 lines of JavaScript!
Start by installing the Mercure support on your project:
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$ composer require symfony/mercure-bundle
Then, enable the "mercure stream" controller in assets/controllers.json
:
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"@symfony/ux-turbo": {
"mercure-turbo-stream": {
+ "enabled": true,
- "enabled": false,
"fetch": "lazy"
}
},
The easiest way to have a working development (and production-ready) environment is to use Symfony Docker, which comes with a Mercure hub integrated in the web server.
If you use Symfony Flex, the configuration has been generated for you,
be sure to update the MERCURE_URL
in the .env
file to point to a
Mercure Hub (it's not necessary if you are using Symfony Docker).
Otherwise, configure Mercure Hub(s) to use:
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# config/packages/turbo.yaml
turbo:
mercure:
hubs: [default]
Let's create our chat:
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// src/Controller/ChatController.php
namespace App\Controller;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\TextType;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Mercure\HubInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Mercure\Update;
class ChatController extends AbstractController
{
public function chat(Request $request, HubInterface $hub): Response
{
$form = $this->createFormBuilder()
->add('message', TextType::class, ['attr' => ['autocomplete' => 'off']])
->add('send', SubmitType::class)
->getForm();
$emptyForm = clone $form; // Used to display an empty form after a POST request
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
$data = $form->getData();
// 🔥 The magic happens here! 🔥
// The HTML update is pushed to the client using Mercure
$hub->publish(new Update(
'chat',
$this->renderView('chat/message.stream.html.twig', ['message' => $data['message']])
));
// Force an empty form to be rendered below
// It will replace the content of the Turbo Frame after a post
$form = $emptyForm;
}
return $this->render('chat/index.html.twig', [
'form' => $form,
]);
}
}
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{# chat/index.html.twig #}
{% extends 'base.html.twig' %}
{% block body %}
<h1>Chat</h1>
<div id="messages" {{ turbo_stream_listen('chat') }}>
{#
The messages will be displayed here.
"turbo_stream_listen()" automatically registers a Stimulus controller that subscribes to the "chat" topic as managed by the transport.
All connected users will receive the new messages!
#}
</div>
<turbo-frame id="message_form">
{{ form(form) }}
{#
The form is displayed in a Turbo Frame, with this trick a new empty form is displayed after every post,
but the rest of the page will not change.
#}
</turbo-frame>
{% endblock %}
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{# chat/message.stream.html.twig #}
{# New messages received through the Mercure connection are appended to the div with the "messages" ID. #}
<turbo-stream action="append" targets="#messages">
<template>
<div>{{ message }}</div>
</template>
</turbo-stream>
Keep in mind that you can use all features provided by Symfony Mercure, including private updates (to ensure that only authorized users will receive the updates) and async dispatching with Symfony Messenger.
Broadcast Doctrine Entities Update
Symfony UX Turbo also comes with a convenient integration with Doctrine ORM.
With a single attribute, your clients can subscribe to creations, updates and deletions of entities:
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// src/Entity/Book.php
namespace App\Entity;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Attribute\Broadcast;
#[ORM\Entity]
#[Broadcast] // 🔥 The magic happens here
class Book
{
#[ORM\Column, ORM\Id, ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy: "AUTO")]
public ?int $id = null;
#[ORM\Column]
public string $title = '';
}
To subscribe to updates of an entity, pass it as parameter of the
turbo_stream_listen()
Twig helper:
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<div id="book_{{ book.id }}" {{ turbo_stream_listen(book) }}></div>
Alternatively, you can subscribe to updates made to all entities of a given class by using its Fully Qualified Class Name:
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<div id="books" {{ turbo_stream_listen('App\\Entity\\Book') }}></div>
Finally, create the template that will be rendered when an entity is created, modified or deleted:
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{# templates/broadcast/Book.stream.html.twig #}
{% block create %}
<turbo-stream action="append" targets="#books">
<template>
<div id="{{ 'book_' ~ id }}">{{ entity.title }} (#{{ id }})</div>
</template>
</turbo-stream>
{% endblock %}
{% block update %}
<turbo-stream action="update" targets="#book_{{ id }}">
<template>
{{ entity.title }} (#{{ id }}, updated)
</template>
</turbo-stream>
{% endblock %}
{% block remove %}
<turbo-stream action="remove" targets="#book_{{ id }}"></turbo-stream>
{% endblock %}
By convention, Symfony UX Turbo will look for a template named
templates/broadcast/{ClassName}.stream.html.twig
. This template
must contain at least 3 blocks: create
, update
and
remove
(they can be empty, but they must exist).
Every time an entity marked with the Broadcast
attribute changes,
Symfony UX Turbo will render the associated template and will broadcast
the changes to all connected clients.
Each block must contain a list of Turbo Stream actions. These actions will be automatically applied by Turbo to the DOM tree of every connected client. Each template can contain as many actions as needed.
For instance, if the same entity is displayed on different pages, you can include all actions updating these different places in the template. Actions applying to non-existing DOM elements will simply be ignored.
The current entity, the string representation of its identifier(s), the
action (create
, update
or remove
) and options set on the
Broadcast
attribute are passed to the template as variables:
entity
, id
, action
and options
.
Broadcast Conventions and Configuration
Because Symfony UX Turbo needs access to their identifier, entities have
to either be managed by Doctrine ORM, have a public property named
id
, or have a public method named getId()
.
Symfony UX Turbo will look for a template named after mapping their
Fully Qualified Class Names. For example and by default, if a class
marked with the Broadcast
attribute is named App\Entity\Foo
, the
corresponding template will be found in
templates/broadcast/Foo.stream.html.twig
.
It's possible to configure own namespaces are mapped to templates by
using the turbo.broadcast.entity_template_prefixes
configuration
options. The default is defined as such:
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# config/packages/turbo.yaml
turbo:
broadcast:
entity_template_prefixes:
App\Entity\: broadcast/
Finally, it's also possible to explicitly set the template to use with
the template
parameter of the Broadcast
attribute:
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#[Broadcast(template: 'my-template.stream.html.twig')]
class Book { /* ... */ }
Broadcast Options
The Broadcast
attribute comes with a set of handy options:
transports
(string[]
): a list of transports to broadcast totopics
(string[]
): a list of topics to use, the default topic is derived from the FQCN of the entity and from its idtemplate
(string
): Twig template to render (see above)
The Broadcast
attribute can be repeated (e.g. you can have multiple
`#[Broadcast]`. This is convenient to render several templates associated with
their own topics for the same change (e.g. the same data is rendered in different
way in the list and in the detail pages).
Options are transport-specific. When using Mercure, some extra options are supported:
private
(bool
): marks Mercure updates as privatesse_id
(string
):id
field of the SSEsse_type
(string
):type
field of the SSEsse_retry
(int
):retry
field of the SSE
The Mercure broadcaster also supports Expression Language in topics by starting with `@=`.
Example:
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// src/Entity/Book.php
namespace App\Entity;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Attribute\Broadcast;
#[Broadcast(topics: ['@="book_detail" ~ entity.getId()', 'books'], template: 'book_detail.stream.html.twig', private: true)]
#[Broadcast(topics: ['@="book_list" ~ entity.getId()', 'books'], template: 'book_list.stream.html.twig', private: true)]
class Book
{
// ...
}
Using Multiple Transports
Symfony UX Turbo allows sending Turbo Streams updates using multiple transports. For instance, it's possible to use several Mercure hubs with the following configuration:
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# config/packages/mercure.yaml
mercure:
hubs:
hub1:
url: https://hub1.example.net/.well-known/mercure
jwt: snip
hub2:
url: https://hub2.example.net/.well-known/mercure
jwt: snip
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# config/packages/turbo.yaml
turbo:
mercure:
hubs: [hub1, hub2]
Use the appropriate Mercure HubInterface
service to send a change
using a specific transport:
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// src/Controller/MyController.php
namespace App\Controller;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Mercure\HubInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Mercure\Update;
class MyController extends AbstractController
{
public function publish(HubInterface $hub1): Response
{
$id = $hub1->publish(new Update('topic', 'content'));
return new Response("Update #{$id} published.");
}
}
Changes made to entities marked with the #[Broadcast]
attribute will
be sent using all configured transport by default. You can specify the
list of transports to use for a specific entity class using the
transports
parameter:
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// src/Entity/Book.php
namespace App\Entity;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Attribute\Broadcast;
#[Broadcast(transports: ['hub1', 'hub2'])]
/** ... */
class Book
{
// ...
}
Finally, generate the HTML attributes registering the Stimulus
controller corresponding to your transport by passing an extra argument
to turbo_stream_listen()
:
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<div id="messages" {{ turbo_stream_listen('App\\Entity\\Book', 'hub2') }}></div>
Registering a Custom Transport
If you prefer using another protocol than Mercure, you can create custom transports:
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// src/Turbo/Broadcaster.php
namespace App\Turbo;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Attribute\Broadcast;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Broadcaster\BroadcasterInterface;
class Broadcaster implements BroadcasterInterface
{
public function broadcast(object $entity, string $action): void
{
// This method will be called every time an object marked with the #[Broadcast] attribute is changed
$attribute = (new \ReflectionClass($entity))->getAttributes(Broadcast::class)[0] ?? null;
// ...
}
}
Then a stream listener:
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// src/Turbo/TurboStreamListenRenderer.php
namespace App\Turbo;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\AsTaggedItem;
use Symfony\UX\StimulusBundle\Helper\StimulusHelper;
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Twig\TurboStreamListenRendererInterface;
use Twig\Environment;
#[AsTaggedItem(index: 'my-transport')]
class TurboStreamListenRenderer implements TurboStreamListenRendererInterface
{
public function __construct(
private StimulusHelper $stimulusHelper,
) {}
public function renderTurboStreamListen(Environment $env, $topic): string
{
$stimulusAttributes = $this->stimulusHelper->createStimulusAttributes();
$stimulusAttributes->addController('your_stimulus_controller', [
/* controller values such as topic */
]);
return (string) $stimulusAttributes;
}
}
The broadcaster must be registered as a service tagged with
turbo.broadcaster
and the renderer must be tagged with
turbo.renderer.stream_listen
. If you enabled autoconfigure option
(it's the case by default), these tags will be added automatically
because these classes implement the BroadcasterInterface
and
TurboStreamListenRendererInterface
interfaces, the related services
will be.
Backward Compatibility promise
This bundle aims at following the same Backward Compatibility promise as the Symfony framework: https://symfony.com/doc/current/contributing/code/bc.html
Credits
Symfony UX Turbo has been created by Kévin Dunglas. It has been inspired by hotwired/turbo-rails and sroze/live-twig.