Introduction to Parameters
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Introduction to Parameters
You can define parameters in the service container which can then be used directly or as part of service definitions. This can help to separate out values that you will want to change more regularly.
Getting and Setting Container Parameters
Working with container parameters is straightforward using the container's accessor methods for parameters. You can check if a parameter has been defined in the container with:
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$container->hasParameter('mailer.transport');
You can retrieve a parameter set in the container with:
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$container->getParameter('mailer.transport');
and set a parameter in the container with:
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$container->setParameter('mailer.transport', 'sendmail');
Note
You can only set a parameter before the container is compiled. To learn more about compiling the container see Compiling the Container.
Parameters in Configuration Files
You can also use the parameters
section of a config file to set parameters:
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parameters:
mailer.transport: sendmail
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<parameters>
<parameter key="mailer.transport">sendmail</parameter>
</parameters>
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$container->setParameter('mailer.transport', 'sendmail');
As well as retrieving the parameter values directly from the container you
can use them in the config files. You can refer to parameters elsewhere by
surrounding them with percent (%
) signs, e.g. %mailer.transport%
.
One use for this is to inject the values into your services. This allows
you to configure different versions of services between applications or multiple
services based on the same class but configured differently within a single
application. You could inject the choice of mail transport into the Mailer
class directly but by making it a parameter. This makes it easier to change
rather than being tied up and hidden with the service definition:
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parameters:
mailer.transport: sendmail
services:
mailer:
class: Mailer
arguments: ['%mailer.transport%']
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<parameters>
<parameter key="mailer.transport">sendmail</parameter>
</parameters>
<services>
<service id="mailer" class="Mailer">
<argument>%mailer.transport%</argument>
</service>
</services>
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use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Reference;
// ...
$container->setParameter('mailer.transport', 'sendmail');
$container
->register('mailer', 'Mailer')
->addArgument('%mailer.transport%');
If you were using this elsewhere as well, then you would only need to change the parameter value in one place if needed.
You can also use the parameters in the service definition, for example, making the class of a service a parameter:
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parameters:
mailer.transport: sendmail
mailer.class: Mailer
services:
mailer:
class: '%mailer.class%'
arguments: ['%mailer.transport%']
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<parameters>
<parameter key="mailer.transport">sendmail</parameter>
<parameter key="mailer.class">Mailer</parameter>
</parameters>
<services>
<service id="mailer" class="%mailer.class%">
<argument>%mailer.transport%</argument>
</service>
</services>
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use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Reference;
// ...
$container->setParameter('mailer.transport', 'sendmail');
$container->setParameter('mailer.class', 'Mailer');
$container
->register('mailer', '%mailer.class%')
->addArgument('%mailer.transport%');
$container
->register('newsletter_manager', 'NewsletterManager')
->addMethodCall('setMailer', array(new Reference('mailer')));
Note
The percent sign inside a parameter or argument, as part of the string, must be escaped with another percent sign:
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arguments: ['http://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&bar=%%d']
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<argument type="string">http://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&bar=%%d</argument>
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->addArgument('http://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&bar=%%d');
Array Parameters
Parameters do not need to be flat strings, they can also be arrays. For the XML
format, you need to use the type="collection"
attribute for all parameters that are
arrays.
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# app/config/config.yml
parameters:
my_mailer.gateways:
- mail1
- mail2
- mail3
my_multilang.language_fallback:
en:
- en
- fr
fr:
- fr
- en
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<!-- app/config/config.xml -->
<parameters>
<parameter key="my_mailer.gateways" type="collection">
<parameter>mail1</parameter>
<parameter>mail2</parameter>
<parameter>mail3</parameter>
</parameter>
<parameter key="my_multilang.language_fallback" type="collection">
<parameter key="en" type="collection">
<parameter>en</parameter>
<parameter>fr</parameter>
</parameter>
<parameter key="fr" type="collection">
<parameter>fr</parameter>
<parameter>en</parameter>
</parameter>
</parameter>
</parameters>
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// app/config/config.php
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Definition;
$container->setParameter('my_mailer.gateways', array('mail1', 'mail2', 'mail3'));
$container->setParameter('my_multilang.language_fallback', array(
'en' => array('en', 'fr'),
'fr' => array('fr', 'en'),
));
Constants as Parameters
The container also has support for setting PHP constants as parameters. To
take advantage of this feature, map the name of your constant to a parameter
key, and define the type as constant
.
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<parameters>
<parameter key="global.constant.value" type="constant">GLOBAL_CONSTANT</parameter>
<parameter key="my_class.constant.value" type="constant">My_Class::CONSTANT_NAME</parameter>
</parameters>
</container>
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$container->setParameter('global.constant.value', GLOBAL_CONSTANT);
$container->setParameter('my_class.constant.value', My_Class::CONSTANT_NAME);
Note
This does not works for Yaml configuration. If you're using Yaml, you can import an XML file to take advantage of this functionality:
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# app/config/config.yml
imports:
- { resource: parameters.xml }