Advanced Usage of the VarDumper Component
Warning: You are browsing the documentation for Symfony 3.x, which is no longer maintained.
Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.1 (the current stable version).
The dump()
function is just a thin wrapper and a more convenient way to call
VarDumper::dump().
You can change the behavior of this function by calling
VarDumper::setHandler($callable).
Calls to dump()
will then be forwarded to $callable
.
By adding a handler, you can customize the Cloners, Dumpers and Casters as explained below. A simple implementation of a handler function might look like this:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\HtmlDumper;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\VarDumper;
VarDumper::setHandler(function ($var) {
$cloner = new VarCloner();
$dumper = 'cli' === PHP_SAPI ? new CliDumper() : new HtmlDumper();
$dumper->dump($cloner->cloneVar($var));
});
Cloners
A cloner is used to create an intermediate representation of any PHP variable. Its output is a Data object that wraps this representation.
You can create a Data
object this way:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
$cloner = new VarCloner();
$data = $cloner->cloneVar($myVar);
// this is commonly then passed to the dumper
// see the example at the top of this page
// $dumper->dump($data);
Whatever the cloned data structure, resulting Data
objects are always
serializable.
A cloner applies limits when creating the representation, so that one can represent only a subset of the cloned variable. Before calling cloneVar(), you can configure these limits:
- setMaxItems()
-
Configures the maximum number of items that will be cloned
past the minimum nesting depth. Items are counted using a breadth-first
algorithm so that lower level items have higher priority than deeply nested
items. Specifying
-1
removes the limit. - setMinDepth()
-
Configures the minimum tree depth where we are guaranteed to clone all the items. After this depth is reached, only
setMaxItems
items will be cloned. The default value is1
, which is consistent with older Symfony versions.3.4
The
setMinDepth()
method was introduced in Symfony 3.4. - setMaxString()
-
Configures the maximum number of characters that will be cloned before
cutting overlong strings. Specifying
-1
removes the limit.
Before dumping it, you can further limit the resulting Data object using the following methods:
- withMaxDepth()
- Limits dumps in the depth dimension.
- withMaxItemsPerDepth()
- Limits the number of items per depth level.
- withRefHandles()
- Removes internal objects' handles for sparser output (useful for tests).
- seek()
-
Selects only sub-parts of already cloned arrays, objects or resources.
3.2
The
seek()
method was introduced in Symfony 3.2.
Unlike the previous limits on cloners that remove data on purpose, these can be changed back and forth before dumping since they do not affect the intermediate representation internally.
Dumpers
A dumper is responsible for outputting a string representation of a PHP variable, using a Data object as input. The destination and the formatting of this output vary with dumpers.
This component comes with an HtmlDumper for HTML output and a CliDumper for optionally colored command line output.
For example, if you want to dump some $variable
, just do:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
$cloner = new VarCloner();
$dumper = new CliDumper();
$dumper->dump($cloner->cloneVar($variable));
By using the first argument of the constructor, you can select the output
stream where the dump will be written. By default, the CliDumper
writes
on php://stdout
and the HtmlDumper
on php://output
. But any PHP
stream (resource or URL) is acceptable.
Instead of a stream destination, you can also pass it a callable
that
will be called repeatedly for each line generated by a dumper. This
callable can be configured using the first argument of a dumper's constructor,
but also using the
setOutput()
method or the second argument of the
dump() method.
For example, to get a dump as a string in a variable, you can do:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
$cloner = new VarCloner();
$dumper = new CliDumper();
$output = '';
$dumper->dump(
$cloner->cloneVar($variable),
function ($line, $depth) use (&$output) {
// A negative depth means "end of dump"
if ($depth >= 0) {
// Adds a two spaces indentation to the line
$output .= str_repeat(' ', $depth).$line."\n";
}
}
);
// $output is now populated with the dump representation of $variable
Another option for doing the same could be:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
$cloner = new VarCloner();
$dumper = new CliDumper();
$output = fopen('php://memory', 'r+b');
$dumper->dump($cloner->cloneVar($variable), $output);
$output = stream_get_contents($output, -1, 0);
// $output is now populated with the dump representation of $variable
Tip
You can pass true
to the second argument of the
dump()
method to make it return the dump as a string:
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$output = $dumper->dump($cloner->cloneVar($variable), true);
3.2
The ability to return a string was introduced in Symfony 3.2.
Dumpers implement the DataDumperInterface interface that specifies the dump(Data $data) method. They also typically implement the DumperInterface that frees them from re-implementing the logic required to walk through a Data object's internal structure.
The HtmlDumper limits string length and nesting depth of the output to make it more readable. These options can be overridden by the third optional parameter of the dump(Data $data) method:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\HtmlDumper;
$output = fopen('php://memory', 'r+b');
$dumper = new HtmlDumper();
$dumper->dump($var, $output, [
// 1 and 160 are the default values for these options
'maxDepth' => 1,
'maxStringLength' => 160
]);
3.2
Support for passing display options to the dump()
method was introduced
in Symfony 3.2.
The output format of a dumper can be fine tuned by the two flags
DUMP_STRING_LENGTH
and DUMP_LIGHT_ARRAY
which are passed as a bitmap
in the third constructor argument. They can also be set via environment
variables when using
assertDumpEquals($dump, $data, $filter, $message)
during unit testing.
The $filter
argument of assertDumpEquals()
can be used to pass a
bit field of Caster::EXCLUDE_*
constants and influences the expected
output produced by the different casters.
3.4
The $filter
argument of assertDumpEquals()
was introduced in
Symfony 3.4.
3.1
The DUMP_STRING_LENGTH
and DUMP_LIGHT_ARRAY
flags were introduced
in Symfony 3.1.
If DUMP_STRING_LENGTH
is set, then the length of a string is displayed
next to its content:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\AbstractDumper;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
$varCloner = new VarCloner();
$var = ['test'];
$dumper = new CliDumper();
echo $dumper->dump($varCloner->cloneVar($var), true);
// array:1 [
// 0 => "test"
// ]
$dumper = new CliDumper(null, null, AbstractDumper::DUMP_STRING_LENGTH);
echo $dumper->dump($varCloner->cloneVar($var), true);
// (added string length before the string)
// array:1 [
// 0 => (4) "test"
// ]
If DUMP_LIGHT_ARRAY
is set, then arrays are dumped in a shortened format
similar to PHP's short array notation:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\AbstractDumper;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
$varCloner = new VarCloner();
$var = ['test'];
$dumper = new CliDumper();
echo $dumper->dump($varCloner->cloneVar($var), true);
// array:1 [
// 0 => "test"
// ]
$dumper = new CliDumper(null, null, AbstractDumper::DUMP_LIGHT_ARRAY);
echo $dumper->dump($varCloner->cloneVar($var), true);
// (no more array:1 prefix)
// [
// 0 => "test"
// ]
If you would like to use both options, then you can just combine them by
using the logical OR operator |
:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\AbstractDumper;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Dumper\CliDumper;
$varCloner = new VarCloner();
$var = ['test'];
$dumper = new CliDumper(null, null, AbstractDumper::DUMP_STRING_LENGTH | AbstractDumper::DUMP_LIGHT_ARRAY);
echo $dumper->dump($varCloner->cloneVar($var), true);
// [
// 0 => (4) "test"
// ]
Casters
Objects and resources nested in a PHP variable are "cast" to arrays in the intermediate Data representation. You can customize the array representation for each object/resource by hooking a Caster into this process. The component already includes many casters for base PHP classes and other common classes.
If you want to build your own Caster, you can register one before cloning
a PHP variable. Casters are registered using either a Cloner's constructor
or its addCasters()
method:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\VarCloner;
$myCasters = [...];
$cloner = new VarCloner($myCasters);
// or
$cloner->addCasters($myCasters);
The provided $myCasters
argument is an array that maps a class,
an interface or a resource type to a callable:
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$myCasters = [
'FooClass' => $myFooClassCallableCaster,
':bar resource' => $myBarResourceCallableCaster,
];
As you can notice, resource types are prefixed by a :
to prevent
colliding with a class name.
Because an object has one main class and potentially many parent classes or interfaces, many casters can be applied to one object. In this case, casters are called one after the other, starting from casters bound to the interfaces, the parents classes and then the main class. Several casters can also be registered for the same resource type/class/interface. They are called in registration order.
Casters are responsible for returning the properties of the object or resource being cloned in an array. They are callables that accept five arguments:
- the object or resource being casted;
- an array modeled for objects after PHP's native
(array)
cast operator; - a Stub object representing the main properties of the object (class, type, etc.);
- true/false when the caster is called nested in a structure or not;
- A bit field of Caster
::EXCLUDE_*
constants.
Here is a simple caster not doing anything:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\Stub;
function myCaster($object, $array, Stub $stub, $isNested, $filter)
{
// ... populate/alter $array to your needs
return $array;
}
For objects, the $array
parameter comes pre-populated using PHP's native
(array)
casting operator or with the return value of $object->__debugInfo()
if the magic method exists. Then, the return value of one Caster is given
as the array argument to the next Caster in the chain.
When casting with the (array)
operator, PHP prefixes protected properties
with a \0*\0
and private ones with the class owning the property. For example,
\0Foobar\0
will be the prefix for all private properties of objects of
type Foobar. Casters follow this convention and add two more prefixes: \0~\0
is used for virtual properties and \0+\0
for dynamic ones (runtime added
properties not in the class declaration).
Note
Although you can, it is advised to not alter the state of an object while casting it in a Caster.
Tip
Before writing your own casters, you should check the existing ones.
Adding Semantics with Metadata
3.2
As of Symfony 3.2, casters can attach metadata attributes to Stub objects to inform dumpers about the precise type of the dumped values.
Since casters are hooked on specific classes or interfaces, they know about the
objects they manipulate. By altering the $stub
object (the third argument of
any caster), one can transfer this knowledge to the resulting Data
object,
thus to dumpers. To help you do this (see the source code for how it works),
the component comes with a set of wrappers for common additional semantics. You
can use:
- ConstStub to wrap a value that is best represented by a PHP constant;
- ClassStub to wrap a PHP identifier (i.e. a class name, a method name, an interface, etc.);
- CutStub to replace big noisy objects/strings/etc. by ellipses;
- CutArrayStub to keep only some useful keys of an array;
- EnumStub to wrap a set of virtual values (i.e. values that do not exist as properties in the original PHP data structure, but are worth listing alongside with real ones);
- LinkStub to wrap strings that can be turned into links by dumpers;
- TraceStub and their
- FrameStub and
- ArgsStub relatives to wrap PHP traces (used by ExceptionCaster).
For example, if you know that your Product
objects have a brochure
property
that holds a file name or a URL, you can wrap them in a LinkStub
to tell
HtmlDumper
to make them clickable:
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use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Caster\LinkStub;
use Symfony\Component\VarDumper\Cloner\Stub;
function ProductCaster(Product $object, $array, Stub $stub, $isNested, $filter = 0)
{
$array['brochure'] = new LinkStub($array['brochure']);
return $array;
}