Best Practices for Reusable Bundles
Warning: You are browsing the documentation for Symfony 4.x, which is no longer maintained.
Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.1 (the current stable version).
This article is all about how to structure your reusable bundles to be configurable and extendable. Reusable bundles are those meant to be shared privately across many company projects or publicly so any Symfony project can install them.
Bundle Name
A bundle is also a PHP namespace. The namespace must follow the PSR-4
interoperability standard for PHP namespaces and class names: it starts with a
vendor segment, followed by zero or more category segments, and it ends with the
namespace short name, which must end with Bundle
.
A namespace becomes a bundle as soon as you add a bundle class to it. The bundle class name must follow these rules:
- Use only alphanumeric characters and underscores;
- Use a StudlyCaps name (i.e. camelCase with an uppercase first letter);
- Use a descriptive and short name (no more than two words);
- Prefix the name with the concatenation of the vendor (and optionally the category namespaces);
- Suffix the name with
Bundle
.
Here are some valid bundle namespaces and class names:
Namespace | Bundle Class Name |
---|---|
Acme\Bundle\BlogBundle |
AcmeBlogBundle |
Acme\BlogBundle |
AcmeBlogBundle |
By convention, the getName()
method of the bundle class should return the
class name.
Note
If you share your bundle publicly, you must use the bundle class name as the name of the repository (AcmeBlogBundle and not BlogBundle for instance).
Note
Symfony core Bundles do not prefix the Bundle class with Symfony
and always add a Bundle
sub-namespace; for example:
FrameworkBundle.
Each bundle has an alias, which is the lower-cased short version of the bundle
name using underscores (acme_blog
for AcmeBlogBundle). This alias
is used to enforce uniqueness within a project and for defining bundle's
configuration options (see below for some usage examples).
Directory Structure
The following is the recommended directory structure of an AcmeBlogBundle:
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<your-bundle>/
├── config/
├── docs/
│ └─ index.md
├── public/
├── src/
│ ├── Controller/
│ ├── DependencyInjection/
│ └── AcmeBlogBundle.php
├── templates/
├── tests/
├── translations/
├── LICENSE
└── README.md
4.4
This directory convention was introduced in Symfony 4.4 and can be used only
when requiring symfony/http-kernel
4.4 or superior.
This directory structure requires to configure the bundle path to its root directory as follows:
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class AcmeBlogBundle extends Bundle
{
public function getPath(): string
{
return \dirname(__DIR__);
}
}
The following files are mandatory, because they ensure a structure convention that automated tools can rely on:
src/AcmeBlogBundle.php
: This is the class that transforms a plain directory into a Symfony bundle (change this to your bundle's name);README.md
: This file contains the basic description of the bundle and it usually shows some basic examples and links to its full documentation (it can use any of the markup formats supported by GitHub, such asREADME.rst
);LICENSE
: The full contents of the license used by the code. Most third-party bundles are published under the MIT license, but you can choose any license;docs/index.md
: The root file for the Bundle documentation.
The depth of subdirectories should be kept to a minimum for the most used classes and files. Two levels is the maximum.
The bundle directory is read-only. If you need to write temporary files, store
them under the cache/
or log/
directory of the host application. Tools
can generate files in the bundle directory structure, but only if the generated
files are going to be part of the repository.
The following classes and files have specific emplacements (some are mandatory and others are just conventions followed by most developers):
Type | Directory |
---|---|
Commands | src/Command/ |
Controllers | src/Controller/ |
Service Container Extensions | src/DependencyInjection/ |
Doctrine ORM entities (when not using annotations) | src/Entity/ |
Doctrine ODM documents (when not using annotations) | src/Document/ |
Event Listeners | src/EventListener/ |
Configuration (routes, services, etc.) | config/ |
Web Assets (CSS, JS, images) | public/ |
Translation files | translations/ |
Validation (when not using annotations) | config/validation/ |
Serialization (when not using annotations) | config/serialization/ |
Templates | templates/ |
Unit and Functional Tests | tests/ |
Classes
The bundle directory structure is used as the namespace hierarchy. For
instance, a ContentController
controller which is stored in
src/Controller/ContentController.php
would have the fully
qualified class name of Acme\BlogBundle\Controller\ContentController
.
All classes and files must follow the Symfony coding standards.
Some classes should be seen as facades and should be as short as possible, like Commands, Helpers, Listeners and Controllers.
Classes that connect to the event dispatcher should be suffixed with
Listener
.
Exception classes should be stored in an Exception
sub-namespace.
Vendors
A bundle must not embed third-party PHP libraries. It should rely on the standard Symfony autoloading instead.
A bundle should also not embed third-party libraries written in JavaScript, CSS or any other language.
Tests
A bundle should come with a test suite written with PHPUnit and stored under
the tests/
directory. Tests should follow the following principles:
- The test suite must be executable with a simple
phpunit
command run from a sample application; - The functional tests should only be used to test the response output and some profiling information if you have some;
- The tests should cover at least 95% of the code base.
Note
A test suite must not contain AllTests.php
scripts, but must rely on the
existence of a phpunit.xml.dist
file.
Continuous Integration
Testing bundle code continuously, including all its commits and pull requests, is a good practice called Continuous Integration. There are several services providing this feature for free for open source projects, like GitHub Actions and Travis CI.
A bundle should at least test:
- The lower bound of their dependencies (by running
composer update --prefer-lowest
); - The supported PHP versions;
- All supported major Symfony versions (e.g. both
4.x
and5.x
if support is claimed for both).
Thus, a bundle supporting PHP 7.3, 7.4 and 8.0, and Symfony 3.4 and 4.x should have at least this test matrix:
PHP version | Symfony version | Composer flags |
---|---|---|
7.3 | 3.* |
--prefer-lowest |
7.4 | 4.* |
|
8.0 | 4.* |
Tip
The tests should be run with the SYMFONY_DEPRECATIONS_HELPER
env variable set to max[direct]=0
. This ensures no code in the
bundle uses deprecated features directly.
The lowest dependency tests can be run with this variable set to
disabled=1
.
Require a Specific Symfony Version
You can use the special SYMFONY_REQUIRE
environment variable together
with Symfony Flex to install a specific Symfony version:
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# this requires Symfony 5.x for all Symfony packages
export SYMFONY_REQUIRE=5.*
# alternatively you can run this command to update composer.json config
# composer config extra.symfony.require "5.*"
# install Symfony Flex in the CI environment
composer global require --no-progress --no-scripts --no-plugins symfony/flex
# install the dependencies (using --prefer-dist and --no-progress is
# recommended to have a better output and faster download time)
composer update --prefer-dist --no-progress
Caution
If you want to cache your Composer dependencies, do not cache the
vendor/
directory as this has side-effects. Instead cache
$HOME/.composer/cache/files
.
Installation
Bundles should set "type": "symfony-bundle"
in their composer.json
file.
With this, Symfony Flex will be able to automatically
enable your bundle when it's installed.
If your bundle requires any setup (e.g. configuration, new files, changes to
.gitignore
, etc), then you should create a Symfony Flex recipe.
Documentation
All classes and functions must come with full PHPDoc.
Extensive documentation should also be provided in the docs/
directory.
The index file (for example docs/index.rst
or
docs/index.md
) is the only mandatory file and must be the entry
point for the documentation. The
reStructuredText (rST) is the format
used to render the documentation on the Symfony website.
Installation Instructions
In order to ease the installation of third-party bundles, consider using the
following standardized instructions in your README.md
file.
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Installation
============
Make sure Composer is installed globally, as explained in the
[installation chapter](https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md)
of the Composer documentation.
Applications that use Symfony Flex
----------------------------------
Open a command console, enter your project directory and execute:
```console
$ composer require <package-name>
```
Applications that don't use Symfony Flex
----------------------------------------
### Step 1: Download the Bundle
Open a command console, enter your project directory and execute the
following command to download the latest stable version of this bundle:
```console
$ composer require <package-name>
```
### Step 2: Enable the Bundle
Then, enable the bundle by adding it to the list of registered bundles
in the `config/bundles.php` file of your project:
```php
// config/bundles.php
return [
// ...
<vendor>\<bundle-name>\<bundle-long-name>::class => ['all' => true],
];
```
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Installation
============
Make sure Composer is installed globally, as explained in the
`installation chapter`_ of the Composer documentation.
----------------------------------
Open a command console, enter your project directory and execute:
.. code-block:: bash
$ composer require <package-name>
Applications that don't use Symfony Flex
----------------------------------------
Step 1: Download the Bundle
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Open a command console, enter your project directory and execute the
following command to download the latest stable version of this bundle:
.. code-block:: terminal
$ composer require <package-name>
Step 2: Enable the Bundle
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Then, enable the bundle by adding it to the list of registered bundles
in the ``config/bundles.php`` file of your project::
// config/bundles.php
return [
// ...
<vendor>\<bundle-name>\<bundle-long-name>::class => ['all' => true],
];
.. _`installation chapter`: https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md
The example above assumes that you are installing the latest stable version of
the bundle, where you don't have to provide the package version number
(e.g. composer require friendsofsymfony/user-bundle
). If the installation
instructions refer to some past bundle version or to some unstable version,
include the version constraint (e.g. composer require friendsofsymfony/user-bundle "~2.0@dev"
).
Optionally, you can add more installation steps (Step 3, Step 4, etc.) to explain other required installation tasks, such as registering routes or dumping assets.
Routing
If the bundle provides routes, they must be prefixed with the bundle alias.
For example, if your bundle is called AcmeBlogBundle, all its routes must be
prefixed with acme_blog_
.
Templates
If a bundle provides templates, they must use Twig. A bundle must not provide a main layout, except if it provides a full working application.
Translation Files
If a bundle provides message translations, they must be defined in the XLIFF
format; the domain should be named after the bundle name (acme_blog
).
A bundle must not override existing messages from another bundle.
Configuration
To provide more flexibility, a bundle can provide configurable settings by using the Symfony built-in mechanisms.
For simple configuration settings, rely on the default parameters
entry of
the Symfony configuration. Symfony parameters are simple key/value pairs; a
value being any valid PHP value. Each parameter name should start with the
bundle alias, though this is just a best-practice suggestion. The rest of the
parameter name will use a period (.
) to separate different parts (e.g.
acme_blog.author.email
).
The end user can provide values in any configuration file:
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# config/services.yaml
parameters:
acme_blog.author.email: 'fabien@example.com'
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<!-- config/services.xml -->
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd"
>
<parameters>
<parameter key="acme_blog.author.email">fabien@example.com</parameter>
</parameters>
</container>
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// config/services.php
namespace Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\Configurator;
return static function (ContainerConfigurator $container) {
$container->parameters()
->set('acme_blog.author.email', 'fabien@example.com')
;
};
Retrieve the configuration parameters in your code from the container:
1
$container->getParameter('acme_blog.author.email');
While this mechanism requires the least effort, you should consider using the more advanced semantic bundle configuration to make your configuration more robust.
Versioning
Bundles must be versioned following the Semantic Versioning Standard.
Services
If the bundle defines services, they must be prefixed with the bundle alias
instead of using fully qualified class names like you do in your project
services. For example, AcmeBlogBundle services must be prefixed with acme_blog
.
The reason is that bundles shouldn't rely on features such as service autowiring
or autoconfiguration to not impose an overhead when compiling application services.
In addition, services not meant to be used by the application directly, should
be defined as private. For public services,
aliases should be created from the interface/class
to the service id. For example, in MonologBundle, an alias is created from
Psr\Log\LoggerInterface
to logger
so that the LoggerInterface
type-hint
can be used for autowiring.
Services should not use autowiring or autoconfiguration. Instead, all services should be defined explicitly.
See also
You can learn much more about service loading in bundles reading this article: How to Load Service Configuration inside a Bundle.
Composer Metadata
The composer.json
file should include at least the following metadata:
name
-
Consists of the vendor and the short bundle name. If you are releasing the
bundle on your own instead of on behalf of a company, use your personal name
(e.g.
johnsmith/blog-bundle
). Exclude the vendor name from the bundle short name and separate each word with a hyphen. For example: AcmeBlogBundle is transformed intoblog-bundle
and AcmeSocialConnectBundle is transformed intosocial-connect-bundle
. description
- A brief explanation of the purpose of the bundle.
type
-
Use the
symfony-bundle
value. license
-
a string (or array of strings) with a valid license identifier, such as
MIT
. autoload
-
This information is used by Symfony to load the classes of the bundle. It's recommended to use the PSR-4 autoload standard: use the namespace as key, and the location of the bundle's main class (relative to
composer.json
) as value. As the main class is located in thesrc/
directory of the bundle:1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
{ "autoload": { "psr-4": { "Acme\\BlogBundle\\": "src/" } }, "autoload-dev": { "psr-4": { "Acme\\BlogBundle\\Tests\\": "tests/" } } }
In order to make it easier for developers to find your bundle, register it on Packagist, the official repository for Composer packages.
Resources
If the bundle references any resources (config files, translation files, etc.),
don't use physical paths (e.g. __DIR__/config/services.xml
) but logical
paths (e.g. @AcmeBlogBundle/config/services.xml
).
The logical paths are required because of the bundle overriding mechanism that lets you override any resource/file of any bundle. See The HttpKernel Component for more details about transforming physical paths into logical paths.
Beware that templates use a simplified version of the logical path shown above.
For example, an index.html.twig
template located in the templates/Default/
directory of the AcmeBlogBundle, is referenced as @AcmeBlog/Default/index.html.twig
.