Progress Indicator
Warning: You are browsing the documentation for Symfony 5.x, which is no longer maintained.
Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.2 (the current stable version).
Progress indicators are useful to let users know that a command isn't stalled. Unlike progress bars, these indicators are used when the command duration is indeterminate (e.g. long-running commands, unquantifiable tasks, etc.)
They work by instantiating the ProgressIndicator class and advancing the progress as the command executes:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
use Symfony\Component\Console\Helper\ProgressIndicator;
// creates a new progress indicator
$progressIndicator = new ProgressIndicator($output);
// starts and displays the progress indicator with a custom message
$progressIndicator->start('Processing...');
$i = 0;
while ($i++ < 50) {
// ... do some work
// advances the progress indicator
$progressIndicator->advance();
}
// ensures that the progress indicator shows a final message
$progressIndicator->finish('Finished');
Customizing the Progress Indicator
Built-in Formats
By default, the information rendered on a progress indicator depends on the current
level of verbosity of the OutputInterface
instance:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
# OutputInterface::VERBOSITY_NORMAL (CLI with no verbosity flag)
\ Processing...
| Processing...
/ Processing...
- Processing...
# OutputInterface::VERBOSITY_VERBOSE (-v)
\ Processing... (1 sec)
| Processing... (1 sec)
/ Processing... (1 sec)
- Processing... (1 sec)
# OutputInterface::VERBOSITY_VERY_VERBOSE (-vv) and OutputInterface::VERBOSITY_DEBUG (-vvv)
\ Processing... (1 sec, 6.0 MiB)
| Processing... (1 sec, 6.0 MiB)
/ Processing... (1 sec, 6.0 MiB)
- Processing... (1 sec, 6.0 MiB)
Tip
Call a command with the quiet flag (-q
) to not display any progress indicator.
Instead of relying on the verbosity mode of the current command, you can also
force a format via the second argument of the ProgressIndicator
constructor:
1
$progressIndicator = new ProgressIndicator($output, 'verbose');
The built-in formats are the following:
normal
verbose
very_verbose
If your terminal doesn't support ANSI, use the no_ansi
variants:
normal_no_ansi
verbose_no_ansi
very_verbose_no_ansi
Custom Indicator Values
Instead of using the built-in indicator values, you can also set your own:
1
$progressIndicator = new ProgressIndicator($output, 'verbose', 100, ['⠏', '⠛', '⠹', '⢸', '⣰', '⣤', '⣆', '⡇']);
The progress indicator will now look like this:
1 2 3 4
⠏ Processing...
⠛ Processing...
⠹ Processing...
⢸ Processing...
Customize Placeholders
A progress indicator uses placeholders (a name enclosed with the %
character) to determine the output format. Here is a list of the
built-in placeholders:
indicator
: The current indicator;elapsed
: The time elapsed since the start of the progress indicator;memory
: The current memory usage;message
: used to display arbitrary messages in the progress indicator.
For example, this is how you can customize the message
placeholder:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
ProgressIndicator::setPlaceholderFormatterDefinition(
'message',
static function (ProgressIndicator $progressIndicator): string {
// Return any arbitrary string
return 'My custom message';
}
);
Note
Placeholders customization is applied globally, which means that any
progress indicator displayed after the
setPlaceholderFormatterDefinition()
call will be affected.