How to Create Service Aliases and Mark Services as Private
Marking Services as Public / Private
When defining a service, it can be made to be public or private. If a service
is public, it means that you can access it directly from the container at runtime.
For example, the doctrine
service is a public service:
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// only public services can be accessed in this way
$doctrine = $container->get('doctrine');
But typically, services are accessed using dependency injection. And in this case, those services do not need to be public.
So unless you specifically need to access a service directly from the container
via $container->get()
, the best-practice is to make your services private.
In fact, All services are private by default.
You can also control the public
option on a service-by-service basis:
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# config/services.yaml
services:
# ...
App\Service\Foo:
public: true
It is also possible to define a service as public thanks to the #[Autoconfigure]
attribute. This attribute must be used directly on the class of the service
you want to configure:
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// src/Service/Foo.php
namespace App\Service;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\Autoconfigure;
#[Autoconfigure(public: true)]
class Foo
{
// ...
}
Private services are special because they allow the container to optimize whether and how they are instantiated. This increases the container's performance. It also gives you better errors: if you try to reference a non-existent service, you will get a clear error when you refresh any page, even if the problematic code would not have run on that page.
Now that the service is private, you must not fetch the service directly from the container:
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use App\Service\Foo;
$container->get(Foo::class);
Thus, a service can be marked as private if you do not want to access it directly from your code. However, if a service has been marked as private, you can still alias it (see below) to access this service (via the alias).
Aliasing
You may sometimes want to use shortcuts to access some services. You can do so by aliasing them and, furthermore, you can even alias non-public services.
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// src/Mail/PhpMailer.php
namespace App\Mail;
// ...
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\AsAlias;
#[AsAlias(id: 'app.mailer', public: true)]
class PhpMailer
{
// ...
}
6.3
The #[AsAlias]
attribute was introduced in Symfony 6.3.
This means that when using the container directly, you can access the
PhpMailer
service by asking for the app.mailer
service like this:
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$container->get('app.mailer'); // Would return a PhpMailer instance
Tip
In YAML, you can also use a shortcut to alias a service:
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# config/services.yaml
services:
# ...
app.mailer: '@App\Mail\PhpMailer'
Tip
When using #[AsAlias]
attribute, you may omit passing id
argument
if the class implements exactly one interface. MailerInterface
will be
alias of PhpMailer
:
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// src/Mail/PhpMailer.php
namespace App\Mail;
// ...
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\AsAlias;
use Symfony\Component\Mailer\MailerInterface;
#[AsAlias]
class PhpMailer implements MailerInterface
{
// ...
}
Deprecating Service Aliases
If you decide to deprecate the use of a service alias (because it is outdated or you decided not to maintain it anymore), you can deprecate its definition:
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app.mailer:
alias: 'App\Mail\PhpMailer'
# this outputs the following generic deprecation message:
# Since acme/package 1.2: The "app.mailer" service alias is deprecated. You should stop using it, as it will be removed in the future
deprecated:
package: 'acme/package'
version: '1.2'
# you can also define a custom deprecation message (%alias_id% placeholder is available)
deprecated:
package: 'acme/package'
version: '1.2'
message: 'The "%alias_id%" alias is deprecated. Do not use it anymore.'
Now, every time this service alias is used, a deprecation warning is triggered, advising you to stop or to change your uses of that alias.
The message is actually a message template, which replaces occurrences of the
%alias_id%
placeholder by the service alias id. You must have at least
one occurrence of the %alias_id%
placeholder in your template.
Anonymous Services
In some cases, you may want to prevent a service being used as a dependency of other services. This can be achieved by creating an anonymous service. These services are like regular services but they don't define an ID and they are created where they are used.
The following example shows how to inject an anonymous service into another service:
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# config/services.yaml
services:
App\Foo:
arguments:
- !service
class: App\AnonymousBar
Note
Anonymous services do NOT inherit the definitions provided from the
defaults defined in the configuration. So you'll need to explicitly mark
service as autowired or autoconfigured when doing an anonymous service
e.g.: inline_service(Foo::class)->autowire()->autoconfigure()
.
Using an anonymous service as a factory looks like this:
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# config/services.yaml
services:
App\Foo:
factory: [ !service { class: App\FooFactory }, 'constructFoo' ]
Deprecating Services
Once you have decided to deprecate the use of a service (because it is outdated or you decided not to maintain it anymore), you can deprecate its definition:
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# config/services.yaml
App\Service\OldService:
deprecated:
package: 'vendor-name/package-name'
version: '2.8'
message: The "%service_id%" service is deprecated since vendor-name/package-name 2.8 and will be removed in 3.0.
Now, every time this service is used, a deprecation warning is triggered, advising you to stop or to change your uses of that service.
The message is actually a message template, which replaces occurrences of the
%service_id%
placeholder by the service's id. You must have at least one
occurrence of the %service_id%
placeholder in your template.
Note
The deprecation message is optional. If not set, Symfony will show this default
message: The "%service_id%" service is deprecated. You should stop using it,
as it will soon be removed.
.
Tip
It is strongly recommended that you define a custom message because the default one is too generic. A good message informs when this service was deprecated, until when it will be maintained and the alternative services to use (if any).
For service decorators (see How to Decorate Services), if the definition does not modify the deprecated status, it will inherit the status from the definition that is decorated.