Lazy Services
See also
Other ways to inject services lazily are via a service closure or service subscriber.
Why Lazy Services?
In some cases, you may want to inject a service that is a bit heavy to instantiate,
but is not always used inside your object. For example, imagine you have
a NewsletterManager
and you inject a mailer
service into it. Only
a few methods on your NewsletterManager
actually use the mailer
,
but even when you don't need it, a mailer
service is always instantiated
in order to construct your NewsletterManager
.
Configuring lazy services is one answer to this. With a lazy service, a
"proxy" of the mailer
service is actually injected. It looks and acts
like the mailer
, except that the mailer
isn't actually instantiated
until you interact with the proxy in some way.
Warning
Lazy services do not support final or readonly
classes, but you can use
Interface Proxifying to work around this limitation.
In PHP versions prior to 8.0 lazy services do not support parameters with
default values for built-in PHP classes (e.g. PDO
).
6.2
Starting from Symfony 6.2, service laziness is supported out of the box without having to install any additional package.
Configuration
You can mark the service as lazy
by manipulating its definition:
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# config/services.yaml
services:
App\Twig\AppExtension:
lazy: true
Once you inject the service into another service, a lazy ghost object with the
same signature of the class representing the service should be injected. A lazy
ghost object is an object that is created empty and that is able to initialize
itself when being accessed for the first time). The same happens when calling
Container::get()
directly.
To check if your lazy service works you can check the interface of the received object:
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dump(class_implements($service));
// the output should include "Symfony\Component\VarExporter\LazyObjectInterface"
You can also configure your service's laziness thanks to the Autoconfigure attribute. For example, to define your service as lazy use the following:
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namespace App\Twig;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\Autoconfigure;
use Twig\Extension\ExtensionInterface;
#[Autoconfigure(lazy: true)]
class AppExtension implements ExtensionInterface
{
// ...
}
You can also configure laziness when your service is injected with the Autowire attribute:
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namespace App\Service;
use App\Twig\AppExtension;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\Autowire;
class MessageGenerator
{
public function __construct(
#[Autowire(service: 'app.twig.app_extension', lazy: true)] ExtensionInterface $extension
) {
// ...
}
}
This attribute also allows you to define the interfaces to proxy when using laziness, and supports lazy-autowiring of union types:
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public function __construct(
#[Autowire(service: 'foo', lazy: FooInterface::class)]
FooInterface|BarInterface $foo,
) {
}
6.3
The lazy
argument of the #[Autowire]
attribute was introduced in
Symfony 6.3.
Interface Proxifying
Under the hood, proxies generated to lazily load services inherit from the class used by the service. However, sometimes this is not possible at all (e.g. because the class is final and can not be extended) or not convenient.
To workaround this limitation, you can configure a proxy to only implement specific interfaces.
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# config/services.yaml
services:
App\Twig\AppExtension:
lazy: 'Twig\Extension\ExtensionInterface'
# or a complete definition:
lazy: true
tags:
- { name: 'proxy', interface: 'Twig\Extension\ExtensionInterface' }
Just like in the Configuration section, you can
use the Autoconfigure
attribute to configure the interface to proxify by passing its FQCN as the lazy
parameter value:
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namespace App\Twig;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\Autoconfigure;
use Twig\Extension\ExtensionInterface;
#[Autoconfigure(lazy: ExtensionInterface::class)]
class AppExtension implements ExtensionInterface
{
// ...
}
The virtual proxy injected into other services will only implement the specified interfaces and will not extend the original service class, allowing to lazy load services using final classes. You can configure the proxy to implement multiple interfaces by adding new "proxy" tags.
Tip
This feature can also act as a safe guard: given that the proxy does not extend the original class, only the methods defined by the interface can be called, preventing to call implementation specific methods. It also prevents injecting the dependency at all if you type-hinted a concrete implementation instead of the interface.