How to Load Service Configuration inside a Bundle
Services created by bundles are not defined in the main config/services.yaml
file used by the application but in the bundles themselves. This article
explains how to create and load service files using the bundle directory
structure.
There are two different ways of doing it:
- Load your services in the main bundle class: this is recommended for new bundles and for bundles following the recommended directory structure;
- Create an extension class to load the service configuration files: this was the traditional way of doing it, but nowadays it's only recommended for bundles following the legacy directory structure.
Loading Services Directly in your Bundle Class
In bundles extending the AbstractBundle class, you can define the loadExtension() method to load service definitions from configuration files:
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// ...
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\Configurator\ContainerConfigurator;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Bundle\AbstractBundle;
class AcmeHelloBundle extends AbstractBundle
{
public function loadExtension(array $config, ContainerConfigurator $container, ContainerBuilder $builder): void
{
// load an XML, PHP or YAML file
$container->import('../config/services.xml');
// you can also add or replace parameters and services
$container->parameters()
->set('acme_hello.phrase', $config['phrase'])
;
if ($config['scream']) {
$container->services()
->get('acme_hello.printer')
->class(ScreamingPrinter::class)
;
}
}
}
This method works similar to the Extension::load()
method explained below,
but it uses a new simpler API to define and import service configuration.
Note
Contrary to the $configs
parameter in Extension::load()
, the
$config
parameter is already merged and processed by the
AbstractBundle
.
Note
The loadExtension()
is called only at compile time.
Creating an Extension Class
This is the traditional way of loading service definitions in bundles. For new bundles it's recommended to load your services in the main bundle class, but the traditional way of creating an extension class still works.
A dependency injection extension is defined as a class that follows these conventions (later you'll learn how to skip them if needed):
- It has to live in the
DependencyInjection
namespace of the bundle; - It has to implement the ExtensionInterface, which is usually achieved by extending the Extension class;
- The name is equal to the bundle name with the
Bundle
suffix replaced byExtension
(e.g. the extension class of the AcmeBundle would be calledAcmeExtension
and the one for AcmeHelloBundle would be calledAcmeHelloExtension
).
This is how the extension of an AcmeHelloBundle should look like:
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// src/DependencyInjection/AcmeHelloExtension.php
namespace Acme\HelloBundle\DependencyInjection;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Extension\Extension;
class AcmeHelloExtension extends Extension
{
public function load(array $configs, ContainerBuilder $container): void
{
// ... you'll load the files here later
}
}
Manually Registering an Extension Class
When not following the conventions, you will have to manually register your extension. To do this, you should override the Bundle::getContainerExtension() method to return the instance of the extension:
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// ...
use Acme\HelloBundle\DependencyInjection\UnconventionalExtensionClass;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Extension\ExtensionInterface;
class AcmeHelloBundle extends Bundle
{
public function getContainerExtension(): ?ExtensionInterface
{
return new UnconventionalExtensionClass();
}
}
In addition, when the new Extension class name doesn't follow the naming
conventions, you must also override the
Extension::getAlias()
method to return the correct DI alias. The DI alias is the name used to refer to
the bundle in the container (e.g. in the config/packages/
files). By
default, this is done by removing the Extension
suffix and converting the
class name to underscores (e.g. AcmeHelloExtension
's DI alias is
acme_hello
).
Using the load()
Method
In the load()
method, all services and parameters related to this extension
will be loaded. This method doesn't get the actual container instance, but a
copy. This container only has the parameters from the actual container. After
loading the services and parameters, the copy will be merged into the actual
container, to ensure all services and parameters are also added to the actual
container.
In the load()
method, you can use PHP code to register service definitions,
but it is more common if you put these definitions in a configuration file
(using the YAML, XML or PHP format).
For instance, assume you have a file called services.xml
in the
config/
directory of your bundle, your load()
method looks like:
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use Symfony\Component\Config\FileLocator;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\XmlFileLoader;
// ...
public function load(array $configs, ContainerBuilder $container): void
{
$loader = new XmlFileLoader(
$container,
new FileLocator(__DIR__.'/../../config')
);
$loader->load('services.xml');
}
The other available loaders are YamlFileLoader
and PhpFileLoader
.
Using Configuration to Change the Services
The Extension is also the class that handles the configuration for that
particular bundle (e.g. the configuration in config/packages/<bundle_alias>.yaml
).
To read more about it, see the "How to Create Friendly Configuration for a Bundle" article.
Adding Classes to Compile
Bundles can hint Symfony about which of their classes contain annotations so
they are compiled when generating the application cache to improve the overall
performance. Define the list of annotated classes to compile in the
addAnnotatedClassesToCompile()
method:
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public function load(array $configs, ContainerBuilder $container): void
{
// ...
$this->addAnnotatedClassesToCompile([
// you can define the fully qualified class names...
'Acme\\BlogBundle\\Controller\\AuthorController',
// ... but glob patterns are also supported:
'Acme\\BlogBundle\\Form\\**',
// ...
]);
}
Note
If some class extends from other classes, all its parents are automatically included in the list of classes to compile.
Patterns are transformed into the actual class namespaces using the classmap
generated by Composer. Therefore, before using these patterns, you must generate
the full classmap executing the dump-autoload
command of Composer.
Warning
This technique can't be used when the classes to compile use the __DIR__
or __FILE__
constants, because their values will change when loading
these classes from the classes.php
file.