How to Inject Instances into the Container
In some applications, you may need to inject a class instance as service, instead of configuring the container to create a new instance.
For instance, the kernel
service in Symfony is injected into the container
from within the Kernel
class:
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// ...
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\KernelInterface;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\TerminableInterface;
abstract class Kernel implements KernelInterface, TerminableInterface
{
// ...
protected function initializeContainer(): void
{
// ...
$this->container->set('kernel', $this);
// ...
}
}
Services that are set at runtime are called synthetic services. This service
has to be configured so the container knows the service exists during compilation
(otherwise, services depending on kernel
will get a "service does not exist" error).
In order to do so, mark the service as synthetic in your service definition configuration:
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# config/services.yaml
services:
# synthetic services don't specify a class
app.synthetic_service:
synthetic: true
Now, you can inject the instance in the container using Container::set():
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// instantiate the synthetic service
$theService = ...;
$container->set('app.synthetic_service', $theService);
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