single: Controller
A controller is a PHP function you create that reads information from the Symfony's Request
object and creates and returns a Response
object. The response could be an HTML page, JSON, XML, a file download, a redirect, a 404 error or anything else you can dream up. The controller executes whatever arbitrary logic your application needs to render the content of a page.
See how simple this is by looking at a Symfony controller in action. This renders a page that prints a lucky (random) number:
// src/AppBundle/Controller/LuckyController.php
namespace AppBundle\Controller;
use Sensio\Bundle\FrameworkExtraBundle\Configuration\Route;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
class LuckyController
{
/**
* @Route("/lucky/number")
*/
public function numberAction()
{
$number = mt_rand(0, 100);
return new Response(
'<html><body>Lucky number: '.$number.'</body></html>'
);
}
}
But in the real world, your controller will probably do a lot of work in order to create the response. It might read information from the request, load a database resource, send an email or set information on the user's session. But in all cases, the controller will eventually return the Response
object that will be delivered back to the client.
Tip
If you haven't already created your first working page, check out /page_creation
and then come back!
single: Controller; Simple example
While a controller can be any PHP callable (a function, method on an object, or a Closure
), a controller is usually a method inside a controller class:
// src/AppBundle/Controller/LuckyController.php
namespace AppBundle\Controller;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Sensio\Bundle\FrameworkExtraBundle\Configuration\Route;
class LuckyController
{
/**
* @Route("/lucky/number/{max}")
*/
public function numberAction($max)
{
$number = mt_rand(0, $max);
return new Response(
'<html><body>Lucky number: '.$number.'</body></html>'
);
}
}
The controller is the numberAction()
method, which lives inside a controller class LuckyController
.
This controller is pretty straightforward:
- line 2: Symfony takes advantage of PHP's namespace functionality to namespace the entire controller class.
- line 4: Symfony again takes advantage of PHP's namespace functionality: the
use
keyword imports theResponse
class, which the controller must return. - line 7: The class can technically be called anything - but should end in the word
Controller
(this isn't required, but some shortcuts rely on this). - line 12: Each action method in a controller class is suffixed with
Action
(again, this isn't required, but some shortcuts rely on this). This method is allowed to have a$max
argument thanks to the{max}
wildcard in the route </routing>
. - line 16: The controller creates and returns a
Response
object.
single: Controller; Routes and controllers
In order to view the result of this controller, you need to map a URL to it via a route. This was done above with the @Route("/lucky/number/{max}")
annotation.
To see your page, go to this URL in your browser:
For more information on routing, see /routing
.
single: Controller; Base controller class
For convenience, Symfony comes with an optional base Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller
class. If you extend it, this won't change anything about how your controller works, but you'll get access to a number of helper methods and the service container (see controller-accessing-services
): an array-like object that gives you access to every useful object in the system. These useful objects are called services, and Symfony ships with a service object that can render Twig templates, another that can log messages and many more.
Add the use
statement atop the Controller
class and then modify LuckyController
to extend it:
// src/AppBundle/Controller/LuckyController.php
namespace AppBundle\Controller;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller;
class LuckyController extends Controller
{
// ...
}
Helper methods are just shortcuts to using core Symfony functionality that's available to you with or without the use of the base Controller
class. A great way to see the core functionality in action is to look in the Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller
class.
single: Controller; Redirecting
The Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller::generateUrl
method is just a helper method that generates the URL for a given route:
$url = $this->generateUrl('blog_show', array('slug' => 'slug-value'));
If you want to redirect the user to another page, use the redirectToRoute()
and redirect()
methods:
public function indexAction()
{
// redirect to the "homepage" route
return $this->redirectToRoute('homepage');
// do a permanent - 301 redirect
return $this->redirectToRoute('homepage', array(), 301);
// redirect to a route with parameters
return $this->redirectToRoute('blog_show', array('slug' => 'my-page'));
// redirect externally
return $this->redirect('http://symfony.com/doc');
}
For more information, see the Routing chapter </routing>
.
Caution
The redirect()
method does not check its destination in any way. If you redirect to some URL provided by the end-users, your application may be open to the unvalidated redirects security vulnerability.
Tip
The redirectToRoute()
method is simply a shortcut that creates a Response
object that specializes in redirecting the user. It's equivalent to:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\RedirectResponse;
public function indexAction()
{
return new RedirectResponse($this->generateUrl('homepage'));
}
single: Controller; Rendering templates
If you're serving HTML, you'll want to render a template. The render()
method renders a template and puts that content into a Response
object for you:
// renders app/Resources/views/lucky/number.html.twig
return $this->render('lucky/number.html.twig', array('name' => $name));
Templates can also live in deeper sub-directories. Just try to avoid creating unnecessarily deep structures:
// renders app/Resources/views/lottery/lucky/number.html.twig
return $this->render('lottery/lucky/number.html.twig', array(
'name' => $name,
));
The Symfony templating system and Twig are explained more in the Creating and Using Templates chapter </templating>
.
single: Controller; Accessing services
Symfony comes packed with a lot of useful objects, called services. These are used for rendering templates, sending emails, querying the database and any other "work" you can think of. When you install a new bundle, it probably brings in even more services.
When extending the base controller class, you can access any Symfony service via the Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller::get
method of the Controller
class. Here are several common services you might need:
$templating = $this->get('templating');
$router = $this->get('router');
$mailer = $this->get('mailer');
What other services exist? To list all services, use the debug:container
console command:
$ php bin/console debug:container
For more information, see the /service_container
chapter.
Tip
To get a container configuration parameter <config-parameter-intro>
, use the Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller::getParameter
method:
$from = $this->getParameter('app.mailer.from');
single: Controller; Managing errors single: Controller; 404 pages
When things are not found, you should play well with the HTTP protocol and return a 404 response. To do this, you'll throw a special type of exception. If you're extending the base Controller
class, do the following:
public function indexAction()
{
// retrieve the object from database
$product = ...;
if (!$product) {
throw $this->createNotFoundException('The product does not exist');
}
return $this->render(...);
}
The Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller::createNotFoundException
method is just a shortcut to create a special Symfony\\Component\\HttpKernel\\Exception\\NotFoundHttpException
object, which ultimately triggers a 404 HTTP response inside Symfony.
Of course, you're free to throw any Exception
class in your controller -Symfony will automatically return a 500 HTTP response code.
throw new \Exception('Something went wrong!');
In every case, an error page is shown to the end user and a full debug error page is shown to the developer (i.e. when you're using the app_dev.php
front controller - see page-creation-environments
).
You'll want to customize the error page your user sees. To do that, see the /controller/error_pages
article.
single: Controller; The session single: Session
What if you need to read query parameters, grab a request header or get access to an uploaded file? All of that information is stored in Symfony's Request
object. To get it in your controller, just add it as an argument and type-hint it with the Request class:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
public function indexAction(Request $request, $firstName, $lastName)
{
$page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
// ...
}
Keep reading <request-object-info>
for more information about using the Request object.
Symfony provides a nice session object that you can use to store information about the user between requests. By default, Symfony stores the attributes in a cookie by using native PHP sessions.
To retrieve the session, call Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller::getSession
method on the Request
object. This method returns a Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\Session\\SessionInterface
with easy methods for storing and fetching things from the session:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
public function indexAction(Request $request)
{
$session = $request->getSession();
// store an attribute for reuse during a later user request
$session->set('foo', 'bar');
// get the attribute set by another controller in another request
$foobar = $session->get('foobar');
// use a default value if the attribute doesn't exist
$filters = $session->get('filters', array());
}
Stored attributes remain in the session for the remainder of that user's session.
single: Session; Flash messages
You can also store special messages, called "flash" messages, on the user's session. By design, flash messages are meant to be used exactly once: they vanish from the session automatically as soon as you retrieve them. This feature makes "flash" messages particularly great for storing user notifications.
For example, imagine you're processing a form </forms>
submission:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
public function updateAction(Request $request)
{
// ...
if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
// do some sort of processing
$this->addFlash(
'notice',
'Your changes were saved!'
);
// $this->addFlash() is equivalent to $request->getSession()->getFlashBag()->add()
return $this->redirectToRoute(...);
}
return $this->render(...);
}
After processing the request, the controller sets a flash message in the session and then redirects. The message key (notice
in this example) can be anything: you'll use this key to retrieve the message.
In the template of the next page (or even better, in your base layout template), read any flash messages from the session:
{# app/Resources/views/base.html.twig #}
{% for flash_message in app.session.flashBag.get('notice') %}
<div class="flash-notice">
{{ flash_message }}
</div>
{% endfor %}
<!-- app/Resources/views/base.html.php -->
<?php foreach ($view['session']->getFlash('notice') as $message): ?>
<div class="flash-notice">
<?php echo "<div class='flash-error'>$message</div>" ?>
</div>
<?php endforeach ?>
Note
It's common to use notice
, warning
and error
as the keys of the different types of flash messages, but you can use any key that fits your needs.
Tip
You can use the Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\Session\\Flash\\FlashBagInterface::peek
method instead to retrieve the message while keeping it in the bag.
single: Controller; Response object
As mentioned earlier <controller-request-argument>
, the framework will pass the Request
object to any controller argument that is type-hinted with the Request
class:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
public function indexAction(Request $request)
{
$request->isXmlHttpRequest(); // is it an Ajax request?
$request->getPreferredLanguage(array('en', 'fr'));
// retrieve GET and POST variables respectively
$request->query->get('page');
$request->request->get('page');
// retrieve SERVER variables
$request->server->get('HTTP_HOST');
// retrieves an instance of UploadedFile identified by foo
$request->files->get('foo');
// retrieve a COOKIE value
$request->cookies->get('PHPSESSID');
// retrieve an HTTP request header, with normalized, lowercase keys
$request->headers->get('host');
$request->headers->get('content_type');
}
The Request
class has several public properties and methods that return any information you need about the request.
Like the Request
, the Response
object has also a public headers
property. This is a Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\ResponseHeaderBag
that has some nice methods for getting and setting response headers. The header names are normalized so that using Content-Type
is equivalent to content-type
or even content_type
.
The only requirement for a controller is to return a Response
object. The Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\Response
class is an abstraction around the HTTP response - the text-based message filled with headers and content that's sent back to the client:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
// create a simple Response with a 200 status code (the default)
$response = new Response('Hello '.$name, Response::HTTP_OK);
// create a CSS-response with a 200 status code
$response = new Response('<style> ... </style>');
$response->headers->set('Content-Type', 'text/css');
There are special classes that make certain kinds of responses easier:
- For files, there is
Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\BinaryFileResponse
. Seecomponent-http-foundation-serving-files
. - For streamed responses, there is
Symfony\\Component\\HttpFoundation\\StreamedResponse
. Seestreaming-response
.
Now that you know the basics you can continue your research on Symfony Request
and Response
object in the HttpFoundation component documentation <component-http-foundation-request>
.
3.1 The json()
helper was introduced in Symfony 3.1.
To return JSON from a controller, use the json()
helper method on the base controller. This returns a special JsonResponse
object that encodes the data automatically:
// ...
public function indexAction()
{
// returns '{"username":"jane.doe"}' and sets the proper Content-Type header
return $this->json(array('username' => 'jane.doe'));
// the shortcut defines three optional arguments
// return $this->json($data, $status = 200, $headers = array(), $context = array());
}
If the serializer service </serializer>
is enabled in your application, contents passed to json()
are encoded with it. Otherwise, the json_encode
function is used.
3.2 The file()
helper was introduced in Symfony 3.2.
You can use the Symfony\\Bundle\\FrameworkBundle\\Controller\\Controller::file
helper to serve a file from inside a controller:
public function fileAction()
{
// send the file contents and force the browser to download it
return $this->file('/path/to/some_file.pdf');
}
The file()
helper provides some arguments to configure its behavior:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\File\File;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\ResponseHeaderBag;
public function fileAction()
{
// load the file from the filesystem
$file = new File('/path/to/some_file.pdf');
return $this->file($file);
// rename the downloaded file
return $this->file($file, 'custom_name.pdf');
// display the file contents in the browser instead of downloading it
return $this->file('invoice_3241.pdf', 'my_invoice.pdf', ResponseHeaderBag::DISPOSITION_INLINE);
}
Whenever you create a page, you'll ultimately need to write some code that contains the logic for that page. In Symfony, this is called a controller, and it's a PHP function where you can do anything in order to return the final Response
object that will be returned to the user.
To make life easier, you'll probably extend the base Controller
class because this gives two things:
- Shortcut methods (like
render()
andredirectToRoute()
); - Access to all of the useful objects (services) in the system via the
get() <controller-accessing-services>
method.
In other chapters, you'll learn how to use specific services from inside your controller that will help you persist and fetch objects from a database, process form submissions, handle caching and more.
Next, learn all about rendering templates with Twig </templating>
.
templating
controller/*