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.. index::
   single: Configuration

Configuring Symfony

Configuration Files

Symfony applications are configured with the files stored in the config/ directory, which has this default structure:

your-project/
├─ config/
│  ├─ packages/
│  ├─ bundles.php
│  ├─ routes.yaml
│  └─ services.yaml
├─ ...

The routes.yaml file defines the :doc:`routing configuration </routing>`; the services.yaml file configures the services of the :doc:`service container </service_container>`; the bundles.php file enables/ disables packages in your application.

You'll be working most in the config/packages/ directory. This directory stores the configuration of every package installed in your application. Packages (also called "bundles" in Symfony and "plugins/modules" in other projects) add ready-to-use features to your projects.

When using :ref:`Symfony Flex <symfony-flex>`, which is enabled by default in Symfony applications, packages update the bundles.php file and create new files in config/packages/ automatically during their installation. For example, this is the default file created by the "API Platform" package:

# config/packages/api_platform.yaml
api_platform:
    mapping:
        paths: ['%kernel.project_dir%/src/Entity']

Splitting the configuration into lots of small files is intimidating for some Symfony newcomers. However, you'll get used to them quickly and you rarely need to change these files after package installation

Tip

To learn about all the available configuration options, check out the :doc:`Symfony Configuration Reference </reference/index>` or run the config:dump-reference command.

Configuration Formats

Unlike other frameworks, Symfony doesn't impose you a specific format to configure your applications. Symfony lets you choose between YAML, XML and PHP and throughout the Symfony documentation, all configuration examples will be shown in these three formats.

There isn't any practical difference between formats. In fact, Symfony transforms and caches all of them into PHP before running the application, so there's not even any performance difference between them.

YAML is used by default when installing packages because it's concise and very readable. These are the main advantages and disadvantages of each format:

  • YAML: simple, clean and readable, but not all IDEs support autocompletion and validation for it. :doc:`Learn the YAML syntax </components/yaml/yaml_format>`;
  • XML:autocompleted/validated by most IDEs and is parsed natively by PHP, but sometimes it generates too verbose configuration. Learn the XML syntax;
  • PHP: very powerful and it allows to create dynamic configuration, but the resulting configuration is less readable than the other formats.

Importing Configuration Files

Symfony loads configuration files using the :doc:`Config component </components/config>`, which provides advanced features such as importing other configuration files, even if they use a different format:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/services.yaml
        imports:
            - { resource: 'legacy_config.php' }
            # ignore_errors silently discards errors if the loaded file doesn't exist
            - { resource: 'my_config_file.xml', ignore_errors: true }
            # glob expressions are also supported to load multiple files
            - { resource: '/etc/myapp/*.yaml' }

        # ...

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/services.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony/symfony-1.0.xsd">

            <imports>
                <import resource="legacy_config.php"/>
                <!-- ignore_errors silently discards errors if the loaded file doesn't exist -->
                <import resource="my_config_file.yaml" ignore-errors="true"/>
                <!-- glob expressions are also supported to load multiple files -->
                <import resource="/etc/myapp/*.yaml"/>
            </imports>

            <!-- ... -->
        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/services.php
        $loader->import('legacy_config.xml');
        // the third optional argument of import() is 'ignore_errors', which
        // silently discards errors if the loaded file doesn't exist
        $loader->import('my_config_file.yaml', null, true);
        // glob expressions are also supported to load multiple files
        $loader->import('/etc/myapp/*.yaml');

        // ...

Configuration Parameters

Sometimes the same configuration value is used in several configuration files. Instead of repeating it, you can define it as a "parameter", which is like a reusable configuration value. By convention, parameters are defined under the parameters key in the config/services.yaml file:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/services.yaml
        parameters:
            # the parameter name is an arbitrary string (the 'app.' prefix is recommended
            # to better differentiate your parameters from Symfony parameters).
            app.admin_email: 'something@example.com'

            # boolean parameters
            app.enable_v2_protocol: true

            # array/collection parameters
            app.supported_locales: ['en', 'es', 'fr']

            # binary content parameters (encode the contents with base64_encode())
            app.some_parameter: !!binary VGhpcyBpcyBhIEJlbGwgY2hhciAH

            # PHP constants as parameter values
            app.some_constant: !php/const GLOBAL_CONSTANT
            app.another_constant: !php/const App\Entity\BlogPost::MAX_ITEMS

        # ...

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/services.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xmlns:framework="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony/symfony-1.0.xsd">

            <parameters>
                <!-- the parameter name is an arbitrary string (the 'app.' prefix is recommended
                     to better differentiate your parameters from Symfony parameters). -->
                <parameter key="app.admin_email">something@example.com</parameter>

                <!-- boolean parameters -->
                <parameter key="app.enable_v2_protocol">true</parameter>
                <!-- if you prefer to store the boolean value as a string in the parameter -->
                <parameter key="app.enable_v2_protocol" type="string">true</parameter>

                <!-- array/collection parameters -->
                <parameter key="app.supported_locales" type="collection">
                    <parameter>en</parameter>
                    <parameter>es</parameter>
                    <parameter>fr</parameter>
                </parameter>

                <!-- binary content parameters (encode the contents with base64_encode()) -->
                <parameter key="app.some_parameter" type="binary">VGhpcyBpcyBhIEJlbGwgY2hhciAH</parameter>

                <!-- PHP constants as parameter values -->
                <parameter key="app.some_constant" type="constant">GLOBAL_CONSTANT</parameter>
                <parameter key="app.another_constant" type="constant">App\Entity\BlogPost::MAX_ITEMS</parameter>
            </parameters>

            <!-- ... -->
        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/services.php
        // the parameter name is an arbitrary string (the 'app.' prefix is recommended
        // to better differentiate your parameters from Symfony parameters).
        $container->setParameter('app.admin_email', 'something@example.com');

        // boolean parameters
        $container->setParameter('app.enable_v2_protocol', true);

        // array/collection parameters
        $container->setParameter('app.supported_locales', ['en', 'es', 'fr']);

        // binary content parameters (use the PHP escape sequences)
        $container->setParameter('app.some_parameter', 'This is a Bell char: \x07');

        // PHP constants as parameter values
        use App\Entity\BlogPost;

        $container->setParameter('app.some_constant', GLOBAL_CONSTANT);
        $container->setParameter('app.another_constant', BlogPost::MAX_ITEMS);

        // ...

Caution!

When using XML configuration, the values between <parameter> tags are not trimmed. This means that the value of the following parameter will be '\n something@example.com\n':

<parameter key="app.admin_email">
    something@example.com
</parameter>

Once defined, you can reference this parameter value from any other configuration file using a special syntax: wrap the parameter name in two % (e.g. %app.admin_email%):

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/packages/some_package.yaml
        some_package:
            # any string surrounded by two % is replaced by that parameter value
            email_address: '%app.admin_email%'

            # ...

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/packages/some_package.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xmlns:framework="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony/symfony-1.0.xsd">

            <!-- any string surrounded by two % is replaced by that parameter value -->
            <some-package:config email-address="%app.admin_email%">
                <!-- ... -->
            </some-package:config>
        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/packages/some_package.php
        $container->loadFromExtension('some_package', [
            // any string surrounded by two % is replaced by that parameter value
            'email_address' => '%app.admin_email%',

            // ...
        ]);

Note

If some parameter value includes the % character, you need to escape it by adding another % so Symfony doesn't consider it a reference to a parameter name:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/services.yaml
        parameters:
            # Parsed as 'https://symfony.com/?foo=%s&amp;bar=%d'
            url_pattern: 'https://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&amp;bar=%%d'

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/services.xml -->
        <parameters>
            <parameter key="url_pattern">http://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&amp;bar=%%d</parameter>
        </parameters>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/services.php
        $container->setParameter('url_pattern', 'http://symfony.com/?foo=%%s&amp;bar=%%d');

Configuration parameters are very common in Symfony applications. Some packages even define their own parameters (e.g. when installing the translation package, a new locale parameter is added to the config/services.yaml file).

.. seealso::

    Read the `Accessing Configuration Values`_ section of this article to learn
    about how to use these configuration parameters in services and controllers.

.. index::
   single: Environments; Introduction

Configuration Environments

You have just one application, but whether you realize it or not, you need it to behave differently at different times:

  • While developing, you want to log everything and expose nice debugging tools;
  • After deploying to production, you want that same application to be optimized for speed and only log errors.

The files stored in config/packages/ are used by Symfony to configure the :doc:`application services </service_container>`. In other words, you can change the application behavior by changing which configuration files are loaded. That's the idea of Symfony's configuration environments.

A typical Symfony application begins with three environments: dev (for local development), prod (for production servers) and test (for :doc:`automated tests </testing>`). When running the application, Symfony loads the configuration files in this order (the last files can override the values set in the previous ones):

  1. config/packages/*.yaml (and .xml and *.php files too);
  2. config/packages/<environment-name>/*.yaml (and .xml and *.php files too);
  3. config/packages/services.yaml (and services.xml and services.php files too);

Take the framework package, installed by default, as an example:

  • First, config/packages/framework.yaml is loaded in all environments and it configures the framework with some options;
  • In the prod environment, nothing extra will be set as there is no config/packages/prod/framework.yaml file;
  • In the dev environment, there is no file either ( config/packages/dev/framework.yaml does not exist).
  • In the test environment, the config/packages/test/framework.yaml file is loaded to override some of the settings previously configured in config/packages/framework.yaml.

In reality, each environment differs only somewhat from others. This means that all environments share a large base of common configurations, which is put in files directly in the config/packages/ directory.

.. seealso::

    See the ``configureContainer()`` method of
    :doc:`the Kernel class </configuration/front_controllers_and_kernel>` to
    learn everything about the loading order of configuration files.

Selecting the Active Environment

Symfony applications come with a file called .env located at the project root directory. This file is used to define the value of environment variables and it's explained in detail :ref:`later in this article <config-dot-env>`.

Open the .env file (or better, the .env.local file if you created one) and edit the value of the APP_ENV variable to change the environment in which the application runs. For example, to run the application in production:

# .env (or .env.local)
APP_ENV=prod

This value is used both for the web and for the console commands. However, you can override it for commands by setting the APP_ENV value before running them:

# Use the environment defined in the .env file
$ php bin/console command_name

# Ignore the .env file and run this command in production
$ APP_ENV=prod php bin/console command_name

Creating a New Environment

The default three environments provided by Symfony are enough for most projects, but you can define your own environments too. For example, this is how you can define a staging environment where the client can test the project before going to production:

  1. Create a configuration directory with the same name as the environment (in this case, config/packages/staging/);
  2. Add the needed configuration files in config/packages/staging/ to define the behavior of the new environment. Symfony loads first the files in config/packages/*.yaml, so you must only configure the differences with those files;
  3. Select the staging environment using the APP_ENV env var as explained in the previous section.

Tip

It's common for environments to be similar between each other, so you can use symbolic links between config/packages/<environment-name>/ directories to reuse the same configuration.

Configuration Based on Environment Variables

Using environment variables (or "env vars" for short) is a common practice to configure options that depend on where the application is run (e.g. the database credentials are usually different in production and in your local machine).

Instead of defining those as regular options, you can define them as environment variables and reference them in the configuration files using the special syntax %env(ENV_VAR_NAME)%. The values of these options are resolved at runtime (only once per request, to not impact performance).

This example shows how to configure the database connection using an env var:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/packages/doctrine.yaml
        doctrine:
            dbal:
                # by convention the env var names are always uppercase
                url: '%env(DATABASE_URL)%'
            # ...

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/packages/doctrine.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xmlns:doctrine="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/doctrine"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/doctrine
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/doctrine/doctrine-1.0.xsd">

            <doctrine:config>
                <!-- by convention the env var names are always uppercase -->
                <doctrine:dbal url="%env(DATABASE_URL)%"/>
            </doctrine:config>

        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/packages/doctrine.php
        $container->loadFromExtension('doctrine', [
            'dbal' => [
                // by convention the env var names are always uppercase
                'url' => '%env(DATABASE_URL)%',
            ]
        ]);

The next step is to define the value of those env vars in your shell, your web server, etc. This is explained in the following sections, but to protect your application from undefined env vars, you can give them a default value using the .env file:

# .env
DATABASE_URL=sqlite:///%kernel.project_dir%/var/data.db
.. seealso::

    The values of env vars can only be strings, but Symfony includes some
    :doc:`env var processors </configuration/env_var_processors>` to transform
    their contents (e.g. to turn a string value into an integer).

In order to define the actual values of env vars, Symfony proposes different solutions depending if the application is running in production or in your local development machine.

Independent from the way you set environmnet variables, you may need to run the debug:container command with the --env-vars option to verify that they are defined and have the expected values:

$ php bin/console debug:container --env-vars

---------------- ----------------- ---------------------------------------------
 Name             Default value     Real value
---------------- ----------------- ---------------------------------------------
 APP_SECRET       n/a               "471a62e2d601a8952deb186e44186cb3"
 FOO              "[1, "2.5", 3]"   n/a
 BAR              null              n/a
---------------- ----------------- ---------------------------------------------

# you can also filter the list of env vars by name:
$ php bin/console debug:container --env-vars foo

# run this command to show all the details for a specific env var:
$ php bin/console debug:container --env-var=FOO

Configuring Environment Variables in Development

Instead of defining env vars in your shell or your web server, Symfony proposes a convenient way of defining them in your local machine based on a file called .env (with a leading dot) located at the root of your project.

The .env file is read and parsed on every request and its env vars are added to the $_ENV PHP variable. The existing env vars are never overwritten by the values defined in .env, so you can combine both.

This is for example the content of the .env file to define the value of the DATABASE_URL env var shown earlier in this article:

# .env
DATABASE_URL="mysql://db_user:db_password@127.0.0.1:3306/db_name"

In addition to your own env vars, this .env file also contains the env vars defined by the third-party packages installed in your application (they are added automatically by :ref:`Symfony Flex <symfony-flex>` when installing packages).

Configuring Environment Variables in Production

In production, the .env files are also parsed and loaded on each request so you can override the env vars already defined in the server. In order to improve performance, you can run the dump-env command (available when using :ref:`Symfony Flex <symfony-flex>` 1.2 or later).

This command parses all the .env files once and compiles their contents into a new PHP-optimized file called .env.local.php. From that moment, Symfony will load the parsed file instead of parsing the .env files again:

$ composer dump-env prod

Tip

Update your deployment tools/workflow to run the dump-env command after each deploy to improve the application performance.

Creating .env files is the easiest way of using env vars in Symfony applications. However, you can also configure real env vars in your servers and operating systems.

Tip

SymfonyCloud, the cloud service optimized for Symfony applications, defines some utilities to manage env vars in production.

Caution!

Beware that dumping the contents of the $_SERVER and $_ENV variables or outputting the phpinfo() contents will display the values of the environment variables, exposing sensitive information such as the database credentials.

The values of the env vars are also exposed in the web interface of the :doc:`Symfony profiler </profiler>`. In practice this shouldn't be a problem because the web profiler must never be enabled in production.

Managing Multiple .env Files

The .env file defines the default values for all env vars. However, it's common to override some of those values depending on the environment (e.g. to use a different database for tests) or depending on the machine (e.g. to use a different OAuth token on your local machine while developing).

That's why you can define multiple .env files to override env vars. The following list shows the files loaded in all environments. The .env file is the only mandatory file and each file content overrides the previous one:

  • .env: defines the default values of the env vars needed by the application;
  • .env.local: defines machine-specific overrides for env vars on all environments. This file is not committed to the repository, so these overrides only apply to the machine which contains the file (your local computer, production server, etc.);
  • .env.<environment> (e.g. .env.test): overrides env vars only for some environment but for all machines;
  • .env.<environment>.local (e.g. .env.test.local): defines machine-specific env vars overrides only for some environment. It's similar to .env.local, but the overrides only apply to some particular environment.

Note

The real environment variables defined in the server always win over the env vars created by the .env files.

The .env and .env.<environment> files should be committed to the shared repository because they are the same for all developers and machines. However, the env files ending in .local (.env.local and .env.<environment>.local) should not be committed because only you will use them. In fact, the .gitignore file that comes with Symfony prevents them from being committed.

Caution!

Applications created before November 2018 had a slightly different system, involving a .env.dist file. For information about upgrading, see: :doc:`configuration/dot-env-changes`.

Accessing Configuration Values

Controllers and services can access all the configuration parameters. This includes both the :ref:`parameters defined by yourself <configuration-parameters>` and the parameters created by packages/bundles. Run the following command to see all the parameters that exist in your application:

$ php bin/console debug:container --parameters

Parameters are injected in services as arguments to their constructors. :doc:`Service autowiring </service_container/autowiring>` doesn't work for parameters. Instead, inject them explicitly:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/services.yaml
        parameters:
            app.contents_dir: '...'

        services:
            App\Service\MessageGenerator:
                arguments:
                    $contentsDir: '%app.contents_dir%'

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/services.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd">

            <parameters>
                <parameter key="app.contents_dir">...</parameter>
            </parameters>

            <services>
                <service id="App\Service\MessageGenerator">
                    <argument key="$contentsDir">%app.contents_dir%</argument>
                </service>
            </services>
        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/services.php
        use App\Service\MessageGenerator;
        use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Reference;

        $container->setParameter('app.contents_dir', '...');

        $container->getDefinition(MessageGenerator::class)
            ->setArgument('$contentsDir', '%app.contents_dir%');

If you inject the same parameters over and over again, use instead the services._defaults.bind option. The arguments defined in that option are injected automatically whenever a service constructor or controller action define an argument with that exact name. For example, to inject the value of the :ref:`kernel.project_dir parameter <configuration-kernel-project-directory>` whenever a service/controller defines a $projectDir argument, use this:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # config/services.yaml
        services:
            _defaults:
                bind:
                    # pass this value to any $projectDir argument for any service
                    # that's created in this file (including controller arguments)
                    $projectDir: '%kernel.project_dir%'

            # ...

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- config/services.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd">

            <services>
                <defaults autowire="true" autoconfigure="true" public="false">
                    <!-- pass this value to any $projectDir argument for any service
                         that's created in this file (including controller arguments) -->
                    <bind key="$projectDir">%kernel.project_dir%</bind>
                </defaults>

                <!-- ... -->
            </services>
        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // config/services.php
        use App\Controller\LuckyController;
        use Psr\Log\LoggerInterface;
        use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Reference;

        $container->register(LuckyController::class)
            ->setPublic(true)
            ->setBindings([
                // pass this value to any $projectDir argument for any service
                // that's created in this file (including controller arguments)
                '$projectDir' => '%kernel.project_dir%',
            ])
        ;

.. seealso::

    Read the article about :ref:`binding arguments by name and/or type <services-binding>`
    to learn more about this powerful feature.

Finally, if some service needs to access to lots of parameters, instead of injecting each of them individually, you can inject all the application parameters at once by type-hinting any of its constructor arguments with the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\DependencyInjection\\ParameterBag\\ContainerBagInterface`:

// src/Service/MessageGenerator.php
// ...

use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\ContainerBagInterface;

class MessageGenerator
{
    private $params;

    public function __construct(ContainerBagInterface $params)
    {
        $this->params = $params;
    }

    public function someMethod()
    {
        // get any container parameter from $this->params, which stores all of them
        $sender = $this->params->get('mailer_sender');
        // ...
    }
}

Keep Going!

Congratulations! You've tackled the basics in Symfony. Next, learn about each part of Symfony individually by following the guides. Check out:

And all the other topics related to configuration:

.. toctree::
    :maxdepth: 1
    :glob:

    configuration/*