How to Create a custom Route Loader¶
Simple applications can define all their routes in a single configuration file -
usually config/routes.yaml
(see Creating Routes).
However, in most applications it’s common to import routes definitions from
different resources: PHP annotations in controller files, YAML, XML or PHP
files stored in some directory, etc.
Built-in Route Loaders¶
Symfony provides several route loaders for the most common needs:
- YAML
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# config/routes.yaml app_file: # loads routes from the given routing file stored in some bundle resource: '@AcmeBundle/Resources/config/routing.yaml' app_annotations: # loads routes from the PHP annotations of the controllers found in that directory resource: '../src/Controller/' type: annotation app_directory: # loads routes from the YAML, XML or PHP files found in that directory resource: '../legacy/routing/' type: directory app_bundle: # loads routes from the YAML, XML or PHP files found in some bundle directory resource: '@AcmeOtherBundle/Resources/config/routing/' type: directory
- XML
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<!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing https://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <!-- loads routes from the given routing file stored in some bundle --> <import resource="@AcmeBundle/Resources/config/routing.yaml"/> <!-- loads routes from the PHP annotations of the controllers found in that directory --> <import resource="../src/Controller/" type="annotation"/> <!-- loads routes from the YAML or XML files found in that directory --> <import resource="../legacy/routing/" type="directory"/> <!-- loads routes from the YAML or XML files found in some bundle directory --> <import resource="@AcmeOtherBundle/Resources/config/routing/" type="directory"/> </routes>
- PHP
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// config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\Loader\Configurator\RoutingConfigurator; return function (RoutingConfigurator $routes) { // loads routes from the given routing file stored in some bundle $routes->import('@AcmeBundle/Resources/config/routing.yaml'); // loads routes from the PHP annotations of the controllers found in that directory $routes->import('../src/Controller/', 'annotation'); // loads routes from the YAML or XML files found in that directory $routes->import('../legacy/routing/', 'directory'); // loads routes from the YAML or XML files found in some bundle directory $routes->import('@AcmeOtherBundle/Resources/config/routing/', 'directory'); };
注釈
When importing resources, the key (e.g. app_file
) is the name of collection.
Just be sure that it’s unique per file so no other lines override it.
If your application needs are different, you can create your own custom route loader as explained in the next section.
What is a Custom Route Loader¶
A custom route loader enables you to generate routes based on some conventions or patterns. A great example for this use-case is the FOSRestBundle where routes are generated based on the names of the action methods in a controller.
You still need to modify your routing configuration (e.g.
config/routes.yaml
) manually, even when using a custom route
loader.
注釈
There are many bundles out there that use their own route loaders to accomplish cases like those described above, for instance FOSRestBundle, JMSI18nRoutingBundle, KnpRadBundle and SonataAdminBundle.
Loading Routes¶
The routes in a Symfony application are loaded by the
DelegatingLoader
.
This loader uses several other loaders (delegates) to load resources of
different types, for instance YAML files or @Route
annotations in controller
files. The specialized loaders implement
LoaderInterface
and therefore have two important methods:
supports()
and load()
.
Take these lines from the routes.yaml
:
- YAML
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# config/routes.yaml controllers: resource: ../src/Controller/ type: annotation
- XML
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<!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing https://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <import resource="../src/Controller" type="annotation"/> </routes>
- PHP
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// config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\Loader\Configurator\RoutingConfigurator; return function (RoutingConfigurator $routes) { $routes->import('../src/Controller', 'annotation'); };
When the main loader parses this, it tries all registered delegate loaders and calls
their supports()
method with the given resource (../src/Controller/
)
and type (annotation
) as arguments. When one of the loader returns true
,
its load()
method
will be called, which should return a RouteCollection
containing Route
objects.
注釈
Routes loaded this way will be cached by the Router the same way as when they are defined in one of the default formats (e.g. XML, YAML, PHP file).
Loading Routes with a Custom Service¶
Using a regular Symfony service is the simplest way to load routes in a customized way. It’s much easier than creating a full custom route loader, so you should always consider this option first.
To do so, define type: service
as the type of the loaded routing resource
and configure the service and method to call:
- YAML
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# config/routes.yaml admin_routes: resource: 'admin_route_loader::loadRoutes' type: service
- XML
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<!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing https://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <import resource="admin_route_loader::loadRoutes" type="service"/> </routes>
- PHP
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// config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\Loader\Configurator\RoutingConfigurator; return function (RoutingConfigurator $routes) { $routes->import('admin_route_loader::loadRoutes', 'service'); };
In this example, the routes are loaded by calling the loadRoutes()
method
of the service whose ID is admin_route_loader
. Your service doesn’t have to
extend or implement any special class, but the called method must return a
RouteCollection
object.
If you’re using autoconfigure, your class should
implement the RouteLoaderInterface
interface to be tagged automatically. If you’re not using autoconfigure,
tag it manually with routing.route_loader
.
注釈
The routes defined using service route loaders will be automatically cached by the framework. So whenever your service should load new routes, don’t forget to clear the cache.
ちなみに
If your service is invokable, you don’t need to precise the method to use.
Creating a custom Loader¶
To load routes from some custom source (i.e. from something other than annotations,
YAML or XML files), you need to create a custom route loader. This loader
has to implement LoaderInterface
.
In most cases it is easier to extend from
Loader
instead of implementing
LoaderInterface
yourself.
The sample loader below supports loading routing resources with a type of
extra
. The type name should not clash with other loaders that might
support the same type of resource. Make up any name specific to what
you do. The resource name itself is not actually used in the example:
// src/Routing/ExtraLoader.php
namespace App\Routing;
use Symfony\Component\Config\Loader\Loader;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouteCollection;
class ExtraLoader extends Loader
{
private $isLoaded = false;
public function load($resource, string $type = null)
{
if (true === $this->isLoaded) {
throw new \RuntimeException('Do not add the "extra" loader twice');
}
$routes = new RouteCollection();
// prepare a new route
$path = '/extra/{parameter}';
$defaults = [
'_controller' => 'App\Controller\ExtraController::extra',
];
$requirements = [
'parameter' => '\d+',
];
$route = new Route($path, $defaults, $requirements);
// add the new route to the route collection
$routeName = 'extraRoute';
$routes->add($routeName, $route);
$this->isLoaded = true;
return $routes;
}
public function supports($resource, string $type = null)
{
return 'extra' === $type;
}
}
Make sure the controller you specify really exists. In this case you
have to create an extra()
method in the ExtraController
:
// src/Controller/ExtraController.php
namespace App\Controller;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
class ExtraController extends AbstractController
{
public function extra($parameter)
{
return new Response($parameter);
}
}
Now define a service for the ExtraLoader
:
- YAML
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# config/services.yaml services: # ... App\Routing\ExtraLoader: tags: [routing.loader]
- XML
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<!-- config/services.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" ?> <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> <!-- ... --> <service id="App\Routing\ExtraLoader"> <tag name="routing.loader"/> </service> </services> </container>
- PHP
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// config/services.php use App\Routing\ExtraLoader; $container->autowire(ExtraLoader::class) ->addTag('routing.loader') ;
Notice the tag routing.loader
. All services with this tag will be marked
as potential route loaders and added as specialized route loaders to the
routing.loader
service, which is an instance of
DelegatingLoader
.
Using the Custom Loader¶
If you did nothing else, your custom routing loader would not be called. What remains to do is adding a few lines to the routing configuration:
- YAML
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# config/routes.yaml app_extra: resource: . type: extra
- XML
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<!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing https://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <import resource="." type="extra"/> </routes>
- PHP
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// config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\Loader\Configurator\RoutingConfigurator; return function (RoutingConfigurator $routes) { $routes->import('.', 'extra'); };
The important part here is the type
key. Its value should be extra
as
this is the type which the ExtraLoader
supports and this will make sure
its load()
method gets called. The resource
key is insignificant
for the ExtraLoader
, so it is set to .
(a single dot).
注釈
The routes defined using custom route loaders will be automatically cached by the framework. So whenever you change something in the loader class itself, don’t forget to clear the cache.
More Advanced Loaders¶
If your custom route loader extends from
Loader
as shown above, you
can also make use of the provided resolver, an instance of
LoaderResolver
, to load secondary
routing resources.
You still need to implement
supports()
and load()
.
Whenever you want to load another resource - for instance a YAML routing
configuration file - you can call the
import()
method:
// src/Routing/AdvancedLoader.php
namespace App\Routing;
use Symfony\Component\Config\Loader\Loader;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouteCollection;
class AdvancedLoader extends Loader
{
public function load($resource, string $type = null)
{
$routes = new RouteCollection();
$resource = '@ThirdPartyBundle/Resources/config/routes.yaml';
$type = 'yaml';
$importedRoutes = $this->import($resource, $type);
$routes->addCollection($importedRoutes);
return $routes;
}
public function supports($resource, string $type = null)
{
return 'advanced_extra' === $type;
}
}
注釈
The resource name and type of the imported routing configuration can be anything that would normally be supported by the routing configuration loader (YAML, XML, PHP, annotation, etc.).
注釈
For more advanced uses, check out the ChainRouter provided by the Symfony CMF project. This router allows applications to use two or more routers combined, for example to keep using the default Symfony routing system when writing a custom router.