How to Use the Serializer¶
Symfony provides a serializer to serialize/deserialize to and from objects and different formats (e.g. JSON or XML). Before using it, read the Serializer component docs to get familiar with its philosophy and the normalizers and encoders terminology.
Installation¶
In applications using Symfony Flex, run this command to
install the serializer
Symfony pack before using it:
1 | $ composer require symfony/serializer-pack
|
Using the Serializer Service¶
Once enabled, the serializer service can be injected in any service where you need it or it can be used in a controller:
// src/Controller/DefaultController.php
namespace App\Controller;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\Serializer\SerializerInterface;
class DefaultController extends AbstractController
{
public function index(SerializerInterface $serializer)
{
// keep reading for usage examples
}
}
Adding Normalizers and Encoders¶
Once enabled, the serializer
service will be available in the container.
It comes with a set of useful encoders
and normalizers.
Encoders supporting the following formats are enabled:
- JSON:
JsonEncoder
- XML:
XmlEncoder
- CSV:
CsvEncoder
- YAML:
YamlEncoder
As well as the following normalizers:
ObjectNormalizer
to handle typical data objectsDateTimeNormalizer
for objects implementing theDateTimeInterface
interfaceDateTimeZoneNormalizer
forDateTimeZone
objectsDateIntervalNormalizer
forDateInterval
objectsDataUriNormalizer
to transformSplFileInfo
objects in Data URIsJsonSerializableNormalizer
to deal with objects implementing theJsonSerializable
interfaceArrayDenormalizer
to denormalize arrays of objects using a format like MyObject[] (note the [] suffix)ConstraintViolationListNormalizer
for objects implementing theConstraintViolationListInterface
interfaceProblemNormalizer
forFlattenException
objects
Custom normalizers and/or encoders can also be loaded by tagging them as serializer.normalizer and serializer.encoder. It’s also possible to set the priority of the tag in order to decide the matching order.
Here is an example on how to load the
GetSetMethodNormalizer
, a
faster alternative to the ObjectNormalizer when data objects always use
getters (getXxx()
), issers (isXxx()
) or hassers (hasXxx()
) to read
properties and setters (setXxx()
) to change properties:
- YAML
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# config/services.yaml services: get_set_method_normalizer: class: Symfony\Component\Serializer\Normalizer\GetSetMethodNormalizer tags: [serializer.normalizer]
- XML
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<!-- 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> <service id="get_set_method_normalizer" class="Symfony\Component\Serializer\Normalizer\GetSetMethodNormalizer"> <tag name="serializer.normalizer"/> </service> </services> </container>
- PHP
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// config/services.php namespace Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\Configurator; use Symfony\Component\Serializer\Normalizer\GetSetMethodNormalizer; return function(ContainerConfigurator $configurator) { $services = $configurator->services(); $services->set('get_set_method_normalizer', GetSetMethodNormalizer::class) ->tag('serializer.normalizer') ; };
Using Serialization Groups Annotations¶
To use annotations, first add support for them via the SensioFrameworkExtraBundle:
1 | $ composer require sensio/framework-extra-bundle
|
Next, add the @Groups annotations to your class and choose which groups to use when serializing:
$json = $serializer->serialize(
$someObject,
'json', ['groups' => 'group1']
);
ちなみに
The value of the groups
key can be a single string, or an array of strings.
In addition to the @Groups
annotation, the Serializer component also
supports YAML or XML files. These files are automatically loaded when being
stored in one of the following locations:
- All
*.yaml
and*.xml
files in theconfig/serializer/
directory. - The
serialization.yaml
orserialization.xml
file in theResources/config/
directory of a bundle; - All
*.yaml
and*.xml
files in theResources/config/serialization/
directory of a bundle.
Configuring the Metadata Cache¶
The metadata for the serializer is automatically cached to enhance application
performance. By default, the serializer uses the cache.system
cache pool
which is configured using the cache.system
option.
Enabling a Name Converter¶
The use of a name converter service can be defined in the configuration using the name_converter option.
The built-in CamelCase to snake_case name converter
can be enabled by using the serializer.name_converter.camel_case_to_snake_case
value:
- YAML
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# config/packages/framework.yaml framework: # ... serializer: name_converter: 'serializer.name_converter.camel_case_to_snake_case'
- XML
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<!-- config/packages/framework.xml --> <framework:config> <!-- ... --> <framework:serializer name-converter="serializer.name_converter.camel_case_to_snake_case"/> </framework:config>
- PHP
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// config/packages/framework.php $container->loadFromExtension('framework', [ // ... 'serializer' => [ 'name_converter' => 'serializer.name_converter.camel_case_to_snake_case', ], ]);
Going Further with the Serializer¶
API Platform provides an API system supporting the following formats:
- JSON-LD along with the Hydra Core Vocabulary
- OpenAPI v2 (formerly Swagger) and v3
- GraphQL
- JSON:API
- HAL
- JSON
- XML
- YAML
- CSV
It is built on top of the Symfony Framework and its Serializer component. It provides custom normalizers and a custom encoder, custom metadata and a caching system.
If you want to leverage the full power of the Symfony Serializer component, take a look at how this bundle works.