mouf / interop.silex.di
This project is a very simple extension to the Silex microframework. It adds to Silex the capability to use any DI container (not only Pimple).
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Requires
- container-interop/container-interop: ~1.0
- mouf/pimple-interop: ~2.0
- silex/silex: ~1.0
README
This project is a very simple extension to the Silex microframework. It makes Silex able to use any other dependency container compatible with container-interop (and not only Pimple).
To use this, you simply need to use the Mouf\Interop\Silex\Application
class that extends the Silex\Application
class.
Why?
Silex is a microframework. It is designed on top of Pimple, a very simple dependency injection container
(DIC) written in about 80 lines of code.
Pimple is a nice DIC, but it can become quite verbose as your project grows. And natively, Silex
has no way to use another DIC (the Application
class of Silex extends the Pimple
class).
This project lets you add any other dependency injection framework
directly in your Silex project. Instead of injecting your dependencies by filling the $app
variable,
you can register entries in your own container. Instances declared in your container will be accessible using the
Pimple $app['my.instance']
syntax.
How?
The extended Application
class has a modified constructor:
- __construct(ContainerInterface $container = null, array $values = array())
The container passed in parameter is a delegate lookup container.
When this is done, you can access any instance declared of your container using the $app
object, just like you would in
any Silex project.
Your DI container must respect the ContainerInterface
described in this the container-interop project.
What DI containers can I plug in Silex?
Out of the box, you can plug any of the DI containers supported by container-interop. There are an awful lot of them!
Installation
This class is distributed as a Composer package:
{
require: {
"mouf/interop.silex.di" : "~2.0"
}
}
See a working sample
Check out this use case: creating a Silex controller with the Mouf framework
You are a Symfony 2 user?
There is a very similar package for Symfony 2 application. It lets you add additional containers to the main Symfony 2 container: check it out: interop.symfony.di