Matthew Weier O’Phinney writes a very useful article about resource injection; Brandon Savage approached me with an interesting issue regarding ZF bootstrap resources, and accessing them in your action controllers. Basically, he’d like to see any resource initialized by the bootstrap immediately available as simply a public member of his action controller.
So, for instance, if you were using the “DB” resource in your application, your controller could access it via $this->db.
I quickly drafted up a proof of concept for him using an action helper:
class My_ResourceInjector extends Zend_Controller_Action_Helper_Abstract
{
protected $_resources;
public function __construct(array $resources = array())
{
$this->_resources = $resources;
}
public function preDispatch()
{
$bootstrap = $this->getBootstrap();
$controller = $this->getActionController();
foreach ($this->_resources as $name) {
if ($bootstrap->hasResource($name)) {
$controller->$name = $bootstrap->getResource($name);
}
}
}
public function getBootstrap()
{
return $this->getFrontController()->getParam('bootstrap');
}
}
In this action helper, you would specify the specific resources you want injected via the $_resources property – which would be values you pass in. Each resource name would then be checked against those available in the bootstrap, and, if found, injected into the action controller as a property of the same name.
You would initialize it in your bootstrap:
class Bootstrap extends Zend_Application_Bootstrap_Bootstrap
{
protected function _initResourceInjector()
{
Zend_Controller_Action_HelperBroker::addHelper(
new My_ResourceInjector(array(
'db',
'layout',
'navigation',
));
);
}
}
The above would map three resources: “db”, “layout”, and “navigation”. This means you can refer to them directly as properties in your controllers:
class FooController extends Zend_Controller_Action
{
public function barAction()
{
$this->layout->disableLayout();
$model = $this->getModel();
$model->setDbAdapter($this->db);
$this->view->assign(
'model' => $this->model,
'navigation' => $this->navigation,
);
}
// ...
}
This approach leads to some nice brevity — you no longer need to fetch the bootstrap from the instantiation arguments, and then fetch the resource.
I thought about it some more, and realized that there’s a few problems: How do you know what is being injected from within the controller? How do you control what is being injected.
So, I revised it to pull the expected dependencies from the action controller itself…
Read the complete article here A Simple Resource Injector for ZF Action Controllers.