Zend_Controller_Action
is an abstract class you may use
for implementing Action Controllers for use with the Front
Controller when building a website based on the
Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern.
To use Zend_Controller_Action
, you will need to
subclass it in your actual action controller classes (or subclass it
to create your own base class for action controllers). The most
basic operation is to subclass it, and create action methods that
correspond to the various actions you wish the controller to handle
for your site. Zend_Controller's routing and dispatch handling will
autodiscover any methods ending in 'Action' in your class as
potential controller actions.
For example, let's say your class is defined as follows:
class FooController extends Zend_Controller_Action { public function barAction() { // do something } public function bazAction() { // do something } }
The above FooController
class (controller
foo
) defines two actions, bar
and
baz
.
There's much more that can be accomplished than this, such as custom initialization actions, default actions to call should no action (or an invalid action) be specified, pre- and post-dispatch hooks, and a variety of helper methods. This chapter serves as an overview of the action controller functionality
While you can always override the action controller's constructor,
we do not recommend this. Zend_Controller_Action::__construct()
performs some important tasks, such as registering the request and
response objects, as well as any custom invocation arguments passed
in from the front controller. If you must override the constructor,
be sure to call parent::__construct($request, $response,
$invokeArgs)
.
The more appropriate way to customize instantiation is to use the
init()
method, which is called as the last task of
__construct()
. For example, if you want to connect to
a database at instantiation:
class FooController extends Zend_Controller_Action { public function init() { $this->db = Zend_Db::factory('Pdo_Mysql', array( 'host' => 'myhost', 'username' => 'user', 'password' => 'XXXXXXX', 'dbname' => 'website' )); } }
Zend_Controller_Action
specifies two methods that may
be called to bookend a requested action, preDispatch()
and postDispatch()
. These can be useful in a variety of
ways: verifying authentication and ACLs prior to running an action
(by calling _forward()
in preDispatch()
,
the action will be skipped), for instance, or placing generated
content in a sitewide template (postDispatch()
).
A number of objects and variables are registered with the object, and each has accessor methods.
Request Object: getRequest()
may be used to retrieve the request object used to call the
action.
Response Object:
getResponse()
may be used to retrieve the
response object aggregating the final response. Some typical
calls might look like:
$this->getResponse()->setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/xml'); $this->getResponse()->appendBody($content);
Invocation Arguments: the front
controller may push parameters into the router, dispatcher,
and action controller. To retrieve these, use
getInvokeArg($key)
; alternatively, fetch the
entire list using getInvokeArgs()
.
Request parameters: The request object
aggregates request parameters, such as any _GET or _POST
parameters, or user parameters specified in the URL's path
information. To retrieve these, use
_getParam($key)
or
_getAllParams()
. You may also set request
parameters using _setParam()
; this is useful
when forwarding to additional actions.
To test whether or not a parameter exists (useful for
logical branching), use _hasParam($key)
.
Note | |
---|---|
<?php // Use default value of 1 if id is not set $id = $this->_getParam('id', 1); // Instead of: if ($this->_hasParam('id') { $id = $this->_getParam('id'); } else { $id = 1; } ?> |
Zend_Controller_Action
provides a rudimentary and
flexible mechanism for view integration. Two methods accomplish
this, initView()
and render()
; the former
method lazy-loads the $view
public property, and the
latter renders a view based on the current requested action, using
the directory hierarchy to determine the script path.
initView()
initializes the view object.
render()
calls initView()
in order to
retrieve the view object, but it may be initialized at any time;
by default it populates the $view
property with a
Zend_View
object, but any class implementing
Zend_View_Interface
may be used. If
$view
is already initialized, it simply returns
that property.
The default implementation makes the following assumption of the directory structure:
applicationOrModule/ controllers/ IndexController.php views/ scripts/ index/ index.phtml helpers/ filters/
In other words, view scripts are assumed to be in the
views/scripts/
subdirectory, and the
views
subdirectory is assumed to contain sibling
functionality (helpers, filters). When determining the view
script name and path, the views/scripts/
directory
will be used as the base path, with a directories named after the
individual controllers providing a hierarchy of view scripts.
render()
has the following signature:
<?php string render(string $action = null, string $name = null, bool $noController = false); ?>
render()
renders a view script. If no arguments are
passed, it assumes that the script requested is
[controller]/[action].phtml
(where
.phtml
is the value of the $viewSuffix
property). Passing a value for $action
will render
that template in the [controller]
subdirectory. To
override using the [controller]
subdirectory, pass
a true value for $noController
. Finally, templates
are rendered into the response object; if you wish to render to
a specific named
segment in the response object, pass a value to
$name
.
Some examples:
<?php class MyController extends Zend_Controller_Action { public function fooAction() { // Renders my/foo.phtml $this->render(); // Renders my/bar.phtml $this->render('bar'); // Renders baz.phtml $this->render('baz', null, true); // Renders foo/login.phtml to the 'form' segment of the response object $this->render('login', 'form'); // Renders site.phtml to the 'page' segment of the response object $this->render('site', 'page', true); } }
Besides the accessors and view integration methods,
Zend_Controller_Action
has several utility methods for
performing common tasks from within your action methods (or from
pre-/post-dispatch).
_forward($action, $controller = null, $module = null,
array $params = null)
: perform another action. If
called in preDispatch()
, the currently
requested action will be skipped in favor of the new one.
Otherwise, after the current action is processed, the action
requested in _forward() will be executed.
_redirect($url, array $options =
array())
: redirect to another location. This
method takes a URL and an optional set of options. By
default, it performs an HTTP 302 redirect.
The options may include one or more of the following:
exit: whether or not to exit immediately. If requested, it will cleanly close any open sessions and perform the redirect.
You may set this option globally within the
controller using the setRedirectExit()
accessor.
prependBase: whether or not to prepend the base URL registered with the request object to the URL provided.
You may set this option globally within the
controller using the
setRedirectPrependBase()
accessor.
code: what HTTP code to utilize in the redirect. By default, an HTTP 302 is utilized; any code between 301 and 306 may be used.
You may set this option globally within the
controller using the
setRedirectCode()
accessor.
By design, Zend_Controller_Action
must be subclassed
in order to create an action controller. At the minimum, you will
need to define action methods that the controller may call.
Besides creating useful functionality for your web applications, you
may also find that you're repeating much of the same setup or
utility methods in your various controllers; if so, creating a
common base controller class that extends
Zend_Controller_Action
could solve such redundancy.
If a request to a controller is made that includes an undefined
action method, Zend_Controller_Action::__call()
will be invoked. __call()
is, of course, PHP's
magic method for method overloading.
By default, this method throws a
Zend_Controller_Action_Exception
indicating the
requested action was not found in the controller. You should
override this functionality if you wish to perform other
operations.
For instance, if you wish to display an error message, you might write something like this:
<?php class MyController extends Zend_Controller_Action { public function __call($method, $args) { if ('Action' == substr($method, -6)) { // If the action method was not found, render the error template return $this->render('error'); } // all other methods throw an exception throw new Exception('Invalid method "' . $method . '" called'); } } ?>
Another possibility is that you may want to forward on to a default controller page:
<?php class MyController extends Zend_Controller_Action { public function indexAction() { $this->render(); } public function __call($method, $args) { if ('Action' == substr($method, -6)) { // If the action method was not found, forward to the index action return $this->_forward('index'); } // all other methods throw an exception throw new Exception('Invalid method "' . $method . '" called'); } } ?>
Besides overriding __call()
, each of the
initialization, utility, accessor, view, and dispatch hook methods
mentioned previously in this chapter may be overridden in order to
customize your controllers. As an example, if you are storing your
view object in a registry, you may want to modify your
initView()
method with code resembling the following:
<?php abstract class My_Base_Controller extends Zend_Controller_Action { public function initView() { if (null === $this->view) { if (Zend_Registry::isRegistered('view')) { $this->view = Zend_Registry::get('view'); } else { $this->view = new Zend_View(); $this->view->setBasePath(dirname(__FILE__) . '/../views'); } } return $this->view; } } ?>
Hopefully, from the information in this chapter, you can see the flexibility of this particular component and how you can shape it to your application's or site's needs.