Zend_Controller_Front
implements a Front
Controller pattern used in Model-View-Controller
(MVC) applications. Its purpose is to initialize the
request environment, route the incoming request, and then dispatch
any discovered actions; it aggregates any responses and returns them
when the process is complete.
Zend_Controller_Front
also implements the Singleton
pattern, meaning only a single instance of it may be available at
any given time. This allows it to also act as a registry on which
the other objects in the dispatch process may draw.
Zend_Controller_Front
registers a plugin broker with
itself, allowing various events it triggers to be observed by
plugins. In most cases, this gives the developer the opportunity to
tailor the dispatch process to the site without the need to extend
the front controller to add functionality.
At a bare minimum, the front controller needs one or more paths to directories containing action controllers in order to do its work. A variety of methods may also be invoked to further tailor the front controller environment and that of its helper classes.
The front controller has several accessors for setting up its environment. However, there are three primary methods key to the front controller's functionality:
getInstance()
is used to retrieve a front
controller instance. As the front controller implements a
Singleton pattern, this is also the only means possible for
instantiating a front controller object.
<?php $front = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance(); ?>
setControllerDirectory()
is used to tell the dispatcher
where to look for action controller
class files. It accepts either a single path or an associative
array of module/path pairs.
As some examples:
// Set the default controller directory: $front->setControllerDirectory('../application/controllers'); // Set several module directories at once: $front->setControllerDirectory(array( 'default' => '../application/controllers', 'blog' => '../modules/blog/controllers', 'news' => '../modules/news/controllers', )); // Add a 'foo' module directory: $front->addControllerDirectory('../modules/foo/controllers', 'foo'); ?>
Note | |
---|---|
If you use |
You can get the current settings for the controller directory
using getControllerDirectory()
; this will return an
array of module/directory pairs.
dispatch(Zend_Controller_Request_Abstract $request = null,
Zend_Controller_Response_Abstract $response = null)
does the heavy work of the front controller. It may optionally
take a request
object and/or a response object,
allowing the developer to pass in custom objects for each.
If no request or response object are passed in,
dispatch()
will check for previously registered
objects and use those or instantiate default versions to use in
its process (in both cases, the HTTP flavor will be used as the
default).
Similarly, dispatch()
checks for registered router and dispatcher
objects, instantiating the default versions of each if none is
found.
The dispatch process has three distinct events:
Routing
Dispatching
Response
Routing takes place exactly once, using the values in the
request object when dispatch()
is called.
Dispatching takes place in a loop; a request may either indicate
multiple actions to dispatch, or the controller or a plugin may
reset the request object to force additional actions to
dispatch. When all is done, the front controller returns a
response.
Zend_Controller_Front::run($path)
is a static
method taking simply a path to a directory containing
controllers. It fetches a front controller instance (via
getInstance(),
registers the path provided via setControllerDirectory(),
and finally dispatches.
Basically, run()
is a convenience method that can
be used for site setups that do not require customization of the
front controller environment.
<?php // Instantiate front controller, set controller directory, and dispatch in one // easy step: Zend_Controller_Front::run('../application/controllers'); ?>
In addition to the methods listed above, there are a number of accessor methods that can be used to affect the front controller environment -- and thus the environment of the classes to which the front controller delegates.
resetInstance()
can be used to clear all
current settings. Its primary purpose is for testing, but it
can also be used for instances where you wish to chain
together multiple front controllers.
(set|get)DefaultControllerName()
let you
specify a different name to use for the default controller
('index' is used otherwise) and retrieve the current value.
They proxy to the
dispatcher.
(set|get)DefaultActionName()
let you specify a
different name to use for the default action ('index' is
used otherwise) and retrieve the current value. They proxy
to the
dispatcher.
(set|get)Request()
let you specify the request
class or object to use during the dispatch process and to
retrieve the current object. When setting the request
object, you may pass in a request class name, in which case
the method will load the class file and instantiate it.
(set|get)Router()
let you specify the router
class or object to use during the dispatch process and to
retrieve the current object. When setting the router
object, you may pass in a router class name, in which case
the method will load the class file and instantiate it.
When retrieving the router object, it first checks to see if one is present, and if not, instantiates the default router (rewrite router).
(set|get)BaseUrl()
let you specify the base
URL to strip when routing requests and to
retrieve the current value. The value is provided to the
request object just prior to routing.
(set|get)Dispatcher()
let you specify the
dispatcher class or object to use during the
dispatch process and retrieve the current object. When
setting the dispatcher object, you may pass in a dispatcher
class name, in which case the method will load the class
file and instantiate it.
When retrieving the dispatcher object, it first checks to see if one is present, and if not, instantiates the default dispatcher.
(set|get)Response()
let you specify the response
class or object to use during the dispatch process and to
retrieve the current object. When setting the response
object, you may pass in a response class name, in which case
the method will load the class file and instantiate it.
(un)registerPlugin()
let you register and
unregister plugin objects.
throwExceptions($flag)
is used to turn on/off
the ability to throw exceptions during the dispatch process.
By default, exceptions are caught and placed in the response
object; turning on throwExceptions()
will override this behaviour.
For more information, read Section 7.12, “MVC Exceptions”.
returnResponse($flag)
is used to tell the front
controller whether to return the response
(true
) from dispatch()
, or if the
response should be automatically emitted
(false
). By default, the response is
automatically emitted (by calling
Zend_Controller_Response_Abstract::sendResponse()
);
turning on returnResponse()
will override this
behaviour.
Reasons to return the response include a desire to check for exceptions prior to emitting the response, needing to log various aspects of the response (such as headers), etc.
In the introduction, we indicated that the front controller also acts as a registry for the various controller components. It does so through a family of "param" methods. These methods allow you to register arbitrary data -- objects and variables -- with the front controller to be retrieved at any time in the dispatch chain. These values are passed on to the router, dispatcher, and action controllers. The methods include:
setParam($name, $value)
allows you to set a
single parameter of $name
with value
$value
.
setParams(array $params)
allows you to set
multiple parameters at once using an associative array.
getParam($name)
allows you to retrieve a single
parameter at a time, using $name
as the
identifier.
getParams()
allows you to retrieve the entire
list of parameters at once.
clearParams()
allows you to clear a single
parameter (by passing a string identifier), multiple named
parameters (by passing an array of string identifiers), or the
entire parameter stack (by passing nothing).
There are several pre-defined parameters that may be set that have specific uses in the dispatch chain:
useDefaultControllerAlways
is used to hint to
the
dispatcher to use the default controller in the
default module for any request that is not dispatchable
(i.e., the module, controller, and/or action do not exist).
By default, this is off.
See Section 7.12.3, “MVC Exceptions You May Encounter” for more detailed information on using this setting.
disableOutputBuffering
is used to hint to the
dispatcher that it should not use output
buffering to capture output generated by action controllers.
By default, the dispatcher captures any output and appends
it to the response object body content.
To subclass the Front Controller, at the very minimum you will need
to override the getInstance()
method:
class My_Controller_Front extends Zend_Controller_Front { public static function getInstance() { if (null === self::$_instance) { self::$_instance = new self(); } return self::$_instance; } }
Overriding the getInstance()
method ensures that
subsequent calls to
Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance()
will return an
instance of your new subclass instead of a
Zend_Controller_Front
instance -- this is particularly
useful for some of the alternate routers and view helpers.
Typically, you will not need to subclass the front controller unless you need to add new functionality (for instance, a plugin autoloader, or a way to specify action helper paths). Some points where you may want to alter behaviour may include modifying how controller directories are stored, or what default router or dispatcher are used.