The EventManagerOverviewZend_EventManager is a component designed for the following use
cases:
Implementing simple subject/observer patterns.
Implementing Aspect-Oriented designs.
Implementing event-driven architectures.
The basic architecture allows you to attach and detach listeners to named events, both on
a per-instance basis as well as statically; trigger events; and interrupt execution of
listeners.
Quick Start
Typically, you will compose a Zend_EventManager_EventManager instance in a class.
events = $events;
} elseif (null === $this->events) {
$this->events = new Zend_EventManager_EventManager(__CLASS__);
}
return $this->events;
}
}
]]>
The above allows users to access the EventManager instance, or
reset it with a new instance; if one does not exist, it will be lazily instantiated
on-demand.
An EventManager is really only interesting if it triggers some
events. Basic triggering takes three arguments: the event name, which is usually the
current function/method name; the "context", which is usually the current object
instance; and the arguments, which are usually the arguments provided to the current
function/method.
events()->trigger(__FUNCTION__, $this, $params);
}
}
]]>
In turn, triggering events is only interesting if something is listening for the event.
Listeners attach to the EventManager, specifying a named event
and the callback to notify. The callback receives a Zend_EventManager_Event
object, which has accessors for retrieving the event name, context, and parameters.
Let's add a listener, and trigger the event.
events()->attach('bar', function ($e) use ($log) {
$event = $e->getName();
$target = get_class($e->getTarget());
$params = json_encode($e->getParams());
$log->info(sprintf(
'%s called on %s, using params %s',
$event,
$target,
$params
));
});
// Results in log message:
$foo->bar('baz', 'bat');
// reading: bar called on Foo, using params {"baz" : "baz", "bat" : "bat"}"
]]>
Note that the second argument to attach() is any valid callback;
an anonymous function is shown in the example in order to keep the example
self-contained. However, you could also utilize a valid function name, a functor, a
string referencing a static method, or an array callback with a named static method or
instance method. Again, any PHP callback is valid.
Sometimes you may want to specify listeners without yet having an object instance of the
class composing an EventManager. The
Zend_EventManager_StaticEventManager allows you to do this. The call to
attach is identical to the EventManager,
but expects an additional parameter at the beginning: a named instance. Remember the
example of composing an EventManager, how we passed it
__CLASS__? That value, or any strings you provide in an array to
the constructor, may be used to identify an instance when using the
StaticEventManager. As an example, we could change the above
example to attach statically:
attach('Foo', 'bar', function ($e) use ($log) {
$event = $e->getName();
$target = get_class($e->getTarget());
$params = json_encode($e->getParams());
$log->info(sprintf(
'%s called on %s, using params %s',
$event,
$target,
$params
));
});
// Later, instantiate Foo:
$foo = new Foo();
// And we can still trigger the above event:
$foo->bar('baz', 'bat');
// results in log message:
// bar called on Foo, using params {"baz" : "baz", "bat" : "bat"}"
]]>
The EventManager also provides the ability to detach listeners,
short-circuit execution of an event either from within a listener or by testing return
values of listeners, test and loop through the results returned by listeners, prioritize
listeners, and more. Many of these features are detailed in the examples.
Wildcard Listeners
Sometimes you'll want to attach the same listener to many events or to all events of
a given instance -- or potentially, with the static manager, many contexts, and many
events. The EventManager component allows for this.
Attaching to many events at onceattach(array('these', 'are', 'event', 'names'), $callback);
]]>
Note that if you specify a priority, that priority will be used for all events
specified.
Attaching using the wildcardattach('*', $callback);
]]>
Note that if you specify a priority, that priority will be used for this
listener for any event triggered.
What the above specifies is that any event triggered will
result in notification of this particular listener.
Attaching to many events at once via the StaticEventManagerattach('foo', array('these', 'are', 'event', 'names'), $callback);
// Attach to many events on the contexts "foo" and "bar"
$events->attach(array('foo', 'bar'), array('these', 'are', 'event', 'names'), $callback);
]]>
Note that if you specify a priority, that priority will be used for all events
specified.
Attaching to many events at once via the StaticEventManagerattach('foo', '*', $callback);
// Attach to all events on the contexts "foo" and "bar"
$events->attach(array('foo', 'bar'), '*', $callback);
]]>
Note that if you specify a priority, that priority will be used for all events
specified.
The above is specifying that for the contexts "foo" and "bar", the specified
listener should be notified for any event they trigger.
Configuration OptionsZend_EventManager_EventManager Optionsidentifier
A string or array of strings to which the given
EventManager instance can answer when accessed via
the StaticEventManager.
event_class
The name of an alternate Zend_EventManager_Event class to use for
representing events passed to listeners.
static_connections
An instance of a Zend_EventManager_StaticEventCollection
instance to use when triggering events. By default, this will use
the global Zend_EventManager_StaticEventManager instance, but that can
be overridden by passing a value to this method. A null
value will prevent the instance from triggering any further statically
attached listeners.
Available Methods__construct__constructnull|string|int $identifier
Constructs a new EventManager instance, using the
given identifier, if provided, for purposes of static attachment.
setEventClasssetEventClassstring $class
Provide the name of an alternate Zend_EventManager_Event class to use
when creating events to pass to triggered listeners.
setStaticConnectionssetStaticConnectionsZend_EventManager_StaticEventCollection $connections = null
An instance of a Zend_EventManager_StaticEventCollection
instance to use when triggering events. By default, this will use
the global Zend_EventManager_StaticEventManager instance, but that can
be overridden by passing a value to this method. A null
value will prevent the instance from triggering any further statically
attached listeners.
getStaticConnectionsgetStaticConnections
Returns the currently attached
Zend_EventManager_StaticEventCollection instance, lazily
retrieving the global Zend_EventManager_StaticEventManager instance if
none is attached and usage of static listeners hasn't been disabled by
passing a null value to setStaticConnections().
Returns either a boolean false if static listeners are
disabled, or a StaticEventCollection instance
otherwise.
triggertriggerstring $event, mixed $target, mixed $argv, callback $callback
Triggers all listeners to a named event. The recommendation is to use the
current function/method name for $event, appending it
with values such as ".pre", ".post", etc. as needed.
$context should be the current object instance, or the
name of the function if not triggering within an object.
$params should typically be an associative array or
ArrayAccess instance; we recommend using the
parameters passed to the function/method (compact() is
often useful here). This method can also take a callback and behave in the
same way as triggerUntil().
The method returns an instance of Zend_EventManager_ResponseCollection,
which may be used to introspect return values of the various listeners, test
for short-circuiting, and more.
triggerUntiltriggerUntilstring $event, mixed $context, mixed $argv, callback
$callback
Triggers all listeners to a named event, just like trigger(),
with the addition that it passes the return value from each listener to
$callback; if $callback returns a
boolean true value, execution of the listeners is
interrupted. You can test for this using $result->stopped().
attachattachstring $event, callback $callback, int $priority
Attaches $callback to the
Zend_EventManager_EventManager instance, listening for the event
$event. If a $priority is provided,
the listener will be inserted into the internal listener stack using that
priority; higher values execute earliest. (Default priority is "1", and
negative priorities are allowed.)
The method returns an instance of
Zend_Stdlib_CallbackHandler; this value can later be
passed to detach() if desired.
attachAggregateattachAggregatestring|Zend_EventManager_ListenerAggregate $aggregate
If a string is passed for $aggregate, instantiates that
class. The $aggregate is then passed the
EventManager instance to its
attach() method so that it may register listeners.
The ListenerAggregate instance is returned.
detachdetachZend_Stdlib_CallbackHandler $listener
Scans all listeners, and detaches any that match $listener
so that they will no longer be triggered.
Returns a boolean true if any listeners have been
identified and unsubscribed, and a boolean false
otherwise.
detachAggregatedetachAggregateZend_EventManager_ListenerAggregate $aggregate
Loops through all listeners of all events to identify listeners that are
represented by the aggregate; for all matches, the listeners will be removed.
Returns a boolean true if any listeners have been
identified and unsubscribed, and a boolean false
otherwise.
detachAggregategetEvents
Returns an array of all event names that have listeners attached.
getListenersgetListenersstring $event
Returns a Zend_Stdlib_PriorityQueue instance of all
listeners attached to $event.
clearListenersclearListenersstring $event
Removes all listeners attached to $event.
prepareArgsprepareArgsarray $args
Creates an ArrayObject from the provided
$args. This can be useful if you want yours listeners
to be able to modify arguments such that later listeners or the triggering
method can see the changes.
ExamplesModifying Arguments
Occasionally it can be useful to allow listeners to modify the arguments they
receive so that later listeners or the calling method will receive those changed
values.
As an example, you might want to pre-filter a date that you know will arrive as a
string and convert it to a DateTime argument.
To do this, you can pass your arguments to prepareArgs(),
and pass this new object when triggering an event. You will then pull that value
back into your method.
events()->prepareArgs($argv);
$this->events()->trigger(__FUNCTION__, $this, $argv);
$date = isset($argv['values']['date']) ? $argv['values']['date'] : new DateTime('now');
// ...
}
}
$v = new ValueObject();
$v->events()->attach('inject', function($e) {
$values = $e->getParam('values');
if (!$values) {
return;
}
if (!isset($values['date'])) {
$values['date'] = new DateTime('now');
return;
}
$values['date'] = new Datetime($values['date']);
});
$v->inject(array(
'date' => '2011-08-10 15:30:29',
));
]]>Short Circuiting
One common use case for events is to trigger listeners until either one indicates no
further processing should be done, or until a return value meets specific criteria.
As examples, if an event creates a Response object, it may want execution to stop.
stopPropagation(true);
return $response;
};
]]>
Alternately, we could do the check from the method triggering the event.
events()->triggerUntil(__FUNCTION__, $this, $argv, function($v) {
return ($v instanceof Response);
});
}
}
]]>
Typically, you may want to return a value that stopped execution, or use it some
way. Both trigger() and
triggerUntil() return a
Zend_EventManager_ResponseCollection instance; call its
stopped() method to test if execution was stopped, and
last() method to retrieve the return value from the last
executed listener:
events()->triggerUntil(__FUNCTION__, $this, $argv, function($v) {
return ($v instanceof Response);
});
// Test if execution was halted, and return last result:
if ($results->stopped()) {
return $results->last();
}
// continue...
}
}
]]>Assigning Priority to Listeners
One use case for the EventManager is for implementing caching
systems. As such, you often want to check the cache early, and save to it late.
The third argument to attach() is a priority value. The
higher this number, the earlier that listener will execute; the lower it is, the
later it executes. The value defaults to 1, and values will trigger in the order
registered within a given priority.
So, to implement a caching system, our method will need to trigger an event at
method start as well as at method end. At method start, we want an event that will
trigger early; at method end, an event should trigger late.
Here is the class in which we want caching:
events()->trigger('get.pre', $this, $params);
// If an event stopped propagation, return the value
if ($results->stopped()) {
return $results->last();
}
// do some work...
$params['__RESULT__'] = $someComputedContent;
$this->events()->trigger('get.post', $this, $params);
}
}
]]>
Now, let's create a ListenerAggregate that can handle
caching for us:
cache = $cache;
}
public function attach(Zend_EventManager_EventCollection $events)
{
$events->attach('get.pre', array($this, 'load'), 100);
$events->attach('get.post', array($this, 'save'), -100);
}
public function load($e)
{
$id = get_class($e->getTarget()) . '-' . json_encode($e->getParams());
if (false !== ($content = $this->cache->load($id))) {
$e->stopPropagation(true);
return $content;
}
}
public function save($e)
{
$params = $e->getParams();
$content = $params['__RESULT__'];
unset($params['__RESULT__']);
$id = get_class($e->getTarget()) . '-' . json_encode($params);
$this->cache->save($content, $id);
}
}
]]>
We can then attach the aggregate to an instance.
events()->attachAggregate($cacheListener);
]]>
Now, as we call get(), if we have a cached entry, it will
be returned immediately; if not, a computed entry will be cached when we complete
the method.