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- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
- <!-- Reviewed: no -->
- <sect1 id="zend.tool.extending">
- <title>Extending Zend_Tool</title>
- <sect2 id="zend.tool.extending.overview">
- <title>Overview of Zend_Tool</title>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname> is a framework for exposing common
- functionalities such as the creation of project scaffolds, code
- generation, search index generation, and much more. Functionality may be
- written and exposed via <acronym>PHP</acronym> classes dropped into the
- <acronym>PHP</acronym> <property>include_path</property>, providing incredible
- flexibility of implementation. The functionality may then be consumed by writing
- implementation and/or protocol-specific clients -- such as console
- clients, <acronym>XML-RPC</acronym>, <acronym>SOAP</acronym>, and much more.
- </para>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname> builds on and extends the capabilities of
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname> to that of managing a "project". In general,
- a "project" is a planned endeavor or an initiative. In the computer world, projects
- generally are a collection of resources. These resources can be files, directories,
- databases, schemas, images, styles, and more.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework">
- <title>Zend_Tool_Framework Extensions</title>
- <sect3 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.architecture">
- <title>Overall Architecture</title>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname> provides the following:
- </para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Common interfaces and abstracts</emphasis> that allow
- developers to create functionality and capabilities that are
- dispatchable by tooling clients.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Base client functionality</emphasis> and a concrete
- console implementation that connect external tools and
- interfaces to the <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname>. The Console
- client may be used in <acronym>CLI</acronym> environments such as unix
- shells and the Windows console.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>"Provider" and "Manifest" interfaces</emphasis> that
- can be utilized by the tooling system. "Providers" represent the
- functional aspect of the framework, and define the actions that
- tooling clients may call. "Manifests" act as metadata registries
- that provide additional context for the various defined
- providers.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>An introspective loading system</emphasis> that will
- scan the environment for providers and determine what is
- required to dispatch them.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>A standard set of system providers</emphasis> that
- allow the system to report what the full capabilities of the
- system are as well as provide useful feedback. This also
- includes a comprehensive "Help System".
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
- <para>
- Definitions that you should be aware of through this manual with respect
- to <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname> include:
- </para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname> - The framework which exposes
- tooling capabilities.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Tooling Client</emphasis> - A developer tool that connects
- to and consumes <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname>.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Client</emphasis> - The subsystem of
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework</classname> that exposes an interface such
- that tooling clients can connect, query and execute commands.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Console Client / Command Line Interface /
- <filename>zf.php</filename></emphasis> - The tooling client for the command
- line. </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Provider</emphasis> - A subsystem and a collection of
- built-in functionality that the framework exports.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Manifest</emphasis> - A subsystem for defining,
- organizing, and disseminating provider requirement data.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname> Provider - A set of providers
- specifically for creating and maintaining Zend Framework-based
- projects.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
- </sect3>
- <sect3 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.cli-client">
- <title>Understanding the CLI Client</title>
- <para>
- The <acronym>CLI</acronym>, or command line tool (internally known as the console
- tool), is currently the primary interface for dispatching
- <classname>Zend_Tool</classname> requests. With the <acronym>CLI</acronym> tool,
- developers can issue tooling requests inside the "command line windows", also
- commonly known as a "terminal" window. This environment is predominant in the *nix
- environment, but also has a common implementation in windows with the
- <filename>cmd.exe</filename>, console2 and also with the Cygwin project.
- </para>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.cli-client.setup-general">
- <title>Setting up the CLI tool</title>
- <para>
- To issue tooling requests via the command line client, you first
- need to set up the client so that your system can handle the "zf"
- command. The command line client, for all intents and purposes, is
- the <filename>.sh</filename> or <filename>.bat</filename> file that is provided
- with your Zend Framework distribution. In trunk, it can be found here:
- <ulink
- url="http://framework.zend.com/svn/framework/standard/trunk/bin/">http://framework.zend.com/svn/framework/standard/trunk/bin/</ulink>.
- </para>
- <para>
- As you can see, there are 3 files in the <filename>/bin/</filename>
- directory: a <filename>zf.php</filename>, <filename>zf.sh</filename>, and
- <filename>zf.bat</filename>. The <filename>zf.sh</filename> and the
- <filename>zf.bat</filename> are the operating system specific client
- wrappers: <filename>zf.sh</filename> for the *nix environment, and
- <filename>zf.bat</filename> for the Win32 environment. These client wrappers are
- responsible for finding the proper <filename>php.exe</filename>, finding the
- <filename>zf.php</filename>, and passing on the client request. The
- <filename>zf.php</filename> is the responsible for handling understanding
- your environment, constructing the proper include_path, and passing
- what is provided on the command line to the proper library component
- for dispatching.
- </para>
- <para>
- Ultimately, you want to ensure two things to make everything work
- regardless of the operating system you are on:
- </para>
- <orderedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <filename>zf.sh/zf.bat</filename> is reachable from your system
- path. This is the ability to call <command>zf</command> from
- anywhere on your command line, regardless of what your
- current working directory is.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- <filename>ZendFramework/library</filename> is in your
- <property>include_path</property>.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </orderedlist>
- <note>
- <para>
- Note: while the above are the most ideal
- requirements, you can simply download Zend Framework and expect it
- to work as <filename>./path/to/zf.php</filename> some command.
- </para>
- </note>
- </sect4>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.cli-client.setup-starnix">
- <title>Setting up the CLI tool on Unix-like Systems</title>
- <para>
- The most common setup in the *nix environment, is to copy the
- <filename>zf.sh</filename> and <filename>zf.php</filename> into the same
- directory as your <acronym>PHP</acronym> binary. This can generally be found in
- one of the following places:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="text"><![CDATA[
- /usr/bin
- /usr/local/bin
- /usr/local/ZendServer/bin/
- /Applications/ZendServer/bin/
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- To find out the location of your <acronym>PHP</acronym> binary, you can execute
- 'which php' on the command line. This will return the location of the
- <acronym>PHP</acronym> binary you will be using to run <acronym>PHP</acronym>
- scripts in this environment.
- </para>
- <para>
- The next order of business is to ensure that Zend Framework
- library is set up correctly inside of the system <acronym>PHP</acronym>
- <property>include_path</property>. To find out where your
- <property>include_path</property> is located, you can execute
- <command>php -i</command> and look for the <property>include_path</property>
- variable, or more succinctly, execute
- <command>php -i | grep include_path</command>. Once you have found where
- your <property>include_path</property> is located (this will generally be
- something like <filename>/usr/lib/php</filename>,
- <filename>/usr/share/php</filename>, <filename>/usr/local/lib/php</filename>, or
- similar), ensure that the contents of the <filename>/library/</filename>
- directory are put inside your <property>include_path</property> specified
- directory.
- </para>
- <para>
- Once you have done those two things, you should be able to issue a
- command and get back the proper response like this:
- </para>
- <para>
- <inlinegraphic scale="100" align="center" valign="middle"
- fileref="figures/zend.tool.framework.cliversionunix.png" format="PNG" />
- </para>
- <para>
- If you do not see this type of output, go back and check your setup
- to ensure you have all of the necessary pieces in the proper place.
- </para>
- <para>
- There are a couple of alternative setups you might want to employ
- depending on your servers configuration, your level of access, or
- for other reasons.
- </para>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Alternative Setup</emphasis> involves keeping the Zend
- Framework download together as is, and creating a link from a
- <constant>PATH</constant> location to the <filename>zf.sh</filename>. What this
- means is you can place the contents of the ZendFramework download into a
- location such as <filename>/usr/local/share/ZendFramework</filename>, or more
- locally like <filename>/home/username/lib/ZendFramework</filename>, and creating
- a symbolic link to the <filename>zf.sh</filename>.
- </para>
- <para>
- Assuming you want to put the link inside <filename>/usr/local/bin</filename>
- (this could also work for placing the link inside
- <filename>/home/username/bin/</filename> for example) you would issue a
- command similar to this:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="sh"><![CDATA[
- ln -s /usr/local/share/ZendFramework/bin/zf.sh /usr/local/bin/zf
- # OR (for example)
- ln -s /home/username/lib/ZendFramework/bin/zf.sh /home/username/bin/zf
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- This will create a link which you should be able to access globally
- on the command line.
- </para>
- </sect4>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.cli-client.setup-windows">
- <title>Setting up the CLI tool on Windows</title>
- <para>
- The most common setup in the Windows Win32 environment, is to copy
- the <filename>zf.bat</filename> and <filename>zf.php</filename> into the same
- directory as your <acronym>PHP</acronym> binary. This can generally be found in
- one of the following places:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="text"><![CDATA[
- C:\PHP
- C:\Program Files\ZendServer\bin\
- C:\WAMP\PHP\bin
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- You should be able to run <filename>php.exe</filename> on the command line.
- If you are not able to, first check the documentation that came with
- your <acronym>PHP</acronym> distribution, or ensure that the path to
- <filename>php.exe</filename> is in your
- Windows <constant>PATH</constant> environment variable.
- </para>
- <para>
- The next order of business is to ensure that Zend Framework
- library is set up correctly inside of the system <acronym>PHP</acronym>
- <property>include_path</property>. To find out where your
- <property>include_path</property> is located, you can type
- <command>php -i</command> and look for the <property>include_path</property>
- variable, or more succinctly execute
- <command>php -i | grep include_path</command> if you have Cygwin setup with
- grep available. Once you have found where your
- <property>include_path</property> is located (this will generally be
- something like <filename>C:\PHP\pear</filename>,
- <filename>C:\PHP\share</filename>,
- <filename>C:\Program%20Files\ZendServer\share</filename> or similar), ensure
- that the contents of the library/ directory are put inside your
- <property>include_path</property> specified directory.
- </para>
- <para>
- Once you have done those two things, you should be able to issue a
- command and get back the proper response like this:
- </para>
- <para>
- <inlinegraphic scale="100" align="center" valign="middle"
- fileref="figures/zend.tool.framework.cliversionwin32.png" format="PNG" />
- </para>
- <para>
- If you do not see this type of output, go back and check your setup
- to ensure you have all of the necessary pieces in the proper place.
- </para>
- <para>
- There are a couple of alternative setups you might want to employ
- depending on your server's configuration, your level of access, or
- for other reasons.
- </para>
- <para>
- <emphasis>Alternative Setup</emphasis> involves keeping the Zend
- Framework download together as is, and altering both your system
- <constant>PATH</constant> as well as the <filename>php.ini</filename> file.
- In your user's environment, make sure to add
- <filename>C:\Path\To\ZendFramework\bin</filename>, so that your
- <filename>zf.bat</filename> file is executable. Also, alter the
- <filename>php.ini</filename> file to ensure that
- <filename>C:\Path\To\ZendFramework\library</filename> is in your
- <property>include_path</property>.
- </para>
- </sect4>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.cli-client.setup-othernotes">
- <title>Other Setup Considerations</title>
- <para>
- If for some reason you do not want Zend Framework library inside
- your <property>include_path</property>, there is another option. There are
- two special environment variables that <filename>zf.php</filename> will
- utilize to determine the location of your Zend Framework
- installation.
- </para>
- <para>
- The first is <constant>ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH_PREPEND</constant>, which will
- prepend the value of this environment variable to the system
- (<filename>php.ini</filename>) <property>include_path</property> before loading
- the client.
- </para>
- <para>
- Alternatively, you might want to use
- <constant>ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH</constant> to completely
- <emphasis>replace</emphasis> the system <property>include_path</property>
- for one that makes sense specifically for the <command>zf</command>
- command line tool.
- </para>
- </sect4>
- </sect3>
- <sect3 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests">
- <title>Creating Providers</title>
- <para>
- In general, a provider, on its own, is nothing more than the shell for a
- developer to bundle up some capabilities they wish to dispatch with the
- command line (or other) clients. It is an analogue to what a
- "controller" is inside of your <acronym>MVC</acronym> application.
- </para>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.loading">
- <title>How Zend_Tool finds your Providers</title>
- <para>
- By default <classname>Zend_Tool</classname> uses the BasicLoader to find all
- the providers that you can run. It recursivly iterates all
- include path directories and opens all files that end
- with "Manifest.php" or "Provider.php". All classes in these
- files are inspected if they implement either
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Interface</classname>
- or <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Manifest_ProviderManifestable</classname>.
- Instances of the provider interface make up for the real functionality
- and all their public methods are accessible as provider actions.
- The ProviderManifestable interface however requires the implementation of a
- method <methodname>getProviders()</methodname> which returns an array of
- instantiated provider interface instances.
- </para>
- <para>
- The following naming rules apply on how you can access the providers
- that were found by the IncludePathLoader:
- </para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- The last part of your classname split by underscore is used
- for the provider name, e.g. "My_Provider_Hello" leads to your
- provider being accessible by the name "hello".
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- If your provider has a method <methodname>getName()</methodname>
- it will be used instead of the previous method to determine
- the name.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- If your provider has "Provider" as prefix, e.g. it is called
- <classname>My_HelloProvider</classname> it will be stripped
- from the name so that the provider will be called "hello".
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
- <note>
- <para>The IncludePathLoader does not follow symlinks, that means
- you cannot link provider functionality into your include paths,
- they have to be physically present in the include paths.</para>
- </note>
- <example
- id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.loading.example">
- <title>Exposing Your Providers with a Manifest</title>
- <para>
- You can expose your providers to <classname>Zend_Tool</classname> by
- offering a manifest with a special filename ending with "Manifest.php".
- A Provider Manifest is an implementation of the
- <interface>Zend_Tool_Framework_Manifest_ProviderManifestable</interface>
- and requires the <methodname>getProviders()</methodname> method to return
- an array of instantiated providers. In anticipation of our first
- own provider <classname>My_Component_HelloProvider</classname>
- we will create the following manifest:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_Manifest
- implements Zend_Tool_Framework_Manifest_ProviderManifestable
- {
- public function getProviders()
- {
- return array(
- new My_Component_HelloProvider()
- );
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- </example>
- </sect4>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.basic">
- <title>Basic Instructions for Creating Providers</title>
- <para>
- As an example, if a developer wants to add the capability of showing
- the version of a datafile that his 3rd party component is working
- from, there is only one class the developer would need to implement.
- Assuming the component is called <classname>My_Component</classname>, he would
- create a class named <classname>My_Component_HelloProvider</classname> in a
- file named <filename>HelloProvider.php</filename> somewhere on the
- <property>include_path</property>. This class would implement
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Interface</classname>, and the body of
- this file would only have to look like the following:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- implements Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Interface
- {
- public function say()
- {
- echo 'Hello from my provider!';
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- Given that code above, and assuming the developer wishes to access
- this functionality through the console client, the call would look
- like this:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="sh"><![CDATA[
- % zf say hello
- Hello from my provider!
- ]]></programlisting>
- </sect4>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.response">
- <title>The response object</title>
- <para>
- As discussed in the architecture section <classname>Zend_Tool</classname> allows
- to hook different clients for using your <classname>Zend_Tool</classname>
- providers. To keep compliant with different clients you should use the response
- object to return messages from your providers instead of using
- <methodname>echo()</methodname> or a similiar output mechanism. Rewritting our
- hello provider with this knowledge it looks like:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- extends Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract
- {
- public function say()
- {
- $this->_registry
- ->getResponse()
- ->appendContent("Hello from my provider!");
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- As you can see one has to extend the
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract</classname> to gain access to
- the Registry which holds the
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Client_Response</classname> instance.
- </para>
- </sect4>
- <sect4 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.advanced">
- <title>Advanced Development Information</title>
- <sect5
- id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.advanced.variables">
- <title>Passing Variables to a Provider</title>
- <para>
- The above "Hello World" example is great for simple commands, but
- what about something more advanced? As your scripting and tooling
- needs grow, you might find that you need the ability to accept
- variables. Much like function signatures have parameters, your
- tooling requests can also accept parameters.
- </para>
- <para>
- Just as each tooling request can be isolated to a method within a
- class, the parameters of a tooling request can also be isolated in a
- very well known place. Parameters of the action methods of a
- provider can include the same parameters you want your client to
- utilize when calling that provider and action combination. For
- example, if you wanted to accept a name in the above example, you
- would probably do this in OO code:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- implements Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Interface
- {
- public function say($name = 'Ralph')
- {
- echo 'Hello' . $name . ', from my provider!';
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- The above example can then be called via the command line
- <command>zf say hello Joe</command>. "Joe" will be supplied to the provider
- as a parameter of the method call. Also note, as you see that the
- parameter is optional, that means it is also optional on the command
- line, so that <command>zf say hello</command> will still work, and default
- to the name "Ralph".
- </para>
- </sect5>
- <sect5
- id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.advanced.prompt">
- <title>Prompt the User for Input</title>
- <para>
- There are cases when the workflow of your provider requires
- to prompt the user for input. This can be done by requesting
- the client to ask for more the required input by calling:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- extends Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract
- {
- public function say($name = 'Ralph')
- {
- $nameResponse = $this->_registry
- ->getClient()
- ->promptInteractiveInput("Whats your name?");
- $name = $nameResponse->getContent();
- echo 'Hello' . $name . ', from my provider!';
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- This command throws an exception if the current client is not
- able to handle interactive requests. In case of the default Console Client
- however you will be asked to enter the name.
- </para>
- </sect5>
- <sect5
- id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.advanced.pretendable">
- <title>Pretending to execute a Provider Action</title>
- <para>
- Another interesting feature you might wish to implement is
- <emphasis>pretendability</emphasis>. Pretendabilty is the ability
- for your provider to "pretend" as if it is doing the requested
- action and provider combination and give the user as much
- information about what it <emphasis>would</emphasis> do without
- actually doing it. This might be an important notion when doing
- heavy database or filesystem modifications that the user might not
- otherwise want to do.
- </para>
- <para>
- Pretendability is easy to implement. There are two parts to this
- feature: 1) marking the provider as having the ability to "pretend",
- and 2) checking the request to ensure the current request was indeed
- asked to be "pretended". This feature is demonstrated in the code
- sample below.
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- extends Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract
- implements Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Pretendable
- {
- public function say($name = 'Ralph')
- {
- if ($this->_registry->getRequest()->isPretend()) {
- echo 'I would say hello to ' . $name . '.';
- } else {
- echo 'Hello' . $name . ', from my provider!';
- }
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- To run the provider in pretend mode just call:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="sh"><![CDATA[
- % zf --pretend say hello Ralph
- I would say hello Ralph.
- ]]></programlisting>
- </sect5>
- <sect5
- id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.advanced.verbosedebug">
- <title>Verbose and Debug modes</title>
- <para>
- You can also run your provider actions in "verbose" or "debug" modes.
- The semantics in regard to this actions have to be implemented by you
- in the context of your provider. You can access debug or verbose modes
- with:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- implements Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Interface
- {
- public function say($name = 'Ralph')
- {
- if($this->_registry->getRequest()->isVerbose()) {
- echo "Hello::say has been called\n";
- }
- if($this->_registry->getRequest()->isDebug()) {
- syslog(LOG_INFO, "Hello::say has been called\n");
- }
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- </sect5>
- <sect5
- id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-framework.providers-and-manifests.advanced.configstorage">
- <title>Accessing User Config and Storage</title>
- <para>
- Using the Enviroment variable <property>ZF_CONFIG_FILE</property> or the
- .zf.ini in your home directory you can inject configuration parameters into
- any <classname>Zend_Tool</classname> provider. Access to this configuration
- is available via the registry that is passed to your provider if you extend
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract</classname>.
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- extends Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract
- {
- public function say()
- {
- $username = $this->_registry->getConfig()->username;
- if(!empty($username)) {
- echo "Hello $username!";
- } else {
- echo "Hello!";
- }
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- The returned configuration is of the type
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Framework_Client_Config</classname> but internally the
- <methodname>__get()</methodname> and <methodname>__set()</methodname> magic
- methods proxy to a <classname>Zend_Config</classname> of the given
- configuration type.
- </para>
- <para>
- The storage allows to save arbitrary data for later reference. This can be
- useful for batch processing tasks or for re-runs of your tasks. You can
- access the storage in a similar way like the configuration:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- extends Zend_Tool_Framework_Provider_Abstract
- {
- public function say()
- {
- $aValue = $this->_registry->getStorage()->get("myUsername");
- echo "Hello $aValue!";
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- The <acronym>API</acronym> of the storage is very simple:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class Zend_Tool_Framework_Client_Storage
- {
- public function setAdapter($adapter);
- public function isEnabled();
- public function put($name, $value);
- public function get($name, $defaultValue=null);
- public function has($name);
- public function remove($name);
- public function getStreamUri($name);
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <important>
- <para>
- When designing your providers that are config or storage aware remember
- to check if the required user-config or storage keys really exist for a
- user. You won't run into fatal errors when none of these are provided
- though, since empty ones are created upon request.
- </para>
- </important>
- </sect5>
- </sect4>
- </sect3>
- </sect2>
- <sect2 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-project">
- <title>Zend_Tool_Project Extensions</title>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname> exposes a rich set of functionality and
- capabilities that make the task of creating new providers, specficially those targetting
- project easier and more manageable.
- </para>
- <sect3 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-project.architecture">
- <title>Overall Architecture</title>
- <para>
- This same concept applies to Zend Framework projects. In Zend Framework projects,
- you have controllers, actions, views, models, databases and so on and so forth. In
- terms of <classname>Zend_Tool</classname>, we need a way to track these types of
- resources - thus <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname>.
- </para>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname> is capable of tracking project resources
- throughout the development of a project. So, for example, if in one command you
- created a controller, and in the next command you wish to create an action within
- that controller, <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname> is gonna have to
- <emphasis>know</emphasis> about the controller file you created so that you can (in
- the next action), be able to append that action to it. This is what keeps our
- projects up to date and <emphasis>stateful</emphasis>.
- </para>
- <para>
- Another important point to understand about projects is that typically, resources
- are organized in a hierarchical fashion. With that in mind,
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Project</classname> is capable of serializing the current
- project into a internal representation that allows it to keep track of not only
- <emphasis>what</emphasis> resources are part of a project at any given time, but
- also <emphasis>where</emphasis> they are in relation to one another.
- </para>
- </sect3>
- <sect3 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-project.providers">
- <title>Creating Providers</title>
- <para>
- Project specific providers are created in the same fashion as plain framework
- providers, with one exception: project providers must extend the
- <classname>Zend_Tool_Project_Provider_Abstract</classname>. This class comes with
- some significant functionality that helps developers load existing project, obtian
- the profile object, and be able to search the profile, then later store any changes
- to the current project profile.
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- class My_Component_HelloProvider
- extends Zend_Tool_Project_Provider_Abstract
- {
- public function say()
- {
- $profile = $this->_loadExistingProfile();
- /* ... do project stuff here */
- $this->_storeProfile();
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- </sect3>
- <!--
- <sect3 id="zend.tool.extending.zend-tool-project.resources-and-contexts">
- <title>Creating Resources & Contexts</title>
- </sect3>
- -->
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
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