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architecture - Should everything really be a bundle in Symfony 2.x?

I'm aware of questions like this, where people tend to discuss the general Symfony 2 concept of bundle.

The thing is, in a specific application, like, for instance, a twitter-like application, should everything really be inside a generic bundle, like the official docs say?

The reason I'm asking this is because when we develop applications, in general, we don't want to highly couple our code to some full-stack glue framework.

If I develop a Symfony 2 based application and, at some point, I decide Symfony 2 is not really the best choice to keep the development going, will that be a problem for me?

So the general question is: why is everything being a bundle a good thing?

EDIT#1

Almost a year now since I asked this question I wrote an article to share my knowledge on this topic.

Question&Answers:os

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I've written a more thorough and updated blog post on this topic: http://elnur.pro/symfony-without-bundles/


No, not everything has to be in a bundle. You could have a structure like this:

  • src/Vendor/Model — for models,
  • src/Vendor/Controller — for controllers,
  • src/Vendor/Service — for services,
  • src/Vendor/Bundle — for bundles, like src/Vendor/Bundle/AppBundle,
  • etc.

This way, you would put in the AppBundle only that stuff that is really Symfony2 specific. If you decide to switch to another framework later, you would get rid of the Bundle namespace and replace it with the chosen framework stuff.

Please note that what I'm suggesting here is for app specific code. For reusable bundles, I still suggest using the best practices.

Keeping entities out of bundles

To keep entities in src/Vendor/Model outside of any bundle, I've changed the doctrine section in config.yml from

doctrine:
    # ...
    orm:
        # ...
        auto_mapping: true

to

doctrine:
    # ...
    orm:
        # ...
        mappings:
            model:
                type: annotation
                dir: %kernel.root_dir%/../src/Vendor/Model
                prefix: VendorModel
                alias: Model
                is_bundle: false

Entities's names — to access from Doctrine repositories — begin with Model in this case, for example, Model:User.

You can use subnamespaces to group related entities together, for example, src/Vendor/User/Group.php. In this case, the entity's name is Model:UserGroup.

Keeping controllers out of bundles

First, you need to tell JMSDiExtraBundle to scan the src folder for services by adding this to config.yml:

jms_di_extra:
    locations:
        directories: %kernel.root_dir%/../src

Then you define controllers as services and put them under the Controller namespace:

<?php
namespace VendorController;

use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationRequest;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationRedirectResponse;
use SensioBundleFrameworkExtraBundleConfigurationRoute;
use SensioBundleFrameworkExtraBundleConfigurationTemplate;
use JMSDiExtraBundleAnnotationService;
use JMSDiExtraBundleAnnotationInjectParams;
use JMSSecurityExtraBundleAnnotationSecure;
use ElnurAbstractControllerBundleAbstractController;
use VendorServiceUserService;
use VendorModelUser;

/**
 * @Service("user_controller", parent="elnur.controller.abstract")
 * @Route(service="user_controller")
 */
class UserController extends AbstractController
{
    /**
     * @var UserService
     */
    private $userService;

    /**
     * @InjectParams
     *
     * @param UserService $userService
     */
    public function __construct(UserService $userService)
    {
        $this->userService = $userService;
    }

    /**
     * @Route("/user/add", name="user.add")
     * @Template
     * @Secure("ROLE_ADMIN")
     *
     * @param Request $request
     * @return array
     */
    public function addAction(Request $request)
    {
        $user = new User;
        $form = $this->formFactory->create('user', $user);

        if ($request->getMethod() == 'POST') {
            $form->bind($request);

            if ($form->isValid()) {
                $this->userService->save($user);
                $request->getSession()->getFlashBag()->add('success', 'user.add.success');

                return new RedirectResponse($this->router->generate('user.list'));
            }
        }

        return ['form' => $form->createView()];
    }

    /**
     * @Route("/user/profile", name="user.profile")
     * @Template
     * @Secure("ROLE_USER")
     *
     * @param Request $request
     * @return array
     */
    public function profileAction(Request $request)
    {
        $user = $this->getCurrentUser();
        $form = $this->formFactory->create('user_profile', $user);

        if ($request->getMethod() == 'POST') {
            $form->bind($request);

            if ($form->isValid()) {
                $this->userService->save($user);
                $request->getSession()->getFlashBag()->add('success', 'user.profile.edit.success');

                return new RedirectResponse($this->router->generate('user.view', [
                    'username' => $user->getUsername()
                ]));
            }
        }

        return [
            'form' => $form->createView(),
            'user' => $user
        ];
    }
}

Note that I'm using my ElnurAbstractControllerBundle to simplify defining controllers as services.

The last thing left is to tell Symfony to look for templates without bundles. I do this by overriding the template guesser service, but since the approach is different between Symfony 2.0 and 2.1, I'm providing versions for both of them.

Overriding the Symfony 2.1+ template guesser

I've created a bundle that does that for you.

Overriding the Symfony 2.0 template listener

First, define the class:

<?php
namespace VendorListener;

use InvalidArgumentException;
use SymfonyBundleFrameworkBundleTemplatingTemplateReference;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationRequest;
use SymfonyComponentHttpKernelBundleBundle;
use SensioBundleFrameworkExtraBundleEventListenerTemplateListener as FrameworkExtraTemplateListener;
use JMSDiExtraBundleAnnotationService;

class TemplateListener extends FrameworkExtraTemplateListener
{
    /**
     * @param array   $controller
     * @param Request $request
     * @param string  $engine
     * @throws InvalidArgumentException
     * @return TemplateReference
     */
    public function guessTemplateName($controller, Request $request, $engine = 'twig')
    {
        if (!preg_match('/Controller\(.+)Controller$/', get_class($controller[0]), $matchController)) {
            throw new InvalidArgumentException(sprintf('The "%s" class does not look like a controller class (it must be in a "Controller" sub-namespace and the class name must end with "Controller")', get_class($controller[0])));

        }

        if (!preg_match('/^(.+)Action$/', $controller[1], $matchAction)) {
            throw new InvalidArgumentException(sprintf('The "%s" method does not look like an action method (it does not end with Action)', $controller[1]));
        }

        $bundle = $this->getBundleForClass(get_class($controller[0]));

        return new TemplateReference(
            $bundle ? $bundle->getName() : null,
            $matchController[1],
            $matchAction[1],
            $request->getRequestFormat(),
            $engine
        );
    }

    /**
     * @param string $class
     * @return Bundle
     */
    protected function getBundleForClass($class)
    {
        try {
            return parent::getBundleForClass($class);
        } catch (InvalidArgumentException $e) {
            return null;
        }
    }
}

And then tell Symfony to use it by adding this to config.yml:

parameters:
    jms_di_extra.template_listener.class: VendorListenerTemplateListener

Using templates without bundles

Now, you can use templates out of bundles. Keep them under the app/Resources/views folder. For example, templates for those two actions from the example controller above are located in:

  • app/Resources/views/User/add.html.twig
  • app/Resources/views/User/profile.html.twig

When referring to a template, just omit the bundle part:

{% include ':Controller:view.html.twig' %}

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