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UPGRADE-2.2.md

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UPGRADE FROM 2.1 to 2.2

TwigBridge

  • The render tag signature and arguments changed.

    Before:

    {% render 'BlogBundle:Post:list' with { 'limit': 2 }, { 'alt': 'BlogBundle:Post:error' } %}

    After:

    {% render controller('BlogBundle:Post:list', { 'limit': 2 }), { 'alt': 'BlogBundle:Post:error' } %}
    {# Or: #}
    {{ render(controller('BlogBundle:Post:list', { 'limit': 2 }), { 'alt': 'BlogBundle:Post:error'}) }}

    Note: The function is the preferred way.

Deprecations

  • The standalone option is deprecated and will replaced with the strategy option in 2.3.

  • The values true, false, js for the standalone option were deprecated and replaced respectively with the esi, inline, hinclude in 2.3.

    Before:

    {% render 'BlogBundle:Post:list' with { 'limit': 2 }, {'standalone': true} %}
    {% render 'BlogBundle:Post:list' with { 'limit': 2 }, {'standalone': false} %}
    {% render 'BlogBundle:Post:list' with { 'limit': 2 }, {'standalone': 'js'} %}

    After:

    {{ render(controller('BlogBundle:Post:list', { 'limit': 2 }), { 'strategy': 'esi'}) }}
    {{ render(controller('BlogBundle:Post:list', { 'limit': 2 }), { 'strategy': 'inline'}) }}
    {{ render(controller('BlogBundle:Post:list', { 'limit': 2 }), { 'strategy': 'hinclude'}) }}

HttpFoundation

  • The MongoDbSessionHandler default field names and timestamp type have changed.

    The sess_ prefix was removed from default field names. The session ID is now stored in the _id field by default. The session date is now stored as a MongoDate instead of MongoTimestamp, which also makes it possible to use TTL collections in MongoDB 2.2+ instead of relying on the gc() method.

  • The Stopwatch functionality was moved from HttpKernel\Debug to its own component

  • The _method request parameter support has been disabled by default (call Request::enableHttpMethodParameterOverride() to enable it).

Deprecations

  • The Request::splitHttpAcceptHeader() is deprecated and will be removed in 2.3.

    You should now use the AcceptHeader class which give you fluent methods to parse request accept-* headers. Some examples:

    $accept = AcceptHeader::fromString($request->headers->get('Accept'));
    if ($accept->has('text/html') {
        $item = $accept->get('html');
        $charset = $item->getAttribute('charset', 'utf-8');
        $quality = $item->getQuality();
    }
    
    // accepts items are sorted by descending quality
    $accepts = AcceptHeader::fromString($request->headers->get('Accept'))->all();
    

Form

  • The PasswordType is now not trimmed by default.

  • The class FormException is now an interface. The old class is still available under the name Symfony\Component\Form\Exception\Exception, but will probably be removed before 2.2. If you created FormException instances manually, you are now advised to create any of the other exceptions in the Symfony\Component\Form\Exception namespace or to create custom exception classes for your purpose.

  • Translating validation errors is now optional. You can still do so manually if you like, or you can simplify your templates to simply output the already translated message.

    Before:

    {{
        error.messagePluralization is null
            ? error.messageTemplate|trans(error.messageParameters, 'validators')
            : error.messageTemplate|transchoice(error.messagePluralization, error.messageParameters, 'validators')
    }}

    After:

    {{ error.message }}
  • FormType, ModelType and PropertyPathMapper now have constructors. If you extended these classes, you should call the parent constructor now. Note that you are not recommended to extend FormType nor ModelType. You should extend AbstractType instead and use the Form component's own inheritance mechanism (AbstractType::getParent()).

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Form\Extensions\Core\DataMapper\PropertyPathMapper;
    
    class CustomMapper extends PropertyPathMapper
    {
        public function __construct()
        {
            // ...
        }
    
        // ...
    }

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Form\Extensions\Core\DataMapper\PropertyPathMapper;
    
    class CustomMapper extends PropertyPathMapper
    {
        public function __construct()
        {
            parent::__construct();
    
            // ...
        }
    
        // ...
    }

Deprecations

  • The methods getParent(), setParent() and hasParent() in FormBuilderInterface were deprecated and will be removed in Symfony 2.3. You should not rely on these methods in your form type because the parent of a form can change after building it.

  • The class PropertyPath and related classes were deprecated and moved to a dedicated component PropertyAccess. If you used any of these classes or interfaces, you should adapt the namespaces now. During the move, InvalidPropertyException was renamed to NoSuchPropertyException.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\PropertyPath;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\PropertyPathBuilder;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\PropertyPathInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\PropertyPathIterator;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\PropertyPathIteratorInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Exception\InvalidPropertyException;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Exception\InvalidPropertyPathException;
    use Symfony\Component\Form\Exception\PropertyAccessDeniedException;

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyPath;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyPathBuilder;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyPathInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyPathIterator;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyPathIteratorInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\Exception\NoSuchPropertyException;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\Exception\InvalidPropertyPathException;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\Exception\PropertyAccessDeniedException;

    Also, FormUtil::singularify() was split away into a class StringUtil in the new component.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\FormUtil;
    
    $singular = FormUtil::singularify($plural);

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\StringUtil;
    
    $singular = StringUtil::singularify($plural);

    The methods getValue() and setValue() were moved to a new class PropertyAccessor.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Form\Util\PropertyPath;
    
    $propertyPath = new PropertyPath('some.path');
    
    $value = $propertyPath->getValue($object);
    $propertyPath->setValue($object, 'new value');

    After (alternative 1):

    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyAccess;
    
    $propertyAccessor = PropertyAccess::getPropertyAccessor();
    
    $value = $propertyAccessor->getValue($object, 'some.path');
    $propertyAccessor->setValue($object, 'some.path', 'new value');

    After (alternative 2):

    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyAccess;
    use Symfony\Component\PropertyAccess\PropertyPath;
    
    $propertyAccessor = PropertyAccess::getPropertyAccessor();
    $propertyPath = new PropertyPath('some.path');
    
    $value = $propertyAccessor->getValue($object, $propertyPath);
    $propertyAccessor->setValue($object, $propertyPath, 'new value');

Routing

  • RouteCollection does not behave like a tree structure anymore but as a flat array of Routes. So when using PHP to build the RouteCollection, you must make sure to add routes to the sub-collection before adding it to the parent collection (this is not relevant when using YAML or XML for Route definitions).

    Before:

    $rootCollection = new RouteCollection();
    $subCollection = new RouteCollection();
    $rootCollection->addCollection($subCollection);
    $subCollection->add('foo', new Route('/foo'));

    After:

    $rootCollection = new RouteCollection();
    $subCollection = new RouteCollection();
    $subCollection->add('foo', new Route('/foo'));
    $rootCollection->addCollection($subCollection);

    Also one must call addCollection from the bottom to the top hierarchy. So the correct sequence is the following (and not the reverse):

    $childCollection->addCollection($grandchildCollection);
    $rootCollection->addCollection($childCollection);
  • The methods RouteCollection::getParent() and RouteCollection::getRoot() have been deprecated and will be removed in Symfony 2.3.

  • Misusing the RouteCollection::addPrefix method to add defaults, requirements or options without adding a prefix is not supported anymore. So if you called addPrefix with an empty prefix or / only (both have no relevance), like addPrefix('', $defaultsArray, $requirementsArray, $optionsArray) you need to use the new dedicated methods addDefaults($defaultsArray), addRequirements($requirementsArray) or addOptions($optionsArray) instead.

  • The $options parameter to RouteCollection::addPrefix() has been deprecated because adding options has nothing to do with adding a path prefix. If you want to add options to all child routes of a RouteCollection, you can use addOptions().

  • The method RouteCollection::getPrefix() has been deprecated because it suggested that all routes in the collection would have this prefix, which is not necessarily true. On top of that, since there is no tree structure anymore, this method is also useless.

  • RouteCollection::addCollection(RouteCollection $collection) should now only be used with a single parameter. The other params $prefix, $default, $requirements and $options will still work, but have been deprecated. The addPrefix method should be used for this use-case instead. Before: $parentCollection->addCollection($collection, '/prefix', array(...), array(...)) After:

    $collection->addPrefix('/prefix', array(...), array(...));
    $parentCollection->addCollection($collection);

Validator

  • Interfaces were created for the classes ConstraintViolation, ConstraintViolationList, GlobalExecutionContext and ExecutionContext. If you type hinted against any of these classes, you are recommended to type hint against their interfaces now.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContext;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContext $context)

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContextInterface;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContextInterface $context)

    For all implementations of ConstraintValidatorInterface, this change is mandatory for the initialize method:

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ConstraintValidatorInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContext;
    
    class MyValidator implements ConstraintValidatorInterface
    {
        public function initialize(ExecutionContext $context)
        {
            // ...
        }
    }

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ConstraintValidatorInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContextInterface;
    
    class MyValidator implements ConstraintValidatorInterface
    {
        public function initialize(ExecutionContextInterface $context)
        {
            // ...
        }
    }
  • The sources of the pluralized messages in translation files have changed from the singular to the pluralized version. If you created custom translation files for validator errors, you should adapt them.

    Before:

    You must select at least {{ limit }} choices. Sie müssen mindestens {{ limit }} Möglichkeit wählen.|Sie müssen mindestens {{ limit }} Möglichkeiten wählen.

    After:

    You must select at least {{ limit }} choice.|You must select at least {{ limit }} choices. Sie müssen mindestens {{ limit }} Möglichkeit wählen.|Sie müssen mindestens {{ limit }} Möglichkeiten wählen.

    Check the file src/Symfony/Component/Validator/Resources/translations/validators.en.xlf for the new message sources.

Deprecations

  • The interface ClassMetadataFactoryInterface was deprecated and will be removed in Symfony 2.3. You should implement MetadataFactoryInterface instead, which changes the name of the method getClassMetadata to getMetadataFor and accepts arbitrary values (e.g. class names, objects, numbers etc.). In your implementation, you should throw a NoSuchMetadataException if you don't support metadata for the given value.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\Mapping\ClassMetadataFactoryInterface;
    
    class MyMetadataFactory implements ClassMetadataFactoryInterface
    {
        public function getClassMetadata($class)
        {
            // ...
        }
    }

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\MetadataFactoryInterface;
    use Symfony\Component\Validator\Exception\NoSuchMetadataException;
    
    class MyMetadataFactory implements MetadataFactoryInterface
    {
        public function getMetadataFor($value)
        {
            if (is_object($value)) {
                $value = get_class($value);
            }
    
            if (!is_string($value) || (!class_exists($value) && !interface_exists($value))) {
                throw new NoSuchMetadataException(...);
            }
    
            // ...
        }
    }

    The return value of ValidatorInterface::getMetadataFactory() was also changed to return MetadataFactoryInterface. Make sure to replace calls to getClassMetadata by getMetadataFor on the return value of this method.

    Before:

    $metadataFactory = $validator->getMetadataFactory();
    $metadata = $metadataFactory->getClassMetadata('Vendor\MyClass');

    After:

    $metadataFactory = $validator->getMetadataFactory();
    $metadata = $metadataFactory->getMetadataFor('Vendor\MyClass');
  • The class GraphWalker and the accessor ExecutionContext::getGraphWalker() were deprecated and will be removed in Symfony 2.3. You should use the methods ExecutionContextInterface::validate() and ExecutionContextInterface::validateValue() instead.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContext;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContext $context)
    {
        if (/* ... */) {
            $path = $context->getPropertyPath();
            $group = $context->getGroup();
    
            if (!empty($path)) {
                $path .= '.';
            }
    
            $context->getGraphWalker()->walkReference($someObject, $group, $path.'myProperty', false);
        }
    }

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContextInterface;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContextInterface $context)
    {
        if (/* ... */) {
            $context->validate($someObject, 'myProperty');
        }
    }
  • The method ExecutionContext::addViolationAtSubPath() was deprecated and will be removed in Symfony 2.3. You should use addViolationAt() instead.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContext;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContext $context)
    {
        if (/* ... */) {
            $context->addViolationAtSubPath('myProperty', 'This value is invalid');
        }
    }

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContextInterface;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContextInterface $context)
    {
        if (/* ... */) {
            $context->addViolationAt('myProperty', 'This value is invalid');
        }
    }
  • The methods ExecutionContext::getCurrentClass(), ExecutionContext::getCurrentProperty() and ExecutionContext::getCurrentValue() were deprecated and will be removed in Symfony 2.3. Use the methods getClassName(), getPropertyName() and getValue() instead.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContext;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContext $context)
    {
        $class = $context->getCurrentClass();
        $property = $context->getCurrentProperty();
        $value = $context->getCurrentValue();
    
        // ...
    }

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Validator\ExecutionContextInterface;
    
    public function validateCustomLogic(ExecutionContextInterface $context)
    {
        $class = $context->getClassName();
        $property = $context->getPropertyName();
        $value = $context->getValue();
    
        // ...
    }

FrameworkBundle

  • The render method of the actions templating helper signature and arguments changed:

    Before:

    <?php echo $view['actions']->render('BlogBundle:Post:list', array('limit' => 2), array('alt' => 'BlogBundle:Post:error')) ?>

    After:

    <?php echo $view['actions']->render($view['router']->generate('post_list', array('limit' => 2)), array('alt' => 'BlogBundle:Post:error')) ?>

    where post_list is the route name for the BlogBundle:Post:list controller, or if you don't want to create a route:

    <?php echo $view['actions']->render(new ControllerReference('BlogBundle:Post:list', array('limit' => 2)), array('alt' => 'BlogBundle:Post:error')) ?>

Configuration

  • The 2.2 version introduces a new parameter trusted_proxies that replaces trust_proxy_headers in the framework configuration.

    Before:

    # app/config/config.yml
    framework:
        trust_proxy_headers: false

    After:

    # app/config/config.yml
    framework:
       trusted_proxies: ['127.0.0.1', '10.0.0.1'] # a list of proxy IPs you trust

Security

  • The existing UserPassword validator constraint class has been modified. Its namespace has been changed to better fit the Symfony coding conventions.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraint\UserPassword;

    After: (note the s at the end of Constraint)

    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraints\UserPassword;
  • The new UserPassword validator constraint class now accepts a new service option that allows to specify a custom validator service name in order to validate the current logged-in user's password.

    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraints\UserPassword;
    
    $constraint = new UserPassword(array(
        'service' => 'my.custom.validator.user_password',
    ));

Deprecations

  • The two previous UserPassword and UserPasswordValidator classes in the Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraint namespace have been deprecated and will be removed in 2.3.

    Before:

    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraint\UserPassword;
    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraint\UserPasswordValidator;

    After:

    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraints\UserPassword;
    use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Validator\Constraints\UserPasswordValidator;

Serializer

  • All serializer interfaces (Serializer, Normalizer, Encoder) have been extended with an optional $context array. This was necessary to allow for more complex use-cases that require context information during the (de)normalization and en-/decoding steps.