Dependency injection library for LiftKit


License
LGPL-2.1-only

Documentation

Dependency Injection

A simple but featured dependency injection library, with automatic class-resolution.

Create a new container

use LiftKit\DependencyInjection\Container\Container;

$container = new Container;

Rules

A rule is an anonymous function that defines how to create an object.

$container->setRule(
  'SomeRule',
  function ()
  {
    return new SomeClass();
  }
);

$someObject = $container->getObject('SomeRule');

// $someObject will be an instance of SomeClass

Singleton rules

A rule will execute each time getObject is called by default. In order to force it to execute only once, we use setSingletonRule. Each call to getObject for the rule will return the same object.

$container->setSingletonRule(
  'SomeSingletonRule',
  function ()
  {
    return new SomeClass();
  }
);

$object1 = $container->getObject('SomeSingletonRule');
$object2 = $container->getObject('SomeSingletonRule');

// $object1 and $object2 are the same object

Rules with parameters

Some rules can have parameters passed to them. The first argument to the setRule callback is the container istelf. Each subsequent argument is supplied by an optional array of parameters supplied to getObject.

$container->setRule(
  'SomeRuleWithParameters',
  function (Container $container, $arg1, $arg2)
  {
    return new SomeClass($arg1, $arg2);
  }
);

$someObject = $container->getObject('SomeRuleWithParameters', ['arg1', 'arg2']);

// SomeClass will be contructed with 'arg1' and 'arg2' as the parameters to is constructor.

Rules that reference other rules

$container->setRule(
  'Rule1',
  function ()
  {
    return new SomeClass;
  }
);

$container->setRule(
  'Rule2',
  function (Container $container)
  {
    return new OtherClass($container->getObject('Rule1'));
  }
);

$someObject = $container->getObject('Rule2');

// $someObject will be an instance of OtherClass with a new instance of SomeClass injected as its
// first contructor argument.

Overriding rules

Rules can be overridden by redefining them. This is useful for modular code.

$conatiner->setRule(
  'SomeRule',
  function ()
  {
    return new SomeClass;
  }
);

$container->setRule(
  'SomeRule',
  function ()
  {
    return new OtherClass;
  }
);

$someObject = $container->getObject('SomeRule');

// $someobject will be an instance of OtherClass

Storing an instance

You can also store an object you've already created an bind it to a rule.

$someObject = new SomeObject;

$container->storeObject('SomeRule', $someObject);

$otherObject = $container->getObject('SomeRule');

// $someObject and $otherObject are the some object

Automatic resolution

The container can also bind a rule to a class. An instance of a class can be created automatially by looking at the typehints of each constructor argument. In the case below, and instance of B is automatically created before creating an instance of A. The newly-created instance of B is then injected into the constructor of A.

class A
{
  private $b;
  
  public function __construct (B $b)
  {
    $this->b = $b;
  }
  
  public function getB ()
  {
    return $this->b;
  }
}

class B
{
  // placeholder class
}

$container->bindRuleToClass(
  'GiveMeANewA',
  A::class
);

$a = $container->getObject('GiveMeANewA');
$b = $a->getB();

// $a is a new instance of A. $b is a new instance of b.

Automatic resolution with rules

In some cases, you may need to tell the injector to create an instance following a different rule when it encounters the typehint of a certain class instead. In the example below, a rule is created for the construction of B. When the container realizes it needs an instance of B when creating an A, it will follow that rule to create B first. In this case, A's constructor was injected with an instance of B created by the rule 'GiveMeANewB' to create $a.

$container->setRule(
  'GiveMeANewB',
  function ()
  {
    $b = new B;
    
    $b->createdByRule = true;
    
    return $b;
  }
);

$container->bindClassToRule(
  B::class,
  'GiveMeANewB'
);

$a = $container->getObject('GiveMeANewA');
$b = $a->getB();

// $b->createdByRule is true

Automatic resolution with parameters

Sometimes, there are additional parameters that need to be passed to the constructor of a new instance that is being automatically constructed. Below the variables $param1 and $param2 will be injectied into C's constructor, while B will be created by the rule 'GiveMeANewB' above. Any additional parameters must fall at the end of the constructor's list of parameters.

class C
{
  private $b;
  private $param1;
  private $param2;
  
  public function __construct (B $b, $param1, $param2)
  {
    $this->b      = $b;
    $this->param1 = $param1;
    $this->param2 = $param2;
  }
  
  public function getB ()
  {
    return $this->b;
  }
  
  public function getParam1 ()
  {
    return $this->param1;
  }
  
  public function getParam2 ()
  {
    return $this->param2;
  }
}

$container->bindRuleToClass(
  'GiveMeANewC',
  C::class
);

$param1 = 1;
$param2 = 2;

$c = $container->getObject(
  'GiveMeANewC',
  [
    $param1,
    $param2,
  ]
);

$b = $c->getB();
$cParam1 = $c->getParam1();
$cParam2 = $c->getParam2();

// $b is an instance of B
// $cParam1 is 1
// $cParam2 is 2

Binding classes to aliases

Sometimes, you may want the container to resolve to a subclass when it encounters a particular typehint. In the example below, a new instance of D will be injected into A, instead of an instance of B.

class D extends B
{
  // placeholder class
}

$container->bindClassToAlias(
  B::class,
  D::class
);

$a = $container->getObject('GiveMeANewA');
$d = $a->getB();

// $d is an instance of D