Console-aware action controllers

Zend Framework 2 has built-in MVC integration with the console. When the user runs an application in a console window, the request will be routed. By matching command line arguments against console routes we have defined in our application, the MVC will invoke a controller and an action.

In this chapter we will learn how ZF2 Controllers can interact with and return output to console window.

See also

In order for a controller to be invoked, at least one route must point to it. To learn about creating console routes, please read the chapter Console routes and routing

Handling console requests

Console requests are very similar to HTTP requests. In fact, they implement a common interface and are created at the same time in the MVC workflow. Console routes match against command line arguments and provide a defaults array, which holds the controller and action keys. These correspond with controller aliases in the ServiceManager, and method names in the controller class. This is analogous to the way HTTP requests are handled in ZF2.

See also

To learn about defining and creating controllers, please read the chapter Routing and controllers

In this example we’ll use the following simple route:

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// FILE: modules/Application/config/module.config.php
array(
    'router' => array(
        'routes' => array(
            // HTTP routes are here
        )
    ),

    'console' => array(
        'router' => array(
            'routes' => array(
                'list-users' => array(
                    'options' => array(
                        'route'    => 'show [all|disabled|deleted]:mode users [--verbose|-v]',
                        'defaults' => array(
                            'controller' => 'Application\Controller\Index',
                            'action'     => 'show-users'
                        )
                    )
                )
            )
        )
    ),
)

This route will match commands such as:

> php public/index.php show users
> php public/index.php show all users
> php public/index.php show disabled users

This route points to the method Application\Controller\IndexController::showUsersAction().

Let’s add it to our controller.

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<?php
namespace Application\Controller;

use Zend\Mvc\Controller\AbstractActionController;
use Zend\View\Model\ViewModel;

class IndexController extends AbstractActionController
{
    public function indexAction()
    {
        return new ViewModel(); // display standard index page
    }

    public function showUsersAction()
    {
        $request = $this->getRequest();

        // Check verbose flag
        $verbose = $request->getParam('verbose') || $request->getParam('v');

        // Check mode
        $mode = $request->getParam('mode', 'all'); // defaults to 'all'

        $users = array();
        switch ($mode) {
            case 'disabled':
                $users = $this->getServiceLocator()->get('users')->fetchDisabledUsers();
                break;
            case 'deleted':
                $users = $this->getServiceLocator()->get('users')->fetchDeletedUsers();
                break;
            case 'all':
            default:
                $users = $this->getServiceLocator()->get('users')->fetchAllUsers();
                break;
        }
    }
}

We fetch the console request, read parameters, and load users from our (theoretical) users service. In order to make this method functional, we’ll have to display the result in the console window.

Sending output to console

The simplest way for our controller to display data in the console window is to return a string. Let’s modify our example to output a list of users:

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public function showUsersAction()
{
    $request = $this->getRequest();

    // Check verbose flag
    $verbose = $request->getParam('verbose') || $request->getParam('v');

    // Check mode
    $mode = $request->getParam('mode', 'all'); // defaults to 'all'

    $users = array();
    switch ($mode) {
        case 'disabled':
            $users = $this->getServiceLocator()->get('users')->fetchDisabledUsers();
            break;
        case 'deleted':
            $users = $this->getServiceLocator()->get('users')->fetchDeletedUsers();
            break;
        case 'all':
        default:
            $users = $this->getServiceLocator()->get('users')->fetchAllUsers();
            break;
    }

    if (count($users) == 0) {
        // Show an error message in the console
        return "There are no users in the database\n";
    }

    $result = '';

    foreach ($users as $user) {
        $result .= $user->name . ' ' . $user->email . "\n";
    }

    return $result; // show it in the console
}

On line 27, we are checking if the users service found any users - otherwise we are returning an error message that will be immediately displayed and the application will end.

If there are 1 or more users, we will loop through them with and prepare a listing. It is then returned from the action and displayed in the console window.

Are we in a console?

Sometimes we might need to check if our method is being called from a console or from a web request. This is useful to block certain methods from running in the console or to change their behavior based on that context.

Here is an example of how to check if we are dealing with a console request:

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namespace Application\Controller;

use Zend\Mvc\Controller\AbstractActionController;
use Zend\View\Model\ViewModel;
use Zend\Console\Request as ConsoleRequest;
use RuntimeException;

class IndexController extends AbstractActionController
{
    public function showUsersAction()
    {
        $request = $this->getRequest();

        // Make sure that we are running in a console and the user has not tricked our
        // application into running this action from a public web server.
        if (!$request instanceof ConsoleRequest) {
            throw new RuntimeException('You can only use this action from a console!');
        }
        // ...
    }
}

Note

You do not need to secure all your controllers and methods from console requests. Controller actions will only be invoked when at least one console route matches it. HTTP and Console routes are separated and defined in different places in module (and application) configuration.

There is no way to invoke a console action unless there is at least one route pointing to it. Similarly, there is no way for an HTTP action to be invoked unless there is at least one HTTP route that points to it.

The example below shows how a single controller method can handle both Console and HTTP requests:

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namespace Application\Controller;

use Zend\Mvc\Controller\AbstractActionController;
use Zend\View\Model\ViewModel;
use Zend\Console\Request as ConsoleRequest;
use Zend\Http\Request as HttpRequest;
use RuntimeException;

class IndexController extends AbstractActionController
{
    public function showUsersAction()
    {
        $request = $this->getRequest();

        $users = array();
        // ... fetch users from database ...

        if ($request instanceof HttpRequest) {
            // display a web page with users list
            return new ViewModel($result);
        } elseif ($request instanceof ConsoleRequest) {
            // ... prepare console output and return it ...
            return $result;
        } else {
            throw new RuntimeException('Cannot handle request of type ' . get_class($request));
        }
    }
}

Reading values from console parameters

There are several types of parameters recognized by the Console component - all of them are described in the console routing chapter. Here, we’ll focus on how to retrieve values from distinct parameters and flags.

Positional parameters

After a route matches, we can access both literal parameters and value parameters from within the $request container.

Assuming we have the following route:

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// inside of config.console.router.routes:
'show-users' => array(
    'options' => array(
        'route'    => 'show (all|deleted|locked|admin) [<groupName>]'
        'defaults' => array(
            'controller' => 'Application\Controller\Users',
            'action'     => 'showusers'
        )
    )
)

If this route matches, our action can now query parameters in the following way:

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// an action inside Application\Controller\UsersController:
public function showUsersAction()
{
    $request = $this->getRequest();

    // We can access named value parameters directly by their name:
    $showUsersFromGroup = $request->getParam('groupName');

    // Literal parameters can be checked with isset() against their exact spelling
    if (isset($request->getParam('all'))) {
        // show all users
    } elseif (isset($request->getParam('deleted'))) {
        // show deleted users
    }
    // ...
}

In case of parameter alternatives, it is a good idea to assign a name to the group, which simplifies the branching in our action controllers. We can do this with the following syntax:

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// inside of config.console.router.routes:
'show-users' => array(
    'options' => array(
        'route'    => 'show (all|deleted|locked|admin):userTypeFilter [<groupName>]'
        'defaults' => array(
            'controller' => 'Application\Controller\Users',
            'action'     => 'showusers'
        )
    )
)

Now we can use a the group name userTypeFilter to check which option has been selected by the user:

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public function showUsersAction()
{
    $request = $this->getRequest();

    // We can access named value parameters directly by their name:
    $showUsersFromGroup = $request->getParam('groupName');

    // The selected option from second parameter is now stored under 'userTypeFilter'
    $userTypeFilter     = $request->getParam('userTypeFilter');

    switch ($userTypeFilter) {
        case 'all':
            // all users
        case 'deleted':
            // deleted users
        case 'locked'
           // ...
           // ...
    }
}

Flags

Flags are directly accessible by name. Value-capturing flags will contain string values, as provided by the user. Non-value flags will be equal to true.

Given the following route:

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'find-user' => array(
    'options' => array(
        'route'    => 'find user [--fast] [--verbose] [--id=] [--firstName=] [--lastName=] [--email=] ',
        'defaults' => array(
            'controller' => 'Application\Controller\Users',
            'action'     => 'find',
        )
    )
)

We can easily retrieve values in the following fashion:

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public function findAction()
{
    $request = $this->getRequest();

    // We can retrieve values from value flags using their name
    $searchId        = $request->getParam('id',        null); // default null
    $searchFirstName = $request->getParam('firstName', null);
    $searchLastName  = $request->getParam('lastName',  null);
    $searchEmail     = $request->getParam('email',     null);

    // Standard flags that have been matched will be equal to TRUE
    $isFast          = (bool) $request->getParam('fast',   false); // default false
    $isVerbose       = (bool) $request->getParam('verbose',false);

    if ($isFast) {
        // perform a fast query ...
    } else {
        // perform standard query ...
    }
}

In case of flag alternatives, we have to check each alternative separately:

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// Assuming our route now reads:
//      'route'    => 'find user [--fast|-f] [--verbose|-v] ... ',
//
public function findAction()
{
    $request = $this->getRequest();

    // Check both alternatives
    $isFast    = $request->getParam('fast',false)    || $request->getParam('f',false);
    $isVerbose = $request->getParam('verbose',false) || $request->getParam('v',false);

    // ...
}