mops1k/request-object-resolver-bundle 问题修复 & 功能扩展

解决BUG、新增功能、兼容多环境部署,快速响应你的开发需求

邮箱:yvsm@zunyunkeji.com | QQ:316430983 | 微信:yvsm316

mops1k/request-object-resolver-bundle

Composer 安装命令:

composer require mops1k/request-object-resolver-bundle

包简介

Bundle for resolving and validate http request to object

README 文档

README

This bundle can help you to deserialize incoming request parameters from symfomy http request object to your DTO objects.

Deserialized objects are validated via symfony/validator, so when using such objects in controllers, we can be sure that the data format and their set in the object are correct and ready for further processing.

Bundle can deserialize:

  • route parameters (attribute RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path)
  • query parameters (attribute RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query)
  • content body (supports all symfony serializer formats) (attribute RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Content)
  • form parameters (attribute RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Form)
  • uploaded files (attribute RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Form)

Install

composer require mops1k/request-object-resolver-bundle

Use

Example:

<?php

use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class ExampleRequest
{
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\GreaterThan(0)]
    public ?int $id = null;
    
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\NotBlank]
    public ?string $name = null;
}

/**
 * Request path example: /25?name=Julian
 */
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/{id}', methods: [Request::METHOD_GET])]
    public function __invoke(#[Query, Path] ExampleRequest $exampleRequest): JsonResponse
    {
        // some logic with $exampleRequest
        
        return new JsonResponse([
            'id' => $exampleRequest->id,
            'name' => $exampleRequest->name,
        ]);
    }
}

Map field to another name

Whole library attributes have a map parameter. With this parameter you can map from one field name to another.

Example:

<?php

use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class ExampleRequest
{
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\GreaterThan(0)]
    public ?int $id = null;
    
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\NotBlank]
    public ?string $title = null;
}

/**
 * Request path example: /25?name=Julian
 */
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/{id}', methods: [Request::METHOD_GET])]
    public function __invoke(#[Query(map: ['name' => 'title']), Path] ExampleRequest $exampleRequest): JsonResponse
    {
        // some logic with $exampleRequest
        
        return new JsonResponse([
            'id' => $exampleRequest->id,
            'title' => $exampleRequest->name,
        ]);
    }
}

Skip dto validation

If your logic does not need automatic validation of the request object for some reason, then you can disable it with RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\SkipValidation attribute.

Example:

<?php

use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\SkipValidation;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class ExampleRequest
{
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\GreaterThan(0)]
    public ?int $id = null;
    
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\NotBlank]
    public ?string $name = null;
}

/**
 * Request path example: /-1?name=
 */
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/{id}', methods: [Request::METHOD_GET])]
    public function __invoke(#[Query, Path, SkipValidation] ExampleRequest $exampleRequest): JsonResponse
    {
        // some logic with $exampleRequest
        
        return new JsonResponse([
            'id' => $exampleRequest->id,
            'name' => $exampleRequest->name,
        ]);
    }
}

Validation groups

If you want to use validation groups, then use attribute \RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\ValidationGroups.

Example:

<?php

use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\ValidationGroups;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class ExampleRequest
{
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\GreaterThan(0, groups: ['default'])]
    public ?int $id = null;
    
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\NotBlank]
    public ?string $name = null;
}

/**
 * Request path example: /25?name=Julian
 */
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/{id}', methods: [Request::METHOD_POST])]
    public function __invoke(#[Query, Path, ValidationGroups(groups: 'default')] ExampleRequest $exampleRequest): JsonResponse
    {
        // some logic with $exampleRequest
        
        return new JsonResponse([
            'id' => $exampleRequest->id,
            'name' => $exampleRequest->name,
        ]);
    }
}

Serialization context

If you want to add some serialization context, then in attributes you can set serializationContext property.

Example:

<?php

use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\ValidationGroups;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Serializer\Annotation\Groups;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class ExampleRequest
{
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\GreaterThan(0)]
    #[Groups(['default'])]
    public ?int $id = null;
    
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\NotBlank]
    public ?string $name = null;
}

/**
 * Request path example: /25?name=Julian
 */
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/{id}', methods: [Request::METHOD_POST])]
    public function __invoke(#[Query(serializerContext: ['groups': ['default']]), Path] ExampleRequest $exampleRequest): JsonResponse
    {
        // some logic with $exampleRequest
        
        return new JsonResponse([
            'id' => $exampleRequest->id,
            'name' => $exampleRequest->name, // will throw error as uninitialized property
        ]);
    }
}

If you want to set context to all request parts which you want to deserialize to object, use \RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\SerializerContext attribute.

<?php

use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Query;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\Path;
use RequestObjectResolverBundle\Attribute\SerializerContext;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Symfony\Component\Serializer\Annotation\Groups;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;

class ExampleRequest
{
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\GreaterThan(0)]
    #[Groups(['default'])]
    public ?int $id = null;
    
    #[Assert\NotNull]
    #[Assert\NotBlank]
    public ?string $name = null;
}

/**
 * Request path example: /25?name=Julian
 */
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/{id}', methods: [Request::METHOD_POST])]
    public function __invoke(#[Query, Path, SerializerContext(['groups': ['default']])] ExampleRequest $exampleRequest): JsonResponse
    {
        // some logic with $exampleRequest
        
        return new JsonResponse([
            'id' => $exampleRequest->id,
            'name' => $exampleRequest->name, // will throw error as uninitialized property
        ]);
    }
}

Overriding values with request parts combination

These are table of request parts priority overriding (if have same key name):

Request part Priority (lower value = higher priority)
Query 30
Path 20
Form 10
Content 0

Example. If you handle Path, Query and Content in same object and all of them have same field (id for example), then resulting field value will be from Form request part.

统计信息

  • 总下载量: 2.1k
  • 月度下载量: 0
  • 日度下载量: 0
  • 收藏数: 9
  • 点击次数: 0
  • 依赖项目数: 0
  • 推荐数: 0

GitHub 信息

  • Stars: 9
  • Watchers: 1
  • Forks: 0
  • 开发语言: PHP

其他信息

  • 授权协议: MIT
  • 更新时间: 2022-04-22

承接程序开发

PHP开发

VUE

Vue开发

前端开发

小程序开发

公众号开发

系统定制

数据库设计

云部署

网站建设

安全加固