1

I recently starting writing a custom MVC framework in PHP. It's basically a learning exercise.

My classes are located in the following directories:

  • system/libraries/
  • system/controllers/
  • system/models
  • application/libraries/
  • application/controlers/
  • application/models

I'm not using namespaces because I can't figure out how to instantiate controllers using namespaces and Apache 2 handler style URLs (controller/action/id). I created a Bootstrap class to autoload my other classes:

class Bootstrap
{
  public function autoloadClasses($class)<br/>
  {
    $class .= '.php';

    $classDirectories = array(
        SYSTEM_LIBS_DIR,
        SYSTEM_CONTROLLERS_DIR,
        SYSTEM_MODELS_DIR,
        APPLICATION_LIBS_DIR,
        APPLICATION_CONTROLLERS_DIR,
        APPLICATION_MODELS_DIR
    );

    foreach ($classDirectories as $classDirectory) {
        $directoryIterator = new DirectoryIterator($classDirectory);
        foreach($directoryIterator as $file) {
            if ($file == $class) {
                include $classDirectory . $class;
                break 2;
            }
        }
    }

  }


  public function register()
  {
    spl_autoload_register(array($this, 'autoloadClasses'), true);
  }


  public function init()
  {
    $this->register();
    $loader = new Loader($_GET);
    $controller = $loader->createController();
    $controller->executeAction();
  }
}

It works fine. However, I know I should really be using the implementation recommended by PSR-0:

https://gist.github.com/221634

However, I can't figure out how to get it to work without namespaces. It looks like the namespace is an optional pararmeter. However, if I do the following, nothing happens -- not even an error in the Apache logs:

$libLoader = new SplClassLoader('', 'system/libraries');
8
  • 1
    why would you implement an autoloader that has been design only for Windows? (that's the only logical conclusion, because the other explanation for it would be that PSR-0 autoloader was not designed for PHP).
    – tereško
    Dec 17, 2012 at 19:15
  • Whatever you do, do not iterate over directories' content when you know what you what to look for. You don't want to stat that many times in vain.
    – chelmertz
    Dec 17, 2012 at 19:58
  • @tereško I'm not sure I understand your question. I'm working on Ubuntu Linux, not windows. PSR-0 has nothing to do with Windows, it's a standard that was developed for interoperability of PHP autoloaders. Dec 17, 2012 at 19:58
  • @NeilGirardi are you aware, that classnames, namespaces, class methods and traits in PHP are case insensitive, while PSR-0 treats them as case-sensitive. Only way for it to function normally is with a case-insensitive file system. Namely - FAT32/NTFS.
    – tereško
    Dec 17, 2012 at 20:01
  • If you can't be bothered to capitalize your classes in a consistent manner, you have much deeper problems than your autoloader. We had this battle in the office about five years ago. It ended in nerf guns and a 500-line autoloader revert. Thank goodness.
    – Charles
    Dec 17, 2012 at 20:03

2 Answers 2

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The goal of PSR-0 was to try and specify how external third-party library classes should be named, and where the files containing those classes should live on disk. This goal was accomplished, and from a high level, it's not too bad of a thing. Interopability and not stepping all over other libraries is a good thing.

Your directory layout and class naming scheme doesn't mesh with PSR-0, which means SplClassLoader is going to be nigh-useless for you.

You have two options:

  1. Rename all of your classes, shuffle them into a namespace hierarchy, and refactor the rest of the code that needs to worry about it, or
  2. Don't use SplClassLoader and write your own autoloader.

If you're building a library intended for external distribution, it'll be a good idea to make yourself PSR-0 compliant, as it's pretty darn simple, logical and painless.

If you're building your own app for your own use and don't intend it as a library, then you are under no requirement to do all of that work, and you shouldn't, because it'd be silly. This looks like it's the case, so I can end with a big fat: don't bother.

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  • Points taken, but I want to learn the PSR-0 way. Let's say I move my class directories into a NeilsMVC directory and add namespaces like this: \NeilsMVC\System\libraries. Would I then do something like this to load those classes? $loadSystemLibs = new SplCLassLoader('\NeilsMVC\system\libraries', ''); The use of namespace AND directory path seem redundant since the namespace is going to be translated into a directory path anyway. Also, if I'm using the controller from the $_GET array to determine which controller to initialize, how do I refactor my code to call it by the correct namespace? Dec 17, 2012 at 20:32
0

I got it to work. YAY!

Here is the code from my front controller (index.php) I'm going to refactor it since it would be cleaner to simply make one call to some type of bootstrap class:

<?php
use NeilMVC\system\libraries\Loader;
require_once('conf/conf.php');
require_once('SplClassLoader.php');

$loadSystemLibraries = new SplClassLoader('NeilMVC\system\libraries'); 
$loadSystemControllers = new SplClassLoader('NeilMVC\system\controllers');
$loadSystemModels = new SplClassLoader('NeilMVC\system\models');

$loadApplicationLibraries = new SplClassLoader('NeilMVC\application\libraries');
$loadApplicationControllers = new SplClassLoader('NeilMVC\application\controllers');
$loadApplicationModels = new SplClassLoader('NeilMVC\application\models');

$loadSystemLibraries->register();
$loadSystemControllers->register();
$loadSystemModels->register();

$loadApplicationLibraries->register();
$loadApplicationControllers->register();
$loadApplicationModels->register();

$loader = new Loader($_GET);
$controller = $loader->createController();
$controller->executeAction();

I had to refactor some of the classes in order to resolve fully qualified classes to unqualified names used in the MVC-style URLs. It wasn't that hard to do, I just had to tinker with it to understand it. If anyone want to know more, you can email me through my website http://neilgirardi.com

Cheers and happy holidays!

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