1

In a Symfony2 application, I have an entity that needs to be populated on pre-persist with various context properties (like user id, what page it was called from, etc.)

I figured that to do this, I need to add a doctrine event listener that has access to "service_container", and the best way to give such access is to pass "service_container" as an argument to this listener.

I have a specific entity that I want to listen to, and I do not want to trigger the listener to events with any other entity.

We can add an entity-specific listener, documentation is found here: http://docs.doctrine-project.org/en/latest/reference/events.html#entity-listeners - but this does not provide example of how to pass an argument (I use PHP annotations to declare the listener).

I also tried to use JMSDiExtraBundle annotations, like in the example below: http://jmsyst.com/bundles/JMSDiExtraBundle/master/annotations#doctrinelistener-or-doctrinemongodblistener - but this way requires to declare the listener as non-entity-specific

Is there any way to make a listener for one entity only, and have it have access to container?

2 Answers 2

1

One of the ways similar to doctrine docs through dependency injection:

<?php

namespace AppBundle\EntityListener;

use AppBundle\Entity\User;
use Doctrine\Common\Persistence\Event\LifecycleEventArgs;
use Psr\Log\LoggerInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouterInterface;

class UserListener {

    /**
     * @var LoggerInterface
     */
    private $logger;

    public function __construct(LoggerInterface $logger)
    {
        $this->logger = $logger;
    }

    public function postPersist(User $user, LifecycleEventArgs $args)
    {
        $logger = $this->logger;

        $logger->info('Event triggered');

        //Do something
    }
}

services:
  user.listener:
      class: AppBundle\EntityListener\UserListener
      arguments: [@logger]
      tags:
          - { name: doctrine.orm.entity_listener }

And dont forget add listener to entity mapping:

AppBundle\Entity\User:
    type: entity
    table: null
    repositoryClass: AppBundle\Entity\UserRepository
    entityListeners:
        AppBundle\EntityListener\UserListener: ~
1

I would simply check entity type from the event. If you check type inside or outside the subscriber, it has the same performance cost. And simple type condition is fast enough.

namespace App\Modules\CoreModule\EventSubscriber;

use Doctrine\Common\EventSubscriber;
use Doctrine\ORM\Event\LifecycleEventArgs;
use Doctrine\ORM\Events;


class SetCountryToTaxSubscriber implements EventSubscriber
{

    /**
     * {@inheritdoc}
     */
    public function getSubscribedEvents()
    {
        return [Events::prePersist];
    }


    public function prePersist(LifecycleEventArgs $lifecycleEventArgs)
    {
        $entity = $lifecycleEventArgs->getEntity();
        if ( ! $entity instanceof Tax) {
            return;
        }

        $entity->setCountry('myCountry');
    }

}
1
  • 1
    Thank you, that's just what I did. I guess this is the simplest way to go. And if performance cost is the same, this is probably also the best way to go.
    – Vasily802
    May 27, 2015 at 19:00

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