2

What I'm asking, is why to add the controllers in the following manner :

'controllers' => array(
    'invokables' => array(
        'Application\Controller\Index' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController'
    ),
),

and not in the following manner :

    'controllers' => array(
        'Application\Controller\Index' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController'
     ),

2 Answers 2

3

By registering your controller under the invokables subkey, you tell Zend Framework that it can invoke the controller by instantiating it with the new operator. This is the most simple way of instantiating the controller. As an alternative, you can register a factory to create the controller instance, in that case you would register your controller under the factories subkey

3

From ZF2 official documentation :

Note


We inform the application about controllers we expect to have in the application. This is to prevent somebody requesting any service the ServiceManager knows about in an attempt to break the application. The dispatcher uses a special, scoped container that will only pull controllers that are specifically registered with it, either as invokable classes or via factories.

You need to add the controller class to invokables in the module config to let the application know about the Controller you've added.

This one of the possible options. The other option consist on creating your Controller with a Factory and by using Service Manager.

The differences between using factories and invokables to register controllers in ZF2 are :

  • invokables : It tells to the ServiceManager to instantiate the class when it’s needed.

  • factories : It is simillar to the invokables but it should be used when you need some additional configuration.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.