It's possible to define controllers as services while at the same time, extending the framework controller class. Why do this? By doing this you can take advantage of the base functionality such as the form factory, template rendering, get user stuff etc.
At the same time, you can inject any controller specific services you need. This avoids using the container as a service locator pattern. In other words, we can push services into the controller as opposed to having the controllers pull the services. The controllers don't need to care where the services come from and become more self contained.
Example:
class PersonController extends Controller
{
private $personRepository;
public function __construct($personRepository)
{
$this->personRepository = $personRepository;
}
public function editAction(Request $request, $id)
{
$person = $this->personRepository->find($id);
$form = $this->createForm(new PersonFormType(), $person);
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isValid()) {
// Note: I add flush/persist methods to my repositories
// You could inject the entity manager and flush from it
$personRepository->flush();
return $this->redirect($this->generateUrl('wherever'));
}
return $this->render('person/edit.html.twig', array(
'form' => $form->createView(),));
}
}
Make the controller a service with:
services:
person_repository:
class: AppBundle\Entity\PersonRepository
factory_service: 'doctrine.orm.default_entity_manager'
factory_method: 'getRepository'
arguments:
- 'AppBundle\Entity\Person'
person_controller:
class: AppBundle\Controller\PersonController
calls:
- [setContainer,['@service_container']]
arguments:
-'person_repository
So basically, you end up with a standard Symfony controller with all the standard functionality but you can inject controller specific services such as repositories which in turn makes your controllers easier to read and debug. You should never need to use $this->get('service') from within your controller action methods.
Contract this with the more standard method of retrieving an entity:
$personRepository = $this->getDoctrine()->getManager()->getRepository('AppBundle\Entity\Person');
As you can see, the standard method not only ties the controller directly to doctrine but also requires the controller to know the entity's class name. You can decide which method is easier to write, understand and maintain.