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RESTful Applications with Zend Framework

This extension for Zend Framework, allows to create RESTful Controllers with ease. please keep in mind that these instructions are general and you should probably customize the code to fit your needs.

for a working example please refer to github.com/ahmadnassri/restful-zend-framework-example

Assumptions

  • you are building a mixed application (regular ZF Controllers + RESTful controllers)
  • your controllers can be a a mix of regular controllers and RESTful controllers or a hybrid!

I recommend creating a separate module for the RESTful controllers, its less complicated to manage this way, and you don't have to worry about advanced REST routing ... However, you can have pie and eat it too! It's possible to have any single Controller act as both a REST controller and a typical Zend MVC controller (HTML output).

In this particular example, I'm using a separate module "Api" that is purely used for REST API calls.

Steps

  1. Copy the REST directory into your library.
  2. modify application.ini.
  3. modify application/Bootstrap.php.
  4. modify your RESTful module Bootstrap ex: application/modules/api/Bootstrap.php.
  5. create Controllers as usual, just make sure they extends REST_Controller.
  6. check https://github.com/ahmadnassri/restful-zend-framework-example for examples.
  7. reccomended: use the Api_ErrorController provided in the example above, modify to your needs.

application.ini:

add the following:

autoloaderNamespaces[] = "REST_"

rest.default = "xml"
rest.formats[] = "json"
rest.formats[] = "xml"

the above achieves a couple of things:

  1. Autoloads the REST library
  2. sets the default respond format when all content type negotiation fails (in the above example: xml)
  3. determines the list of content types you want to support in your API, built in types include: html, xml, php, json

application/Bootstrap.php

add the following:

public function _initREST()
{
    $frontController = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance();

    // set custom request object
    $frontController->setRequest(new REST_Request);
    $frontController->setResponse(new REST_Response);

    // add the REST route for the API module only
    $restRoute = new Zend_Rest_Route($frontController, array(), array('api'));
    $frontController->getRouter()->addRoute('rest', $restRoute);
}

In the above example, we are only enabling RESTful responses on a particular route, which is the Api module, look up the Zend_Rest_Route docs for further configuration options.

application/modules/api/Bootstrap.php

Note: depending on your setup, you may want to setup some advanced rules to enable the REST Plugin and the Action Helpers only when needed. I use a modified Bootstraping method called "Active Bootstrap" (google it) to only run the bootstrap _init methods per active module, which saves me a lot of headaches.

public function _initREST()
{
    $frontController = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance();

    // register the RestHandler plugin
    $frontController->registerPlugin(new REST_Controller_Plugin_RestHandler($frontController));

    // add REST contextSwitch helper
    $contextSwitch = new REST_Controller_Action_Helper_ContextSwitch();
    Zend_Controller_Action_HelperBroker::addHelper($contextSwitch);

    // add restContexts helper
    $restContexts = new REST_Controller_Action_Helper_RestContexts();
    Zend_Controller_Action_HelperBroker::addHelper($restContexts);
}

Module Specific ErrorController issue

It seems there is an inherit issue with Zend Framework's modules & calling the ErrorController, basically ZF calls the default module's error controller for all modules. This can be a problem of course if one of your modules is an API, you'll end up with HTML in the REST ErrorController output.

to fix this is beyond the scope of the REST library, so its only included in the README file:

in your application.ini

resources.frontController.plugins.ErrorHandler.class = "Zend_Controller_Plugin_ErrorHandler"
resources.frontController.plugins.ErrorHandler.options.module = "default"
resources.frontController.plugins.ErrorHandler.options.controller = "error"
resources.frontController.plugins.ErrorHandler.options.action = "error"

then create a plugin to change the "module" scope, you can name this whatever you want, I went with App_Controller_Plugin_Errors:

class App_Controller_Plugin_Errors extends Zend_Controller_Plugin_Abstract
{
    public function routeShutdown(Zend_Controller_Request_Abstract $request)
    {
        $frontController = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance();

        $error = $frontController->getPlugin('Zend_Controller_Plugin_ErrorHandler');

        $error->setErrorHandlerModule($request->getModuleName());
    }
}

Bugs and feature requests

Have a bug or a feature request? Please first read the issue guidelines and search for existing and closed issues. If your problem or idea is not addressed yet, please open a new issue.

Contributing

Please read through our contributing guidelines. Included are directions for opening issues, coding standards, and notes on development.

More over, if your pull request contains JavaScript patches or features, you must include relevant unit tests.

Editor preferences are available in the editor config for easy use in common text editors. Read more and download plugins at http://editorconfig.org.

Support

Donations are welcome to help support the continuous development of this project.

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License

MIT © Ahmad Nassri