ResourcesΒΆ

In order to perist resources or retrieve resources to represent, PhlyRestfully uses a PhlyRestfully\Resource instance. This class simply triggers an event based on the operation requested; you, as a developer, provide and attach listeners to those events to do the actual work.

PhlyRestfully\Resource defines the following events, with the following event parameters:

Event name Parameters
create
  • data
update
  • id
  • data
replaceList
  • data
patch
  • id
  • data
delete
  • id
deleteList
  • data
fetch
  • id
fetchAll  

Event listeners receive an instance of PhlyRestfully\ResourceEvent, which also composes the route matches and query parameters from the request. You may retrieve them from the event instance using the following methods:

  • getQueryParams() (returns a Zend\Stdlib\Parameters instance)
  • getRouteMatch() (returns a Zend\Mvc\Router\RouteMatch instance)
  • getQueryParam($name, $default = null)
  • getRouteParam($name, $default = null)

Within your listeners, you have the option of throwing an exception in order to raise an ApiProblem response. The following maps events to the special exceptions you can raise; all exceptions are in the PhlyRestfully\Exception namespace, except where globally qualified:

Event name Parameters
create CreationException
update UpdateException
replaceList UpdateException
patch PatchException
delete \Exception
deleteList \Exception
fetch \Exception
fetchAll \Exception

Additionally, if you throw any exception implementing PhlyRestfully\Exception\ProblemExceptionInterface, it can be used to seed an ApiProblem instance with the appropriate information. Such an exception needs to define the following methods:

  • getAdditionalDetails(), which should return a string or array.
  • getDescribedBy(), which should return a URI for the “describedBy” field.
  • getTitle(), which should return a string for the “title” field.

The exception code and message will be used for the “httpStatus” and “detail”, respectively.

The CreationException, UpdateException, and PatchException types all inherit from DomainException, which implements the ProblemExceptionInterface.

As a quick example, let’s look at two listeners, one that listens on the create event, and another on the fetch event, in order to see how we might handle them.

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// listener on "create"
function ($e) {
    $data = $e->getParam('data');

    // Assume an ActiveRecord-like pattern here for simplicity
    $user = User::factory($data);
    if (!$user->isValid()) {
        $ex = new CreationException('New user failed validation', 400);
        $ex->setAdditionalDetails($user->getMessages());
        $ex->setDescibedBy('http://example.org/api/errors/user-validation');
        $ex->setTitle('Validation error');
        throw $ex;
    }

    $user->persist();
    return $user;
}

// listener on "fetch"
function ($e) {
    $id = $e->getParam('id');

    // Assume an ActiveRecord-like pattern here for simplicity
    $user = User::fetch($id);
    if (!$user) {
        $ex = new DomainException('User not found', 404);
        $ex->setDescibedBy('http://example.org/api/errors/user-not-found');
        $ex->setTitle('User not found');
        throw $ex;
    }

    return $user;
}

Typically, you will create a Zend\EventManager\ListenerAggregateInterface implementation that will contain all of your listeners, so that you can also compose in other classes such as data mappers, a service layer, etc. Read about listener aggregates in the ZF2 documentation if you are unfamiliar with them.

In a later section, I will show you how to wire your listener aggregate to a resource and resource controller.

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