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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

As any web application, your project has repetitive maintenance tasks, database operations, or other console scripts running on a regular basis.

Symfony 1.1 extends symfony 1.0 pake tasks to create a powerful and uniform command line utility for your projects, fully integrated with the symfony Command Line Interface (CLI).

Let's create our first task

Open your symfony 1.1 project directory and type:

$ php symfony generate:task doNothing

It will bootstrap an empty task in lib/task/doNothingTask.class.php. Let's tune it a bit.

class doNothingTask extends sfBaseTask
{
  protected function configure()
  {
    $this->namespace        = 'project';
    $this->name             = 'do-nothing';
    $this->briefDescription = 'Does strictly nothing';
 
    $this->detailedDescription = <<This task is completely useless, and should be run as often as possible.
EOF;
  }
 
  protected function execute($arguments = array(), $options = array())
  {
    $this->logSection('do-nothing', 'I did nothing successfully!');
  }
}
 

This task for sure does not much, but demonstrates the first basic concepts.:

You can play around a bit with it:

$ php symfony help project:do-nothing
$ php symfony project:do-nothing

Some command line interaction

Arguments and options are the way to give parameters to a task.

$ php symfony project:hello-world --name="Romain"

Here we're running the project:hello-world task with the name option set to Romain

$ php symfony project:hello-world Hi

Now, we run the same task with the first argument set to Hi.

Options and arguments can have default values, be optional or required and embed their purpose for automatic syntax help.

Let's write our project:hello-world task:

class doHelloWorldTask extends sfBaseTask
{
  protected function configure()
  {
    $this->addArgument('verb', sfCommandArgument::OPTIONAL, 'Customize the verb used to say hello', 'hello');
    $this->addOption('name', null, sfCommandOption::PARAMETER_OPTIONAL, 'Customize the person to say hello to', 'world');
 
    $this->namespace        = 'project';
    $this->name             = 'hello-world';
    $this->briefDescription = 'Spread the (hello) world';
 
    $this->detailedDescription = <<Runs an evolved hello world display, with customisable name and word.
EOF;
  }
 
  protected function execute($arguments = array(), $options = array())
  {
    $this->logSection('do', ucfirst($arguments['verb']).' '.ucfirst($options['name']));
  }
}
 

Now check out how symfony helps the lost user about how to use our new task:

$ php symfony project:hello-world invalid arguments given
$ php symfony help project:hello-world

And play a bit with the task:

$ php symfony project:hello-world
$ php symfony project:hello-world --name="romain"
$ php symfony project:hello-world --name=romain hi
$ php symfony project:hello-world hi --name=romain

Some other handy features

What do you think? Isn't this some cherry on the cake, or for instance, some jazzy chorus over the symfony?

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