Zend\Config\Writer
provides the ability to write config files from an array,
Zend\Config\Config
instance, or any Traversable
object. Zend\Config\Writer
is itself only an interface that defining the methods toFile()
and
toString()
.
We have five writers implementing the interface:
Zend\Config\Writer\Ini
Zend\Config\Writer\Xml
Zend\Config\Writer\PhpArray
Zend\Config\Writer\Json
Zend\Config\Writer\Yaml
The INI writer has two modes for rendering with regard to sections. By default, the top-level
configuration is always written into section names. By calling
$writer->setRenderWithoutSectionsFlags(true);
all options are written into the global namespace of
the INI file and no sections are applied.
Zend\Config\Writer\Ini
has an additional option parameter, nestSeparator
,
which defines with which character the single nodes are separated. The default
is a single dot (.
), such as is accepted by Zend\Config\Reader\Ini
by
default.
When modifying or creating a Zend\Config\Config
object, there are several
considerations to keep in mind. To create or modify a value, you simply say set
the parameter of the Config
object via the parameter accessor (->
). To
create a section in the root or to create a branch, just create a new array
($config->branch = [];
).
Consider the following code, which creates a configuration structure:
// Create the config object
$config = new Zend\Config\Config([], true);
$config->production = [];
$config->production->webhost = 'www.example.com';
$config->production->database = [];
$config->production->database->params = [];
$config->production->database->params->host = 'localhost';
$config->production->database->params->username = 'production';
$config->production->database->params->password = 'secret';
$config->production->database->params->dbname = 'dbproduction';
$writer = new Zend\Config\Writer\Ini();
echo $writer->toString($config);
The result of this code is the following INI string:
[production]
webhost = "www.example.com"
database.params.host = "localhost"
database.params.username = "production"
database.params.password = "secret"
database.params.dbname = "dbproduction"
You can use the method toFile()
to store the INI data to a file instead.
Zend\Config\Writer\Xml
can be used to generate an XML string or file.
Consider the following code, which creates a configuration structure:
// Create the config object
$config = new Zend\Config\Config([], true);
$config->production = [];
$config->production->webhost = 'www.example.com';
$config->production->database = [];
$config->production->database->params = [];
$config->production->database->params->host = 'localhost';
$config->production->database->params->username = 'production';
$config->production->database->params->password = 'secret';
$config->production->database->params->dbname = 'dbproduction';
$writer = new Zend\Config\Writer\Xml();
echo $writer->toString($config);
The result of this code is the following XML string:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<zend-config>
<production>
<webhost>www.example.com</webhost>
<database>
<params>
<host>localhost</host>
<username>production</username>
<password>secret</password>
<dbname>dbproduction</dbname>
</params>
</database>
</production>
</zend-config>
You can use the method toFile()
to store the XML data to a file.
Zend\Config\Writer\PhpArray
can be used to generate a PHP script that
represents and returns configuration.
Consider the following code, which creates a configuration structure:
// Create the config object
$config = new Zend\Config\Config([], true);
$config->production = [];
$config->production->webhost = 'www.example.com';
$config->production->database = [];
$config->production->database->params = [];
$config->production->database->params->host = 'localhost';
$config->production->database->params->username = 'production';
$config->production->database->params->password = 'secret';
$config->production->database->params->dbname = 'dbproduction';
$writer = new Zend\Config\Writer\PhpArray();
echo $writer->toString($config);
The result of this code is the following PHP script:
<?php
return array (
'production' =>
array (
'webhost' => 'www.example.com',
'database' =>
array (
'params' =>
array (
'host' => 'localhost',
'username' => 'production',
'password' => 'secret',
'dbname' => 'dbproduction',
),
),
),
);
You can use the method toFile()
to save the PHP script to a file.
Zend\Config\Writer\Json
can be used to generate a JSON representation of
configuration.
Consider the following code, which creates a configuration structure:
// Create the config object
$config = new Zend\Config\Config([], true);
$config->production = [];
$config->production->webhost = 'www.example.com';
$config->production->database = [];
$config->production->database->params = [];
$config->production->database->params->host = 'localhost';
$config->production->database->params->username = 'production';
$config->production->database->params->password = 'secret';
$config->production->database->params->dbname = 'dbproduction';
$writer = new Zend\Config\Writer\Json();
echo $writer->toString($config);
The result of this code is the following JSON string:
{
"webhost": "www.example.com",
"database": {
"params": {
"host": "localhost",
"username": "production",
"password": "secret",
"dbname": "dbproduction"
}
}
}
You can use the method toFile()
to save the JSON data to a file.
Zend\Config\Writer\Json
uses the zend-json component to convert the data to
JSON.
Zend\Config\Writer\Yaml
can be used to generate a PHP code that returns the YAML
representation of configuration. In order to use the YAML writer, we need to pass a
callback to an external PHP library, or use the
YAML PECL extension.
Consider the following code, which creates a configuration structure using the YAML PECL extension:
// Create the config object
$config = new Zend\Config\Config([], true);
$config->production = [];
$config->production->webhost = 'www.example.com';
$config->production->database = [];
$config->production->database->params = [];
$config->production->database->params->host = 'localhost';
$config->production->database->params->username = 'production';
$config->production->database->params->password = 'secret';
$config->production->database->params->dbname = 'dbproduction';
$writer = new Zend\Config\Writer\Yaml();
echo $writer->toString($config);
The result of this code is the following YAML string contains the following value:
webhost: www.example.com
database:
params:
host: localhost
username: production
password: secret
dbname: dbproduction
You can use the method toFile()
to save the YAML data to a file.
If you want to use an external YAML writer library, pass the callback function that will generate the YAML from the configuration when instantiating the writer. For instance, to use the Spyc library:
// include the Spyc library
require_once 'path/to/spyc.php';
$writer = new Zend\Config\Writer\Yaml(['Spyc', 'YAMLDump']);
echo $writer->toString($config);