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How to access service container in symfony2 global helper function (service)?

This question started out with me not understanding why I couldn't pass variables to a symfony2 global helper function (service), but thanks to people brighter than I, I realized my error was about trying to use the security_context from within a class that didn't have it injected so...

This is the final result, the code that works. I found no better way of making this helpful to the comunity.

This is how you can get the user and other data from security_context from within a global function or helper function in symfony2.

I have the following class and function:

<?php namespace BizTV\CommonBundle\Helper;  use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface as Container;  class globalHelper {      private $container;  public function __construct(Container $container) {     $this->container = $container; }         //This is a helper function that checks the permission on a single container     public function hasAccess($container)     {         $user = $this->container->get('security.context')->getToken()->getUser();          //do my stuff     }      } 

...defined as a service (in app/config/config.yml) like this...

#Registering my global helper functions             services:   biztv.helper.globalHelper:     class: BizTV\CommonBundle\Helper\globalHelper     arguments: ['@service_container'] 

Now, in my controller I call on this function like this...

public function createAction($id) {      //do some stuff, transform $id into $entity of my type...      //Check if that container is within the company, and if user has access to it.     $helper = $this->get('biztv.helper.globalHelper');     $access = $helper->hasAccess($entity); 
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Matt Welander Avatar asked Aug 21 '12 13:08

Matt Welander


2 Answers

I assume that the first error (undefined property) happened before you added the property and the constructor. Then you got the second error. This other error means that your constructor expects to receive a Container object but it received nothing. This is because when you defined your service, you did not tell the Dependency Injection manager that you wanted to get the container. Change your service definition to this:

services:   biztv.helper.globalHelper:     class: BizTV\CommonBundle\Helper\globalHelper     arguments: ['@service_container'] 

The constructor should then expect an object of type Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface;

use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface as Container;  class globalHelper {          private $container;      public function __construct(Container $container) {         $this->container = $container;     } 
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Carlos Granados Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 03:09

Carlos Granados


An approach that always works, despite not being the best practice in OO

global $kernel; $assetsManager = $kernel->getContainer()->get('acme_assets.assets_manager');‏ 
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Guilherme Viebig Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 03:09

Guilherme Viebig