Taylor Otwell 73e355bf18 added http foundation. | 12 years ago | |
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File | 12 years ago | |
Resources | 12 years ago | |
Session | 12 years ago | |
ApacheRequest.php | 12 years ago | |
Cookie.php | 12 years ago | |
FileBag.php | 12 years ago | |
HeaderBag.php | 12 years ago | |
JsonResponse.php | 12 years ago | |
LICENSE | 12 years ago | |
LaravelRequest.php | 12 years ago | |
ParameterBag.php | 12 years ago | |
README.md | 12 years ago | |
RedirectResponse.php | 12 years ago | |
Request.php | 12 years ago | |
RequestMatcher.php | 12 years ago | |
RequestMatcherInterface.php | 12 years ago | |
Response.php | 12 years ago | |
ResponseHeaderBag.php | 12 years ago | |
ServerBag.php | 12 years ago | |
StreamedResponse.php | 12 years ago | |
composer.json | 12 years ago |
HttpFoundation defines an object-oriented layer for the HTTP specification.
It provides an abstraction for requests, responses, uploaded files, cookies, sessions, ...
In this example, we get a Request object from the current PHP global variables:
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
$request = Request::createFromGlobals();
echo $request->getPathInfo();
You can also create a Request directly -- that's interesting for unit testing:
$request = Request::create('/?foo=bar', 'GET');
echo $request->getPathInfo();
And here is how to create and send a Response:
$response = new Response('Not Found', 404, array('Content-Type' => 'text/plain'));
$response->send();
The Request and the Response classes have many other methods that implement the HTTP specification.
If you are using PHP 5.3.x you must add the following to your autoloader:
// SessionHandlerInterface
if (!interface_exists('SessionHandlerInterface')) {
$loader->registerPrefixFallback(__DIR__.'/../vendor/symfony/src/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/Resources/stubs');
}
Unit tests:
https://github.com/symfony/symfony/tree/master/tests/Symfony/Tests/Component/HttpFoundation