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Table of Contents

  1. Installing
  2. Container Listener Provider
  3. Classic Listener Provider
  4. Reflection Listener Provider
  5. Deferred events
  6. Listeners constraints according to PSR-14
  7. Stopped Propagation Events
  8. Iterators instead of arrays
  9. Creating listener providers

It's the PSR-14 compatible Event Dispatcher which provides several ways of determining "Event-Listeners" definitions.

NOTE: All the examples below, which include the DI container, are written using the php-di library. But you can utilize any DI container in your code.

Installing

// php 7.4+
composer require solventt/event-dispatcher ^0.1

// php 8.0+
composer require solventt/event-dispatcher ^1.0

Note: if you are going to use Container Listener Provider you must install any PSR-11 compatible DI Container.

Container Listener Provider

This provider supports only string definitions of listeners. And listeners must implement the __invoke method. It allows "lazy" creation of callable listeners while dispatching an event.

Remember:

  • the executing order of listeners is as you specified in the DI container definition;
  • this provider doesn't support dynamic binding/unbinding of listeners to/from events using the ON/OFF or ADD/REMOVE methods

The "Event-Listeners" definition for the DI container,

The first format:

return [
    'eventsToListeners' => [
        
        FirstEvent::class => [
                InvokableListenerOne::class,
                InvokableListenerTwo::class,
        ],
        
        SecondEvent::class => [
                InvokableListenerThree::class,
                InvokableListenerFour::class,
        ],   
    ]
];

The second format without specifying events (listeners events will be automatically resolved):

return [
    'eventsToListeners' => [
        
        InvokableListenerOne::class,
        InvokableListenerTwo::class,
        InvokableListenerThree::class,
        InvokableListenerFour::class, 
    ]
];

The third mixed format (arrays and strings):

return [
    'eventsToListeners' => [
        
        FirstEvent::class => [
            InvokableListenerOne::class,
            InvokableListenerTwo::class,
        ],
        InvokableListenerThree::class,
        InvokableListenerFour::class,

    ]
];

The Event Dispatcher definition for the DI container:

return [
    EventDispatcherInterface::class => function (ContainerInterface $container) {
        
        $provider = new ContainerListenerProvider($container);
        
        return new EventDispatcher($provider);       
    }
];

Somewhere in the code:

public function __construct(private EventDispatcherInterface $dispatcher) {}

...

$this->dispatcher->dispatch(new FirstEvent());

'eventsToListeners - the definition name which by default is recognized by the Container Provider. If you want to use a different name you have to pass it to the ContainerListenerProvider constructor as a second argument:

return [
    'yourCustomName' => [
        
        FirstEvent::class => [
                InvokableListenerOne::class
                InvokableListenerTwo::class
        ],  
    ],

    EventDispatcherInterface::class => function (ContainerInterface $container) {
        
        $provider = new ContainerListenerProvider($container, 'yourCustomName');
        
        return new EventDispatcher($provider);       
    }
];

Classic Listener Provider

This provider supports only callable definitions of listeners. You can assign listeners to events using:

  • a provider constructor
  • and/or the ON method (the OFF method unbinds a listener)

Using:

$provider = new ClassicListenerProvider([
    FirstEvent::class => [
        new InvokableClass(),
        [ArrayCallable::class, 'test'],
        [new ArrayCallable(), 'test2']
    ],    
    
    SecondEvent::class => [    
        'usualFunc',
         $someClosure                
    ]
]);

$dispatcher = new EventDispatcher($provider);

$dispatcher->dispatch(new FirstEvent());

If you use the DI Container your definition might look like:

return [
    EventDispatcherInterface::class => function (ContainerInterface $container) {
    
        $someClosure = function (FirstEvent $event): void {};
        
        $provider = new ClassicListenerProvider([
            SomeEvent::class => [
                new InvokableClass(),
                [ArrayCallable::class, 'test'],
                [new ArrayCallable(), 'test2'],
                'usualFunc',
                $someClosure                
            ],
        ]);
        
        return new EventDispatcher($provider);       
    }
];

Also, you can specify the listener execution order (an integer parameter). The higher the value, the earlier it will be called:

...
[
    SomeEvent::class => [
        [new InvokableClass(), 3],
        [[ArrayCallable::class, 'test'], 6],
        [[new ArrayCallable(), 'test2'], 10],
        ['usualFunc', 1],
        [$someClosure, 12]                
    ],
]
...

The "Event-Listeners" definition using the ON method somewhere in the code:

public function __construct(private EventDispatcherInterface $dispatcher) {}

...

$this->dispatcher->on(FirstEvent::class, new InvokableClass());

$this->dispatcher->on(SecondEvent::class, [ArrayCallable::class, 'test']);

$this->dispatcher->on(ThirdEvent::class, function (ThirdEvent $event): void {});

And with the priority:

$this->dispatcher->on(FirstEvent::class, new InvokableClass(), 4);

To unbind a listener from an event use the OFF method:

$this->dispatcher->off(FirstEvent::class, new InvokableClass());

$this->dispatcher->off(SecondEvent::class, [ArrayCallable::class, 'test']);

Reflection Listener Provider

This provider admits only callable definitions of listeners but without specifying events (it will be automatically resolved).

You can assign listeners to events using:

  • the provider constructor
  • and/or the ADD method (the REMOVE method unbinds a listener)

Using:

$provider = new ReflectionListenerProvider([
    new InvokableClass(),
    [ArrayCallable::class, 'test'],
    [new ArrayCallable(), 'test2'],
    'usualFunc',
    $someClosure                          
]);

$dispatcher = new EventDispatcher($provider);

$dispatcher->dispatch(new FirstEvent());

With the listener execution order:

...
[
    [new InvokableClass(), 0],
    [[ArrayCallable::class, 'test'], 2],
    [new ArrayCallable(), 'test2'],
    ['usualFunc', 3],  // will be executed the first
    $someClosure       // 0 - a default priority, if it isn't specified explicitly                   
]
...

The "Event-Listeners" definition using the ADD method somewhere in the code:

public function __construct(private EventDispatcherInterface $dispatcher) {}

...

$this->dispatcher->add(new InvokableClass());

$this->dispatcher->add([ArrayCallable::class, 'test']);

$this->dispatcher->add(function (ThirdEvent $event): void {});

And with the priority:

$this->dispatcher->add(new InvokableClass(), 4);

To unbind a listener from an event use the REMOVE method:

$this->dispatcher->remove(new InvokableClass());

$this->dispatcher->remove([ArrayCallable::class, 'test']);

Deferred events

In some cases you may need to use deferred events.

public function __construct(private EventDispatcherInterface $dispatcher) {}

...

$this->dispatcher->defer(new FirstEvent());  // no listeners are called;

$this->dispatcher->defer(new SecondEvent()); // no listeners are called;

$this->dispatcher->dispatchDeferredEvents(); // FirstEvent and SecondEvent are dispatched

Listeners constraints according to PSR-14

Quotes from the PSR-14:

  1. "A Listener MUST have one and only one parameter, which is the Event to which it responds";
  2. "A Listener SHOULD have a void return, and SHOULD type hint that return explicitly".

You can say that SHOULD not equal MUST. But I can't imagine what use-cases might require returning values from listeners and then use them. Anyway this dispatcher does not implement it.

So in this package you can't specify:

  • an empty listener signature;
  • more than one parameter in a listener signature;
  • any return type besides void. Omitted return type is also forbidden

You must provide a type hint of the listener argument - it can be an existent class or the object type. Other type-hints are not accepted.

In these cases an exception will be thrown:

// Listeners callbacks

public function noParameters(): void {}

public function moreThanOneParameter(FirstEvent $event, string $name): void {}

public function undefinedParameterType($event): void {}

public function noReturnType(object $event) {}

public function wrongReturnType(FirstEvent $event): string {}

But you can switch off these listener constraints. It is necessary to pass false as the argument in the constructor of some listener provider:

$provider = new ContainerListenerProvider($container, 'someDefinitionName', false);
...
$provider = new ClassicListenerProvider([...definition...], false);

However, the listeners provided without corresponding events ignores this setting because it requires a type-hinted argument for resolving an event:

return [
    'eventsToListeners' => [
        
        FirstEvent::class => [InvokableListenerOne::class], // supports switching off the listener constraints
        InvokableListenerTwo::class, // doesn't support switching off the listener constraints
    ]
];

Also, ReflectionListenerProvider does not support switching off the listener constraints.

Stopped Propagation Events

Your events can implement StoppableEventInterface (from PSR-14) to have more control over the listeners execution. For example, we have the following event class:

class FirstEvent implements StoppableEventInterface
{
    public string $result = '';

    public function isPropagationStopped(): bool
    {
        return (bool) preg_match('/stop/', $this->result);
    }
}

And there are three listeners:

public function __invoke(FirstEvent $event): void
{
    $event->result = 'First';
}
...
public function __invoke(FirstEvent $event): void
{
    $event->result .= '-stop';
}
...
public function __invoke(FirstEvent $event): void
{
    $event->result .= '-Test';
}

The listeners definition:

return [
    'eventsToListeners' => [
           
        FirstEvent::class => [
                InvokableListenerOne::class,
                InvokableListenerTwo::class,   // adds the '-stop' string in the $result property of FirstEvent
                InvokableListenerThree::class, // will not be executed
        ],  
    ],
    
    EventDispatcherInterface::class => function (ContainerInterface $container) {
        
        $provider = new ContainerListenerProvider($container);
        
        return new EventDispatcher($provider);    
    }
];

The third listener will not be executed because the isPropagationStopped() method of the FirstEvent returns true after the second listener is being executed.

Iterators instead of arrays

Providers also receive iterators in their constructor. But an iterator must implement the ArrayAccess interface.

Example 1:

$definition = [
    FirstEvent::class => [
        new InvokableClass(),
        [ArrayCallable::class, 'test'],
    ]
];

$provider = new ClassicListenerProvider(new ArrayIterator($definition));

Example 2:

class ListenerIterator extends ArrayIterator
{
    public function __construct()
    {
        parent::__construct($this->getListeners());
    }

    private function getListeners(): array
    {
        return [
            FirstEvent::class => [
                new InvokableClass(),
                [[ArrayCallable::class, 'test'], 2],
            ],

            SecondEvent::class => [
                'usualFunc',
                [new ArrayCallable(), 'test2']
            ]
        ];
    }
}

Somewhere in the code:

$provider = new ClassicListenerProvider(new ListenerIterator());

Creating listener providers

You need to implement the PSR-14 ListenerProviderInterface. And if you want your provider to support the ON/OFF methods you also have to implement SubscribingInterface.

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PSR-14 compatible event dispatcher

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