An experimental framework for php
It was created to allow a project to be organized in a hierarchical manner similar to a REST service.
Architecturally, it facilitates a broad swathe of design patterns using a client-server process flow.
- HTML templating: convenience classes facilitating sophisticated templating
- Front-End Routing: flexible dynamic routing for the HTML views
- Back-End Webservice: convienence classes to faciliate actual RESTful APIs
- Command line scripts: convenience classes to faciliate creation of recurring (cron), deamons, and ad-hoc scripts
The Flat Framework can be the basis of a new project or added to an existing project
The easiest way to get going with The Flat Framework is to copy the flat boilerplate webapp.
Step 1. Composer 'create-project' (flat boilerplate webapp)...
composer create-project katmore/flat-webapp my_project_dir
(copies this repo and configures php dependencies)
Step 2. Bower update
cd my_project_dir
bower update
(installs static dependencies)
Step 1. Using composer
cd my_project_dir
composer require katmore/flat
Step 2. Bower update
cd my_project_dir
bower update
The components of flat architecture facilitate a client-server process flow...
- resources: An abstract hierarchical tree of the applications components.
- app objects: A group of instantiable php objects.
- app routes: A group of of routes that an application controller can access to resolve a client request.
- app controllers: A group of application "entry-points"; i.e. the "server" which processes a request from the "client".
- requests: A request consists of a client inquiry which provides a resource and any associated input data to an app controller.
- route maps: A route map consists of multiple routes that each must be resolved by an app controller
- resolvers: A resolver instantiates app objects when given a resource.
Admittedly, the component organization of the flat architecture is rigidly attached to the client-server model. Despite this, the programming design constraints of a flat based project are actually very minimal. For this reason, flat can be argued to be a lightweight framework. Any programming design pattern can be used within a flat project.
However... there is an idealized programming design use case neatly bundled within the architecture.
Groan...yes, it is yet another design pattern.
The Resource-Route-Controller is a novel design pattern invented in tandem with flat. It is, though, intended to be a very lightweight design pattern that should not keep other design patterns (MVC, MVP, MVVM) from being incorporated. It is described further in a section below.
The hierarchical organization of a flat project is abstracted into multiple abstract levels of programming design (not just the path names of scripts and dependency file structure).
The following sections contain further details regarding concepts and terminology encountered in flat.
A "resource" is a string value comprised of one or more "segments", each "segment" being delineated by either a backslash "" or forward-slash "/".
For example, given the following URL:
https:/example.com/my_app/my_app_frontend/my_frontend_view
An app controller might extract the URL path as the resource /my_app/my_app_frontend/my_frontend_view
and then check if a php class exists with the name \my_app\my_app_frontend\my_frontend_view
, and instantiate
the class, which becomes an app object...
$check_class = $_SERVER ['PATH_INFO'];
$check_class = str_replace('/','\\',$check_class);
if (class_exists($check_class)) {
new $check_class;
}
Note: flat has convenience classes that facilitate more complex routing than the trivial example above. These facilitate more complex aspects, such as dealing with associated request input data.
See * Route Rules definition below * Route Factory definition below * Resolver Class https://github.com/katmore/flat/blob/master/src/flat/core/resolver.php
A "route factory" facilitates creating a "route map" for resolving a "resource".
A "route map" consists of "route rules" which determine how a "resource" corresponds to php classnames within a php sub-namespace.
An entry-point controller script uses a "resolver" to instantiate "app objects". based on the "route map" logic created in this
An example of an entry-point script can be seen in the 'flat-webapp' github repo: https://github.com/katmore/flat-webapp/blob/master/web/api.php
- resource
- input data associated
- controller
- request Determines the resource (and any input) to provide the controller
Ideal process flow incorporating Resource-Route-Controller design using 'client-server' model
- An application controller is provided a "resource" along with any "input"
- A controller "resolves" the "resource" into one or more objects which contain the application logic.
Copyright (c) 2012-2019 Doug Bird - [email protected]. All Rights Reserved.
This software is distributed under the terms of the MIT license or the GNU General Public License v3.0.