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I'm currently trying my hand at creating Registry classes that are very similar to those found in the Zandstra book.  I thought it was a good idea to remove some of the initialization from the constructors and put them in their respective getInstance() methods.  So, I have the following:

 

Base Registry class:

<?php
   abstract class MP_base_Registry{
      private final function __construct(){}
      abstract protected function get($key);
      abstract protected function set($key, $value);
   }
?>

 

RequestRegistry:

<?php
   class MP_base_RequestRegistry extends MP_base_Registry{
      private static $instance;
      private $requests = array();

      static function getInstance(){
         if(!self::$instance){
            self::$instance = new self();
         }

         return self::$instance;
      }

      protected function get($key){
         return $this->requests[$key];
      }

      protected function set($key, $value){
         $this->requests[$key] = $value;
      }

      static function getRequest(){
         return self::$instance->get('request');
      }

      static function setRequest(MP_controller_Request $request){
         self::$instance->set('request', $request);
      }
   }
?>

 

SessionRegistry (unfinished as I have a question about it):

<?php
   class MP_base_SessionRegistry extends MP_base_Registry{
      private static $instance;

      static function getInstance(){
         if(!self::$instance){
            session_start();
            self::$instance = new self();
         }

         return self::$instance;
      }

      protected function get($key){
         return $_SESSION[__CLASS__][$key];
      }

      protected function set($key, $value){
         $_SESSION[__CLASS__][$key] = $value;
      }

      /* inquire about the Complex $complex in Zandstra's book */
   }
?>

 

And, finally, ApplicationRegistry:

<?php
   class MP_base_ApplicationRegistry extends MP_base_Registry{
      private static $instance;
      private $values = array();
      private $appFile = "data/applicationRegistry.txt";
      private $isDirty = false;

      static function getInstance(){
         if(!self::$instance){
            self::$instance = new self();
            $this->doReload();
         }

         return self::$instance;
      }

      function __destruct(){
         if($this->isDirty){
            $this->save();
         }
      }

      static function reload(){
         self::instance->doReload();
      }

      private function doReload(){
         if(!file_exists($this->appFile)){
            return false;
         }

         $serialized = file_get_contents($this->appFile, true);
         $fileContents = unserialize($serialized);

         if(is_array($fileContents)){
            $fileContents = array_merge($fileContents, $this->values);
            $this->values = $fileContents;

            return true;
         }

         return false;
      }

      private function save(){
         $saveData = serialize($this->values);
         file_put_contents($this->appFile, $saveData, FILE_USE_INCLUDE_PATH);
         $this->isDirty = false;
      }

      protected function get($key){
         return $this->values[$key];
      }

      protected function set($key, $value){
         $this->values[$key] = $value;
         $this->isDirty = true;
      }

      static function isEmpty(){
         return empty(self::$instance->values);
      }

      /*add static functions or use magic __get() and __set() to 
      obtain/set specific data */
   }
?>

 

Okay, with that in place, here are my questions:

 

1. In SessionRegistry, Zandstra creates two publically available static methods that get and set session info.  They look like this:

<?php
   function getComplex(){
      return self::$instance->get('complex');
   }

   function setComplex(Complex $complex){
      self::$instance->set('complex', $complex);
   }
?>

I haven't read much further in the book, so I'm not sure if this is addressed later on, but is the Complex datatype there just as a hypothetical?  Or is he suggesing that things saved in a session should all have the same base class (in this case, a class named Complex)?

 

2. In ApplicationRegistry, he (and thus, my code) seem to switch from using self::$instance and $this->something.  This is a bit confusing.  I realize that the former represents accessing something as part of a class, and the latter means actually accessing the object.  That said, the object in question is actually referred to by itself via $instance.  So, wouldn't accessing the private properties of the class have to be done like self::$instance->values, or something along those lines?

 

3. Are there any pitfalls you can see in me forcing the constructors to be empty?  I figure that since it's basically a large singleton, the getInstance() method will always be called whenever one wants access to a Registry.  Why not put the initialization processes in there when the first instance is created?

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Re. 1: You'd have to figure out what the Complex class is. Apparently he thinks that it should have it's own getter and setter methods.

Re. 2: Doing self::$instance->something instead of $this->something would in this case be the same seeing as self::$instance === $this in this case.

Re. 3: It depends on whether you need it done each time you get the instance or the first time you get the instance (i.e. when it's created).

 

 

Also, I'd modify your MP_base_Registry class to look like this:

<?php
   abstract class MP_base_Registry{
      protected static $instance;

      static public function getInstance(){
         if(!self::$instance){
            session_start();
            self::$instance = new self();
         }

         return self::$instance;
      }

      private final function __construct(){}
      abstract protected function get($key);
      abstract protected function set($key, $value);
   }
?>

Then you can always override the getInstance() method in child classes if you need specialized behavior.

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Not sure I agree 100% with daniel's implementation of the Base_Registry, as he appears to have put session_start() inside there, which should ONLY occur in the Session_Registry object...

 

1) Complex is basically just a complex object. In the case of the session registry, I would imagine 1 such object to be a "User", i.e. setUser(User $user), and getUser()

2) self::$instance is used with static public functions (in case you hadn't noticed) which obviously (because they're static) don't have a $this reference. Hence the need to utilise the internal static variable $instance.

3) See Daniel0's example, as I'm pretty sure he's covered this correctly. p.s. NOW i know how to get singletons in a parent class, DOH! :P

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Not sure I agree 100% with daniel's implementation of the Base_Registry, as he appears to have put session_start() inside there, which should ONLY occur in the Session_Registry object...

 

Actually, I didn't even notice that. I just copied the method verbatim from one of his classes. I certainly didn't mean to do so.

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Ah, great, thanks guys! :)  I thought I was more or less on the right track, but it's nice to get confirmation.

 

Regarding question 3, specifically something done once vs. each time an instance is created/assigned -- does calling session_start() after a session is already in place destroy the current session?  Or does it just not do anything?

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Regarding question 3, specifically something done once vs. each time an instance is created/assigned -- does calling session_start() after a session is already in place destroy the current session?  Or does it just not do anything?

 

<?php
session_start();
session_start();
?>

 

Notice: A session had already been started - ignoring session_start() in /var/www/test.php on line 3

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