how to create a factory in zend framework 2?

Patrioticcow picture Patrioticcow · Sep 18, 2013 · Viewed 9.7k times · Source

in my Module.php i have the fallowing methods that i would like to move them in a factory class so that i wont clutter the Module class:

public function getControllerConfig()
{
    return array(
        'factories' => array(
            'account-index' => function ($controllerManager) {
                $serviceManager = $controllerManager->getServiceLocator();
                $accountService = $serviceManager->get('account-service');

                return new Controller\IndexController($accountService);
            }
        )
    );
}

public function getServiceConfig()
{
    return array(
        'factories' => array(
            'account-service' => function ($serviceManages) {
                return new Service\Account;
            }
        )
    );
}

right now i have:

and where shall i put this factory class, maybe in a Factory folder?

any ideas?

Answer

cptnk picture cptnk · Sep 18, 2013

I usually put my factories into ../module/yourmodule/src/yourmodule/Factory.

in your ../module/yourmodule/config/module.config.php you then have to configure your service_manager like so:

'service_manager' => array(
   'factories' => array(
      'yourfactory' => 'yourmodule\Factory\yourfactory',
   ),
),

in yourfactory.php You then have to implent the FactoryInterface and set the service locator. Once you done this you should be able to call the service the usual way for controllers, forms etc.

namespace Application\Factory;

use Zend\ServiceManager\FactoryInterface;
use Zend\ServiceManager\ServiceLocatorInterface;

class yourfactory implements FactoryInterface
{

private $config;

private $serviceLocator;

public function createService(ServiceLocatorInterface $serviceLocator)
{
    return $servicelocator->get('Your\Service');
}

After that you can just define functions in your yourfactory.php. In your Controller you call functions like so $serviceManager->get('yourfactory')->yourfunction(yourarguments);