Convert XSD into PHP classes.
With goetas-webservices/xsd2php
you can convert any XSD/WSDL definition into PHP classes.
XSD2PHP can also generate JMS Serializer compatible metadata that can be used to serialize/unserialize the object instances.
There is one recommended way to install xsd2php via Composer:
- adding the dependency to your
composer.json
file:
"require": {
..
"goetas-webservices/xsd2php-runtime":"^0.2.2",
..
},
"require-dev": {
..
"goetas-webservices/xsd2php":"^0.3",
..
},
With this example we will convert OTA XSD definitions into PHP classes.
Suppose that you have all XSD files in /home/my/ota
, first of all we need a configuration file
(as example config.yml
) that will keep all the namespace and directory mappings information.
# config.yml
# Linux Users: PHP Namespaces use back slash \ rather than a forward slash /
# So for destinations_php, the namespace would be TestNs\MyApp
xsd2php:
namespaces:
'http://www.example.org/test/': 'TestNs\MyApp'
destinations_php:
'TestNs\MyApp': soap/src
# 'TestNs\MyApp': soap\src # on Windows
destinations_jms:
'TestNs\MyApp': soap/metadata
# 'TestNs\MyApp': soap\metadata # on Windows
aliases: # optional
'http://www.example.org/test/':
MyCustomXSDType: 'MyCustomMappedPHPType'
naming_strategy: short # optional and default
path_generator: psr4 # optional and default
Here is an explanation on the meaning of each parameter:
-
xsd2php.namespaces
(required) defines the mapping between XML namespaces and PHP namespaces. (in the example we have thehttp://www.example.org/test/
XML namespace mapped toTestNs\MyApp
) -
xsd2php.destinations_php
(required) specifies the directory where to save the PHP classes that belongs toTestNs\MyApp
PHP namespace. (in this exampleTestNs\MyApp
classes will be saved intosoap/src
directory. -
xsd2php.destinations_jms
(required) specifies the directory where to save JMS Serializer metadata files that belongs toTestNs\MyApp
PHP namespace. (in this exampleTestNs\MyApp
metadata will be saved intosoap/metadata
directory. -
xsd2php.aliases
(optional) specifies some mappings that are handled by custom JMS serializer handlers. Allows to specify to do not generate metadata for some XML types, and assign them directly a PHP class. For that PHP class is necessary to create a custom JMS serialize/deserialize handler. -
xsd2php.naming_strategy
(optional) specifies the naming strategy to use when converting XML names PHP classes. -
xsd2php.path_generator
(optional) specifies the strategy to use for path generation and file saving
vendor/bin/xsd2php convert config.yml /home/my/ota/OTA_Air*.xsd
This command will generate PHP classes and JMS metadata files for all the XSD files matching /home/my/ota/OTA_Air*.xsd
and using the configuration available in config.yml
XSD2PHP can also generate for you JMS Serializer metadata that you can use to serialize/unserialize the generated PHP class instances.
The parameter aliases
in the configuration file, will instruct XSD2PHP to not generate any metadata information or
PHP class for the {http://www.example.org/test/}MyCustomXSDType
type.
All reference to this type are replaced with the MyCustomMappedPHPType
name.
You have to provide a custom serializer for this type/alis.
Here is an example on how to configure JMS serializer to handle custom types
use JMS\Serializer\SerializerBuilder;
use JMS\Serializer\Handler\HandlerRegistryInterface;
use GoetasWebservices\Xsd\XsdToPhpRuntime\Jms\Handler\BaseTypesHandler;
use GoetasWebservices\Xsd\XsdToPhpRuntime\Jms\Handler\XmlSchemaDateHandler;
$serializerBuilder = SerializerBuilder::create();
$serializerBuilder->addMetadataDir('metadata dir', 'TestNs');
$serializerBuilder->configureHandlers(function (HandlerRegistryInterface $handler) use ($serializerBuilder) {
$serializerBuilder->addDefaultHandlers();
$handler->registerSubscribingHandler(new BaseTypesHandler()); // XMLSchema List handling
$handler->registerSubscribingHandler(new XmlSchemaDateHandler()); // XMLSchema date handling
// $handler->registerSubscribingHandler(new YourhandlerHere());
});
$serializer = $serializerBuilder->build();
// deserialize the XML into Demo\MyObject object
$object = $serializer->deserialize('<some xml/>', 'TestNs\MyObject', 'xml');
// some code ....
// serialize the Demo\MyObject back into XML
$newXml = $serializer->serialize($object, 'xml');
If your XSD contains xsd:anyType
or xsd:anySimpleType
types you have to specify a handler for this.
When you generate the JMS metadata you have to specify a custom handler:
# config.yml
xsd2php:
...
aliases:
'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema':
anyType: 'MyCustomAnyTypeHandler'
anySimpleType: 'MyCustomAnySimpleTypeHandler'
Now you have to create a custom serialization handler:
use JMS\Serializer\XmlSerializationVisitor;
use JMS\Serializer\XmlDeserializationVisitor;
use JMS\Serializer\Handler\SubscribingHandlerInterface;
use JMS\Serializer\GraphNavigator;
use JMS\Serializer\VisitorInterface;
use JMS\Serializer\Context;
class MyHandler implements SubscribingHandlerInterface
{
public static function getSubscribingMethods()
{
return array(
array(
'direction' => GraphNavigator::DIRECTION_DESERIALIZATION,
'format' => 'xml',
'type' => 'MyCustomAnyTypeHandler',
'method' => 'deserializeAnyType'
),
array(
'direction' => GraphNavigator::DIRECTION_SERIALIZATION,
'format' => 'xml',
'type' => 'MyCustomAnyTypeHandler',
'method' => 'serializeAnyType'
)
);
}
public function serializeAnyType(XmlSerializationVisitor $visitor, $data, array $type, Context $context)
{
// serialize your object here
}
public function deserializeAnyType(XmlDeserializationVisitor $visitor, $data, array $type)
{
// deserialize your object here
}
}
There are two types of naming strategies: short
and long
. The default is short
, this naming strategy can however generate naming conflicts.
The long
naming strategy will suffix elements with Element
and types with Type
.
MyNamesapce\User
will becomeMyNamesapce\UserElement
MyNamesapce\UserType
will becomeMyNamesapce\UserTypeType
An XSD for instance with a type named User
, a type named UserType
, a root element named User
and UserElement
, will only work when using the long
naming strategy.
- If you don't have naming conflicts and you want to have short and descriptive class names, use the
short
option. - If you have naming conflicts use the
long
option. - If you want to be safe, use the
long
option.
The code in this project is provided under the MIT license. For professional support contact goetas@gmail.com or visit https://www.goetas.com