PHP Classes

ezphpconfig: Converts xml config file into a set of php classes

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ezphpconfig 0.4GNU General Publi...5XML, PHP 5, Code Generation, Configur...
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Generates a set of php configuration classes from a supplied xml file. You can then access your configuration values very quickly without having to parse the xml file on every request.

This class can be used to generate a PHP class from an XML file. The element (tag) names become property names and the text contained in the elements becomes the property's value. It also supports nested elements.

If the generated php file is older than the xml file, it is re-generated using the data in the newer xml file.

For example, this xml file:
<config>
<database>
<connString>This is my connection string</connString>
</database>
</config>

Would be accessed in php as follows (after the ConfigurationLoader.update method had been called:
$config = new config();
echo $config->database->connString;

This class also supports array types using the <item> element inside an element whose type attribute is set to "array". Please read the documentation and see example xml files for more details.

Once you have your configuration classes you can get or set the values as required.

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PHP Programming Innovation award nominee
April 2008
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XML is often used by humans to store information that can easily be parsed by computer programs, like for instance application configuration options.

However, XML parsing is often a process that consumes too much CPU and memory when parsing many documents or the same document many times.

This class provides a solution to override the overhead of repeatedly parsing XML configuration files. It creates a PHP class file with variables set to the configuration values retrieved from the XML file.

This way the XML file does not have to be parsed in all requests on which its information is needed. The speedup can be further optimized by using a PHP caching engine extension, as the generated PHP class does not need to be parsed and compiled again.

Manuel Lemos
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Name: David Wainwright <contact>
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Details

Introduction ------------ ConfigurationLoader generates a php class from a specified xml file. Any property values are hard-coded into this class. This means that you can use xml configuration files without having to re-parse them each time. For instance, if you had an xml file that contained the following: <Configuration> <username>david</username> <password>blah</password> <usernames type="array"> <item value="david" /> <item value="cath" /> <item value="shaun" /> </usernames> </Configuration> ConfigurationLoader would convert this into the following php class: class Configuration { public $username; public $password; public $usernames function __construct() { $this->username = "david"; $this->password = "blah; $this->usernames = array(); $this->usernames[0] = "david"; $this->usernames[1] = "cath"; $this->usernames[2] = "shaun"; } } This table should help you to decide how to specify the values in your xml files If you have been using a previous version of ConfigurationLoader, and are getting errors caused by null configuration values when you use the latest version, consult this table and update your xml file accordingly. As you can see, if the element has a value attribute then that value gets used over any value specified between the start and end tags. the tag name 'elem' is used for documentation only, any tag name can be used in your xml files. Xml content Php value assigned to property <elem></elem> null <elem /> null <elem type="string" /> (string) null <elem type="string></elem> (string) null <elem value="" /> "" <elem type="string" value="" /> (string) "" <elem>12</elem> 12 <elem type="int">12</elem> (int) 12 <elem type="string">12</elem> (string) "12" <elem value="12" /> 12 <elem value="12" type="string" /> (string) "12" <elem value="12" type="string">50</elem> (string) "12" <elem value="12" type="int">50</elem> (int) 12 <elem value="hello" type="string"></elem> (string) "hello" <elem value="hello"></elem> (string) "hello" Take a look at the example config.xml to find out the different ways of specifying your config values. Setup ----- 1. If you are not putting ConfigurationLoader into your cgi directory, ensure that the folder where ConfigurationLoader.class.php is located is in your search path, eg: set_include_path(get_include_path() . PATH_SEPARATOR . "/home/dave/www/project/include"); 2. Ensure that the path where your xml config file is has read permissions for whichever user runs your apache daemon. Open your apache config file and search for 'user', this value tells you which user is running apache. In unix-based systems you can then log in as root and enter: chown -R <user> <ConfigDirectory> chmod -R 755 <ConfigDirectory> Ensure that the path where your php config class will reside has write permissions for whichever user runs your apache daemon. (It's easiest to put them both in the same folder). Log in as root and enter: chown -R <user> <ConfigDirectory> chmod -R 775 <ConfigDirectory> DEFAULT VALUES The easiest way to use ConfigurationLoader is to use the default file paths. If you call: ConfigurationLoader::update(null, null); It will look for a file called 'config.xml' in the same directory that your php page resides, it will then parse this file into config.xml.php for you to use. Require_once(ConfigurationLoader.class.php); ConfigurationLoader::update(</path/to/xml/config/file.xml>, </path/to/generated/php/config/file>); $config = new <nameOfRootElementInXmlFile>(); For example, assuming that your root xml element is called 'config': ConfigurationLoader::update("/home/me/www/app1/config/config.xml", "/home/me/www/app1/config/config.php"); $config = new config(); This will read config.xml and use it to generate config.php in /home/me/www/app1/config.php You can now create a new instance of the class called config (the name of the class corresponds to the name of the root element in the xml config file), which will contain all your config values. The method will only reparse the xml file if it is newer than the php class file, obviously if the php class doesn't yet exist then the xml file will be parsed anyway. If you want to be more specific about what type you want a particular value to be, specify the type attribute for the value, eg: <connectionString type="string">blahblahblah</connectionString> If your xml file was: <myApp> <database> <connectionString>This is my connection string</connectionString> <timeoutPeriod type="int">10</timeoutPeriod> </database> </myApp> After calling update you could create a new instance of your config class and access it as follows: echo $config->database->connectionString . "<br />"; echo $config->database->timeoutPeriod . "<br />"; which would output: This is my connection string 10 To the page IMPORTANT NOTICES ----------------- I'm no security expert but instinct tells me that allowing the apache user write access to your cgi-bin directory is not a good idea at all. There is also the added risk that ConfigurationLoader may overwrite one of your php files. For this reason it is better to put the generated .php file into it's own directory which is out of the web root directory. I've only tested this class in php 5 on ubuntu linux. Feel free to report bugs but go easy on me! Any hyphens or non-word characters in your xml element names will be converted into underscores when generating the classnames. For example an element named timeout-value will be converted to timeout_value. The simplest approach is to avoid naming your xml elements in this way. Please email me at david.wainwright1@sky.com if you have any problems or suggestions for improvements to this class.

  Files folder image Files (6)  
File Role Description
Accessible without login Plain text file config.xml Doc. example config file
Plain text file ConfigurationLoader.class.php Class class file
Accessible without login Plain text file COPYING Lic. license
Accessible without login Plain text file example.php Example Example script
Accessible without login Plain text file example.xml Data example xml file
Accessible without login Plain text file README Doc. Setup Instructions

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