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page last edited on 13 January 2015

Controllers

Version: 5.4 and early

Introduction

Controller is type of classes that is responsible for request handling in X-Cart. This article aims to give a basic understanding of how controllers work in X-Cart and how you can use them.

Understanding how X-Cart handles requests

When X-Cart receives a request to one of its end-points – cart.php or admin.php – it starts looking for an appropriate Controller class based on target parameter in the request. If target is not specified, it is assumed as main.

When X-Cart identifies controller class name based on the target parameter passed, it upperscases the first letter of each word separated by underscores and then remove underscores.

  • If target=main, then controller class name will be Main;
  • If target=featured_products, then controller name will become FeaturedProducts and so on.

If you make a request to admin.php, script X-Cart identifies a controller class name and after that looks for it in the 'classes/XLite/Controller/Admin/' folder and then in 'classes/XLite/Module/<DEV-ID>/<MODULE-ID>/Controller/Admin/' folder of each module.

If you make a request to cart.php, X-Cart identifies a controller class name and then looks for it in the 'classes/XLite/Controller/Customer/' folder and then in 'classes/XLite/Module/<DEV-ID>/<MODULE-ID>/Controller/Customer/' folders of each module as well.

When, controller class is found, X-Cart calls its handleRequest() method – see an implementation of the \XLite::processRequest() > \XLite::runController() methods (more about classnames in X-Cart).

Let us have a look at what exactly handleRequest() method does. See its general implementation in the \XLite\Controller\AController class.

handleRequest()

Its default implementation is as follows:

public function handleRequest()
{
if (!$this->checkAccess()) {
$this->markAsAccessDenied();

} elseif (!$this->isVisible()) {
$this->display404();

} elseif ($this->needSecure()) {
$this->redirectToSecure();

} elseif (!$this->checkLanguage()) {
$this->redirectToCurrentLanguage();

} else {
$this->run();
}

if ($this->isRedirectNeeded()) {
$this->doRedirect();

// ...
}
  1. It checks whether you have rights to access this resource (if (!$this->checkAccess())), whether this page is visible (elseif (!$this->isVisible())), whether we need a redirect to properly display store in customer's language (elseif (!$this->checkLanguage()) and whether we need a redirect to HTTPS (elseif ($this->needSecure())).

  2. If everything is good, it calls run() method, which is implemented as follows: 

    protected function run()
    {
    if ($this->getAction() && $this->isValid()) {
    $this->callAction();

    } else {
    $this->doNoAction();

    }

    if (!$this->isValid()) {
    $this->restoreFormId();
    }
    }
  3. This method looks for action parameter in the request and if it is there, it tries to find a method for handling this action. If action=create, then it will search for doActionCreate() method, i.e. it camel-cases the action parameter and prepend it with doAction prefix.

  4. If no action parameter is passed, X-Cart will call doNoAction() method.

  5. That is it with run() method and we get back to handleReques() method implementation. X-Cart checks the isRedirectNeeded() method and performs redirect if needed.

In your modules, you might want to extend handleRequest() method itself or just implement doAction<YourAction>() methods according to action parameters you are going to pass.

Also, talking about modules, if you want to create a controller for customer area, your controller class should extend the \XLite\Controller\Customer\ACustomer class. If you create a controller class for admin area, then it should extend the \XLite\Controller\Admin\AAdmin class. More details are in the module example below.

Module example

Let us try to create some simple module that will show how doAction() method works in real life.

We will create a mod that will create cart.php?target=controller_demo page. It will also create two records in xc_config table: one will count number of opening this page with no action, another record will track number of page opening with action=test parameter. We will be able to see these option values via direct requests to MySQL: 

SELECT * FROM xc_config WHERE category = "XCExample\\ControllerDemo";

We start with creating an empty module with developer ID XCExample and module ID ControllerDemo. Then, we create the classes/XLite/Module/XCExample/ControllerDemo/install.yaml file with the following content: 

XLite\Model\Config:
- name: no_action
category: XCExample\ControllerDemo
value: 0
- name: test_action
category: XCExample\ControllerDemo
value: 0

This install.yaml file will create no_action and test_action settings in the database, which will track opening of our page with no action and with action=test.

Note: do not forget to push the content of this YAML file to the database.

Now we need to create the page in customer area that will be available by cart.php?target=controller_demo URL. We create the classes/XLite/Module/XCExample/ControllerDemo/Controller/Customer/ControllerDemo.php file with the following content: 

<?php

namespace XLite\Module\XCExample\ControllerDemo\Controller\Customer;

class ControllerDemo extends \XLite\Controller\Customer\ACustomer
{
protected function doNoAction()
{
$this->increaseCounter('no_action');
}

protected function doActionTest()
{
$this->increaseCounter('test_action');
}  

protected function increaseCounter($name)
{
if (in_array($name, array('no_action', 'test_action'))) {
\XLite\Core\Database::getRepo('\XLite\Model\Config')->createOption(
array(
'category' => 'XCExample\ControllerDemo',
'name' => $name,
'value' => \XLite\Core\Config::getInstance()->XCExample->ControllerDemo->{$name} + 1,
)
);
}
}
}

Here are key points of this class implementation:

  1. Class name represents the converted target parameter as controller_demo. We just uppercased first letter of each word separated by underscore – controller_demo became Controller_Demo – and removed underscores, so it became ControllerDemo.

  2. Our class extends abstract controller of customer area (\XLite\Controller\Customer\ACustomer):

    class ControllerDemo extends \XLite\Controller\Customer\ACustomer

    If we created a controller for admin area, we would extend \XLite\Controller\Admin\AAdmin class.

  3. We implemented two methods – doNoAction() and doActionTest()

    protected function doNoAction() 
    {
    $this->increaseCounter('no_action');
    }

    protected function doActionTest()
    {
    $this->increaseCounter('test_action');
    }

    As mentioned earlier, doNoAction() is run when no action parameter passed in the request and doActionTest() method is run when action=test is passed in the request.

  4. We also implemented increaseCounter() method that actually increment counters in settings based on the option name give: 

    protected function increaseCounter($name)
    {
    if (in_array($name, array('no_action', 'test_action'))) {
    \XLite\Core\Database::getRepo('\XLite\Model\Config')->createOption(
    array(
    'category' => 'XCExample\ControllerDemo',
    'name' => $name,
    'value' => \XLite\Core\Config::getInstance()->XCExample->ControllerDemo->{$name} + 1,
    )
    );
    }
    }

The mod is done now and we need to re-deploy the store and then check the results. You just need to go to your store and open cart.php?target=controller_demo and cart.php?target=controller_demo&action=test URLs. After that, make a request to your database and check the counters: 

SELECT * FROM xc_config WHERE category = "XCExample\\ControllerDemo";

Module pack

You can download this module example from here: XCExample-ControllerDemo-v5_3_0.tar