Laravel uses PHP's reflection API for several components. Of these, the inverson-of-control (IoC) dependency injection container and controller method injection are most visible to developers.
To more clearly illustrate the use of reflection, here's a dramatically simplified version of the routine Laravel's IoC container class uses to build up an object's dependencies through constructor injection:
function build($className)
{
$reflector = new ReflectionClass($className);
$constructor = $reflector->getConstructor();
foreach ($constructor->getParameters() as $dependency) {
$instances[] = build($dependency->getClass()->name);
}
return $reflector->newInstanceArgs($instances);
}
As we can see, the concept isn't too difficult to understand. The container uses PHP's ReflectionClass
to find the names of the classes in an object's constructor, and then loops through each of these names recursively to create instances of each object in the dependency tree. With these instances, build()
finally instantiates the original class and passes the dependencies as arguments to the constructor.
Controller method injection uses the same container functionality shown above to resolve instances of dependencies declared as method parameters, but there's a bit of extra logic needed to separate class dependencies from route parameters:
function dispatch(Route $route, Controller $controller, $methodName)
{
$routeParameters = $route->parametersWithoutNulls();
$method = new ReflectionMethod($controller, $methodName);
foreach ($method->getParameters() as $index => $parameter) {
$class = $parameter->getClass();
if ($class !== null) {
$instance = build($class->name);
array_splice($routeParameters, $index, 0, [ $instance ]);
}
}
$controller->callAction($methodName, $routeParameters);
}
Again, this adaptation is slimmed-down to highlight the role reflection plays and relies on our build()
function shown previously. The ControllerDispatcher
class uses the getParameters()
method of PHP's ReflectionMethod
to determine which parameters a controller method expects, and then loops through these to find parameters that represent dependencies that it can resolve from the container. Then, it splices each dependency it finds back into the array of route parameters that it passes back to the controller method defined for the route. See RouteDependencyResolverTrait
for details.
If we ignore the application bootstrapping process, this dependency injection cascade typically starts for a request when Laravel maps a request to a route, and then determines which controller to pass the request to. Laravel first resolves an instance of the controller from the container, which builds out any constructor-injected dependencies. Then, Laravel finds the appropriate controller method and resolves any more dependencies for the arguments as needed.
As shown here, Laravel uses relatively simple techniques to implement these tools using reflection. However, unlike the examples shown in this answer, the framework adds a lot of additional code to make them as robust and flexible as they are today.