To retrieve data exposed by the API, API Platform uses classes called state providers. A state provider using Doctrine ORM to retrieve data from a database, a state provider using Doctrine MongoDB ODM to retrieve data from a document database, and a state provider using Elasticsearch-PHP to retrieve data from an Elasticsearch cluster are included with the library. The first one is enabled by default. These state providers natively support paged collections and filters. They can be used as-is and are perfectly suited to common uses.
However, you sometimes want to retrieve data from other sources such as another persistence layer or a webservice. Custom state providers can be used to do so. A project can include as many state providers as needed. The first able to retrieve data for a given resource will be used.
To do so you need to implement the ApiPlatform\State\ProviderInterface
.
In the following examples we will create custom state providers for an entity class called App\Entity\BlogPost
.
Note, that if your entity is not Doctrine-related, you need to flag the identifier property by using
#[ApiProperty(identifier: true)
for things to work properly (see also Entity Identifier Case).
If the Symfony MakerBundle is installed in your project, you can use the following command to generate a custom state provider easily:
bin/console make:state-provider
Let’s start with a State Provider for the URI: /blog_posts/{id}
.
First, your BlogPostProvider
has to implement the
ProviderInterface
:
<?php
// api/src/State/BlogPostProvider.php
namespace App\State;
use App\Entity\BlogPost;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\Operation;
use ApiPlatform\State\ProviderInterface;
/**
* @implements ProviderInterface<BlogPost|null>
*/
final class BlogPostProvider implements ProviderInterface
{
private const DATA = [
'ab' => new BlogPost('ab'),
'cd' => new BlogPost('cd'),
];
public function provide(Operation $operation, array $uriVariables = [], array $context = []): BlogPost|null
{
return self::DATA[$uriVariables['id']] ?? null;
}
}
For the example, we store the list of our blog posts in an associative array (the BlogPostProvider::DATA
constant).
As this operation expects a BlogPost
, the provide
methods return the instance of the BlogPost
corresponding to the ID passed in the URL. If the ID doesn’t exist in the associative array, provide()
returns null
. API Platform will automatically generate a 404 response if the provider returns null
.
The $uriVariables
parameter contains an array with the values of the URI variables.
To use this provider we need to configure the provider on the operation:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/BlogPost.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\Get;
use App\State\BlogPostProvider;
#[Get(provider: BlogPostProvider::class)]
class BlogPost {}
Now let’s say that we also want to handle the /blog_posts
URI which returns a collection. We can change the Provider into
supporting a wider range of operations. Then we can provide a collection of blog posts when the operation is a CollectionOperationInterface
:
<?php
// api/src/State/BlogPostProvider.php
namespace App\State;
use App\Entity\BlogPost;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\Operation;
use ApiPlatform\State\ProviderInterface;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\CollectionOperationInterface;
/**
* @implements ProviderInterface<BlogPost[]|BlogPost|null>
*/
final class BlogPostProvider implements ProviderInterface
{
private const DATA = [
'ab' => new BlogPost('ab'),
'cd' => new BlogPost('cd'),
];
public function provide(Operation $operation, array $uriVariables = [], array $context = []): iterable|BlogPost|null
{
if ($operation instanceof CollectionOperationInterface) {
return self::DATA;
}
return self::DATA[$uriVariables['id']] ?? null;
}
}
We then need to configure this same provider on the BlogPost GetCollection
operation, or for every operations via the ApiResource
attribute:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/BlogPost.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\ApiResource;
use App\State\BlogPostProvider;
#[ApiResource(provider: BlogPostProvider::class)]
class BlogPost {}
If you want to execute custom business logic before or after retrieving data, this can be achieved by decorating the built-in state providers or using composition.
The next example uses a DTO to change the presentation for data originally retrieved by the default state provider.
<?php
// api/src/State/BlogPostProvider.php
namespace App\State;
use App\Dto\AnotherRepresentation;
use App\Model\Book;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\Operation;
use ApiPlatform\State\ProviderInterface;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Attribute\Autowire;
/**
* @implements ProviderInterface<AnotherRepresentation>
*/
final class BookRepresentationProvider implements ProviderInterface
{
public function __construct(
#[Autowire(service: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.state.item_provider')]
private ProviderInterface $itemProvider,
)
{
}
public function provide(Operation $operation, array $uriVariables = [], array $context = []): AnotherRepresentation
{
$book = $this->itemProvider->provide($operation, $uriVariables, $context);
return new AnotherRepresentation(
// Add DTO constructor params here.
// $book->getTitle(),
);
}
}
And configure that you want to use this provider on the Book resource:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Book.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\Get;
use App\Dto\AnotherRepresentation;
use App\State\BookRepresentationProvider;
#[Get(output: AnotherRepresentation::class, provider: BookRepresentationProvider::class)]
class Book {}
The services in the previous examples are automatically registered because autowiring and autoconfiguration are enabled by default in API Platform. To declare the service explicitly, you can use the following snippet:
# api/config/services.yaml
services:
# ...
App\State\BlogPostProvider: ~
tags: [ 'api_platform.state_provider' ]
# api/config/services.yaml
services:
# ...
App\State\BookRepresentationProvider:
arguments:
$itemProvider: '@api_platform.doctrine.orm.state.item_provider'
tags: [ 'api_platform.state_provider' ]
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