Book Image

Mastering Symfony

Book Image

Mastering Symfony

Overview of this book

In this book, you will learn some lesser known aspects of development with Symfony, and you will see how to use Symfony as a framework to create reliable and effective applications. You might have developed some impressive PHP libraries in other projects, but what is the point when your library is tied to one particular project? With Symfony, you can turn your code into a service and reuse it in other projects. This book starts with Symfony concepts such as bundles, routing, twig, doctrine, and more, taking you through the request/response life cycle. You will then proceed to set up development, test, and deployment environments in AWS. Then you will create reliable projects using Behat and Mink, and design business logic, cover authentication, and authorization steps in a security checking process. You will be walked through concepts such as DependencyInjection, service containers, and services, and go through steps to create customized commands for Symfony's console. Finally, the book covers performance optimization and the use of Varnish and Memcached in our project, and you are treated with the creation of database agnostic bundles and best practices.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Mastering Symfony
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Index

Chapter 8. Project Review

Let's improve the project a little. In this chapter, we are going to review what we have created so far and modify or add some more features to it. Our focus will be on the dashboard page where you can get a glimpse of what's going on in your current workspace. There will be reports for tasks and people whom tasks are assigned to. A notification system is a new feature that we will build in this chapter. It will alert us about the changes and overall progress of the project.

We will implement a commenting system as well. This is where team members add comments and reply to them for each task. This means that we need another entity with some one-to-many relationships to tasks and members.

In the real world, we should be able to upload files for each task. So, attachments will be another feature in this chapter and we will see how to use SonataMediaBundle to achieve this goal.