lithium\core\Environment

class

The Environment class allows you to manage multiple configurations for your application, depending on the context within which it is running, i.e. development, test or production.

While those three environments are the most common, you can create any arbitrary environment with any set of configuration, for example:


You can then retrieve the configurations using the key name. The correct configuration is
returned, automatically accounting for the current environment:

``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testSetAndGetCurrentEnvironment(15-15)```

`Environment` also works with subclasses of `Adaptable`, allowing you to maintain separate
configurations for database servers, cache adapters, and other environment-specific classes, for
example:
```
Connections::add('default', [
	'production' => [
		'type'     => 'database',
		'adapter'  => 'MySql',
		'host'     => 'db1.application.local',
		'login'    => 'secure',
		'password' => 'secret',
		'database' => 'app-production'
	],
	'development' => [
		'type'     => 'database',
		'adapter'  => 'MySql',
		'host'     => 'localhost',
		'login'    => 'root',
		'password' => '',
		'database' => 'app'
	]
]);
```

This allows the database connection named `'default'` to be connected to a local database in
development, and a production database in production. You can define environment-specific
configurations for caching, logging, even session storage, i.e.:
```
Cache::config([
	'userData' => [
		'development' => ['adapter' => 'File'],
		'production' => ['adapter' => 'Memcache']
	]
]);
```

When the cache configuration is accessed in the application's code, the correct configuration is
automatically used:
```
$user = User::find($request->id);
Cache::write('userData', "User.{$request->id}", $user->data(), '+5 days');
```

In this configuration, the above example will automatically send cache writes to the file
system during local development, and to a memcache server in production.

When writing classes that connect to other external resources, you can automatically take
advantage of environment-specific configurations by extending `Adaptable` and implementing
your resource-handling functionality in adapter classes.

In addition to managing your environment-specific configurations, `Environment` will also help
you by automatically detecting which environment your application is running in. For additional
information, see the documentation for `Environment::is()`.

Source

class Environment {

	protected static $_configurations = [
		'production' => [],
		'development' => [],
		'test' => []
	];

	/**
	 * Holds the name of the current environment under which the application is running. Set by
	 * passing a `Request` object or `$_SERVER` or `$_ENV` array into `Environment::set()` (which
	 * in turn passes this on to the _detector_ used to determine the correct environment). Can be
	 * tested or retrieved using `Environment::is()` or `Environment::get()`.
	 *
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::set()
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::is()
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::get()
	 * @var string
	 */
	protected static $_current = '';

	/**
	 * If `Environment::is()` is used to assign a custom closure for environment detection, a copy
	 * is kept in `$_detector`. Otherwise, `$_detector` is `null`, and the hard-coded detector is
	 * used.
	 *
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::_detector()
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::is()
	 * @var callable
	 */
	protected static $_detector = null;

	/**
	 * Resets the `Environment` class to its default state, including unsetting the current
	 * environment, removing any environment-specific configurations, and removing the custom
	 * environment detector, if any has been specified.
	 *
	 * @param $env If set, delete the defined environment only.
	 */
	public static function reset($env = null) {
		if ($env) {
			unset(static::$_configurations[$env]);
			return;
		}
		static::$_current = '';
		static::$_detector = null;
		static::$_configurations = [
			'production' => [],
			'development' => [],
			'test' => []
		];
	}

	/**
	 * A simple boolean detector that can be used to test which environment the application is
	 * running under. For example `Environment::is('development')` will return `true` if
	 * `'development'` is, in fact, the current environment.
	 *
	 * This method also handles how the environment is detected at the beginning of the request.
	 *
	 * #### Custom Detection
	 *
	 * While the default detection rules are very simple (if the `'SERVER_ADDR'` variable is set to
	 * `127.0.0.1`, the environment is assumed to be `'development'`, or if the string `'test'` is
	 * found anywhere in the host name, it is assumed to be `'test'`, and in all other cases it
	 * is assumed to be `'production'`), you can define your own detection rule set easily using a
	 * closure that accepts an instance of the `Request` object, and returns the name of the correct
	 * environment, as in the following example:
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testCustomDetector(1-9) ```
	 *
	 * In the above example, the user-specified closure takes in a `Request` object, and using the
	 * server data which it encapsulates, returns the correct environment name as a string.
	 *
	 * #### Host Mapping
	 *
	 * The most common use case is to set the environment depending on host name. For convenience,
	 * the `is()` method also accepts an array that matches host names to environment names, where
	 * each key is an environment, and each value is either an array of valid host names, or a
	 * regular expression used to match a valid host name.
	 *
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testDetectionWithArrayMap(1-5) ```
	 *
	 * In this example, a regular expression is being used to match local domains
	 * (i.e. `localhost`), as well as the built-in `.console` domain, for console requests. Note
	 * that in the console, the environment can always be overridden by specifying the `--env`
	 * option.
	 *
	 * Then, one or more host names are matched up to `'test'` and `'staging'`, respectively. Note
	 * that no rule is present for production: this is because `'production'` is the default value
	 * if no other environment matches.
	 *
	 * @param mixed $detect Either the name of an environment to check against the current, i.e.
	 *              `'development'` or `'production'`, or a closure which `Environment` will use
	 *              to determine the current environment name, or an array mapping environment names
	 *              to host names.
	 * @return boolean If `$detect` is a string, returns `true` if the current environment matches
	 *         the value of `$detect`, or `false` if no match. If used to set a custom detector,
	 *         returns `null`.
	 */
	public static function is($detect) {
		if (is_callable($detect)) {
			static::$_detector = $detect;
		}
		if (!is_array($detect)) {
			return (static::$_current == $detect);
		}
		static::$_detector = function($request) use ($detect) {
			if ($request->env || $request->command == 'test') {
				return $request->env ?: 'test';
			}
			$host = method_exists($request, 'get') ? $request->get('http:host') : '.console';

			foreach ($detect as $environment => $hosts) {
				if (is_string($hosts) && preg_match($hosts, $host)) {
					return $environment;
				}
				if (is_array($hosts) && in_array($host, $hosts)) {
					return $environment;
				}
			}
			return "production";
		};
	}

	/**
	 * Gets the current environment name, a setting associated with the current environment, or the
	 * entire configuration array for the current environment.
	 *
	 * @param string $name The name of the environment setting to retrieve, or the name of an
	 *               environment, if that environment's entire configuration is to be retrieved. If
	 *               retrieving the current environment name, `$name` should not be passed.
	 * @return mixed If `$name` is unspecified, returns the name of the current environment name as
	 *         a string (i.e. `'production'`). If an environment name is specified, returns that
	 *         environment's entire configuration as an array.
	 */
	public static function get($name = null) {
		$cur = static::$_current;

		if (!$name) {
			return $cur;
		}
		if ($name === true) {
			return isset(static::$_configurations[$cur]) ? static::$_configurations[$cur] : null;
		}
		if (isset(static::$_configurations[$name])) {
			return static::_processDotPath($name, static::$_configurations);
		}
		if (!isset(static::$_configurations[$cur])) {
			return static::_processDotPath($name, static::$_configurations);
		}

		return static::_processDotPath($name, static::$_configurations[$cur]);
	}

	protected static function _processDotPath($path, &$arrayPointer) {
		if (isset($arrayPointer[$path])) {
			return $arrayPointer[$path];
		}
		if (strpos($path, '.') === false) {
			return null;
		}
		$pathKeys = explode('.', $path);
		foreach ($pathKeys as $pathKey) {
			if (!is_array($arrayPointer) || !isset($arrayPointer[$pathKey])) {
				return false;
			}
			$arrayPointer = &$arrayPointer[$pathKey];
		}
		return $arrayPointer;
	}

	/**
	 * Creates, modifies or switches to an existing environment configuration. To create a new
	 * configuration, or to update an existing configuration, pass an environment name and an array
	 * that defines its configuration:
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testModifyEnvironmentConfig(1-1) ```
	 *
	 * You can then add to an existing configuration by calling the `set()` method again with the
	 * same environment name:
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testModifyEnvironmentConfig(6-6) ```
	 *
	 * The settings for the environment will then be the aggregate of all `set()` calls:
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testModifyEnvironmentConfig(7-7) ```
	 *
	 * By passing an array to `$env`, you can assign the same configuration to multiple
	 * environments:
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testSetMultipleEnvironments(5-7) ```
	 *
	 * The `set()` method can also be called to manually set which environment to operate in:
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testSetAndGetCurrentEnvironment(5-5) ```
	 *
	 * Finally, `set()` can accept a `Request` object, to automatically detect the correct
	 * environment.
	 *
	 * ``` embed:lithium\tests\cases\core\EnvironmentTest::testEnvironmentDetection(9-10) ```
	 *
	 * For more information on defining custom rules to automatically detect your application's
	 * environment, see the documentation for `Environment::is()`.
	 *
	 * @see lithium\action\Request
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::is()
	 * @param mixed $env The name(s) of the environment(s) you wish to create, update or switch to
	 *              (string/array), or a `Request` object or `$_SERVER` / `$_ENV` array used to
	 *              detect (and switch to) the application's current environment.
	 * @param array $config If creating or updating a configuration, accepts an array of settings.
	 *              If the environment name specified in `$env` already exists, the values in
	 *              `$config` will be recursively merged with any pre-existing settings.
	 * @return array If creating or updating a configuration, returns an array of the environment's
	 *               settings. If updating an existing configuration, this will be the newly-applied
	 *               configuration merged with the pre-existing values. If setting the environment
	 *               itself (i.e. `$config` is unspecified), returns `null`.
	 */
	public static function set($env, $config = null) {
		if ($config === null) {
			if (is_object($env) || is_array($env)) {
				static::$_current = static::_detector()->__invoke($env);
			} elseif (isset(static::$_configurations[$env])) {
				static::$_current = $env;
			}
			return;
		}
		if (is_array($env)) {
			foreach ($env as $name) {
				static::set($name, $config);
			}
			return;
		}
		$env = ($env === true) ? static::$_current : $env;

		if (isset(static::$_configurations[$env])) {
			$config = Set::merge(static::$_configurations[$env], $config);
		}
		return static::$_configurations[$env] = $config;
	}

	/**
	 * Accessor method for `Environment::$_detector`. If `$_detector` is unset, returns the default
	 * detector built into the class. For more information on setting and using `$_detector`, see
	 * the documentation for `Environment::is()`. The `_detector()` method is called at the
	 * beginning of the application's life-cycle, when `Environment::set()` is passed either an
	 * instance of a `Request` object, or the `$_SERVER` or `$_ENV` array. This object (or array)
	 * is then passed onto `$_detector`, which returns the correct environment.
	 *
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::is()
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::set()
	 * @see lithium\core\Environment::$_detector
	 * @return object Returns a callable object (anonymous function) which detects the application's
	 *         current environment.
	 */
	protected static function _detector() {
		return static::$_detector ?: function($request) {
			$isLocal = in_array($request->env('SERVER_ADDR'), ['::1', '127.0.0.1']);
			switch (true) {
				case (isset($request->env)):
					return $request->env;
				case ($request->command == 'test'):
					return 'test';
				case ($request->env('PLATFORM') == 'CLI'):
					return 'development';
				case (preg_match('/^\/test/', $request->url) && $isLocal):
					return 'test';
				case ($isLocal):
					return 'development';
				case (preg_match('/^test/', $request->env('HTTP_HOST'))):
					return 'test';
				default:
					return 'production';
			}
		};
	}
}