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Version: 5.1

Extensions and Child Containers

Whenever Joomla boots an extension it creates a child DIC, solely for use of that extension. It's shown diagrammatically below.

Child DIC

The child DIC has a parent pointer to the main DIC, and acts similarly to the main DIC, but not exactly:

  • Whenever set() is called on this child DIC the key-value pair is inserted into the child container.
  • Whenever get() is called on it, the resource is obtained from the child container, but if it's not found there then the parent container is searched also.

From Joomla version 4 the Joomla developers are requesting that extension developers use dependency injection for their extensions by defining a services/provider.php file. The loading of an extension is then a two-step process, handled within the services/provider.php file::

  1. The extension class is entered into child DIC
  2. The extension class is retrieved from the child DIC, creating an instance of the class

Let's look at a minimal example of this for com_example, with namespace Mycompany\Component\Example.

use Joomla\CMS\Extension\ComponentInterface;
use Joomla\DI\Container;
use Joomla\DI\ServiceProviderInterface;
use Mycompany\Component\Example\Administrator\Extension\ExampleComponent;

return new class implements ServiceProviderInterface {
public function register(Container $container): void
{
$container->set(
ComponentInterface::class,
function (Container $container) {
$component = new ExampleComponent();
return $component;
}
);
}
};

We can see that when Joomla does a require of this php file, then it will return a class instance:

$provider = require $path;  // $path points to the relevant services/provider.php file

The variable $provider then points to an object which is an instance of this anonymous class. Also the class implements Joomla\DI\ServiceProviderInterface, which basically means that it has a method called register with the above signature.

When next Joomla does

if ($provider instanceof ServiceProviderInterface) {
$provider->register($container);

the register function will be called, which will put into the child DIC an entry with

  • key = ComponentInterface::class – this is just a PHP shorthand way of specifying the string 'Joomla\CMS\Extension\ComponentInterface'
  • value = a function which returns a new instance of ExampleComponent, which is the Extension class of com_example

Then when Joomla executes the code:

$extension = $container->get($type);

the function above will run and will return a new instance of ExampleComponent.

You can follow through the Joomla code yourself in libraries/src/Extension/ExtensionManagerTrait.php, and confirm that the above pattern also applies to modules and plugins.

Notice also the following line in that file:

if ($extension instanceof BootableExtensionInterface) {
$extension->boot($container);
}

So if the Extension class implements BootableExtensionInterface then Joomla will immediately call the boot function of the Extension instance, as described in the Extension documentation.