This popular article was updated on May 24th, 2017 to provide a more comprehensive introduction into an essential, modern tool.

“The console component eases the creation of beautiful and testable command line interfaces.”

This is how we are welcomed when we visit the Symfony Console component tool page.

As software developers, we often feel the need to resort to command line tools. These kinds of tools are helpful when we need to do a sort of recurring task like migrating data, performing imports, or creating cron jobs.

The Symfony Console component tool provides us with a simple framework to create our own command line tools.

Unlike many components in Symfony, this is a standalone package and is used by the likes of Laravel‘s Artisan and many other famous PHP packages.

To read up on alternatives to Symfony Console, see our comparison post: PHP Console Wars!

Installation

composer require symfony/console

Essential information about Composer here.

Creating a New Command

To create a new command, we need to make sure our file will be executable. In order to do that, let’s create a console file in the root of our project. This file will be our command manager.

touch console

Now, let’s make sure the file is executable.

chmod 755 console

Then, let’s make sure our file has the shebang at the beginning. The shebang is a character sequence (a number sign followed by an exclamation mark) that appears at the beginning of a script. When the shebang is present, exec() will instead run the executable specified after the shebang. In our case, it will run as a PHP script.

After this, let’s define our console application. The first iteration of our command manager will look like this:

#!/usr/bin/env php <?php require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php'; use Symfony\Component\Console\Application; $app = new Application(); $app->run();

`

Let’s take a closer look at things. First, we are autoloading all our dependencies, then importing the Application package from the Console component. After that, we are creating a new instance of the Application and running it.

If we execute our script with ./console , we should get the following help message:



This is because we haven’t registered any commands yet, we only built the basic framework for them.

Let’s create our script and register it in our newly created command manager.

For this particular example, we will implement two simple commands: one for hashing strings, and another one for confirming a hash belongs to a given string.

We’ll create a /src folder in which we will put our Hash.php class with the contents:

<?php namespace Hash ; class Hash { public static function hash ( $password ) { return password_hash ( $password , PASSWORD_DEFAULT ) ; } public static function checkHash ( $string , $hash ) { if ( password_verify ( $string , $hash ) ) { return true ; } return false ; } }

It’s time to create our command. Let’s create a new PHP file called HashCommand.php .

This class will extend from Symfony’s Command class and implement the configure and execute methods. These methods are essential for our command as they tell it how to look and behave.

This is what the finished command looks like:

<?php namespace Hash ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Command \ Command ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Input \ InputInterface ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Output \ OutputInterface ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Input \ InputArgument ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Input \ InputOption ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Formatter \ OutputFormatterStyle ; use Hash \ Hash ; class HashCommand extends Command { protected function configure ( ) { $this - > setName ( "Hash:Hash" ) - > setDescription ( "Hashes a given string using Bcrypt." ) - > addArgument ( 'Password' , InputArgument :: REQUIRED , 'What do you wish to hash)' ) ; } protected function execute ( InputInterface $input , OutputInterface $output ) { $hash = new Hash ( ) ; $input = $input - > getArgument ( 'Password' ) ; $result = $hash - > hash ( $input ) ; $output - > writeln ( 'Your password hashed: ' . $result ) ; } }

In the configure portion, the setName method is how we will be calling our command, setDescription is a description of our command, and addArgument is where we are saying that our command will take one argument called Password , and that it is required.

In the execute portion, we are accessing the argument through the getArgument function, and then using our Hash class to hash it. Finally, we use the OutputInterface ‘s writeln method to print our result to the screen.

If we run our command like this, we will see that nothing happens. That’s because we are still missing one very important step. We still need to register our command in the console .

#!/usr/bin/env php <?php require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php' ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Application ; use Hash \ HashCommand ; $app = new Application ( ) ; $app - > add ( new HashCommand ( ) ) ; $app - > run ( ) ;

With the command registered in our console , let’s run it.

If we run the ./console command once again, we can see that we now have a new command registered.

Let’s run it:

./console Hash:Hash Sitepoint

And we see the final result:

The hash is the result of running the PHP hash() method on the Sitepoint string.

For the hash-confirming functionality, we will use the same method, but instead of one, we will have two arguments. One will be the string to confirm, and the other the hash we want to validate.

We will be creating a new command file, right next to the HashCommand file. Let’s call it ConfirmCommand .

<?php namespace Hash ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Command \ Command ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Input \ InputInterface ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Output \ OutputInterface ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Input \ InputArgument ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Input \ InputOption ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Formatter \ OutputFormatterStyle ; use Hash \ Hash ; class ConfirmCommand extends Command { protected function configure ( ) { $this - > setName ( "Hash:Confirm" ) - > setDescription ( "Confirms an Hash given the string." ) - > addArgument ( 'Password' , InputArgument :: REQUIRED , 'What password do you wish to confirm?)' ) - > addArgument ( 'Hash' , InputArgument :: REQUIRED , 'What is the hashyou want to confirm?' ) ; } protected function execute ( InputInterface $input , OutputInterface $output ) { $hash = new Hash ( ) ; $inputPassword = $input - > getArgument ( 'Password' ) ; $inputHash = $input - > getArgument ( 'Hash' ) ; $result = $hash - > checkHash ( $inputPassword , $inputHash ) ; if ( $result ) { $output - > writeln ( 'The hash belongs to the password!' ) ; return true ; } $output - > writeln ( 'The hash does not belong to the password!' ) ; } }

Then, register the command in the console .

#!/usr/bin/env php <?php require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php' ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Application ; use Hash \ HashCommand ; use Hash \ ConfirmCommand ; $app = new Application ( ) ; $app - > add ( new HashCommand ( ) ) ; $app - > add ( new ConfirmCommand ( ) ) ; $app - > run ( ) ;

Testing

When it comes to testing, Symfony provides us with some handy tools. The most useful of them is the CommandTester class, as it provides special input and output classes to test our commands without the need of a command line.

Let’s use the CommandTester class to implement a test for our Hash:Hash command.

First, let’s create a /tests folder at the same level as our /src folder.

Then, let’s create our test class inside of it and call it HashCommandTest.php :

<?php use Hash \ HashCommand ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Application ; use Symfony \ Component \ Console \ Tester \ CommandTester ; require_once './vendor/autoload.php' ; class HashCommandTest extends \ PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase { public function testHashIsCorrect ( ) { $application = new Application ( ) ; $application - > add ( new HashCommand ( ) ) ; $command = $application - > find ( 'Hash:Hash' ) ; $commandTester = new CommandTester ( $command ) ; $commandTester - > execute ( array ( 'command' = > $command - > getName ( ) , 'Password' = > 'Sitepoint' ) ) ; $this - > assertRegExp ( '/Your password hashed:/' , $commandTester - > getDisplay ( ) ) ; } }

We begin our test by loading our command using the Application class. Then, we instantiate a new CommandTester . With the CommandTester, we can configure how we want to call our command. The last step is just comparing the results of the execution with the result we are expecting using the getDisplay() method.

The getDisplay() method holds the result of our command’s execution, just as we would see it on the command line.

Conclusion

We just created two different commands using the Symfony Console Component. We also saw a good way of testing those commands. I recommend you take a look at the component’s various options and features, and give us some feedback on your experiments in the comments section below.

Would you like to see some more advanced tutorials about Symfony Console on SitePoint? Let us know!

All the code we wrote in this article is available on Github.