Usage of basic components ========================= This document explains how to use the parser, the pretty printer and the node traverser. Bootstrapping ------------- To bootstrap the library, include the autoloader generated by composer: ```php require 'path/to/vendor/autoload.php'; ``` Additionally you may want to set the `xdebug.max_nesting_level` ini option to a higher value: ```php ini_set('xdebug.max_nesting_level', 3000); ``` This ensures that there will be no errors when traversing highly nested node trees. However, it is preferable to disable XDebug completely, as it can easily make this library more than five times slower. Parsing ------- In order to parse code, you first have to create a parser instance: ```php use PhpParser\ParserFactory; $parser = (new ParserFactory)->create(ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP7); ``` The factory accepts a kind argument, that determines how different PHP versions are treated: Kind | Behavior -----|--------- `ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP7` | Try to parse code as PHP 7. If this fails, try to parse it as PHP 5. `ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP5` | Try to parse code as PHP 5. If this fails, try to parse it as PHP 7. `ParserFactory::ONLY_PHP7` | Parse code as PHP 7. `ParserFactory::ONLY_PHP5` | Parse code as PHP 5. Unless you have a strong reason to use something else, `PREFER_PHP7` is a reasonable default. The `create()` method optionally accepts a `Lexer` instance as the second argument. Some use cases that require customized lexers are discussed in the [lexer documentation](component/Lexer.markdown). Subsequently you can pass PHP code (including the opening `create(ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP7); try { $stmts = $parser->parse($code); // $stmts is an array of statement nodes } catch (Error $e) { echo 'Parse Error: ', $e->getMessage(); } ``` A parser instance can be reused to parse multiple files. Node dumping ------------ To dump the abstact syntax tree in human readable form, a `NodeDumper` can be used: ```php dump($stmts), "\n"; ``` For the sample code from the previous section, this will produce the following output: ``` array( 0: Stmt_Function( byRef: false name: Identifier( name: printLine ) params: array( 0: Param( type: null byRef: false variadic: false var: Expr_Variable( name: msg ) default: null ) ) returnType: null stmts: array( 0: Stmt_Echo( exprs: array( 0: Expr_Variable( name: msg ) 1: Scalar_String( value: ) ) ) ) ) 1: Stmt_Expression( expr: Expr_FuncCall( name: Name( parts: array( 0: printLine ) ) args: array( 0: Arg( value: Scalar_String( value: Hello World!!! ) byRef: false unpack: false ) ) ) ) ) ``` You can also use the `php-parse` script to obtain such a node dump by calling it either with a file name or code string: ```sh vendor/bin/php-parse file.php vendor/bin/php-parse " PhpParser\Node\Stmt\Function_` * `Stmt_Expression -> PhpParser\Node\Stmt\Expression` The additional `_` at the end of the first class name is necessary, because `Function` is a reserved keyword. Many node class names in this library have a trailing `_` to avoid clashing with a keyword. As PHP is a large language there are approximately 140 different nodes. In order to make working with them easier they are grouped into three categories: * `PhpParser\Node\Stmt`s are statement nodes, i.e. language constructs that do not return a value and can not occur in an expression. For example a class definition is a statement. It doesn't return a value and you can't write something like `func(class A {});`. * `PhpParser\Node\Expr`s are expression nodes, i.e. language constructs that return a value and thus can occur in other expressions. Examples of expressions are `$var` (`PhpParser\Node\Expr\Variable`) and `func()` (`PhpParser\Node\Expr\FuncCall`). * `PhpParser\Node\Scalar`s are nodes representing scalar values, like `'string'` (`PhpParser\Node\Scalar\String_`), `0` (`PhpParser\Node\Scalar\LNumber`) or magic constants like `__FILE__` (`PhpParser\Node\Scalar\MagicConst\File`). All `PhpParser\Node\Scalar`s extend `PhpParser\Node\Expr`, as scalars are expressions, too. * There are some nodes not in either of these groups, for example names (`PhpParser\Node\Name`) and call arguments (`PhpParser\Node\Arg`). The `Node\Stmt\Expression` node is somewhat confusing in that it contains both the terms "statement" and "expression". This node distinguishes `expr`, which is a `Node\Expr`, from `expr;`, which is an "expression statement" represented by `Node\Stmt\Expression` and containing `expr` as a sub-node. Every node has a (possibly zero) number of subnodes. You can access subnodes by writing `$node->subNodeName`. The `Stmt\Echo_` node has only one subnode `exprs`. So in order to access it in the above example you would write `$stmts[0]->exprs`. If you wanted to access the name of the function call, you would write `$stmts[0]->exprs[1]->name`. All nodes also define a `getType()` method that returns the node type. The type is the class name without the `PhpParser\Node\` prefix and `\` replaced with `_`. It also does not contain a trailing `_` for reserved-keyword class names. It is possible to associate custom metadata with a node using the `setAttribute()` method. This data can then be retrieved using `hasAttribute()`, `getAttribute()` and `getAttributes()`. By default the lexer adds the `startLine`, `endLine` and `comments` attributes. `comments` is an array of `PhpParser\Comment[\Doc]` instances. The start line can also be accessed using `getLine()`/`setLine()` (instead of `getAttribute('startLine')`). The last doc comment from the `comments` attribute can be obtained using `getDocComment()`. Pretty printer -------------- The pretty printer component compiles the AST back to PHP code. As the parser does not retain formatting information the formatting is done using a specified scheme. Currently there is only one scheme available, namely `PhpParser\PrettyPrinter\Standard`. ```php use PhpParser\Error; use PhpParser\ParserFactory; use PhpParser\PrettyPrinter; $code = "create(ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP7); $prettyPrinter = new PrettyPrinter\Standard; try { // parse $stmts = $parser->parse($code); // change $stmts[0] // the echo statement ->exprs // sub expressions [0] // the first of them (the string node) ->value // it's value, i.e. 'Hi ' = 'Hello '; // change to 'Hello ' // pretty print $code = $prettyPrinter->prettyPrint($stmts); echo $code; } catch (Error $e) { echo 'Parse Error: ', $e->getMessage(); } ``` The above code will output: echo 'Hello ', hi\getTarget(); As you can see the source code was first parsed using `PhpParser\Parser->parse()`, then changed and then again converted to code using `PhpParser\PrettyPrinter\Standard->prettyPrint()`. The `prettyPrint()` method pretty prints a statements array. It is also possible to pretty print only a single expression using `prettyPrintExpr()`. The `prettyPrintFile()` method can be used to print an entire file. This will include the opening ` Read more: [Pretty printing documentation](component/Pretty_printing.markdown) Node traversation ----------------- The above pretty printing example used the fact that the source code was known and thus it was easy to write code that accesses a certain part of a node tree and changes it. Normally this is not the case. Usually you want to change / analyze code in a generic way, where you don't know how the node tree is going to look like. For this purpose the parser provides a component for traversing and visiting the node tree. The basic structure of a program using this `PhpParser\NodeTraverser` looks like this: ```php use PhpParser\NodeTraverser; use PhpParser\ParserFactory; use PhpParser\PrettyPrinter; $parser = (new ParserFactory)->create(ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP7); $traverser = new NodeTraverser; $prettyPrinter = new PrettyPrinter\Standard; // add your visitor $traverser->addVisitor(new MyNodeVisitor); try { $code = file_get_contents($fileName); // parse $stmts = $parser->parse($code); // traverse $stmts = $traverser->traverse($stmts); // pretty print $code = $prettyPrinter->prettyPrintFile($stmts); echo $code; } catch (PhpParser\Error $e) { echo 'Parse Error: ', $e->getMessage(); } ``` The corresponding node visitor might look like this: ```php use PhpParser\Node; use PhpParser\NodeVisitorAbstract; class MyNodeVisitor extends NodeVisitorAbstract { public function leaveNode(Node $node) { if ($node instanceof Node\Scalar\String_) { $node->value = 'foo'; } } } ``` The above node visitor would change all string literals in the program to `'foo'`. All visitors must implement the `PhpParser\NodeVisitor` interface, which defines the following four methods: ```php public function beforeTraverse(array $nodes); public function enterNode(\PhpParser\Node $node); public function leaveNode(\PhpParser\Node $node); public function afterTraverse(array $nodes); ``` The `beforeTraverse()` method is called once before the traversal begins and is passed the nodes the traverser was called with. This method can be used for resetting values before traversation or preparing the tree for traversal. The `afterTraverse()` method is similar to the `beforeTraverse()` method, with the only difference that it is called once after the traversal. The `enterNode()` and `leaveNode()` methods are called on every node, the former when it is entered, i.e. before its subnodes are traversed, the latter when it is left. All four methods can either return the changed node or not return at all (i.e. `null`) in which case the current node is not changed. The `enterNode()` method can additionally return the value `NodeTraverser::DONT_TRAVERSE_CHILDREN`, which instructs the traverser to skip all children of the current node. To furthermore prevent subsequent visitors from visiting the current node, `NodeTraverser::DONT_TRAVERSE_CURRENT_AND_CHILDREN` can be used instead. The `leaveNode()` method can additionally return the value `NodeTraverser::REMOVE_NODE`, in which case the current node will be removed from the parent array. Furthermore it is possible to return an array of nodes, which will be merged into the parent array at the offset of the current node. I.e. if in `array(A, B, C)` the node `B` should be replaced with `array(X, Y, Z)` the result will be `array(A, X, Y, Z, C)`. Instead of manually implementing the `NodeVisitor` interface you can also extend the `NodeVisitorAbstract` class, which will define empty default implementations for all the above methods. > Read more: [Walking the AST](component/Walking_the_AST.markdown) The NameResolver node visitor ----------------------------- One visitor that is already bundled with the package is `PhpParser\NodeVisitor\NameResolver`. This visitor helps you work with namespaced code by trying to resolve most names to fully qualified ones. For example, consider the following code: use A as B; new B\C(); In order to know that `B\C` really is `A\C` you would need to track aliases and namespaces yourself. The `NameResolver` takes care of that and resolves names as far as possible. After running it, most names will be fully qualified. The only names that will stay unqualified are unqualified function and constant names. These are resolved at runtime and thus the visitor can't know which function they are referring to. In most cases this is a non-issue as the global functions are meant. Also the `NameResolver` adds a `namespacedName` subnode to class, function and constant declarations that contains the namespaced name instead of only the shortname that is available via `name`. > Read more: [Name resolution documentation](component/Name_resolution.markdown) Example: Converting namespaced code to pseudo namespaces -------------------------------------------------------- A small example to understand the concept: We want to convert namespaced code to pseudo namespaces so it works on 5.2, i.e. names like `A\\B` should be converted to `A_B`. Note that such conversions are fairly complicated if you take PHP's dynamic features into account, so our conversion will assume that no dynamic features are used. We start off with the following base code: ```php use PhpParser\ParserFactory; use PhpParser\PrettyPrinter; use PhpParser\NodeTraverser; use PhpParser\NodeVisitor\NameResolver; $inDir = '/some/path'; $outDir = '/some/other/path'; $parser = (new ParserFactory)->create(ParserFactory::PREFER_PHP7); $traverser = new NodeTraverser; $prettyPrinter = new PrettyPrinter\Standard; $traverser->addVisitor(new NameResolver); // we will need resolved names $traverser->addVisitor(new NamespaceConverter); // our own node visitor // iterate over all .php files in the directory $files = new \RecursiveIteratorIterator(new \RecursiveDirectoryIterator($inDir)); $files = new \RegexIterator($files, '/\.php$/'); foreach ($files as $file) { try { // read the file that should be converted $code = file_get_contents($file->getPathName()); // parse $stmts = $parser->parse($code); // traverse $stmts = $traverser->traverse($stmts); // pretty print $code = $prettyPrinter->prettyPrintFile($stmts); // write the converted file to the target directory file_put_contents( substr_replace($file->getPathname(), $outDir, 0, strlen($inDir)), $code ); } catch (PhpParser\Error $e) { echo 'Parse Error: ', $e->getMessage(); } } ``` Now lets start with the main code, the `NodeVisitor\NamespaceConverter`. One thing it needs to do is convert `A\\B` style names to `A_B` style ones. ```php use PhpParser\Node; class NamespaceConverter extends \PhpParser\NodeVisitorAbstract { public function leaveNode(Node $node) { if ($node instanceof Node\Name) { return new Node\Name(str_replace('\\', '_', $node->toString())); } } } ``` The above code profits from the fact that the `NameResolver` already resolved all names as far as possible, so we don't need to do that. We only need to create a string with the name parts separated by underscores instead of backslashes. This is what `str_replace('\\', '_', $node->toString())` does. (If you want to create a name with backslashes either write `$node->toString()` or `(string) $node`.) Then we create a new name from the string and return it. Returning a new node replaces the old node. Another thing we need to do is change the class/function/const declarations. Currently they contain only the shortname (i.e. the last part of the name), but they need to contain the complete name including the namespace prefix: ```php use PhpParser\Node; use PhpParser\Node\Stmt; class NodeVisitor_NamespaceConverter extends \PhpParser\NodeVisitorAbstract { public function leaveNode(Node $node) { if ($node instanceof Node\Name) { return new Node\Name(str_replace('\\', '_', $node->toString())); } elseif ($node instanceof Stmt\Class_ || $node instanceof Stmt\Interface_ || $node instanceof Stmt\Function_) { $node->name = str_replace('\\', '_', $node->namespacedName->toString()); } elseif ($node instanceof Stmt\Const_) { foreach ($node->consts as $const) { $const->name = str_replace('\\', '_', $const->namespacedName->toString()); } } } } ``` There is not much more to it than converting the namespaced name to string with `_` as separator. The last thing we need to do is remove the `namespace` and `use` statements: ```php use PhpParser\Node; use PhpParser\Node\Stmt; use PhpParser\NodeTraverser; class NodeVisitor_NamespaceConverter extends \PhpParser\NodeVisitorAbstract { public function leaveNode(Node $node) { if ($node instanceof Node\Name) { return new Node\Name(str_replace('\\', '_', $node->toString())); } elseif ($node instanceof Stmt\Class_ || $node instanceof Stmt\Interface_ || $node instanceof Stmt\Function_) { $node->name = str_replace('\\', '_', $node->namespacedName->toString(); } elseif ($node instanceof Stmt\Const_) { foreach ($node->consts as $const) { $const->name = str_replace('\\', '_', $const->namespacedName->toString()); } } elseif ($node instanceof Stmt\Namespace_) { // returning an array merges is into the parent array return $node->stmts; } elseif ($node instanceof Stmt\Use_) { // remove use nodes altogether return NodeTraverser::REMOVE_NODE; } } } ``` That's all.