flysystem-bundle is a Symfony bundle integrating the Flysystem library into Symfony applications.
It provides an efficient abstraction for the filesystem in order to change the storage backend depending on the execution environment (local files in development, cloud storage in production and memory in tests).
Note: you are reading the documentation for flysystem-bundle 2.0, which relies on Flysystem 2.X. If you use Flysystem 1.X, use flysystem-bundle 1.X. Read the Upgrade guide to learn how to upgrade.
flysystem-bundle requires PHP 7.2+ and Symfony 4.2+.
You can install the bundle using Symfony Flex:
composer require league/flysystem-bundle
The default configuration file created by Symfony Flex provides enough configuration to use Flysystem in your application as soon as you install the bundle:
# config/packages/flysystem.yaml
flysystem:
storages:
default.storage:
adapter: 'local'
options:
directory: '%kernel.project_dir%/var/storage/default'
This configuration defines a single storage service (default.storage
) based on the local adapter
and configured to use the %kernel.project_dir%/var/storage/default
directory.
For each storage defined under flysystem.storages
, an associated service is created using the
name you provide (in this case, a service default.storage
will be created). The bundle also
creates a named alias for each of these services.
This means you have two way of using the defined storages:
-
either using autowiring, by typehinting against the
FilesystemOperator
and using the variable name matching one of your storages:use League\Flysystem\FilesystemOperator; class MyService { private $storage; // The variable name $defaultStorage matters: it needs to be the camelized version // of the name of your storage. public function __construct(FilesystemOperator $defaultStorage) { $this->storage = $defaultStorage; } // ... }
The same goes for controllers:
use League\Flysystem\FilesystemOperator; class MyController { // The variable name $defaultStorage matters: it needs to be the camelized version // of the name of your storage. public function index(FilesystemOperator $defaultStorage) { // ... } }
-
or using manual injection, by injecting the service named
default.storage
inside your services.
Once you have a FilesystemOperator, you can call methods from the Filesystem API to interact with your storage.
- Getting started
- Cloud storage providers: AsyncAws S3, AWS SDK S3, Google Cloud Storage, DigitalOcean Spaces, Scaleway Object Storage
- Interacting with FTP and SFTP servers
- Using a lazy adapter to switch storage backend using an environment variable
- Creating a custom adapter
If you discover a security vulnerability within the bundle, please follow our disclosure procedure.
This library follows the same Backward Compatibility promise as the Symfony framework: https://symfony.com/doc/current/contributing/code/bc.html
Note: many classes in this bundle are either marked
@final
or@internal
.@internal
classes are excluded from any Backward Compatibility promise (you should not use them in your code) whereas@final
classes can be used but should not be extended (use composition instead).