Architectural Overview
Flow is a PHP-based application framework. It is especially well-suited for enterprise-grade applications and explicitly supports Domain-Driven Design, a powerful software design philosophy. Convention over configuration, Test-Driven Development, Continuous Integration and an easy-to-read source code are other important principles we follow for the development of Flow.
Although we created Flow as the foundation for the Neos Content Management System, its approach is general enough to be useful as a basis for any other PHP application. We’re happy to share the Flow framework with the whole PHP community and are looking forward to the hundreds of new features and enhancements contributed as packages by other enthusiastic developers.
This reference describes all features of Flow and provides you with in-depth information. If you’d like to get a feeling for Flow and get started quickly, we suggest that you try out our Getting Started tutorial first.
System Parts
The Flow framework is composed of the following submodules:
The Flow Bootstrap takes care of configuring and initializing the whole framework.
The Package Manager allows you to download, install, configure and uninstall packages.
The ObjectManagement is in charge of building, caching and combining objects.
The Configuration framework reads and cascades various kinds of configuration from different sources and provides access to it.
The ResourceManagement module contains functions for publishing, caching, securing and retrieving resources.
The HTTP component is a standards-compliant implementation of a number of RFCs around HTTP, Cookies, content negotiation and more. It is based on the PHP-FIG PSR-15 and PSR-7 specifications.
The MVC framework takes care of requests and responses and provides you with a powerful, easy-to use Model-View-Controller implementation.
The Cli module provides a very easy way to implement CLI commands using Flow, including built-in help based on code documentation.
The Cache framework provides different kinds of caches with can be combined with a selection of cache backends.
The Error module handles errors and exceptions and provides utility classes for this purpose.
The Log module provides simple but powerful means to log any kind of event or signal into different types of backends.
The Signal Slot module implements the event-driven concept of signals and slots through AOP aspects.
The Validation module provides a validation and filtering framework with built-in rules as well as support for custom validation of any object.
The Property module implements the concept of property editors and is used for setting and retrieving object properties.
The Reflection API complements PHP’s built-in reflection support by advanced annotation handling and a cached reflection service.
The AOP framework enables you to use the powerful techniques of Aspect Oriented Programming.
The Persistence module allows you to transparently persist your objects following principles of Domain Driven Design.
The Security framework enforces security policies and provides an API for managing those.
The Session framework takes care of session handling and storing session information in different backends
The I18n service manages languages and other regional settings and makes them accessible to other packages and Flow sub packages.
The Utility module is a library of useful general-purpose functions for file handling, algorithms, environment abstraction and more.
If you are overwhelmed by the amount of information in this reference, just keep in mind that you don’t need to know all of it to write your own Flow packages. You can always come back and look up a specific topic once you need to know about it - that’s what references are for.
But even if you don’t need to know everything, we recommend that you get familiar with the concepts of each module and read the whole manual. This way you make sure that you don’t miss any of the great features Flow provides and hopefully feel inspired to produce clean and easy-maintainable code.