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02.

Upgrading to 2.2

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Upgrading to 2.2

To find details about this release, the actual blog post about it is a great spot. Upgrading a Symfony2 project actually means upgrading the libraries in your vendor/ directory. The code in your project is, well, your code. Symfony2 and all its friends just sit there in vendor/ and wait for you to use them.

Updating composer.json

The blog post contains a diff of how your composer.json needs to change. An easier way to see this for any release is to go to the Symfony Standard Edition Repository and find the exact tag you want. Right now, 2.2.0 is the latest, so I’ll select it by clicking on the hash. From here, we can browse how the code looked at the moment of this release. And so when we open composer.json, we’re seeing exactly how it should look for this version:

{
    [ " ... parts left out ..." ],
    "require": {
        "php": ">=5.3.3",
        "symfony/symfony": "2.2.*",
        "doctrine/orm": "~2.2,>=2.2.3",
        "doctrine/doctrine-bundle": "1.2.*",
        "twig/extensions": "1.0.*",
        "symfony/assetic-bundle": "2.1.*",
        "symfony/swiftmailer-bundle": "2.2.*",
        "symfony/monolog-bundle": "2.2.*",
        "sensio/distribution-bundle": "2.2.*",
        "sensio/framework-extra-bundle": "2.2.*",
        "sensio/generator-bundle": "2.2.*",
        "jms/security-extra-bundle": "1.4.*",
        "jms/di-extra-bundle": "1.3.*"
    },

    [ " ... parts left out ..." ],

    "minimum-stability": "alpha",
    "extra": {
        "symfony-app-dir": "app",
        "symfony-web-dir": "web",
        "branch-alias": {
            "dev-master": "2.2-dev"
        }
    }
}

Copy the contents of the require key and paste them into your composer.json file, being sure to only replace the core Symfony libraries, and not any custom lines you may have added. In this case, the doctrine-fixtures-bundle is custom, so I’ll leave it alone:

"require": {
    "php": ">=5.3.3",
    "symfony/symfony": "2.2.*",
    "doctrine/orm": "~2.2,>=2.2.3",
    "doctrine/doctrine-bundle": "1.2.*",
    "twig/extensions": "1.0.*",
    "symfony/assetic-bundle": "2.1.*",
    "symfony/swiftmailer-bundle": "2.2.*",
    "symfony/monolog-bundle": "2.2.*",
    "sensio/distribution-bundle": "2.2.*",
    "sensio/framework-extra-bundle": "2.2.*",
    "sensio/generator-bundle": "2.2.*",
    "jms/security-extra-bundle": "1.4.*",
    "jms/di-extra-bundle": "1.3.*",.

    "doctrine/doctrine-fixtures-bundle": "dev-master"
},

Also, be sure you have the minimum-stability set to alpha. As Stof points out in the blog, this is because at least one of the libraries here is still technically at an alpha state. This allows that library to be included. Finally, add the branch-alias that maps dev-master to 2.2-dev.

Updating with Composer

All we need to do now is tell Composer to re-read the composer.json file and update everything. But wait! As you undoubtedly remember from watching our wildly entertaining and informative tutorial on Composer, we need to run composer.phar update to do this, which can be a dangerous command. Let’s run update now, and then talk about what horrible things this might be doing:

php composer.phar update

Remember that running update will update all of our vendor libraries to the latest versions specified in composer.json. Since the doctrine-fixtures-bundle is tagged at dev-master, it means that it is updating this bundle to the latest commits on the master branch.

Instead of running a naked update, you could try to specify only the libraries you want to update:

php composer.phar update symfony doctrine/orm doctrine/doctrine-bundle twig sensio jms

But since so many libraries depend on the version of Symfony, you’ll quite likely get dependency errors if you try this. Give it a shot, but your best option is to tag as many packages to specific versions as possible before running update. If a library you use isn’t tagged, well, it’s time to give the maintainer a loving poke to tag.

Upgrading your Project

Ok! We’re now on Symfony 2.2! All we need to do now is see if any of our code needs to be updated. In fact, when I refresh the page, Symfony 2.2 kills my project!

Cannot import resource “@FrameworkBundle/Resources/config/routing/internal.xml” from “/Users/weaverryan/Sites/knp/casts/new-2.2/app/config/routing.yml”. Make sure the “FrameworkBundle” bundle is correctly registered and loaded in the application kernel class.

Ok, don’t panic. Head back to the blog post and find 2 UPGRADE links. The first UPGRADE file is a big list of all the backwards-compatibility breaks in Symfony, which may or may not affect you depending on which features you use.

The second UPGRADE file talks about changes that you’ll need to make to the files in the Symfony Standard Distribution, which was the starting point of your project. It mentions a change to the _internal route used for ESI caching, which sounds just like the error we’re seeing.