Symfony 2 - Working with assets
Asked Answered
U

3

34

I need some tips on how to work with assets in Symfony 2. For example, do we have to always perform the assets:update every time an image is added ? I know Assetic take care of the management on css and javascript files but what about images? What would be the best practice for the front-end development with Symfony 2 ? How do you guys setup your css, images and js files in your app to make it easy to develop, deploy and change ?

Uppish answered 29/3, 2012 at 18:19 Comment(2)
Is assets:update a real command? I've not found it mentioned anywhere else, and can't find it in the Symfony/Assetic codebase. If it does exist, I'd be interested to know more about it.Hypotonic
Related: #12123569Runlet
N
76

Regarding images, if you added it into your public folder, I think there's no need to perform assets:update

However, if you add the image within the resources folders of a bundle, you might have to, depending on your OS and which options you used when called assets:install

If you're using an OS which supports symlinks (linux, OS X, and I guess all OS but Windows), you can install the assets calling (I don't exactly remember the call, the important thing here is the symlink option):

php app/console assets:install web --symlink

This way, instead of having a copy of each bundle's resources, you'll have a symlink, so there should be no need to update. If you have an OS which doesn't support symlinks, I think you'll have to keep updating or reinstalling assets (in fact, I always used assets:install, I didn't knew there was an update option :P).

Regarding the set up, I usually put all css, js, images and any public resources inside a bundle if it is used only within the bundle, and place it onto the public folder if it's used by many bundles, or I plan to use it in other bundles.

Nevski answered 29/3, 2012 at 19:2 Comment(2)
Also, if you’re using Composer to update your vendor packages, don’t forget to set the "extra": { "symfony-assets-install": "symlink" } in your composer.json file (see docs).Stringpiece
The symlink also work on Windows when you are running cmd (or git bash) under Administrator mode. :) because Assetic works with php.net/manual/en/function.symlink.php which is supported on Windows.Horseshoes
C
5

As of Symfony 2.7 this will generate relative symlinks in web directory:

php app/console assets:install web --symlink --relative

In composer.json add:

"extra": {
    "symfony-assets-install": "relative"
}

This will also generate relative symlinks on composer update.

Canarese answered 8/1, 2015 at 13:30 Comment(1)
Since composer.json is committed, and thus used during the install on a production environment, I'm not sure you want this in your composer.json directly.Runlet
S
1

Here is cool think about --symlink.You can configure(config) one time and use forever.If you want more http://www.w3docs.com/snippets/symfony/how-to-keep-symlinks-in-web-bundles-after-composer-update.html

Sturtevant answered 11/6, 2015 at 20:10 Comment(0)

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