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AvalancheImagineBundle

This bundle provides easy image manipulation support for Symfony2. For example, with this bundle, the following is possible:

<img src="{{ '/relative/path/to/image.jpg' | apply_filter('thumbnail') }}" />

This will perform the transformation called thumbnail, which you can define to do a number of different things, such as resizing, cropping, drawing, masking, etc.

This bundle integrates the standalone PHP "Imagine library".

Installation

Installation is a quick 3 step process:

  1. Download AvalancheImagineBundle using composer
  2. Enable the Bundle
  3. Configure your application's config.yml

Step 1: Download AvalancheImagineBundle using composer

Add AvalancheImagineBundle in your composer.json:

{
    "require": {
        "avalanche123/imagine-bundle": "v2.1"
    }
}

Now tell composer to download the bundle by running the command:

$ php composer.phar update avalanche123/imagine-bundle

Composer will install the bundle to your project's vendor/avalanche123/imagine-bundle directory.

Step 2: Enable the bundle

Enable the bundle in the kernel:

<?php
// app/AppKernel.php

public function registerBundles()
{
    $bundles = array(
        // ...
        new Avalanche\Bundle\ImagineBundle\AvalancheImagineBundle(),
    );
}

Step3: Register the bundle's routes

Finally, add the following to your routing file:

# app/config/routing.yml

_imagine:
    resource: .
    type:     imagine

Congratulations! You're ready to rock your images!

Basic Usage

This bundle works by configuring a set of filters and then applying those filters to images inside a template. So, start by creating some sort of filter that you need to apply somewhere in your application. For example, suppose you want to thumbnail an image to a size of 120x90 pixels:

# app/config/config.yml

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        my_thumb:
            type:    thumbnail
            options: { size: [120, 90], mode: outbound }

You can also change the quality and the format you want to use to save our image :

# app/config/config.yml

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        my_thumb:
            type:    thumbnail
            options: { size: [120, 90], mode: outbound, quality: 100, format: png }

You've now defined a filter called my_thumb that performs a thumbnail transformation. We'll learn more about available transformations later, but for now, this new filter can be used immediately in a template:

<img src="{{ '/relative/path/to/image.jpg' | apply_filter('my_thumb') }}" />

Or if you're using PHP templates:

<img src="<?php $this['imagine']->filter('/relative/path/to/image.jpg', 'my_thumb') ?>" />

Behind the scenes, the bundle applies the filter(s) to the image on the first request and then caches the image to a similar path. On the next request, the cached image would be served directly from the file system.

In this example, the final rendered path would be something like /media/cache/my_thumb/relative/path/to/image.jpg. This is where Imagine would save the filtered image file.

HTTP Cache Headers

Configuration example:

# app/config/config.yml

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        my_thumb:
            type:    thumbnail
            options: { size: [120, 90], mode: outbound, cache_type: public, cache_expires: 2 weeks }

Cache headers are set only for first request when image is generated. To solve this issue you should add additional configuration for your web server. Example for apache web server:

<IfModule mod_expires.c>
    <Directory "/path/to/web/media/cache">
        ExpiresActive On
        ExpiresDefault "access plus 2 weeks"
    </Directory>
</IfModule>

Configuration

The default configuration for the bundle looks like this:

avalanche_imagine:
    source_root:  %kernel.root_dir%/../web
    web_root:     %kernel.root_dir%/../web
    cache_prefix: media/cache
    driver:       gd
    filters:      []

There are several configuration options available:

Each filter that you specify have the following options:

Built-in Filters

Currently, this bundles comes with just one built-in filter: thumbnail.

Thumbnail

The thumbnail filter, as the name implies, performs a thumbnail transformation on your image. The configuration looks like this:

filters:
    my_thumb:
        type:    thumbnail
        options: { size: [120, 90], mode: outbound }

The mode can be either outbound or inset.

Resize

The resize filter may be used to simply change the width and height of an image irrespective of its proportions.

Consider the following configuration example, which defines two filters to alter an image to an exact screen resolution:

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        cga:
            type:    resize
            options: { size: [320, 200] }
        wuxga:
            type:    resize
            options: { size: [1920, 1200] }

RelativeResize

The relative_resize filter may be used to heighten, widen, increase or scale an image with respect to its existing dimensions. These options directly correspond to methods on Imagine's BoxInterface.

Given an input image sized 50x40 (width, height), consider the following annotated configuration examples:

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        heighten:
            type:    relative_resize
            options: { heighten: 60 } # Transforms 50x40 to 75x60
        widen:
            type:    relative_resize
            options: { widen: 32 }    # Transforms 50x40 to 40x32
        increase:
            type:    relative_resize
            options: { increase: 10 } # Transforms 50x40 to 60x50
        scale:
            type:    relative_resize
            options: { scale: 2.5 }   # Transforms 50x40 to 125x100

If you prefer using Imagine without a filter configuration, the RelativeResize class may be used directly.

Paste

The paste filter pastes an image into your image.

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        paste:
            type:        paste
            options:
                image:   %kernel.root_dir%/Resources/image.png  # path to image
                x:       right                                  # [left|right|center] or integer
                y:       bottom                                 # [top|bottom|middle] or integer

Chain

With chain filter you can apply some filters on your image. You can quite simply create a watermark filter:

avalanche_imagine:
    filters:
        watermark:
            type:                chain
            options:
                filters:
                    thumbnail:                                          # filter type
                        size:    [100, 100]                             # filter options
                        mode:    outbound
                    paste:
                        image:   %kernel.root_dir%/Resources/image.png
                        x:       right
                        y:       bottom

Load your Custom Filters

The ImagineBundle allows you to load your own custom filter classes. The only requirement is that each filter loader implement the following interface:

Avalanche\Bundle\ImagineBundle\Imagine\Filter\Loader\LoaderInterface

To tell the bundle about your new filter loader, register it in the service container and apply the following tag to it (example here in XML):

<tag name="imagine.filter.loader" filter="my_custom_filter" />

For more information on the service container, see the Symfony2 Service Container documentation.

You can now reference and use your custom filter when defining filters you'd like to apply in your configuration:

filters:
    my_special_filter:
        type:    my_custom_filter
        options: { }

For an example of a filter loader implementation, refer to Avalanche\Bundle\ImagineBundle\Imagine\Filter\Loader\ThumbnailFilterLoader.

Caveats

If you are generating your image names from multiple parts in a Twig template, please be aware that Twig applies filters before concatenation, so

<img src="{{ '/relative/path/to/' ~ some_variable ~ '.jpg' | apply_filter('my_thumb') }}" />

will apply your filter to '.jpg', and then concatenate the result to '/relative/path/to/' and some_variable. So the correct invocation would be

<img src="{{ ('/relative/path/to/' ~ some_variable ~ '.jpg') | apply_filter('my_thumb') }}" />

Using as a service

You can also use ImagineBundle as a service and create the cache image from controller.

$avalancheService = $this->get('imagine.cache.path.resolver');

Then, call the getBrowserPath and pass the original image webpath and the filter you want to use

$cachedImage = $avalancheService->getBrowserPath($object->getWebPath(), 'my_thumb');