[DOCUMENTATION] Added a code walkthrough document, which explains how the codebase works
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DOCUMENTATION/code_walkthrough.md
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DOCUMENTATION/code_walkthrough.md
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### Entrypoint
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GNU social's entrypoint is the `public/index.php` script, which gets
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called by the webserver for all requests. This is handled by the
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webserver itself, which translates a `GET /foo` to `GET
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/index.php?p=foo`. This feature is called 'fancy URLs', as it was in V2.
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The `index` script handles all the initialization of the Symfony
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framework and social itself. It reads configuration from `.env` or any
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`.env.*` file at the project root. The `index` script creates a
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`Kernel` object, which is defined on the `src/Kernel.php` file. This
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is the part where the code we control starts; the `Kernel` constructor
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creates the needed constants, sets the timezone to UTC and the string
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encoding to UTF8. The other functions in this class get called by the
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Symfony framework at the appropriate times. We will come back to this
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file.
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### Registering services
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Next, the `src/Util/GNUsocial.php` class is instantiated by the
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Symfony framework, on the `'onKernelRequest'` or `'onCommand'` events. The
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former event, as described in the docs:
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> This event is dispatched very early in Symfony, before the
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> controller is determined. It's useful to add information to the
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> Request or return a Response early to stop the handling of the
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> request.
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The latter, is launched on the `bin/console` script is used.
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In both cases, these events call the `register` function, which
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creates static references for the logging, event and translation
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services. This is done so these services can be used via static
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function calls, which is much less verbose and more accessible than
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the way the framework recommends. This function also loads all the
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Modules and Plugins, which like in V2, are components that aren't
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directly connected to the core code, being used to implement internal
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and optional functionality respectively, by handling events launched
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by various parts of the code.
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### Database definitions
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Going back to the `Kernel`, the `build` function gets called by the
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Symfony framework and allows us to register a 'Compiler Pass'.
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Specifically, we register the `SchemaDefPass` from the
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`src/DependencyInjection/Compiler/SchemaDefPass.php` file, which adds
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a new 'metadata driver' to Doctrine. The metadata driver is
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responsible for loading database definitions. We keep the same method
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as in V2, which was that each 'Entity' has a `schemaDef` static
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function which returns an array describing the database.
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This definition is handled by the `SchemaDefDriver` class from
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`src/Util/SchemaDefDriver.php` file, which extends `StaticPHPDriver`
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and replaces the methods `loadMetadata` with `schemaDef`. The function
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`loadMetadataForClass` function is called by the Symfony framework for
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each file in `src/Entity/`. It allows us to call the `schemaDef`
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function and translate the array definition to Doctrine's internal
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representation.
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### Routing
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Next, we'll look at the `RouteLoader`, defined in
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`src/Util/RoutLoader.php`, which loads all the files from
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`src/Routes/*.php` and calls the static `load` method, which defines
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routes with an interface similar to V2's `connect`, except it requires
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an extra identifier as the first argument. This identifier is used,
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for instance, to generate URLs for each route. Each route connects an
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URL path to a Controller, with the possibility of taking arguments,
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which are passed to the `__invoke` method of the respective
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controller. The controllers are defined in `src/Controller/` and are
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responsible for handling a request and return a Symfony `Response`
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object (subject to change, in order to abstract HTML vs JSON output).
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### End to end
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The next steps are handled by the Symfony framework which creates a
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`Request` object from the HTTP request, and then a corresponding
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`Response` is created by calling the `Kernel::handle` method, which
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matches the appropriate route and thus calls it's controller.
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### Performance
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All this happens on each request, which seems like a lot to handle,
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and would be too slow. Fortunately, Symfony has a 'compiler' which
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caches and optimizes the code paths. In production mode, this can be
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done through a command, while in development mode, it's handled on
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each request if the file changed, which has a performance impact, but
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obviously makes development easier.
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