How to Manage Configuration for Complex Backends ================================================ The recommended way to start configuring your backend is to use the ``app/config/config.yml`` file and put your configuration under the ``easy_admin`` key. However, for medium-sized and large backends this configuration can be very long and hard to maintain. In those cases, it's better to create a new ``app/config/easyadmin.yml`` file to define all the configuration related to the backend and then, import that file from the general ``config.yml`` file: .. code-block:: yaml # app/config/config.yml imports: - { resource: parameters.yml } - { resource: security.yml } - { resource: services.yml } - { resource: easyadmin.yml } # <-- add this line # app/config/easyadmin.yml # <-- create this file easy_admin: # ... # copy all the configuration originally defined in config.yml # ... Splitting Configuration into Several Files ------------------------------------------ If your application keeps growing, moving its configuration to ``easyadmin.yml`` file won't solve your problem. In this case it's better to split the configuration into different files. Consider an application which defines the following configuration: .. code-block:: yaml # app/config/easyadmin.yml easy_admin: site_name: '...' # ... design: # ... entities: Product: # ... User: # ... Category: # ... # ... This configuration is going to be divided into four different files: * ``design.yml`` for design related configuration; * ``product.yml`` for the configuration related to ``Product`` entity; * ``user.yml`` for the configuration related to ``User`` entity; * ``basic.yml`` for the rest of the configuration, including any entity different from ``Product`` and ``User``. First, create a new ``app/config/easyadmin/`` directory to store the new files so they don't mess with the other Symfony configuration files. Then, create the four files with these contents: .. code-block:: yaml # app/config/easyadmin/basic.yml easy_admin: site_name: '...' # ... # app/config/easyadmin/design.yml easy_admin: design: # ... # app/config/easyadmin/product.yml easy_admin: entities: Product: # ... # app/config/easyadmin/user.yml easy_admin: entities: User: # ... Beware that each configuration file must define its contents under the ``easy_admin`` key. Otherwise, Symfony won't be able to merge the different configurations. The last step is to import those files from any configuration file loaded for Symfony, usually ``config.yml``: .. code-block:: yaml # Before Symfony 2.8 # app/config/config.yml imports: - { resource: easyadmin/basic.yml } - { resource: easyadmin/design.yml } - { resource: easyadmin/product.yml } - { resource: easyadmin/user.yml } # Symfony 2.8 and higher # app/config/config.yml imports: - { resource: easyadmin/ } The imported files can define any number of EasyAdmin configuration options. You can even define the same option in several files and Symfony will take care of merging all values (the last one always wins). Importing EasyAdmin Configuration from Different Bundles -------------------------------------------------------- This technique is also useful when your entities are scattered across different bundles. You can define their backend configuration separately in each bundle and then load those files through the service configuration loading mechanism. Consider an application which contains a ``ProductBundle`` bundle where the ``Product`` entity is defined. First, create the configuration file for that entity: .. code-block:: yaml # src/ProductBundle/Resources/config/product.yml easy_admin: entities: Product: # ... Then, import the ``product.yml`` file from the DependencyInjection extension defined by the bundle: .. code-block:: php namespace ProductBundle\DependencyInjection; use Symfony\Component\Config\FileLocator; use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder; use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\YamlFileLoader; use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\DependencyInjection\Extension; // ... public function load(array $configs, ContainerBuilder $container) { // ... $loader = new YamlFileLoader($container, new FileLocator(__DIR__.'/../Resources/config')); $loader->load('product.yml'); } Alternatively, if you don't want to use a DependencyInjection extension, you can import the bundle's file from the main Symfony configuration file: .. code-block:: yaml imports: # ... - { resource: "@ProductBundle/Resources/config/product.yml" }