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A set of abstractions extracted out of the Symfony components.
Can be used to build on semantics that the Symfony components proved useful - and that already have battle tested implementations.
Packages that implement specific contracts should list them in the "provide"
section of their "composer.json" file, using the symfony/*-contracts-implementation
convention (e.g. "provide": { "symfony/cache-contracts-implementation": "1.0" }
).
The abstractions in this package are useful to achieve loose coupling and interoperability. By using the provided interfaces as type hints, you are able to reuse any implementations that match their contracts. It could be a Symfony component, or another one provided by the PHP community at large.
Depending on their semantics, some interfaces can be combined with autowiring to seamlessly inject a service in your classes.
Others might be useful as labeling interfaces, to hint about a specific behavior that could be enabled when using autoconfiguration or manual service tagging (or any other means provided by your framework.)
When applicable, the provided contracts are built on top of PHP-FIG's PSRs. But the group has different goals and different processes. Here, we're focusing on providing abstractions that are useful on their own while still compatible with implementations provided by Symfony. Although not the main target, we hope that the declared contracts will directly or indirectly contribute to the PHP-FIG.
Putting all interfaces in one package eases discoverability and dependency management. Instead of dealing with a myriad of small packages and the corresponding matrix of versions, you just need to deal with one package and one version. Also when using IDE autocompletion or just reading the source code, it makes it easier to figure out which contracts are provided.
There are two downsides to this approach: you may have unused files in your
vendor/
directory, and in the future, it will be impossible to use two
different sub-namespaces in different major versions of the package. For the
"unused files" downside, it has no practical consequences: their file sizes are
very small, and there is no performance overhead at all since they are never
loaded. For major versions, this package follows the Symfony BC + deprecation
policies, with an additional restriction to never remove deprecated interfaces.