Registry Design Pattern – useful or harmful? – Stubblog – Planet PHP
Jan 03, 2010
About a year ago I wrote about How to get a Singleton right. While nothing has changed my opinion about the Singleton Design Pattern – contrary, I’m even more convinced that it is bad, bad and bad – I still have homework to do. In the comments to this article I was asked about my opinion on the Registry Design Pattern, and I promised it would be worth an own blog entry. Well, I did not anticipate it would take more than a year to write it, but you know, work, and no time, and yada yada yada… so here it is.
When thinking about a Registry one has to consider two points: overall architecture of the application, and implementation of the Registry itself. It’s not that much what you can say about the implementation of a Registry. For PHP, it should just follow one rule to make it testable and to ease testing of classes using the registry: do not make it a Singleton. (You might have guessed that already.) PHP offers the possibility to implement the Registry as a pure static class, where data within the Registry can be stored within a static class variable, and setters as well as getters can also be static methods. There is no value in making it a Singleton, it just more stuff to type where the result is the same: global state. So if you implement it as pure static, the Registry in itself is neither bad or good.
Speaking of global state, it should be common sense by now that global state is a bad idea, at least if this global does not mean the root of the application itself, which leads us to the overall architecture of the application. How is this related to the Registry Design Pattern? The Registry is intended to allow access to configuration data, objects etc. which you don’t want to pass around in your application but require them in different parts (or layers) of your applications. If you have such a need from my point of view this means the application is not fully based on the Dependency Injection principle, it does not separate object creation and business logic as much as it should. If the application is completely based on Dependency Injection, there is no need for a Registry any more.
Did I just say that there is no need for a Registry any more? Well, two exceptions. First, unfortunately in PHP there might be cases where you can not influence the creation of an object instance, and if you want to pass data or other objects to such an instance, you have to take cumbersome actions to pass those. Creation of user land stream wrapper instances is such an example, as those instances are created by PHP itself and there is no possibility to intercept this. Here a Registry might be of help, but it stays what it is: a workaround for a flaw in PHP.
The other exception is the case of using a Dependency Injection framework. You do not need a Registry here – your DI framework already has something like this. It just not called Registry, but it is it’s mechanism where you bind data or objects for example in the case of Stubbles or Google Guice, and in Symfony it is called Service Container. (Please note that this is just a quick thought I had in the last days, I might be wrong on this.)
To conclude, the Registry itself is neither useful or harmful. The more important question is how strong you apply the Dependency Injection principle in your application.

