Dojo build layers provide a clean path from development to production when using Dojo for your UI layer. In development, you can have load-on-demand, rapid application prototyping; a build layer takes all Dojo dependencies and compiles them to a single file, optionally stripping whitespace and comments, and performing code heuristics to allow further minification of variable names. Additionally, it can do CSS minification.
In order to create a build layer, you would traditionally create a JavaScript file that has dojo.require statements for each dependency, and optionally some additional code that might run when the script is loaded. As an example:
dojo.provide("custom.main");
dojo.require("dijit.layout.TabContainer");
dojo.require("dijit.layout.ContentPane");
dojo.require("dijit.form.Form");
dojo.require("dijit.form.Button");
dojo.require("dijit.form.TextBox");
        This script is generally referred to as a "layer" script.
Then, in your application's layout, you'd instruct Dojo to load this module:
<html>
<head>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="/js/dojo/dojo.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">
        dojo.registerModulePath("custom", "../custom/");
        dojo.require("custom.main");
    </script>
        
            If you use Zend_Dojo to do this, you'd do the
            following:
        
$view->dojo()->registerModulePath('custom', '../custom/')
             ->requireModule('custom.main');
        
            But since Zend_Dojo aggregates your various
            dojo.require statements, how do you create your layer
            script? You could open each page and view the generated
            dojo.require statements, and cut and paste them into a
            layer script file manually.
        
            However, a better solution exists: since
            Zend_Dojo aggregates this information
            already, you can simply pull that information and build your layer
            file. This is the purpose of
            Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer.
        
            At its simplest, you simply instantiate
            Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer, feed it the view object
            and the name of your custom module layer, and have it generate the
            content of the layer file; it is up to you to then write it to disk.
        
            As an example, let's say you wanted to create the module layer
            "custom.main". Assuming you follow the recommended project
            directory structure, and that you are storing your JavaScript files under
            public/js/, you could do the following:
        
$build = new Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer(array(
    'view'      => $view,
    'layerName' => 'custom.main',
));
$layerContents = $build->generateLayerScript();
$filename      = APPLICATION_PATH . '/../public/js/custom/main.js';
if (!file_exists(dirname($filename))) {
    mkdir(dirname($filename));
}
file_put_contents($filename, $layerContents);
        
            When should you do the above? For it to work correctly, you need to
            do it after all view scripts and the layout have been rendered, to
            ensure that the dojo() helper is fully populated. One
            easy way to do so is using a front controller plugin, with a
            dispatchLoopShutdown() hook:
        
class App_Plugin_DojoLayer extends Zend_Controller_Plugin_Abstract
{
    public $layerScript = APPLICATION_PATH . '/../public/js/custom/main.js';
    protected $_build;
    public function dispatchLoopShutdown()
    {
        if (!file_exists($this->layerScript)) {
            $this->generateDojoLayer();
        }
    }
    public function getBuild()
    {
        $viewRenderer = Zend_Controller_Action_HelperBroker::getStaticHelper(
            'ViewRenderer'
        );
        $viewRenderer->initView();
        if (null === $this->_build) {
            $this->_build = new Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer(array(
                'view'      => $viewRenderer->view,
                'layerName' => 'custom.main',
            ));
        }
        return $this->_build;
    }
    public function generateDojoLayer()
    {
        $build = $this->getBuild();
        $layerContents = $build->generateLayerScript();
        if (!file_exists(dirname($this->layerScript))) {
            mkdir(dirname($this->layerScript));
        }
        file_put_contents($this->layerScript, $layerContents);
    }
}
        Do not generate the layer on every page
It's tempting to generate the layer script on each and every page. However, this is resource intensive, as it must write to the disk on each page. Additionally, since the mtime of the file will keep changing, you will get no benefits of client-side caching. Write the file once.
The above functionality will suffice for most situations. For those needing more customization, a variety of options may be invoked.
                    While the view object may be passed during instantiation,
                    you may also pass it in to an instance via the
                    setView() method:
                
$build->setView($view);
                    While the layer name may be passed during instantiation,
                    you may also pass it in to an instance via the
                    setLayerName() method:
                
$build->setLayerName("custom.main");
            
                    dojo.addOnLoad is a useful utility for
                    specifying actions that should trigger when the DOM has
                    finished loading. The dojo() view helper can
                    create these statements via its
                    addOnLoad() and
                    onLoadCapture() methods. In some
                    cases, it makes sense to push these into your layer file
                    instead of rendering them via your view scripts.
                
By default, these are not rendered; to enable them, pass the consumeOnLoad configuration key during instantiation:
$build = new Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer(array(
    'view'          => $view,
    'layerName'     => 'custom.main',
    'consumeOnLoad' => true,
));
                
                    Alternately, you can use the
                    setConsumeOnLoad() method after
                    instantiation:
                
$build->setConsumeOnLoad(true);
                    The dojo() view helper includes methods for
                    capturing arbitrary JavaScript to include in the
                    <script> tag containing the various
                    dojo.require and dojo.addOnLoad
                    statements. This can be useful when creating default data
                    stores or globally scoped objects used throughout your
                    application.
                
By default, these are not rendered; to enable them, pass the consumeJavascript configuration key during instantiation:
$build = new Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer(array(
    'view'              => $view,
    'layerName'         => 'custom.main',
    'consumeJavascript' => true,
));
                
                    Alternately, you can use the
                    setConsumeJavascript() method after
                    instantiation:
                
$build->setConsumeJavascript(true);
            One of the chief benefits of a Dojo module layer is that it
            facilitates the creation of a custom build.
            Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer has functionality for
            generate build profiles.
        
            The simplest use case is to utilize the
            generateBuildProfile() method and send the
            output to a file:
        
$build = new Zend_Dojo_BuildLayer(array(
    'view'      => $view,
    'layerName' => 'custom.main',
));
$profile   = $build->generateBuildProfile();
$filename  = APPLICATION_PATH . '/../misc/scripts/custom.profile.js';
file_put_contents($filename, $profile);
        
            Just like generating layers, you may want to automate this via a
            dispatchLoopShutdown() plugin hook; you
            could even simply modify the one shown for generating layers to read
            as follows:
        
class App_Plugin_DojoLayer extends Zend_Controller_Plugin_Abstract
{
    public $layerScript  = APPLICATION_PATH
                         . '/../public/js/custom/main.js';
    public $buildProfile = APPLICATION_PATH
                         . '/../misc/scripts/custom.profile.js';
    protected $_build;
    public function dispatchLoopShutdown()
    {
        if (!file_exists($this->layerScript)) {
            $this->generateDojoLayer();
        }
        if (!file_exists($this->buildProfile)) {
            $this->generateBuildProfile();
        }
    }
    public function generateDojoLayer() { /* ... */ }
    public function generateBuildProfile()
    {
        $profile = $this->getBuild()->generateBuildProfile();
        file_put_contents($this->buildProfile, $profile);
    }
}
        As noted, with module layers, you should only create the file once.
The above functionality will suffice for most situations. The only way to customize build profile generation is to provide additional build profile options to utilize.
As an example, you may want to specify what type of optimizations should be performed, whether or not to optimize CSS files in the layer, whether or not to copy tests into the build, etc. For a listing of available options, you should read the Dojo Build documentation and accompanying documentation.
                Setting these options is trivial: use the
                addProfileOption(),
                addProfileOptions(), or
                setProfileOptions() methods. The first
                method adds a single key and value option pair, the second will add
                several, and the third will overwrite any options with the list
                of key and value pairs provided.
            
By default, the following options are set:
{
    action:        "release",
    optimize:      "shrinksafe",
    layerOptimize: "shrinksafe",
    copyTests:     false,
    loader:        "default",
    cssOptimize:   "comments"
}
            You can pass in whatever key and value pairs you want; the Dojo build script will ignore those it does not understand.
As an example of setting options:
// A single option:
$build->addProfileOption('version', 'zend-1.3.1');
// Several options:
$build->addProfileOptions(array(
    'loader'   => 'xdomain',
    'optimize' => 'packer',
));
// Or overwrite options:
$build->setProfileOptions(array(
    'version'  => 'custom-1.3.1',
    'loader'   => 'shrinksafe',
    'optimize' => 'shrinksafe',
));