Keeping your Modules independent

One of the goals of using modules is to create discrete units of functionality that do not have many (if any) dependencies, allowing you to use that functionality in other applications without including unnecessary items.

Doctrine ORM includes a new utility called the ResolveTargetEntityListener, that functions by intercepting certain calls inside Doctrine and rewrite targetEntity parameters in your metadata mapping at runtime. It means that in your bundle you are able to use an interface or abstract class in your mappings and expect correct mapping to a concrete entity at runtime.

This functionality allows you to define relationships between different entities but not making them hard dependencies.

Background

In the following example, the situation is we have an InvoiceModule which provides invoicing functionality, and a CustomerModule that contains customer management tools. We want to keep these separated, because they can be used in other systems without each other, but for our application we want to use them together.

In this case, we have an Invoice entity with a relationship to a non-existent object, an InvoiceSubjectInterface. The goal is to get the ResolveTargetEntityListener to replace any mention of the interface with a real object that implements that interface.

Set up

We're going to use the following basic entities (which are incomplete for brevity) to explain how to set up and use the RTEL.

A Customer entity

1<?php // src/Acme/AppModule/Entity/Customer.php namespace Acme\AppModule\Entity; use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM; use Acme\CustomerModule\Entity\Customer as BaseCustomer; use Acme\InvoiceModule\Model\InvoiceSubjectInterface; #[ORM\Entity] #[ORM\Table(name: 'customer')] class Customer extends BaseCustomer implements InvoiceSubjectInterface { // In our example, any methods defined in the InvoiceSubjectInterface // are already implemented in the BaseCustomer }
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An Invoice entity

1<?php // src/Acme/InvoiceModule/Entity/Invoice.php namespace Acme\InvoiceModule\Entity; use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping AS ORM; use Acme\InvoiceModule\Model\InvoiceSubjectInterface; #[ORM\Entity] #[ORM\Table(name: 'invoice')] class Invoice { #[ORM\ManyToOne(targetEntity: InvoiceSubjectInterface::class)] protected InvoiceSubjectInterface $subject; }
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An InvoiceSubjectInterface

1<?php // src/Acme/InvoiceModule/Model/InvoiceSubjectInterface.php namespace Acme\InvoiceModule\Model; /** * An interface that the invoice Subject object should implement. * In most circumstances, only a single object should implement * this interface as the ResolveTargetEntityListener can only * change the target to a single object. */ interface InvoiceSubjectInterface { // List any additional methods that your InvoiceModule // will need to access on the subject so that you can // be sure that you have access to those methods. /** * @return string */ public function getName(); }
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Next, we need to configure the listener. Add this to the area you set up Doctrine. You must set this up in the way outlined below, otherwise you can not be guaranteed that the targetEntity resolution will occur reliably:

1<?php $evm = new \Doctrine\Common\EventManager; $rtel = new \Doctrine\ORM\Tools\ResolveTargetEntityListener; // Adds a target-entity class $rtel->addResolveTargetEntity('Acme\\InvoiceModule\\Model\\InvoiceSubjectInterface', 'Acme\\CustomerModule\\Entity\\Customer', array()); // Add the ResolveTargetEntityListener $evm->addEventListener(Doctrine\ORM\Events::loadClassMetadata, $rtel); $connection = \Doctrine\DBAL\DriverManager::getConnection($connectionOptions, $config, $evm); $em = new \Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager($connection, $config, $evm);
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Final Thoughts

With the ResolveTargetEntityListener, we are able to decouple our bundles, keeping them usable by themselves, but still being able to define relationships between different objects. By using this method, I've found my bundles end up being easier to maintain independently.