You are browsing a version that is no longer maintained. |
Installation
If you use the Doctrine PHPCR ODM Symfony Bundle, please look into the Tutorial to install the DoctrinePHPCRBundle. This documentation explains how to use PHPCR ODM outside of symfony, which requires some manual initialization.
Composer
Doctrine PHPCR-ODM should be installed through composer. The reason is that it depends on quite a few other libraries which in turn require other libraries. If you really can't use composer in a project, we recommend you do a test installation of phpcr-odm with composer to see the dependencies and add manually everything from vendor/ to your project.
Composer is the recommended installation method for Doctrine PHPCR-ODM.
Define the following requirement in your composer.json
file:
Then run composer install
and you are done.
PHPCR provider
Doctrine PHPCR-ODM uses the PHP Content Repository API for storage. You can force one of the available providers in your projects composer.json file "require" section by specifying one of the "suggest" libraries in the phpcr-odm composer.json
Each of the providers requires some additional setup. The following sections will briefly list how to set each of them up. Please refer to the documentation of the provider you choose for details.
Install Jackalope-Jackrabbit PHPCR provider
Jackalope-Jackrabbit uses the Java backend jackrabbit for storage.
Follow Running Jackrabbit Server from the Jackalope wiki to have the storage backend.
Bootstrap will roughly look like this:
$ workspace = 'default';
$ user = 'admin';
$ pass = 'admin';
$ repository = \Jackalope\RepositoryFactoryJackrabbit::getRepository([
'jackalope.jackrabbit_uri' => 'http://localhost:8080/server',
]);
$ credentials = new \PHPCR\SimpleCredentials($user, $pass);
$ session = $repository->login($credentials, $workspace);
Install Jackalope Doctrine DBAL PHPCR provider
Jackalope Doctrine DBAL maps PHPCR to relational databases. It should support all databases that Doctrine DBAL can support.
Create the database as described in the documentation of Jackalope Doctrine DBAL.
Bootstrap will roughly look like this when using mysql as storage backend:
$ workspace = 'default';
$ user = 'admin';
$ pass = 'admin';
$ params = [
'driver' => 'pdo_mysql', // or pdo_pgsql
'host' => 'localhost',
'user' => $user,
'password' => $pass,
'dbname' => 'phpcr_odm_tutorial',
'charset' => 'utf8mb4', // only when using MySQL
];
// Bootstrap Doctrine DBAL
$ dbConn = \Doctrine\DBAL\DriverManager::getConnection($params);
$ repository = \Jackalope\RepositoryFactoryDoctrineDBAL::getRepository([
'jackalope.doctrine_dbal_connection' => $dbConn,
]);
// dummy credentials to comply with the API
$ credentials = new \PHPCR\SimpleCredentials(null, null);
$ session = $repository->login($credentials, $workspace);
Jackalope Doctrine DBAL does currently not manage users, so the simple credentials are ignored.
Jackalope Doctrine DBAL also works with sqlite. Use the following parameters:
$ params = [
'driver' => 'pdo_sqlite',
'dbname' => 'odm',
'path' => '/tmp/jackalope.db',
];
Install Midgard2 PHPCR provider
Midgard2 is a PHP extension that persists PHPCR into relational databases like SQLite and MySQL.
Midgard2 needs the migard-php5 PHP extension to run. On typical Linux setups getting the extension is as easy as:
sudo apt-get install php5-midgard2
Bootstrap will roughly look like this when using mysql as storage backend:
$ workspace = 'default';
$ user = 'admin';
$ pass = 'password';
$ params = [
'midgard2.configuration.db.type' => 'MySQL',
'midgard2.configuration.db.name' => 'phpcr',
'midgard2.configuration.db.host' => 'localhost',
'midgard2.configuration.db.username' => 'midgard',
'midgard2.configuration.db.password' => 'midgard',
'midgard2.configuration.blobdir' => '/some/path/for/blobs',
'midgard2.configuration.db.init' => true,
];
$ repository = \Midgard\PHPCR\RepositoryFactory::getRepository($params);
$ credentials = new \PHPCR\SimpleCredentials($user, $pass);
$ session = $repository->login($credentials, $workspace);
Note that the midgard2.configuration.db.init
setting should only be used the
first time you connect to the Midgard2 repository. After that the database is
ready and this setting should be removed for better performance.
The $user
and $pass
are the credentials for the PHPCR user. The
...db.username
and ...db.password
configuration values are used by the
mysql driver of midgard to connect to the database.
Midgard can also use sqlite, with the following parameters:
$ params = [
'midgard2.configuration.db.type' => 'SQLite',
'midgard2.configuration.db.name' => 'odm',
'midgard2.configuration.db.dir' => '/tmp',
'midgard2.configuration.blobdir' => '/tmp/blobs'
'midgard2.configuration.db.init' => true,
];
Configuration
Bootstrapping Doctrine PHPCR-ODM is a relatively simple procedure that roughly exists of four steps:
- Installation (see above)
- Making sure Doctrine class files are autoloaded.
- Obtaining a DocumentManager instance.
- Configuration of the Console Tool and run the register-system-node-types command
Straightforward bootstrap sample files for all PHPCR implementations are found in the root folder of phpcr-odm. They are called cli-config.*.php.dist. You will need one of those files to set up the console, but it can be used for the rest of your application too. |
Class loading with composer
Autoloading is taken care of by Composer. You just have to include the composer autoload file in your project:
// Include Composer Autoload
// if this file does not exist, you forgot to run php composer.phar install
require_once __DIR__ . "/vendor/autoload.php";
Obtaining an ObjectManager
Once you have prepared the class loading, you acquire an ObjectManager instance. The ObjectManager class is the primary access point to the document mapper functionality provided by Doctrine PHPCR-ODM.
Prepare the mapping driver
In order to make PHPCR-ODM understand your documents, you need to provide mappings.
You can choose between the drivers for attributes, xml and yml configuration files. Add the respective code right after the autoloading.
See later in this chapter for more options with the mapping drivers.
Attributes Mapping Driver
With the attributes driver, you can add attributes to your document classes with the mapping metadata:
use Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\AttributeDriver;
$ driver = new AttributeDriver(['/path/to/your/document/classes']);
XML Mapping Driver
With the XML driver, you create separate XML files that map between your documents and PHPCR:
use Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\XmlDriver;
$ driver = new XmlDriver(['/path/to/your/xml-mapping/files']);
YML Mapping Driver
Your project must require symfony/yaml in composer.json:
use Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\YamlDriver;
$ driver = new YamlDriver(['/path/to/your/yml-mapping/files']);
Quick Configuration Example
A complete configuration could look like this:
$ workspace = 'default';
$ user = 'admin';
$ pass = 'admin';
/***** transport implementation specific code begin *****/
/* --- see above for sample bootstrapping code of other repository implementations --- */
$ params = [
'driver' => 'pdo_mysql',
'host' => 'localhost',
'user' => $user,
'password' => $pass,
'dbname' => 'phpcr_odm_tutorial',
'charset' => 'utf8mb4',
];
$ dbConn = \Doctrine\DBAL\DriverManager::getConnection($params);
$ parameters = ['jackalope.doctrine_dbal_connection' => $dbConn];
$ repository = \Jackalope\RepositoryFactoryDoctrineDBAL::getRepository($parameters);
$ credentials = new \PHPCR\SimpleCredentials(null, null);
/***** transport implementation specific code ends *****/
$ session = $repository->login($credentials, $workspace);
/* prepare the doctrine configuration */
use Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\AttributeDriver;
use Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\DocumentManager;
$ driver = new AttributeDriver(['/path/to/your/document/classes']);
$ config = new \Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Configuration();
$ config->setMetadataDriverImpl($driver);
$ documentManager = DocumentManager::create($session, $config);
Your PHPCR implementation should document the options for the repository factory. As you can see, the PHPCR implementation jackalope-doctrine-dbal used in this example needs a Doctrine DBAL connection to store its data in a database. You can learn more about the options for the connection in this case with the Doctrine DBAL connection configuration reference. |
Configuration Options
The following sections describe all the configuration options
available on a Doctrine\ORM\Configuration
instance.
Proxy Directory (*REQUIRED*)
Configure the directory where proxy objects are cached:
$ config->setProxyDir($dir);
$ config->getProxyDir();
For a detailed explanation on proxy classes and how they are used in Doctrine, see Proxy Objects.
Proxy Namespace (*REQUIRED*)
Gets or sets the namespace to use for generated proxy classes. For a detailed explanation on proxy classes and how they are used in Doctrine, refer to the "Proxy Objects" section further down.
Metadata Driver (*REQUIRED*)
Gets or sets the metadata driver implementation that is used by Doctrine to acquire the object-relational metadata for your classes.
There are currently 4 implementations available:
Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\AttributeDriver
Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\XmlDriver
Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\YamlDriver
Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\Mapping\Driver\DriverChain
Throughout the most part of this manual the AttributeDriver is
used in the examples. For information on the usage of the XmlDriver
or YamlDriver please refer to the dedicated chapters
XML Mapping
and YAML Mapping
.
When you manually instantiate the attribute driver, you need to tell it the path to the entities. All metadata drivers accept an array of directories. With this feature a single driver can support multiple directories of Documents.
Metadata Cache (*RECOMMENDED*)
Gets or sets the cache implementation to use for caching metadata
information, that is, all the information you supply via
attributes, xml or yaml, so that they do not need to be parsed and
loaded from scratch on every single request which is a waste of
resources. The cache implementation must implement the
Doctrine\Common\Cache\Cache
interface.
Usage of a metadata cache is highly recommended.
The recommended implementations for production are:
Doctrine\Common\Cache\ApcCache
Doctrine\Common\Cache\MemcacheCache
Doctrine\Common\Cache\XcacheCache
Doctrine\Common\Cache\RedisCache
For development you should use the
Doctrine\Common\Cache\ArrayCache
which only caches data on a
per-request basis.
Auto-generating Proxy Classes (*OPTIONAL*)
Gets or sets whether proxy classes should be generated
automatically at runtime by Doctrine. If set to FALSE
, proxy
classes must be generated manually through the doctrine command
line task generate-proxies
. The strongly recommended value for
a production environment is FALSE
.
Development vs Production Configuration
You should code your Doctrine PHPCR-ODM bootstrapping with two different
runtime models in mind. There are some serious benefits of using
APC or Memcache in production. In development however this will
frequently give you fatal errors, when you change your entities and
the cache still keeps the outdated metadata. That is why we
recommend the ArrayCache
for development.
Furthermore you should have the Auto-generating Proxy Classes
option to true in development and to false in production. If this
option is set to TRUE
it can seriously hurt your script
performance if several proxy classes are re-generated during script
execution. Filesystem calls of that magnitude can even slower than
all the database queries Doctrine issues. Additionally writing a
proxy sets an exclusive file lock which can cause serious
performance bottlenecks in systems with regular concurrent
requests.
Connection Options
The $session
passed as the first argument to DocumentManager::create()
has to be an instance of PHPCR\SessionInterface
.
See the documentation of your PHPCR implementation for further options when
creating the session.
Proxy Objects
A proxy object is an object that is put in place or used instead of the "real" object. A proxy object can add behavior to the object being proxied without that object being aware of it. In Doctrine, proxy objects are used to realize several features but mainly for transparent lazy-loading.
Proxy objects with their lazy-loading facilities help to keep the subset of objects that are already in memory connected to the rest of the objects. This is an essential property as without it there would always be fragile partial objects at the outer edges of your object graph.
Doctrine implements a variant of the proxy pattern where it generates classes that extend your entity classes and adds lazy-loading capabilities to them. Doctrine can then give you an instance of such a proxy class whenever you request an object of the class being proxied. This happens in two situations:
Reference Proxies
The method DocumentManager::getReference($documentName, $identifier)
lets you obtain a reference to a document for which the identifier
is known, without loading that entity from the database. This is
useful, for example, as a performance enhancement, when you want to
establish an association to an entity for which you have the
identifier. You could simply do this:
// $dm instanceof DocumentManager, $cart instanceof MyProject\Model\Cart
// $itemId comes from somewhere, probably a request parameter
$ item = $dm->getReference('MyProject\Model\Item', $itemId);
$ cart->addItem($item);
Here, we added an Item to a Cart without loading the Item from the database. If you invoke any method on the Item instance, it would fully initialize its state transparently from the database. Here $item is actually an instance of the proxy class that was generated for the Item class but your code does not need to care. In fact it should not care. Proxy objects should be transparent to your code.
Be aware that in this situation, you may not pass null for the $documentName as the autodetecting only works when it can actually load the document from the repository.
Generating Proxy classes
Proxy classes can either be generated manually through the Doctrine Console or automatically by Doctrine. The configuration option that controls this behavior is:
$ config->setAutoGenerateProxyClasses($bool);
$ config->getAutoGenerateProxyClasses();
The default value is true
for convenient development. However,
this setting is not optimal for performance and therefore not
recommended for a production environment. To eliminate the overhead
of proxy class generation during runtime, set this configuration
option to false
. When you do this in a development environment,
note that you may get class/file not found errors if certain proxy
classes are not available or failing lazy-loads if new methods were
added to the entity class that are not yet in the proxy class.
When you set auto generate to false
, you need to generate the proxy classes
each time you change anything on your class or mapping:
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrodm doctrine:phpcr:generate-proxies
This command is only available since PHPCR-ODM 1.1. |
Multiple Metadata Sources
When using different components using Doctrine you may end up with them using two different metadata drivers, for example XML and YAML. You can use the DriverChain Metadata implementations to aggregate these drivers based on namespaces:
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping\Driver\DriverChain;
$ chain = new DriverChain();
$ chain->addDriver($xmlDriver, 'Doctrine\Tests\Models\Company');
$ chain->addDriver($yamlDriver, 'Doctrine\Tests\PHPCR-ODM\Mapping');
Based on the namespace of the entity the loading of entities is
delegated to the appropriate driver. The chain semantics come from
the fact that the driver loops through all namespaces and matches
the entity class name against the namespace using a
strpos() === 0
call. This means you need to order the drivers
correctly if sub-namespaces use different metadata driver
implementations.
Default Repository (*OPTIONAL*)
Specifies the FQCN of a subclass of the DoctrineCommonPersistenceObjectRepository. This will be used for all documents that do not specify a custom repository class:
$ config->setDefaultRepositoryClassName($fqcn);
$ config->getDefaultRepositoryClassName();
The default value is Doctrine\ODM\PHPCR\DocumentRepository
.
This option was introduced in PHPCR-ODM 1.1. |
Setting up the Console
Doctrine uses the Symfony Console component for generating the command line
interface. You can take a look at the bin/phpcrodm.php
script for
inspiration how to setup the cli.
If you installed Doctrine PHPCR-ODM through Composer, then the phpcrodm
script is available to you in the bin-dir, by default at
vendor/bin/phpcrodm
. Otherwise create a symlink to the file or run it
inside the phpcr-odm folder.
Next, you need to copy the cli-config.<implementation>.php.dist file from the phpcr-odm folder to the parent folder of where you have the binary and adjust it to bootstrap your application. The details of what you can configure are explained above.
The Tools Chapter explains the commands you have available.
Register system node types
PHPCR ODM uses a custom node type to track meta information without interfering with your content. Before you can use a PHPCR repository to store documents, you need to run the following command:
$ php bin/phpcrodm doctrine:phpcr:register-system-node-types