This is a Symfony bundle providing integration for the standalone package
consistence/consistence-doctrine
, if you are not using Symfony, follow instructions there.
This bundle provides integration of Consistence value objects for Doctrine ORM so that you can use them in your entities.
For now, the only integration which is needed is for Enums, see the examples below.
Enums represent predefined set of values and of course, you will want to store these values in your database as well. Since Enums
are objects and you only want to store the represented value, there has to be some mapping.
You can see it in this example where you want to store sex for your User
s:
<?php
namespace Consistence\Doctrine\Example\User;
class Sex extends \Consistence\Enum\Enum
{
public const FEMALE = 'female';
public const MALE = 'male';
}
Now you can use the Sex
enum in your User
entity. There are two important things to notice:
type="string_enum"
inORM\Column
- this will be used for mapping the value to your database, that means if you have a string based enum (see values inSex
), usestring_enum
You can specify any other parameters for ORM\Column
as you would usually (nullability, length...).
There is also integer_enum
, float_enum
and boolean_enum
which can be used respectively for their types.
@Enum(class=Sex::class)
- this will be used for reconstructing theSex
enum object when loading the value back from database
The class
annotation parameter uses the same namespace resolution process as other Doctrine annotations, so it is practically the same as when you specify a targetEntity
in associations mapping.
<?php
namespace Consistence\Doctrine\Example\User;
use Consistence\Doctrine\Enum\EnumAnnotation as Enum;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
/**
* @ORM\Entity()
*/
class User extends \Consistence\ObjectPrototype
{
// ...
/**
* @Enum(class=Sex::class)
* @ORM\Column(type="string_enum", nullable=true)
* @var \Consistence\Doctrine\Example\User\Sex|null
*/
private $sex;
// ...
public function __construct(
// ...
Sex $sex = null
// ...
)
{
// ...
$this->sex = $sex;
// ...
}
// ...
}
Now everything is ready to be used, when you call flush
, only female
will be saved:
<?php
namespace Consistence\Doctrine\Example\User;
$user = new User(
// ...
Sex::get(Sex::FEMALE)
// ...
);
/** @var \Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager $entityManager */
$entityManager->persist($user);
// when persisting User::$sex to database, `female` will be saved
$entityManager->flush();
And when you retrieve the entity back from database, you will receive the Sex
enum object again:
<?php
namespace Consistence\Doctrine\Example\User;
/** @var \Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager $entityManager */
$user = $entityManager->find(User::class, 1);
var_dump($user->getSex());
/*
class Consistence\Doctrine\Example\User\Sex#5740 (1) {
private $value =>
string(6) "female"
}
*/
This means that the objects API is symmetrical (you get the same type as you set) and you can start benefiting from Enums advantages such as being sure, that what you get is already a valid value and having the possibility to define methods on top of the represented values.
You can override services used internally, for example if you want to use a more effective cache in production (which is recommended), you can provide custom instance with an alias:
services:
mycache:
class: 'Doctrine\Common\Cache\FilesystemCache'
arguments:
$directory: '%kernel.cache_dir%/mycache'
consistence.doctrine.enum.enum_fields_cache: '@mycache'
- Install package
consistence/consistence-doctrine-symfony
with Composer:
composer require consistence/consistence-doctrine-symfony
- Register the bundle in your application:
// config/bundles.php
return [
// ...
Consistence\Doctrine\SymfonyBundle\ConsistenceDoctrineBundle::class => ['all' => true],
];
That's all, you are good to go!