1
0
mirror of synced 2024-12-15 07:36:03 +03:00
doctrine2/manual/new/docs/en/plugins.txt

125 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

++ Validators
++ View
2007-06-26 13:41:24 +04:00
++ Profiler
+++ Introduction
{{Doctrine_Connection_Profiler}} is an eventlistener for {{Doctrine_Connection}}. It provides flexible query profiling. Besides the SQL strings the query profiles include elapsed time to run the queries. This allows inspection of the queries that have been performed without the need for adding extra debugging code to model classes.
{{Doctrine_Connection_Profiler}} can be enabled by adding it as an eventlistener for {{Doctrine_Connection}}.
<code type='php'>
$conn = Doctrine_Manager::connection($dsn);
$profiler = new Doctrine_Connection_Profiler();
$conn->setListener($profiler);
</code>
+++ Basic usage
Perhaps some of your pages is loading slowly. The following shows how to build a complete profiler report from the connection:
<code type='php'>
$totalTime = $profiler->getTotalElapsedSecs();
$queryCount = $profiler->getTotalNumQueries();
$longestTime = 0;
$longestQuery = null;
foreach ($profiler->getQueryProfiles() as $query) {
if ($query->getElapsedSecs() > $longestTime) {
$longestTime = $query->getElapsedSecs();
$longestQuery = $query->getQuery();
}
}
echo 'Executed ' . $queryCount . ' queries in ' . $totalTime . ' seconds' . "\n";
echo 'Average query length: ' . $totalTime / $queryCount . ' seconds' . "\n";
echo 'Queries per second: ' . $queryCount / $totalTime . "\n";
echo 'Longest query length: ' . $longestTime . "\n";
echo 'Longest query: ' . $longestQuery . "\n";
</code>
+++ Advanced usage
++ Cache
++ Locking Manager
2007-06-26 13:21:27 +04:00
++ Connection Profiler
2007-07-13 20:39:52 +04:00
++ AuditLog and versioning
Doctrine_AuditLog provides a full versioning solution. Lets say we have a NewsItem class that we want to be versioned. This means that everytime a NewsItem object is updated its version number is increased.
+++ Creating a versioned record
<code type='php'>
class NewsItem extends Doctrine_Record
{
public function setTableDefinition()
{
$this->hasColumn('title', 'string', 200);
$this->hasColumn('content', 'string');
}
public function setUp()
{
$this->loadTemplate(new Doctrine_AuditLog_Template());
}
}
</code>
+++ Using versioning
<code type='php'>
$newsItem = new NewsItem();
$newsItem->title = 'No news is good news';
$newsItem->content = 'All quiet on the western front';
$newsItem->save();
$newsItem->version; // 1
$newsItem->title = 'A different title';
$newsItem->save();
$newsItem->version; // 2
</code>
<code type='php'>
$newsItem->revert(1);
$newsItem->title; // No news is good news
</code>
++ Hook
2007-06-26 13:21:27 +04:00
++ Soft-delete
Soft-delete is a very simple plugin for achieving the following behaviour: when a record is deleted its not removed from database. Usually the record contains some special field like 'deleted' which tells the state of the record (deleted or alive).
The following code snippet shows what you need in order to achieve this kind of behaviour. Notice how we define two event hooks: preDelete and postDelete. Also notice how the preDelete hook skips the actual delete-operation with skipOperation() call. For more info about the event hooks see the Event listener section.
<code type='php'>
class SoftDeleteTest extends Doctrine_Record
{
public function setTableDefinition()
{
$this->hasColumn('name', 'string', null, array('primary' => true));
$this->hasColumn('deleted', 'boolean', 1);
}
public function preDelete($event)
{
$event->skipOperation();
}
public function postDelete($event)
{
$this->deleted = true;
$this->save();
}
}
</code>
Now lets put the plugin in action:
<code type='php'>
// save a new record
$record = new SoftDeleteTest();
$record->name = 'new record';
$record->save();
$record->delete();
var_dump($record->deleted); // true
</code>