This chapter explains how associations between entities are mapped with Doctrine. We start out with an explanation of the concept of owning and inverse sides which is important to understand when working with bidirectional associations. Please read these explanations carefully.
++ Owning Side and Inverse Side
When mapping bidirectional associations it is important to understand the concept of the owning and inverse sides. The following general rules apply:
* Relationships may be bidirectional or unidirectional.
* A bidirectional relationship has both an owning side and an inverse side.
* A unidirectional relationship only has an owning side.
* The owning side of a relationship determines the updates to the relationship in the database.
The following rules apply to *bidirectional* associations:
* The inverse side of a bidirectional relationship must refer to its owning side by use of the mappedBy attribute of the OneToOne, OneToMany, or ManyToMany mapping declaration. The mappedBy attribute designates the field in the entity that is the owner of the relationship.
* The owning side of a bidirectional relationship must refer to its inverse side by use of the inversedBy attribute of the OneToOne, ManyToOne, or ManyToMany mapping declaration. The inversedBy attribute designates the field in the entity that is the inverse side of the relationship.
* The many side of OneToMany/ManyToOne bidirectional relationships *must* be the owning side, hence the mappedBy element can not be specified on the ManyToOne side.
* For OneToOne bidirectional relationships, the owning side corresponds to the side that contains the corresponding foreign key (@JoinColumn(s)).
* For ManyToMany bidirectional relationships either side may be the owning side (the side that defines the @JoinTable and/or does not make use of the mappedBy attribute, thus using a default join table).
Especially important is the following:
**The owning side of a relationship determines the updates to the relationship in the database**.
To fully understand this, remember how bidirectional associations are maintained
in the object world. There are 2 references on each side of the association
and these 2 references both represent the same association but can change
independently of one another. Of course, in a correct application the semantics
of the bidirectional association are properly maintained by the application
these two in-memory references is the one that should be persisted and which
not. This is what the owning/inverse concept is mainly used for.
**Changes made only to the inverse side of an association are ignored. Make sure to update both sides of a bidirectional association (or at least the owning side, from Doctrine's point of view)**
The owning side of a bidirectional association is the side Doctrine "looks at" when determining
the state of the association, and consequently whether there is anything to do to update the association
in the database.
> **NOTE**
> "Owning side" and "inverse side" are technical concepts of the ORM technology, not concepts
> of your domain model. What you consider as the owning side in your domain model can be different
> from what the owning side is for Doctrine. These are unrelated.
++ Collections
In all the examples of many-valued associations in this manual we will make use of a `Collection` interface and a corresponding default implementation `ArrayCollection` that are defined in the `Doctrine\Common\Collections` namespace. Why do we need that? Doesn't that couple my domain model to Doctrine? Unfortunately, PHP arrays, while being great for many things, do not make up for good collections of business objects, especially not in the context of an ORM. The reason is that plain PHP arrays can not be transparently extended / instrumented in PHP code, which is necessary for a lot of advanced ORM features. The classes / interfaces that come closest to an OO collection are ArrayAccess and ArrayObject but until instances of these types can be used in all places where a plain array can be used (something that may happen in PHP6) their useability is fairly limited. You "can" type-hint on `ArrayAccess` instead of `Collection`, since the Collection interface extends `ArrayAccess`, but this will severely limit you in the way you can work with the collection, because the `ArrayAccess` API is (intentionally) very primitive and more importantly because you can not pass this collection to all the useful PHP array functions, which makes it very hard to work with.
> **CAUTION**
> The Collection interface and ArrayCollection class, like everything else in the
> Doctrine\Common namespace, are neither part of the ORM, nor the DBAL, it is a plain PHP
> class that has no outside dependencies apart from dependencies on PHP itself (and the
> SPL). Therefore using this class in your domain classes and elsewhere does not introduce
> a coupling to the persistence layer. The Collection class, like everything else in the
> Common namespace, is not part of the persistence layer. You could even copy that class
> over to your project if you want to remove Doctrine from your project and all your
In that case, the name of the join table defaults to a combination of the simple, unqualified class names of the participating classes, separated by an underscore character. The names of the join columns default to the simple, unqualified class name of the targeted class followed by "_id". The referencedColumnName always defaults to "id", just as in one-to-one or many-to-one mappings.
If you accept these defaults, you can reduce the mapping code to a minimum.
You have to be careful when using entity fields that contain a collection of related entities. Say we have a User entity that contains a collection of groups:
[php]
/** @Entity */
class User
{
/** @ManyToMany(targetEntity="Group") */
private $groups;
public function getGroups()
{
return $this->groups;
}
}
With this code alone the `$groups` field only contains an instance of `Doctrine\Common\Collections\Collection` if the user is retrieved from
Doctrine, however not after you instantiated a fresh instance of the User. When your user entity is still new `$groups` will obviously be null.
This is why we recommend to initialize all collection fields to an empty `ArrayCollection` in your entities constructor:
[php]
use Doctrine\Common\Collections\ArrayCollection;
/** @Entity */
class User
{
/** @ManyToMany(targetEntity="Group") */
private $groups;
public function __construct()
{
$this->groups = new ArrayCollection();
}
public function getGroups()
{
return $this->groups;
}
}
Now the following code will be working even if the Entity hasn't been associated with an EntityManager yet:
A unidirectional one-to-one association is very common. Here is an example of a `Product` that has one `Shipping` object associated to it. The `Shipping` side does not reference back to the `Product` so it is unidirectional.
A unidirectional one-to-many association can be mapped through a join table. From Doctrine's point of view, it is simply mapped as a unidirectional many-to-many whereby a unique constraint on one of the join columns enforces the one-to-many cardinality.
The following example sets up such a unidirectional one-to-many association:
You can even have a self-referencing many-to-many association. A common scenario is where a `User` has friends and the target entity of that relationship is a `User` so it is self referencing. In this example it is bidirectional so `User` has a field named `$friendsWithMe` and `$myFriends`.