When merging an entity with a to-many association, it will store the
original entity data using the object hash of the to-be-merged entity
instead of the managed entity. Since this to-be-merged entity is not
managed by Doctrine, it can disappear from the memory. A new object
can reuse the same memory location and thus have the same object hash.
When one tries to persist this object as new, Doctrine will refuse it
because it thinks that the entity is managed+dirty.
This patch is a very naive fix: it just disables storing the original
entity data in case of to-many associations. It may not be the ideal
or even a good solution at all, but it solves the problem of object
hash reuse.
The test case relies on the immediate reusing of memory locations by
PHP. The variable $user has twice the same object hash, though referring
a different object. Tested on PHP 5.6.17
Without the fix, the test fails on the last line with:
A managed+dirty entity Doctrine\Tests\Models\CMS\CmsUser@[...] can not
be scheduled for insertion.
http://www.doctrine-project.org/jira/browse/DDC-3619
When using SoftDeleteable doctrine extension, an entity can be scheduled
for deletion, then persisted before flushing. In such a case, the entity
was removed from the unit of work identity map and no reference was
hold. This could lead to spl_object_hash collisions, and prevent
another, new entity to be persisted later.
This fix makes sure the unit of work identity map holds a reference to
the entity after it has been soft-deleted.
Possibly to do:
1. Make custom Exception for line 713
2. Make custom Exception for line 817
3. Does the object check on line 816 slow down the code too much? Alternatively a try-catch could be put around line 1415 or higher up.
Previous patch avoided initialization of proxies before merging, mainly to
fix a bug with merging. However, later on, doctrine tries again to load
the proxy. This is unnecessary and thus has been removed. This way, a
round trip to the database is saved.
Ticket DDC-1392 fixed an issue where uninitialized proxies could not be merged
because the merge routine couldn't get the identifier from them. The soution
was to initialize the proxy.
Ticket DDC-1734 fixed the merging of *unserialized* uninitialized proxies by
resetting their internals, so these proxies were able to initialize, as required
by the fix for DDC-1392.
Somehow, in the meanwhile, the fix for DDC-1392 is not needed anymore:
reverting the patch will not break the associated test (but it does break the
test for DDC-1734). This means it is not needed anymore to initialize the proxy
when merging.
Uninitialized proxies that get merged should not be loaded at all. Since they
are not initialized, the entity data for sure hasn't changed, so it can be
safely ignored. Actually, the only thing the data is needed for while merging,
is to copy it into the managed entity, but that one is already supposed to be
up to date. By not initializing the proxy, a potential database roundtrip is
saved, and the fix for DDC-1734 is not needed anymore.
Besides optimizing the merge, this patch also solves an issue with merging.
Currently, when a detached uninitialized proxy is merged while there is already a
corresponding managed entity (proxy or not), the ORM returns a blank entity
instead of returning the already managed entity. This patch makes sure that
already existing managed entities are re-used.
1. Refactor handling of hydration complete: delegate this task to special object
2. Write test case for situation, when inside postLoad listener other entity is loading.
3. Make test, written on second step, be able to pass :)