Native SQL ========== With ``NativeQuery`` you can execute native SELECT SQL statements and map the results to Doctrine entities or any other result format supported by Doctrine. In order to make this mapping possible, you need to describe to Doctrine what columns in the result map to which entity property. This description is represented by a ``ResultSetMapping`` object. With this feature you can map arbitrary SQL code to objects, such as highly vendor-optimized SQL or stored-procedures. Writing ``ResultSetMapping`` from scratch is complex, but there is a convenience wrapper around it called a ``ResultSetMappingBuilder``. It can generate the mappings for you based on Entities and even generates the ``SELECT`` clause based on this information for you. .. note:: If you want to execute DELETE, UPDATE or INSERT statements the Native SQL API cannot be used and will probably throw errors. Use ``EntityManager#getConnection()`` to access the native database connection and call the ``executeUpdate()`` method for these queries. The NativeQuery class --------------------- To create a ``NativeQuery`` you use the method ``EntityManager#createNativeQuery($sql, $resultSetMapping)``. As you can see in the signature of this method, it expects 2 ingredients: The SQL you want to execute and the ``ResultSetMapping`` that describes how the results will be mapped. Once you obtained an instance of a ``NativeQuery``, you can bind parameters to it with the same API that ``Query`` has and execute it. .. code-block:: php createNativeQuery('SELECT id, name, discr FROM users WHERE name = ?', $rsm); $query->setParameter(1, 'romanb'); $users = $query->getResult(); ResultSetMappingBuilder ----------------------- An easy start into ResultSet mapping is the ``ResultSetMappingBuilder`` object. This has several benefits: - The builder takes care of automatically updating your ``ResultSetMapping`` when the fields or associations change on the metadata of an entity. - You can generate the required ``SELECT`` expression for a builder by converting it to a string. - The API is much simpler than the usual ``ResultSetMapping`` API. One downside is that the builder API does not yet support entities with inheritance hierachies. .. code-block:: php addRootEntityFromClassMetadata('MyProject\User', 'u'); $rsm->addJoinedEntityFromClassMetadata('MyProject\Address', 'a', 'u', 'address', array('id' => 'address_id')); The builder extends the ``ResultSetMapping`` class and as such has all the functionality of it as well. .. versionadded:: 2.4 Starting with Doctrine ORM 2.4 you can generate the ``SELECT`` clause from a ``ResultSetMappingBuilder``. You can either cast the builder object to ``(string)`` and the DQL aliases are used as SQL table aliases or use the ``generateSelectClause($tableAliases)`` method and pass a mapping from DQL alias (key) to SQL alias (value) .. code-block:: php generateSelectClause(array( 'u' => 't1', 'g' => 't2' )); $sql = "SELECT " . $selectClause . " FROM users t1 JOIN groups t2 ON t1.group_id = t2.id"; The ResultSetMapping -------------------- Understanding the ``ResultSetMapping`` is the key to using a ``NativeQuery``. A Doctrine result can contain the following components: - Entity results. These represent root result elements. - Joined entity results. These represent joined entities in associations of root entity results. - Field results. These represent a column in the result set that maps to a field of an entity. A field result always belongs to an entity result or joined entity result. - Scalar results. These represent scalar values in the result set that will appear in each result row. Adding scalar results to a ResultSetMapping can also cause the overall result to become **mixed** (see DQL - Doctrine Query Language) if the same ResultSetMapping also contains entity results. - Meta results. These represent columns that contain meta-information, such as foreign keys and discriminator columns. When querying for objects (``getResult()``), all meta columns of root entities or joined entities must be present in the SQL query and mapped accordingly using ``ResultSetMapping#addMetaResult``. .. note:: It might not surprise you that Doctrine uses ``ResultSetMapping`` internally when you create DQL queries. As the query gets parsed and transformed to SQL, Doctrine fills a ``ResultSetMapping`` that describes how the results should be processed by the hydration routines. We will now look at each of the result types that can appear in a ResultSetMapping in detail. Entity results ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ An entity result describes an entity type that appears as a root element in the transformed result. You add an entity result through ``ResultSetMapping#addEntityResult()``. Let's take a look at the method signature in detail: .. code-block:: php addEntityResult('User', 'u'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'id', 'id'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'name', 'name'); $query = $this->_em->createNativeQuery('SELECT id, name FROM users WHERE name = ?', $rsm); $query->setParameter(1, 'romanb'); $users = $query->getResult(); The result would look like this: .. code-block:: php array( [0] => User (Object) ) Note that this would be a partial object if the entity has more fields than just id and name. In the example above the column and field names are identical but that is not necessary, of course. Also note that the query string passed to createNativeQuery is **real native SQL**. Doctrine does not touch this SQL in any way. In the previous basic example, a User had no relations and the table the class is mapped to owns no foreign keys. The next example assumes User has a unidirectional or bidirectional one-to-one association to a CmsAddress, where the User is the owning side and thus owns the foreign key. .. code-block:: php addEntityResult('User', 'u'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'id', 'id'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'name', 'name'); $rsm->addMetaResult('u', 'address_id', 'address_id'); $query = $this->_em->createNativeQuery('SELECT id, name, address_id FROM users WHERE name = ?', $rsm); $query->setParameter(1, 'romanb'); $users = $query->getResult(); Foreign keys are used by Doctrine for lazy-loading purposes when querying for objects. In the previous example, each user object in the result will have a proxy (a "ghost") in place of the address that contains the address\_id. When the ghost proxy is accessed, it loads itself based on this key. Consequently, associations that are *fetch-joined* do not require the foreign keys to be present in the SQL result set, only associations that are lazy. .. code-block:: php addEntityResult('User', 'u'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'id', 'id'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'name', 'name'); $rsm->addJoinedEntityResult('Address' , 'a', 'u', 'address'); $rsm->addFieldResult('a', 'address_id', 'id'); $rsm->addFieldResult('a', 'street', 'street'); $rsm->addFieldResult('a', 'city', 'city'); $sql = 'SELECT u.id, u.name, a.id AS address_id, a.street, a.city FROM users u ' . 'INNER JOIN address a ON u.address_id = a.id WHERE u.name = ?'; $query = $this->_em->createNativeQuery($sql, $rsm); $query->setParameter(1, 'romanb'); $users = $query->getResult(); In this case the nested entity ``Address`` is registered with the ``ResultSetMapping#addJoinedEntityResult`` method, which notifies Doctrine that this entity is not hydrated at the root level, but as a joined entity somewhere inside the object graph. In this case we specify the alias 'u' as third parameter and ``address`` as fourth parameter, which means the ``Address`` is hydrated into the ``User::$address`` property. If a fetched entity is part of a mapped hierarchy that requires a discriminator column, this column must be present in the result set as a meta column so that Doctrine can create the appropriate concrete type. This is shown in the following example where we assume that there are one or more subclasses that extend User and either Class Table Inheritance or Single Table Inheritance is used to map the hierarchy (both use a discriminator column). .. code-block:: php addEntityResult('User', 'u'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'id', 'id'); $rsm->addFieldResult('u', 'name', 'name'); $rsm->addMetaResult('u', 'discr', 'discr'); // discriminator column $rsm->setDiscriminatorColumn('u', 'discr'); $query = $this->_em->createNativeQuery('SELECT id, name, discr FROM users WHERE name = ?', $rsm); $query->setParameter(1, 'romanb'); $users = $query->getResult(); Note that in the case of Class Table Inheritance, an example as above would result in partial objects if any objects in the result are actually a subtype of User. When using DQL, Doctrine automatically includes the necessary joins for this mapping strategy but with native SQL it is your responsibility. Named Native Query ------------------ You can also map a native query using a named native query mapping. To achieve that, you must describe the SQL resultset structure using named native query (and sql resultset mappings if is a several resultset mappings). Like named query, a named native query can be defined at class level or in a XML or YAML file. A resultSetMapping parameter is defined in @NamedNativeQuery, it represents the name of a defined @SqlResultSetMapping. .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php SELECT u.id AS u_id, u.name AS u_name, u.status AS u_status, a.id AS a_id, a.zip AS a_zip, a.country AS a_country, COUNT(p.phonenumber) AS numphones FROM users u INNER JOIN addresses a ON u.id = a.user_id INNER JOIN phonenumbers p ON u.id = p.user_id GROUP BY u.id, u.name, u.status, u.username, a.id, a.zip, a.country ORDER BY u.username .. code-block:: yaml MyProject\Model\User: type: entity namedNativeQueries: fetchMultipleJoinsEntityResults: name: fetchMultipleJoinsEntityResults resultSetMapping: mappingMultipleJoinsEntityResults query: SELECT u.id AS u_id, u.name AS u_name, u.status AS u_status, a.id AS a_id, a.zip AS a_zip, a.country AS a_country, COUNT(p.phonenumber) AS numphones FROM users u INNER JOIN addresses a ON u.id = a.user_id INNER JOIN phonenumbers p ON u.id = p.user_id GROUP BY u.id, u.name, u.status, u.username, a.id, a.zip, a.country ORDER BY u.username sqlResultSetMappings: mappingMultipleJoinsEntityResults: name: mappingMultipleJoinsEntityResults columnResult: 0: name: numphones entityResult: 0: entityClass: __CLASS__ fieldResult: 0: name: id column: u_id 1: name: name column: u_name 2: name: status column: u_status 1: entityClass: Address fieldResult: 0: name: id column: a_id 1: name: zip column: a_zip 2: name: country column: a_country Things to note: - The resultset mapping declares the entities retrieved by this native query. - Each field of the entity is bound to a SQL alias (or column name). - All fields of the entity including the ones of subclasses and the foreign key columns of related entities have to be present in the SQL query. - Field definitions are optional provided that they map to the same column name as the one declared on the class property. - ``__CLASS__`` is an alias for the mapped class In the above example, the ``fetchJoinedAddress`` named query use the joinMapping result set mapping. This mapping returns 2 entities, User and Address, each property is declared and associated to a column name, actually the column name retrieved by the query. Let's now see an implicit declaration of the property / column. .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php SELECT * FROM addresses .. code-block:: yaml MyProject\Model\Address: type: entity namedNativeQueries: findAll: resultSetMapping: mappingFindAll query: SELECT * FROM addresses sqlResultSetMappings: mappingFindAll: name: mappingFindAll entityResult: address: entityClass: Address In this example, we only describe the entity member of the result set mapping. The property / column mappings is done using the entity mapping values. In this case the model property is bound to the model_txt column. If the association to a related entity involve a composite primary key, a @FieldResult element should be used for each foreign key column. The @FieldResult name is composed of the property name for the relationship, followed by a dot ("."), followed by the name or the field or property of the primary key. .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php SELECT u.id, u.name, u.status, a.id AS a_id, a.country AS a_country, a.zip AS a_zip, a.city AS a_city FROM users u INNER JOIN addresses a ON u.id = a.user_id WHERE u.username = ? .. code-block:: yaml MyProject\Model\User: type: entity namedNativeQueries: fetchJoinedAddress: name: fetchJoinedAddress resultSetMapping: mappingJoinedAddress query: SELECT u.id, u.name, u.status, a.id AS a_id, a.country AS a_country, a.zip AS a_zip, a.city AS a_city FROM users u INNER JOIN addresses a ON u.id = a.user_id WHERE u.username = ? sqlResultSetMappings: mappingJoinedAddress: entityResult: 0: entityClass: __CLASS__ fieldResult: 0: name: id 1: name: name 2: name: status 3: name: address.id column: a_id 4: name: address.zip column: a_zip 5: name: address.city column: a_city 6: name: address.country column: a_country If you retrieve a single entity and if you use the default mapping, you can use the resultClass attribute instead of resultSetMapping: .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php SELECT * FROM addresses WHERE id = ? .. code-block:: yaml MyProject\Model\Address: type: entity namedNativeQueries: findAll: name: findAll resultClass: Address query: SELECT * FROM addresses In some of your native queries, you'll have to return scalar values, for example when building report queries. You can map them in the @SqlResultsetMapping through @ColumnResult. You actually can even mix, entities and scalar returns in the same native query (this is probably not that common though). .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php SELECT COUNT(*) AS count FROM addresses .. code-block:: yaml MyProject\Model\Address: type: entity namedNativeQueries: count: name: count resultSetMapping: mappingCount query: SELECT COUNT(*) AS count FROM addresses sqlResultSetMappings: mappingCount: name: mappingCount columnResult: count: name: count