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169 lines
5.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
169 lines
5.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Working with DateTime Instances
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===============================
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There are many nitty gritty details when working with PHPs DateTime instances. You have know their inner
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workings pretty well not to make mistakes with date handling. This cookbook entry holds several
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interesting pieces of information on how to work with PHP DateTime instances in Doctrine 2.
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DateTime changes are detected by Reference
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When calling ``EntityManager#flush()`` Doctrine computes the changesets of all the currently managed entities
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and saves the differences to the database. In case of object properties (@Column(type="datetime") or @Column(type="object"))
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these comparisons are always made **BY REFERENCE**. That means the following change will **NOT** be saved into the database:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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/** @Entity */
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class Article
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{
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/** @Column(type="datetime") */
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private $updated;
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public function setUpdated()
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{
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// will NOT be saved in the database
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$this->updated->modify("now");
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}
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}
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The way to go would be:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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class Article
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{
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public function setUpdated()
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{
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// WILL be saved in the database
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$this->updated = new \DateTime("now");
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}
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}
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Default Timezone Gotcha
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By default Doctrine assumes that you are working with a default timezone. Each DateTime instance that
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is created by Doctrine will be assigned the timezone that is currently the default, either through
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the ``date.timezone`` ini setting or by calling ``date_default_timezone_set()``.
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This is very important to handle correctly if your application runs on different serves or is moved from one to another server
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(with different timezone settings). You have to make sure that the timezone is the correct one
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on all this systems.
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Handling different Timezones with the DateTime Type
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you first come across the requirement to save different you are still optimistic to manage this mess,
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however let me crush your expectations fast. There is not a single database out there (supported by Doctrine 2)
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that supports timezones correctly. Correctly here means that you can cover all the use-cases that
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can come up with timezones. If you don't believe me you should read up on `Storing DateTime
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in Databases <http://derickrethans.nl/storing-date-time-in-database.html>`_.
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The problem is simple. Not a single database vendor saves the timezone, only the differences to UTC.
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However with frequent daylight saving and political timezone changes you can have a UTC offset that moves
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in different offset directions depending on the real location.
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The solution for this dilemma is simple. Don't use timezones with DateTime and Doctrine 2. However there is a workaround
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that even allows correct date-time handling with timezones:
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1. Always convert any DateTime instance to UTC.
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2. Only set Timezones for displaying purposes
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3. Save the Timezone in the Entity for persistence.
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Say we have an application for an international postal company and employees insert events regarding postal-package
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around the world, in their current timezones. To determine the exact time an event occurred means to save both
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the UTC time at the time of the booking and the timezone the event happened in.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace DoctrineExtensions\DBAL\Types;
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use Doctrine\DBAL\Platforms\AbstractPlatform;
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use Doctrine\DBAL\Types\ConversionException;
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class UTCDateTimeType extends DateTimeType
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{
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static private $utc = null;
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public function convertToDatabaseValue($value, AbstractPlatform $platform)
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{
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if ($value === null) {
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return null;
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}
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return $value->format($platform->getDateTimeFormatString(),
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(self::$utc) ? self::$utc : (self::$utc = new \DateTimeZone('UTC'))
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);
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}
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public function convertToPHPValue($value, AbstractPlatform $platform)
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{
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if ($value === null) {
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return null;
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}
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$val = \DateTime::createFromFormat(
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$platform->getDateTimeFormatString(),
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$value,
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(self::$utc) ? self::$utc : (self::$utc = new \DateTimeZone('UTC'))
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);
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if (!$val) {
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throw ConversionException::conversionFailed($value, $this->getName());
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}
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return $val;
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}
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}
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This database type makes sure that every DateTime instance is always saved in UTC, relative
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to the current timezone that the passed DateTime instance has. To be able to transform these values
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back into their real timezone you have to save the timezone in a separate field of the entity
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requiring timezoned datetimes:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace Shipping;
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/**
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* @Entity
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*/
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class Event
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{
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/** @Column(type="datetime") */
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private $created;
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/** @Column(type="string") */
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private $timezone;
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/**
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* @var bool
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*/
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private $localized = false;
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public function __construct(\DateTime $createDate)
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{
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$this->localized = true;
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$this->created = $createDate;
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$this->timezone = $createDate->getTimeZone()->getName();
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}
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public function getCreated()
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{
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if (!$this->localized) {
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$this->created->setTimeZone(new \DateTimeZone($this->timezone));
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}
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return $this->created;
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}
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}
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This snippet makes use of the previously discussed "changeset by reference only" property of
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objects. That means a new DateTime will only be used during updating if the reference
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changes between retrieval and flush operation. This means we can easily go and modify
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the instance by setting the previous local timezone.
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