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404 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
Introduction
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============
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Welcome
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-------
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Doctrine 2 is an object-relational mapper (ORM) for PHP 5.3.0+ that
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provides transparent persistence for PHP objects. It sits on top of
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a powerful database abstraction layer (DBAL). Object-Relational
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Mappers primary task is the transparent translation between (PHP)
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objects and relational database rows.
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One of Doctrines key features is the option to write database
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queries in a proprietary object oriented SQL dialect called
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Doctrine Query Language (DQL), inspired by Hibernates HQL. Besides
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DQLs slight differences to SQL it abstracts the mapping between
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database rows and objects considerably, allowing developers to
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write powerful queries in a simple and flexible fashion.
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Disclaimer
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----------
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This is the Doctrine 2 reference documentation. Introductory guides
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and tutorials that you can follow along from start to finish, like
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the "Guide to Doctrine" book known from the Doctrine 1.x series,
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will be available at a later date.
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Using an Object-Relational Mapper
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---------------------------------
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As the term ORM already hints at, Doctrine 2 aims to simplify the
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translation between database rows and the PHP object model. The
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primary use case for Doctrine are therefore applications that
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utilize the Object-Oriented Programming Paradigm. For applications
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that not primarily work with objects Doctrine 2 is not suited very
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well.
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Requirements
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------------
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Doctrine 2 requires a minimum of PHP 5.3.0. For greatly improved
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performance it is also recommended that you use APC with PHP.
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Doctrine 2 Packages
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-------------------
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Doctrine 2 is divided into three main packages.
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- Common
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- DBAL (includes Common)
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- ORM (includes DBAL+Common)
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This manual mainly covers the ORM package, sometimes touching parts
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of the underlying DBAL and Common packages. The Doctrine code base
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is split in to these packages for a few reasons and they are to...
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- ...make things more maintainable and decoupled
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- ...allow you to use the code in Doctrine Common without the ORM
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or DBAL
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- ...allow you to use the DBAL without the ORM
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The Common Package
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Common package contains highly reusable components that have no
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dependencies beyond the package itself (and PHP, of course). The
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root namespace of the Common package is ``Doctrine\Common``.
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The DBAL Package
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The DBAL package contains an enhanced database abstraction layer on
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top of PDO but is not strongly bound to PDO. The purpose of this
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layer is to provide a single API that bridges most of the
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differences between the different RDBMS vendors. The root namespace
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of the DBAL package is ``Doctrine\DBAL``.
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The ORM Package
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ORM package contains the object-relational mapping toolkit that
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provides transparent relational persistence for plain PHP objects.
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The root namespace of the ORM package is ``Doctrine\ORM``.
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Installing
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----------
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Doctrine can be installed many different ways. We will describe all
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the different ways and you can choose which one suits you best.
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PEAR
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~~~~
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You can easily install any of the three Doctrine packages from the
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PEAR command line installation utility.
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To install just the ``Common`` package you can run the following
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command:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ sudo pear install pear.doctrine-project.org/DoctrineCommon-<version>
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If you want to use the Doctrine Database Abstraction Layer you can
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install it with the following command.
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ sudo pear install pear.doctrine-project.org/DoctrineDBAL-<version>
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Or, if you want to get the works and go for the ORM you can install
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it with the following command.
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ sudo pear install pear.doctrine-project.org/DoctrineORM-<version>
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.. note::
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The ``<version>`` tag above represents the version you
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want to install. For example if the current version at the time of
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writing this is ``2.0.7`` for the ORM, so you could install it
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like the following:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ sudo pear install pear.doctrine-project.org/DoctrineORM-2.0.7
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When you have a package installed via PEAR you can require and load
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the ``ClassLoader`` with the following code.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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require 'Doctrine/ORM/Tools/Setup.php';
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Doctrine\ORM\Tools\Setup\registerAutoloadPEAR();
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The packages are installed in to your shared PEAR PHP code folder
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in a folder named ``Doctrine``. You also get a nice command line
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utility installed and made available on your system. Now when you
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run the ``doctrine`` command you will see what you can do with it.
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.. code-block:: php
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$ doctrine
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Doctrine Command Line Interface version 2.0.0BETA3-DEV
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Usage:
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[options] command [arguments]
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Options:
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--help -h Display this help message.
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--quiet -q Do not output any message.
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--verbose -v Increase verbosity of messages.
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--version -V Display this program version.
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--color -c Force ANSI color output.
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--no-interaction -n Do not ask any interactive question.
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Available commands:
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help Displays help for a command (?)
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list Lists commands
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dbal
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:import Import SQL file(s) directly to Database.
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:run-sql Executes arbitrary SQL directly from the command line.
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orm
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:convert-d1-schema Converts Doctrine 1.X schema into a Doctrine 2.X schema.
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:convert-mapping Convert mapping information between supported formats.
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:ensure-production-settings Verify that Doctrine is properly configured for a production environment.
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:generate-entities Generate entity classes and method stubs from your mapping information.
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:generate-proxies Generates proxy classes for entity classes.
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:generate-repositories Generate repository classes from your mapping information.
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:run-dql Executes arbitrary DQL directly from the command line.
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:validate-schema Validate that the mapping files.
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orm:clear-cache
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:metadata Clear all metadata cache of the various cache drivers.
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:query Clear all query cache of the various cache drivers.
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:result Clear result cache of the various cache drivers.
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orm:schema-tool
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:create Processes the schema and either create it directly on EntityManager Storage Connection or generate the SQL output.
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:drop Processes the schema and either drop the database schema of EntityManager Storage Connection or generate the SQL output.
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:update Processes the schema and either update the database schema of EntityManager Storage Connection or generate the SQL output.
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Package Download
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can also use Doctrine 2 by downloading the latest release
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package from
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`the download page <http://www.doctrine-project.org/download>`_.
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See the configuration section on how to configure and bootstrap a
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downloaded version of Doctrine.
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GitHub
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~~~~~~
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Alternatively you can clone the latest version of Doctrine 2 via
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GitHub.com:
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.. code-block:: php
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$ git clone git://github.com/doctrine/doctrine2.git doctrine
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This downloads all the sources of the ORM package. You need to
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initialize the Github submodules for the Common and DBAL package
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dependencies:
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.. code-block:: php
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$ git submodule init
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$ git submodule update
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This updates your Git checkout to use the Doctrine and Doctrine
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package versions that are recommended for the cloned Master version
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of Doctrine 2.
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See the configuration chapter on how to configure a Github
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installation of Doctrine with regards to autoloading.
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**NOTE**
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You should not combine the Doctrine-Common, Doctrine-DBAL and
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Doctrine-ORM master commits with each other in combination. The ORM
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may not work with the current Common or DBAL master versions.
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Instead the ORM ships with the Git Submodules that are required.
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Subversion
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~~~~~~~~~~
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**NOTE**
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Using the SVN Mirror is not recommended. It only allows access to
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the latest master commit and does not automatically fetch the
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submodules.
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If you prefer subversion you can also checkout the code from
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GitHub.com through the subversion protocol:
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.. code-block:: php
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$ svn co http://svn.github.com/doctrine/doctrine2.git doctrine2
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However this only allows you to check out the current master of
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Doctrine 2, without the Common and DBAL dependencies. You have to
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grab them yourself, but might run into version incompatibilities
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between the different master branches of Common, DBAL and ORM.
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Sandbox Quickstart
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------------------
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**NOTE** The sandbox is only available via the Doctrine2 Github
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Repository or soon as a separate download on the downloads page.
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You will find it in the $root/tools/sandbox folder.
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The sandbox is a pre-configured environment for evaluating and
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playing with Doctrine 2.
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Overview
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~~~~~~~~
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After navigating to the sandbox directory, you should see the
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following structure:
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.. code-block:: php
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sandbox/
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Entities/
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Address.php
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User.php
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xml/
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Entities.Address.dcm.xml
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Entities.User.dcm.xml
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yaml/
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Entities.Address.dcm.yml
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Entities.User.dcm.yml
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cli-config.php
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doctrine
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doctrine.php
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index.php
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Here is a short overview of the purpose of these folders and
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files:
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- The ``Entities`` folder is where any model classes are created.
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Two example entities are already there.
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- The ``xml`` folder is where any XML mapping files are created
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(if you want to use XML mapping). Two example mapping documents for
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the 2 example entities are already there.
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- The ``yaml`` folder is where any YAML mapping files are created
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(if you want to use YAML mapping). Two example mapping documents
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for the 2 example entities are already there.
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- The ``cli-config.php`` contains bootstrap code for a
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configuration that is used by the Console tool ``doctrine``
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whenever you execute a task.
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- ``doctrine``/``doctrine.php`` is a command-line tool.
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- ``index.php`` is a basic classical bootstrap file of a php
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application that uses Doctrine 2.
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Mini-tutorial
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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1) From within the tools/sandbox folder, run the following command
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and you should see the same output.
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$ php doctrine orm:schema-tool:create Creating database schema...
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Database schema created successfully!
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2) Take another look into the tools/sandbox folder. A SQLite
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database should have been created with the name
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``database.sqlite``.
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3) Open ``index.php`` and at the bottom edit it so it looks like
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the following:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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//... bootstrap stuff
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## PUT YOUR TEST CODE BELOW
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$user = new \Entities\User;
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$user->setName('Garfield');
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$em->persist($user);
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$em->flush();
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echo "User saved!";
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Open index.php in your browser or execute it on the command line.
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You should see the output "User saved!".
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4) Inspect the SQLite database. Again from within the tools/sandbox
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folder, execute the following command:
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$ php doctrine dbal:run-sql "select \* from users"
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You should get the following output:
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.. code-block:: php
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array(1) {
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[0]=>
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array(2) {
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["id"]=>
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string(1) "1"
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["name"]=>
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string(8) "Garfield"
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}
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}
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You just saved your first entity with a generated ID in an SQLite
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database.
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5) Replace the contents of index.php with the following:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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//... bootstrap stuff
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## PUT YOUR TEST CODE BELOW
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$q = $em->createQuery('select u from Entities\User u where u.name = ?1');
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$q->setParameter(1, 'Garfield');
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$garfield = $q->getSingleResult();
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echo "Hello " . $garfield->getName() . "!";
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You just created your first DQL query to retrieve the user with the
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name 'Garfield' from an SQLite database (Yes, there is an easier
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way to do it, but we wanted to introduce you to DQL at this point.
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Can you **find** the easier way?).
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**TIP** When you create new model classes or alter existing ones
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you can recreate the database schema with the command
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``doctrine orm:schema-tool --drop`` followed by
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``doctrine orm:schema-tool --create``.
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6) Explore Doctrine 2!
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Instead of reading through the reference manual we also recommend to look at the tutorials:
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:doc:`Getting Started Tutorial <../tutorials/getting-started-xml-edition>`
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