c933ac1a4a
* Added reference to override section of inheritance-mapping.rst * Added link to yaml/xml examples in override-field-association-mappings-in-subclasses.rst
561 lines
19 KiB
ReStructuredText
561 lines
19 KiB
ReStructuredText
Inheritance Mapping
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===================
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Mapped Superclasses
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-------------------
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A mapped superclass is an abstract or concrete class that provides
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persistent entity state and mapping information for its subclasses,
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but which is not itself an entity. Typically, the purpose of such a
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mapped superclass is to define state and mapping information that
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is common to multiple entity classes.
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Mapped superclasses, just as regular, non-mapped classes, can
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appear in the middle of an otherwise mapped inheritance hierarchy
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(through Single Table Inheritance or Class Table Inheritance).
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.. note::
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A mapped superclass cannot be an entity, it is not query-able and
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persistent relationships defined by a mapped superclass must be
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unidirectional (with an owning side only). This means that One-To-Many
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associations are not possible on a mapped superclass at all.
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Furthermore Many-To-Many associations are only possible if the
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mapped superclass is only used in exactly one entity at the moment.
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For further support of inheritance, the single or
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joined table inheritance features have to be used.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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/** @MappedSuperclass */
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class MappedSuperclassBase
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{
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/** @Column(type="integer") */
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protected $mapped1;
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/** @Column(type="string") */
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protected $mapped2;
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/**
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* @OneToOne(targetEntity="MappedSuperclassRelated1")
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* @JoinColumn(name="related1_id", referencedColumnName="id")
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*/
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protected $mappedRelated1;
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// ... more fields and methods
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}
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/** @Entity */
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class EntitySubClass extends MappedSuperclassBase
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{
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/** @Id @Column(type="integer") */
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private $id;
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/** @Column(type="string") */
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private $name;
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// ... more fields and methods
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}
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The DDL for the corresponding database schema would look something
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like this (this is for SQLite):
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.. code-block:: sql
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CREATE TABLE EntitySubClass (mapped1 INTEGER NOT NULL, mapped2 TEXT NOT NULL, id INTEGER NOT NULL, name TEXT NOT NULL, related1_id INTEGER DEFAULT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(id))
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As you can see from this DDL snippet, there is only a single table
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for the entity subclass. All the mappings from the mapped
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superclass were inherited to the subclass as if they had been
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defined on that class directly.
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Single Table Inheritance
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------------------------
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`Single Table Inheritance <http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/singleTableInheritance.html>`_
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is an inheritance mapping strategy where all classes of a hierarchy
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are mapped to a single database table. In order to distinguish
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which row represents which type in the hierarchy a so-called
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discriminator column is used.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace MyProject\Model;
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @InheritanceType("SINGLE_TABLE")
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* @DiscriminatorColumn(name="discr", type="string")
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* @DiscriminatorMap({"person" = "Person", "employee" = "Employee"})
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*/
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class Person
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{
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// ...
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}
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/**
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* @Entity
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*/
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class Employee extends Person
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{
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// ...
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}
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Things to note:
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- The @InheritanceType, @DiscriminatorColumn and @DiscriminatorMap
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must be specified on the topmost class that is part of the mapped
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entity hierarchy.
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- The @DiscriminatorMap specifies which values of the
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discriminator column identify a row as being of a certain type. In
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the case above a value of "person" identifies a row as being of
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type ``Person`` and "employee" identifies a row as being of type
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``Employee``.
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- The names of the classes in the discriminator map do not need to
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be fully qualified if the classes are contained in the same
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namespace as the entity class on which the discriminator map is
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applied.
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Design-time considerations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This mapping approach works well when the type hierarchy is fairly
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simple and stable. Adding a new type to the hierarchy and adding
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fields to existing supertypes simply involves adding new columns to
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the table, though in large deployments this may have an adverse
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impact on the index and column layout inside the database.
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Performance impact
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This strategy is very efficient for querying across all types in
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the hierarchy or for specific types. No table joins are required,
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only a WHERE clause listing the type identifiers. In particular,
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relationships involving types that employ this mapping strategy are
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very performant.
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There is a general performance consideration with Single Table
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Inheritance: If the target-entity of a many-to-one or one-to-one
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association is an STI entity, it is preferable for performance reasons that it
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be a leaf entity in the inheritance hierarchy, (ie. have no subclasses).
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Otherwise Doctrine *CANNOT* create proxy instances
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of this entity and will *ALWAYS* load the entity eagerly.
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SQL Schema considerations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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For Single-Table-Inheritance to work in scenarios where you are
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using either a legacy database schema or a self-written database
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schema you have to make sure that all columns that are not in the
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root entity but in any of the different sub-entities has to allows
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null values. Columns that have NOT NULL constraints have to be on
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the root entity of the single-table inheritance hierarchy.
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Class Table Inheritance
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-----------------------
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`Class Table Inheritance <http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/classTableInheritance.html>`_
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is an inheritance mapping strategy where each class in a hierarchy
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is mapped to several tables: its own table and the tables of all
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parent classes. The table of a child class is linked to the table
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of a parent class through a foreign key constraint. Doctrine 2
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implements this strategy through the use of a discriminator column
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in the topmost table of the hierarchy because this is the easiest
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way to achieve polymorphic queries with Class Table Inheritance.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace MyProject\Model;
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @InheritanceType("JOINED")
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* @DiscriminatorColumn(name="discr", type="string")
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* @DiscriminatorMap({"person" = "Person", "employee" = "Employee"})
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*/
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class Person
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{
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// ...
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}
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/** @Entity */
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class Employee extends Person
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{
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// ...
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}
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Things to note:
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- The @InheritanceType, @DiscriminatorColumn and @DiscriminatorMap
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must be specified on the topmost class that is part of the mapped
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entity hierarchy.
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- The @DiscriminatorMap specifies which values of the
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discriminator column identify a row as being of which type. In the
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case above a value of "person" identifies a row as being of type
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``Person`` and "employee" identifies a row as being of type
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``Employee``.
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- The names of the classes in the discriminator map do not need to
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be fully qualified if the classes are contained in the same
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namespace as the entity class on which the discriminator map is
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applied.
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.. note::
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When you do not use the SchemaTool to generate the
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required SQL you should know that deleting a class table
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inheritance makes use of the foreign key property
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``ON DELETE CASCADE`` in all database implementations. A failure to
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implement this yourself will lead to dead rows in the database.
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Design-time considerations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Introducing a new type to the hierarchy, at any level, simply
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involves interjecting a new table into the schema. Subtypes of that
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type will automatically join with that new type at runtime.
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Similarly, modifying any entity type in the hierarchy by adding,
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modifying or removing fields affects only the immediate table
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mapped to that type. This mapping strategy provides the greatest
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flexibility at design time, since changes to any type are always
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limited to that type's dedicated table.
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Performance impact
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This strategy inherently requires multiple JOIN operations to
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perform just about any query which can have a negative impact on
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performance, especially with large tables and/or large hierarchies.
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When partial objects are allowed, either globally or on the
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specific query, then querying for any type will not cause the
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tables of subtypes to be OUTER JOINed which can increase
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performance but the resulting partial objects will not fully load
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themselves on access of any subtype fields, so accessing fields of
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subtypes after such a query is not safe.
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There is a general performance consideration with Class Table
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Inheritance: If the target-entity of a many-to-one or one-to-one
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association is a CTI entity, it is preferable for performance reasons that it
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be a leaf entity in the inheritance hierarchy, (ie. have no subclasses).
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Otherwise Doctrine *CANNOT* create proxy instances
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of this entity and will *ALWAYS* load the entity eagerly.
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SQL Schema considerations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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For each entity in the Class-Table Inheritance hierarchy all the
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mapped fields have to be columns on the table of this entity.
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Additionally each child table has to have an id column that matches
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the id column definition on the root table (except for any sequence
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or auto-increment details). Furthermore each child table has to
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have a foreign key pointing from the id column to the root table id
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column and cascading on delete.
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.. _inheritence_mapping_overrides:
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Overrides
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---------
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Used to override a mapping for an entity field or relationship.
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May be applied to an entity that extends a mapped superclass
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to override a relationship or field mapping defined by the mapped superclass.
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Association Override
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Override a mapping for an entity relationship.
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Could be used by an entity that extends a mapped superclass
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to override a relationship mapping defined by the mapped superclass.
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Example:
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.. configuration-block::
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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// user mapping
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namespace MyProject\Model;
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/**
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* @MappedSuperclass
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*/
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class User
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{
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//other fields mapping
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/**
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* @ManyToMany(targetEntity="Group", inversedBy="users")
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* @JoinTable(name="users_groups",
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* joinColumns={@JoinColumn(name="user_id", referencedColumnName="id")},
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* inverseJoinColumns={@JoinColumn(name="group_id", referencedColumnName="id")}
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* )
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*/
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protected $groups;
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/**
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* @ManyToOne(targetEntity="Address")
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* @JoinColumn(name="address_id", referencedColumnName="id")
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*/
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protected $address;
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}
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// admin mapping
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namespace MyProject\Model;
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @AssociationOverrides({
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* @AssociationOverride(name="groups",
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* joinTable=@JoinTable(
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* name="users_admingroups",
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* joinColumns=@JoinColumn(name="adminuser_id"),
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* inverseJoinColumns=@JoinColumn(name="admingroup_id")
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* )
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* ),
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* @AssociationOverride(name="address",
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* joinColumns=@JoinColumn(
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* name="adminaddress_id", referencedColumnName="id"
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* )
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* )
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* })
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*/
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class Admin extends User
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{
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}
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.. code-block:: xml
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<!-- user mapping -->
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<doctrine-mapping>
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<mapped-superclass name="MyProject\Model\User">
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<!-- other fields mapping -->
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<many-to-many field="groups" target-entity="Group" inversed-by="users">
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<cascade>
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<cascade-persist/>
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<cascade-merge/>
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<cascade-detach/>
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</cascade>
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<join-table name="users_groups">
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<join-columns>
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<join-column name="user_id" referenced-column-name="id" />
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</join-columns>
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<inverse-join-columns>
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<join-column name="group_id" referenced-column-name="id" />
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</inverse-join-columns>
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</join-table>
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</many-to-many>
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</mapped-superclass>
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</doctrine-mapping>
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<!-- admin mapping -->
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<doctrine-mapping>
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<entity name="MyProject\Model\Admin">
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<association-overrides>
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<association-override name="groups">
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<join-table name="users_admingroups">
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<join-columns>
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<join-column name="adminuser_id"/>
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</join-columns>
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<inverse-join-columns>
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<join-column name="admingroup_id"/>
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</inverse-join-columns>
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</join-table>
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</association-override>
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<association-override name="address">
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<join-columns>
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<join-column name="adminaddress_id" referenced-column-name="id"/>
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</join-columns>
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</association-override>
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</association-overrides>
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</entity>
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</doctrine-mapping>
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.. code-block:: yaml
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# user mapping
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MyProject\Model\User:
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type: mappedSuperclass
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# other fields mapping
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manyToOne:
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address:
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targetEntity: Address
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joinColumn:
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name: address_id
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referencedColumnName: id
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cascade: [ persist, merge ]
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manyToMany:
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groups:
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targetEntity: Group
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joinTable:
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name: users_groups
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joinColumns:
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user_id:
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referencedColumnName: id
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inverseJoinColumns:
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group_id:
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referencedColumnName: id
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cascade: [ persist, merge, detach ]
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# admin mapping
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MyProject\Model\Admin:
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type: entity
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associationOverride:
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address:
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joinColumn:
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adminaddress_id:
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name: adminaddress_id
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referencedColumnName: id
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groups:
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joinTable:
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name: users_admingroups
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joinColumns:
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adminuser_id:
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referencedColumnName: id
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inverseJoinColumns:
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admingroup_id:
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referencedColumnName: id
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Things to note:
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- The "association override" specifies the overrides base on the property name.
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- This feature is available for all kind of associations. (OneToOne, OneToMany, ManyToOne, ManyToMany)
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- The association type *CANNOT* be changed.
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- The override could redefine the joinTables or joinColumns depending on the association type.
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Attribute Override
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Override the mapping of a field.
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Could be used by an entity that extends a mapped superclass to override a field mapping defined by the mapped superclass.
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.. configuration-block::
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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// user mapping
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namespace MyProject\Model;
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/**
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* @MappedSuperclass
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*/
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class User
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{
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/** @Id @GeneratedValue @Column(type="integer", name="user_id", length=150) */
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protected $id;
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/** @Column(name="user_name", nullable=true, unique=false, length=250) */
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protected $name;
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// other fields mapping
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}
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// guest mapping
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namespace MyProject\Model;
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @AttributeOverrides({
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* @AttributeOverride(name="id",
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* column=@Column(
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* name = "guest_id",
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* type = "integer",
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length = 140
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* )
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* ),
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* @AttributeOverride(name="name",
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* column=@Column(
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* name = "guest_name",
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* nullable = false,
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* unique = true,
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length = 240
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* )
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* )
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* })
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*/
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class Guest extends User
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{
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}
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.. code-block:: xml
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<!-- user mapping -->
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<doctrine-mapping>
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<mapped-superclass name="MyProject\Model\User">
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<id name="id" type="integer" column="user_id" length="150">
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<generator strategy="AUTO"/>
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</id>
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<field name="name" column="user_name" type="string" length="250" nullable="true" unique="false" />
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<many-to-one field="address" target-entity="Address">
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<cascade>
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<cascade-persist/>
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<cascade-merge/>
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</cascade>
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<join-column name="address_id" referenced-column-name="id"/>
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</many-to-one>
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<!-- other fields mapping -->
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</mapped-superclass>
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</doctrine-mapping>
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<!-- admin mapping -->
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<doctrine-mapping>
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<entity name="MyProject\Model\Guest">
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<attribute-overrides>
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<attribute-override name="id">
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<field column="guest_id" length="140"/>
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</attribute-override>
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<attribute-override name="name">
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<field column="guest_name" type="string" length="240" nullable="false" unique="true" />
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</attribute-override>
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</attribute-overrides>
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</entity>
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</doctrine-mapping>
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.. code-block:: yaml
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# user mapping
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MyProject\Model\User:
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type: mappedSuperclass
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id:
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id:
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type: integer
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column: user_id
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length: 150
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generator:
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strategy: AUTO
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fields:
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name:
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type: string
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column: user_name
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length: 250
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nullable: true
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unique: false
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#other fields mapping
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# guest mapping
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MyProject\Model\Guest:
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type: entity
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attributeOverride:
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id:
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column: guest_id
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type: integer
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length: 140
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name:
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column: guest_name
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type: string
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length: 240
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nullable: false
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unique: true
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Things to note:
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- The "attribute override" specifies the overrides base on the property name.
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- The column type *CANNOT* be changed. if the column type is not equals you got a ``MappingException``
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- The override can redefine all the column except the type.
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