152 lines
5.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
152 lines
5.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
Change Tracking Policies
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------------------------
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Change tracking is the process of determining what has changed in
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managed entities since the last time they were synchronized with
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the database.
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Doctrine provides 3 different change tracking policies, each having
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its particular advantages and disadvantages. The change tracking
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policy can be defined on a per-class basis (or more precisely,
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per-hierarchy).
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Deferred Implicit
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The deferred implicit policy is the default change tracking policy
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and the most convenient one. With this policy, Doctrine detects the
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changes by a property-by-property comparison at commit time and
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also detects changes to entities or new entities that are
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referenced by other managed entities ("persistence by
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reachability"). Although the most convenient policy, it can have
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negative effects on performance if you are dealing with large units
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of work (see "Understanding the Unit of Work"). Since Doctrine
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can't know what has changed, it needs to check all managed entities
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for changes every time you invoke EntityManager#flush(), making
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this operation rather costly.
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Deferred Explicit
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The deferred explicit policy is similar to the deferred implicit
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policy in that it detects changes through a property-by-property
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comparison at commit time. The difference is that only entities are
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considered that have been explicitly marked for change detection
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through a call to EntityManager#persist(entity) or through a save
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cascade. All other entities are skipped. This policy therefore
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gives improved performance for larger units of work while
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sacrificing the behavior of "automatic dirty checking".
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Therefore, flush() operations are potentially cheaper with this
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policy. The negative aspect this has is that if you have a rather
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large application and you pass your objects through several layers
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for processing purposes and business tasks you may need to track
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yourself which entities have changed on the way so you can pass
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them to EntityManager#persist().
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This policy can be configured as follows:
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::
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<?php
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @ChangeTrackingPolicy("DEFERRED_EXPLICIT")
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*/
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class User
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{
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// ...
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}
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Notify
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~~~~~~
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This policy is based on the assumption that the entities notify
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interested listeners of changes to their properties. For that
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purpose, a class that wants to use this policy needs to implement
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the ``NotifyPropertyChanged`` interface from the Doctrine
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namespace. As a guideline, such an implementation can look as
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follows:
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::
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<?php
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use Doctrine\Common\NotifyPropertyChanged,
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Doctrine\Common\PropertyChangedListener;
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @ChangeTrackingPolicy("NOTIFY")
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*/
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class MyEntity implements NotifyPropertyChanged
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{
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// ...
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private $_listeners = array();
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public function addPropertyChangedListener(PropertyChangedListener $listener)
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{
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$this->_listeners[] = $listener;
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}
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}
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Then, in each property setter of this class or derived classes, you
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need to notify all the ``PropertyChangedListener`` instances. As an
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example we add a convenience method on ``MyEntity`` that shows this
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behaviour:
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::
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<?php
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// ...
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class MyEntity implements NotifyPropertyChanged
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{
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// ...
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protected function _onPropertyChanged($propName, $oldValue, $newValue)
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{
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if ($this->_listeners) {
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foreach ($this->_listeners as $listener) {
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$listener->propertyChanged($this, $propName, $oldValue, $newValue);
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}
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}
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}
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public function setData($data)
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{
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if ($data != $this->data) {
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$this->_onPropertyChanged('data', $this->data, $data);
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$this->data = $data;
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}
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}
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}
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You have to invoke ``_onPropertyChanged`` inside every method that
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changes the persistent state of ``MyEntity``.
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The check whether the new value is different from the old one is
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not mandatory but recommended. That way you also have full control
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over when you consider a property changed.
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The negative point of this policy is obvious: You need implement an
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interface and write some plumbing code. But also note that we tried
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hard to keep this notification functionality abstract. Strictly
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speaking, it has nothing to do with the persistence layer and the
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Doctrine ORM or DBAL. You may find that property notification
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events come in handy in many other scenarios as well. As mentioned
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earlier, the ``Doctrine\Common`` namespace is not that evil and
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consists solely of very small classes and interfaces that have
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almost no external dependencies (none to the DBAL and none to the
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ORM) and that you can easily take with you should you want to swap
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out the persistence layer. This change tracking policy does not
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introduce a dependency on the Doctrine DBAL/ORM or the persistence
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layer.
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The positive point and main advantage of this policy is its
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effectiveness. It has the best performance characteristics of the 3
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policies with larger units of work and a flush() operation is very
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cheap when nothing has changed.
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