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doctrine2/manual/docs/en/connection-management/managing-connections.txt
2007-10-17 21:16:49 +00:00

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From the start Doctrine has been designed to work with multiple connections. Unless separately specified Doctrine always uses the current connection for executing the queries. The following example uses {{openConnection()}} second argument as an optional connection alias.
<code type="php">
// Doctrine_Manager controls all the connections
$manager = Doctrine_Manager::getInstance();
// open first connection
$conn = $manager->openConnection(new PDO('dsn','username','password'), 'connection 1');
</code>
For convenience {{Doctrine_Manager}} provides static method {{connection()}} which opens new connection when arguments are given to it and returns the current connection when no arguments have been speficied.
<code type="php">
// open first connection
$conn = Doctrine_Manager::connection(new PDO('dsn','username','password'), 'connection 1');
$conn2 = Doctrine_Manager::connection();
// $conn2 == $conn
</code>
The current connection is the lastly opened connection.
<code type="php">
// open second connection
$conn2 = $manager->openConnection(new PDO('dsn2','username2','password2'), 'connection 2');
$manager->getCurrentConnection(); // $conn2
</code>
You can change the current connection by calling {{setCurrentConnection()}}.
<code type="php">
$manager->setCurrentConnection('connection 1');
$manager->getCurrentConnection(); // $conn
</code>
You can iterate over the opened connection by simple passing the manager object to foreach clause. This is possible since {{Doctrine_Manager}} implements special {{IteratorAggregate}} interface.
<code type="php">
// iterating through connections
foreach($manager as $conn) {
}
</code>