doctrine / key-value-store
Simple Key-Value Store Abstraction Layer that maps to PHP objects, allowing for many backends.
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Requires
- php: ^5.5|^7.0
- doctrine/common: ^2.4
Requires (Dev)
- aws/aws-sdk-php: ^3.8
- datastax/php-driver: ^1.0
- doctrine/couchdb: ^1.0.0-beta4
- mongodb/mongodb: ^1.4
- php-riak/riak-client: ^1.0@alpha
- phpunit/phpunit: ^4.8|^5.0
Suggests
- ext-couchbase: to use the Couchbase storage
- aws/aws-sdk-php: to use the DynamoDB storage
- doctrine/couchdb: to use the CouchDB storage
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-02-16 03:57:54 UTC
README
The Persistence interfaces are rather overkill for many implementations in the NoSQL world that are only key-value stores with some additional features on top. Doctrine Key Value Store to the rescue. This project offers a much simpler lightweight API that is centered on a key-value API to fetch/save objects.
- Single- or multi-value primary keys
- Unstructured/schema-less values that are mapped onto objects
- Depending on the implementation embedded values/objects are supported
- No complex mapping necessary, just put @Entity on the class and all properties are automatically mapped unless @Transient is given. At least one property has to be @Id. Depends on the underlying vendor though.
- Properties dont have to exist on the class, public properties are created for missing ones.
- No support for references to other objects
- EventListener for ODM/ORM that allows to manage key-value entities and collections of them as properties (postLoad, postUpdate, postPersist, postRemove)
- Stripped down Object Manager Interface
- Data-mapper as any other Doctrine library and persistence and data-objects are separated.
- Inheritance (Single- or Multiple-Storage)
Implementations
Following vendors are targeted:
- Microsoft Azure Table (Implemented)
- Doctrine\Common\Cache provider (Implemented)
- RDBMS (Implemented)
- Couchbase (Implemented)
- Amazon DynamoDB (Implemented)
- CouchDB (Implemented)
- Cassandra
- MongoDB (Implemented)
- Riak (Implemented)
- Redis (Implemented)
We happily accept contributions for any of the drivers.
Example
Suppose we track e-mail campaigns based on campaign id and recipients.
<?php use Doctrine\KeyValueStore\Mapping\Annotations as KeyValue; /** * @KeyValue\Entity(storageName="responses") */ class Response { const RECEIVE = 0; const OPEN = 10; const CLICK = 20; const ACTION = 30; /** @KeyValue\Id */ private $campaign; /** @KeyValue\Id */ private $recipient; private $status; private $date; public function __construct($campaign, $recipient, $status) { $this->campaign = $campaign; $this->recipient = $recipient; $this->status = $status; } }
Create
<?php $response = new Response("1234", "kontakt@beberlei.de", Response::RECEIVE); $entityManager->persist($response); //.... persists as much as you can :-) $entityManager->flush();
Read
<?php $response = $entityManager->find("Response",array("campaign" => "1234","recipient" => "kontakt@beberlei.de"));
Update
same as create, just reuse the same id.
Delete
<?php $response = $entityManager->find("Response",array("1234","kontakt@beberlei.de")); $entityManager->remove($response); $entityManager->flush();
Configuration
There is no factory yet that simplifies the creation process, here is the full code necessary to instantiate a KeyValue EntityManager with a Doctrine Cache backend:
<?php use Doctrine\KeyValueStore\EntityManager; use Doctrine\KeyValueStore\Configuration; use Doctrine\KeyValueStore\Mapping\AnnotationDriver; use Doctrine\KeyValueStore\Storage\DoctrineCacheStorage; use Doctrine\Common\Cache\ArrayCache; use Doctrine\Common\Annotations\AnnotationReader; $cache = new ArrayCache; $storage = new DoctrineCacheStorage($cache); $reader = new AnnotationReader(); $metadata = new AnnotationDriver($reader); $config = new Configuration(); $config->setMappingDriverImpl($metadata); $config->setMetadataCache($cache); $entityManager = new EntityManager($storage, $config);
If you want to use WindowsAzure Table you can use the following configuration to instantiate the storage:
use Doctrine\KeyValueStore\Storage\AzureSdkTableStorage; use WindowsAzure\Common\ServicesBuilder; $connectionString = ""; // Windows Azure Connection string $builder = ServicesBuilder::getInstance(); $client = $builder->createTableService($connectionString); $storage = new AzureSdkTableStorage($client);
If you want to use Doctrine DBAL as backend:
$params = array(); $tableName = "storage"; $idColumnName = "id"; $dataColumnName = "serialized_data"; $conn = DriverManager::getConnection($params); $storage = new DBALStorage($conn, $tableName, $idColumnName, $dataColumnName);