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Configuration
=============
The first thing you need to know about Idiorm is that *you dont need to
define any model classes to use it*. With almost every other ORM, the
first thing to do is set up your models and map them to database tables
(through configuration variables, XML files or similar). With Idiorm,
you can start using the ORM straight away.
Setup
~~~~~
First, ``require`` the Idiorm source file:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
require_once 'idiorm.php';
Then, pass a *Data Source Name* connection string to the ``configure``
method of the ORM class. This is used by PDO to connect to your
database. For more information, see the `PDO documentation`_.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('sqlite:./example.db');
You may also need to pass a username and password to your database
driver, using the ``username`` and ``password`` configuration options.
For example, if you are using MySQL:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=my_database');
ORM::configure('username', 'database_user');
ORM::configure('password', 'top_secret');
Also see “Configuration” section below.
Configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Other than setting the DSN string for the database connection (see
above), the ``configure`` method can be used to set some other simple
options on the ORM class. Modifying settings involves passing a
key/value pair to the ``configure`` method, representing the setting you
wish to modify and the value you wish to set it to.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('setting_name', 'value_for_setting');
A shortcut is provided to allow passing multiple key/value pairs at
once.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure(array(
'setting_name_1' => 'value_for_setting_1',
'setting_name_2' => 'value_for_setting_2',
'etc' => 'etc'
));
Use the ``get_config`` method to read current settings.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
$isLoggingEnabled = ORM::get_config('logging');
ORM::configure('logging', false);
// some crazy loop we don't want to log
ORM::configure('logging', $isLoggingEnabled);
Database authentication details
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Settings: ``username`` and ``password``
Some database adapters (such as MySQL) require a username and password
to be supplied separately to the DSN string. These settings allow you to
provide these values. A typical MySQL connection setup might look like
this:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=my_database');
ORM::configure('username', 'database_user');
ORM::configure('password', 'top_secret');
Or you can combine the connection setup into a single line using the
configuration array shortcut:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure(array(
'connection_string' => 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=my_database',
'username' => 'database_user',
'password' => 'top_secret'
));
Result sets
^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``return_result_sets``
Collections of results can be returned as an array (default) or as a result set.
See the `find_result_set()` documentation for more information.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('return_result_sets', true); // returns result sets
.. note::
It is recommended that you setup your projects to use result sets as they
are more flexible.
PDO Driver Options
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``driver_options``
Some database adapters require (or allow) an array of driver-specific
configuration options. This setting allows you to pass these options
through to the PDO constructor. For more information, see `the PDO
documentation`_. For example, to force the MySQL driver to use UTF-8 for
the connection:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('driver_options', array(PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND => 'SET NAMES utf8'));
PDO Error Mode
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``error_mode``
This can be used to set the ``PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE`` setting on the
database connection class used by Idiorm. It should be passed one of the
class constants defined by PDO. For example:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('error_mode', PDO::ERRMODE_WARNING);
The default setting is ``PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION``. For full details of
the error modes available, see `the PDO set attribute documentation`_.
PDO object access
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Should it ever be necessary, the PDO object used by Idiorm may be
accessed directly through ``ORM::get_db()``, or set directly via
``ORM::set_db()``. This should be an unusual occurance.
After a statement has been executed by any means, such as ``::save()``
or ``::raw_execute()``, the ``PDOStatement`` instance used may be
accessed via ``ORM::get_last_statement()``. This may be useful in order
to access ``PDOStatement::errorCode()``, if PDO exceptions are turned
off, or to access the ``PDOStatement::rowCount()`` method, which returns
differing results based on the underlying database. For more
information, see the `PDOStatement documentation`_.
Identifier quote character
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``identifier_quote_character``
Set the character used to quote identifiers (eg table name, column
name). If this is not set, it will be autodetected based on the database
driver being used by PDO.
ID Column
^^^^^^^^^
By default, the ORM assumes that all your tables have a primary key
column called ``id``. There are two ways to override this: for all
tables in the database, or on a per-table basis.
Setting: ``id_column``
This setting is used to configure the name of the primary key column for
all tables. If your ID column is called ``primary_key``, use:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('id_column', 'primary_key');
You can specify a compound primary key using an array:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('id_column', array('pk_1', 'pk_2'));
Note: If you use a auto-increment column in the compound primary key then it
should be the first one defined into the array.
Setting: ``id_column_overrides``
This setting is used to specify the primary key column name for each
table separately. It takes an associative array mapping table names to
column names. If, for example, your ID column names include the name of
the table, you can use the following configuration:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('id_column_overrides', array(
'person' => 'person_id',
'role' => 'role_id',
));
As with ``id_column`` setting, you can specify a compound primary key
using an array.
Limit clause style
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``limit_clause_style``
You can specify the limit clause style in the configuration. This is to facilitate
a MS SQL style limit clause that uses the ``TOP`` syntax.
Acceptable values are ``ORM::LIMIT_STYLE_TOP_N`` and ``ORM::LIMIT_STYLE_LIMIT``.
.. note::
If the PDO driver you are using is one of sqlsrv, dblib or mssql then Idiorm
will automatically select the ``ORM::LIMIT_STYLE_TOP_N`` for you unless you
override the setting.
Query logging
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``logging``
Idiorm can log all queries it executes. To enable query logging, set the
``logging`` option to ``true`` (it is ``false`` by default).
When query logging is enabled, you can use two static methods to access
the log. ``ORM::get_last_query()`` returns the most recent query
executed. ``ORM::get_query_log()`` returns an array of all queries
executed.
.. note::
The code that does the query log is an approximation of that provided by PDO/the
database (see the Idiorm source code for detail). The actual query isn't even available
to idiorm to log as the database/PDO handles the binding outside of idiorm's reach and
doesn't pass it back.
This means that you might come across some inconsistencies between what is logged and
what is actually run. In these case you'll need to look at the query log provided by
your database vendor (eg. MySQL).
Query logger
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``logger``
.. note::
You must enable ``logging`` for this setting to have any effect.
It is possible to supply a ``callable`` to this configuration setting, which will
be executed for every query that idiorm executes. In PHP a ``callable`` is anything
that can be executed as if it were a function. Most commonly this will take the
form of a anonymous function.
This setting is useful if you wish to log queries with an external library as it
allows you too whatever you would like from inside the callback function.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('logger', function($log_string, $query_time) {
echo $log_string . ' in ' . $query_time;
});
Query caching
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Setting: ``caching``
Idiorm can cache the queries it executes during a request. To enable
query caching, set the ``caching`` option to ``true`` (it is ``false``
by default).
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('caching', true);
Setting: ``caching_auto_clear``
Idiorm's cache is never cleared by default. If you wish to automatically clear it on save, set ``caching_auto_clear`` to ``true``
.. code-block:: php
<?php
ORM::configure('caching_auto_clear', true);
When query caching is enabled, Idiorm will cache the results of every
``SELECT`` query it executes. If Idiorm encounters a query that has
already been run, it will fetch the results directly from its cache and
not perform a database query.
Warnings and gotchas
''''''''''''''''''''
- Note that this is an in-memory cache that only persists data for the
duration of a single request. This is *not* a replacement for a
persistent cache such as `Memcached`_.
- Idiorms cache is very simple, and does not attempt to invalidate
itself when data changes. This means that if you run a query to
retrieve some data, modify and save it, and then run the same query
again, the results will be stale (ie, they will not reflect your
modifications). This could potentially cause subtle bugs in your
application. If you have caching enabled and you are experiencing odd
behaviour, disable it and try again. If you do need to perform such
operations but still wish to use the cache, you can call the
``ORM::clear_cache()`` to clear all existing cached queries.
- Enabling the cache will increase the memory usage of your
application, as all database rows that are fetched during each
request are held in memory. If you are working with large quantities
of data, you may wish to disable the cache.
Custom caching
''''''''''''''
If you wish to use custom caching functions, you can set them from the configure options.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
$my_cache = array();
ORM::configure('cache_query_result', function ($cache_key, $value, $table_name, $connection_name) use (&$my_cache) {
$my_cache[$cache_key] = $value;
});
ORM::configure('check_query_cache', function ($cache_key, $table_name, $connection_name) use (&$my_cache) {
if(isset($my_cache[$cache_key])){
return $my_cache[$cache_key];
} else {
return false;
}
});
ORM::configure('clear_cache', function ($table_name, $connection_name) use (&$my_cache) {
$my_cache = array();
});
ORM::configure('create_cache_key', function ($query, $parameters, $table_name, $connection_name) {
$parameter_string = join(',', $parameters);
$key = $query . ':' . $parameter_string;
$my_key = 'my-prefix'.crc32($key);
return $my_key;
});
.. _PDO documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/pdo.construct.php
.. _the PDO documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/pdo.construct.php
.. _the PDO set attribute documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/pdo.setattribute.php
.. _PDOStatement documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/class.pdostatement.php
.. _Memcached: http://www.memcached.org/