mongodb-odm-docs-dash/Doctrine ODM.docset/Contents/Resources/Documents/_sources/reference/complex-references.rst.txt

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2017-12-02 03:35:11 +00:00
Complex References
==================
Sometimes you may want to access related documents using custom criteria or from
the inverse side of a relationship.
You can create an `immutable`_ reference to one or many documents and specify
how that reference is to be loaded. The reference is immutable in that it is
defined only in the mapping, unlike a typical reference where a `MongoDBRef`_ or
identifier (see :ref:`storing_references`) is stored on the document itself.
The following options may be used for :ref:`one <reference_one>` and
:ref:`many <reference_many>` reference mappings:
- ``criteria`` - Query criteria to apply to the cursor.
- ``repositoryMethod`` - The repository method used to create the cursor.
- ``sort`` - Sort criteria for the cursor.
- ``skip`` - Skip offset to apply to the cursor.
- ``limit`` - Limit to apply to the cursor.
Basic Example
-------------
In the following example, ``$comments`` will refer to all Comments for the
BlogPost and ``$last5Comments`` will refer to only the last five Comments. The
``mappedBy`` field is used to determine which Comment field should be used for
querying by the BlogPost's ID.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
/** @Document */
class BlogPost
{
// ...
/** @ReferenceMany(targetDocument="Comment", mappedBy="blogPost") */
private $comments;
/**
* @ReferenceMany(
* targetDocument="Comment",
* mappedBy="blogPost",
* sort={"date"="desc"},
* limit=5
* )
*/
private $last5Comments;
}
/** @Document */
class Comment
{
// ...
/** @ReferenceOne(targetDocument="BlogPost", inversedBy="comments") */
private $blogPost;
}
You can also use ``mappedBy`` for referencing a single document, as in the
following example:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
/**
* @ReferenceOne(
* targetDocument="Comment",
* mappedBy="blogPost",
* sort={"date"="desc"}
* )
*/
private $lastComment;
``criteria`` Example
--------------------
Use ``criteria`` to further match referenced documents. In the following
example, ``$commentsByAdmin`` will refer only comments created by
administrators:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
/**
* @ReferenceMany(
* targetDocument="Comment",
* mappedBy="blogPost",
* criteria={"isByAdmin" : true}
* )
*/
private $commentsByAdmin;
``repositoryMethod`` Example
----------------------------
Alternatively, you can use ``repositoryMethod`` to specify a custom method to
call on the Comment repository class to populate the reference.
.. code-block:: php
<?php
/**
* @ReferenceMany(
* targetDocument="Comment",
* mappedBy="blogPost",
* repositoryMethod="findSomeComments"
* )
*/
private $someComments;
The ``Comment`` class will need to have a custom repository class configured:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
/** @Document(repositoryClass="CommentRepository") */
class Comment
{
// ...
}
Lastly, the ``CommentRepository`` class will need a ``findSomeComments()``
method which shall return ``Doctrine\MongoDB\CursorInterface``. When this method
is called to populate the reference, Doctrine will provide the Blogpost instance
(i.e. owning document) as the first argument:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
class CommentRepository extends \Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\DocumentRepository
{
/**
* @return \Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\Cursor
*/
public function findSomeComments(BlogPost $blogPost)
{
return $this->createQueryBuilder()
->field('blogPost')->references($blogPost);
->getQuery()->execute();
}
}
.. _MongoDBRef: http://php.net/manual/en/class.mongodbref.php
.. _immutable: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immutable