Tables have relationships to each other in a relational database. An entity in one table can be linked to one or more entities in another table by using referential integrity constraints defined in the database schema.
The
Zend_Db_Table_Row
class has methods for querying related rows
in other tables.
Define classes for each of your tables, extending the abstract class
Zend_Db_Table_Abstract
, as described in
“Defining a Table Class”
. Also
see
“La base de datos de ejemplo”
for a description of the
example database for which the following example code is
designed.
Below are the PHP class definitions for these tables:
class Accounts extends Zend_Db_Table_Abstract { protected $_name = 'accounts'; protected $_dependentTables = array('Bugs'); } class Products extends Zend_Db_Table_Abstract { protected $_name = 'products'; protected $_dependentTables = array('BugsProducts'); } class Bugs extends Zend_Db_Table_Abstract { protected $_name = 'bugs'; protected $_dependentTables = array('BugsProducts'); protected $_referenceMap = array( 'Reporter' => array( 'columns' => 'reported_by', 'refTableClass' => 'Accounts', 'refColumns' => 'account_name' ), 'Engineer' => array( 'columns' => 'assigned_to', 'refTableClass' => 'Accounts', 'refColumns' => 'account_name' ), 'Verifier' => array( 'columns' => array('verified_by'), 'refTableClass' => 'Accounts', 'refColumns' => array('account_name') ) ); } class BugsProducts extends Zend_Db_Table_Abstract { protected $_name = 'bugs_products'; protected $_referenceMap = array( 'Bug' => array( 'columns' => array('bug_id'), 'refTableClass' => 'Bugs', 'refColumns' => array('bug_id') ), 'Product' => array( 'columns' => array('product_id'), 'refTableClass' => 'Products', 'refColumns' => array('product_id') ) ); }
If you use
Zend_Db_Table
to emulate cascading UPDATE and DELETE
operations, declare the
$_dependentTables
array in the class for the
parent table. List the class name for each dependent table.
Use the class name, not the
physical name of the
SQL
table.
Nota
Skip declaration of
$_dependentTables
if you use referential
integrity constraints in the
RDBMS
server to implement cascading
operations. See
“Cascading Write Operations”
for more
information.
Declare the
$_referenceMap
array in the class for each dependent
table. This is an associative array of reference
"rules". A reference rule identifies
which table is the parent table in the relationship,
and also lists which columns in the
dependent table reference which columns in the parent
table.
The rule key is a string used as an index to the
$_referenceMap
array. This rule key is used to identify each reference relationship. Choose a
descriptive name for this rule key. It's best to use a string that can be part of a
PHP
method name, as you will see later.
In the example
PHP
code above, the rule keys in the Bugs table class
are:
'Reporter'
,
'Engineer'
,
'Verifier'
, and
'Product'
.
The value of each rule entry in the
$_referenceMap
array is also an
associative array. The elements of this rule entry are described below:
-
columns => A string or an array of strings naming the foreign key column name(s) in the dependent table.
It's common for this to be a single column, but some tables have multi-column keys.
-
refTableClass => The class name of the parent table. Use the class name, not the physical name of the SQL table.
It's common for a dependent table to have only one reference to its parent table, but some tables have multiple references to the same parent table. In the example database, there is one reference from the
bugs
table to theproducts
table, but three references from thebugs
table to theaccounts
table. Put each reference in a separate entry in the$_referenceMap
array. -
refColumns => A string or an array of strings naming the primary key column name(s) in the parent table.
It's common for this to be a single column, but some tables have multi-column keys. If the reference uses a multi-column key, the order of columns in the
'columns'
entry must match the order of columns in the'refColumns'
entry.It is optional to specify this element. If you don't specify the
refColumns
, the column(s) reported as the primary key columns of the parent table are used by default. -
onDelete => The rule for an action to execute if a row is deleted in the parent table. See “Cascading Write Operations” for more information.
-
onUpdate => The rule for an action to execute if values in primary key columns are updated in the parent table. See “Cascading Write Operations” for more information.
If you have a Row object as the result of a query on a parent table, you can fetch rows from dependent tables that reference the current row. Use the method:
$row->findDependentRowset($table, [$rule]);
This method returns a
Zend_Db_Table_Rowset_Abstract
object,
containing a set of rows from the dependent table
$table
that refer
to the row identified by the
$row
object.
The first argument
$table
can be a string that specifies the
dependent table by its class name. You can also
specify the dependent table by using an
object of that table class.
Ejemplo 326. Fetching a Dependent Rowset
This example shows getting a Row object from the table
Accounts
, and
finding the
Bugs
reported by that account.
$accountsTable = new Accounts(); $accountsRowset = $accountsTable->find(1234); $user1234 = $accountsRowset->current(); $bugsReportedByUser = $user1234->findDependentRowset('Bugs');
The second argument
$rule
is optional. It is a string that names the
rule key in the
$_referenceMap
array of the dependent table class. If
you don't specify a rule, the first rule in the
array that references the parent table
is used. If you need to use a rule other than the
first, you need to specify the key.
In the example code above, the rule key is not specified, so the rule used by default
is
the first one that matches the parent table. This is the rule
'Reporter'
.
Ejemplo 327. Fetching a Dependent Rowset By a Specific Rule
This example shows getting a Row object from the table
Accounts
, and
finding the
Bugs
assigned to be fixed by the user of that account. The
rule key string that
corresponds to this reference relationship in this example is
'Engineer'
.
$accountsTable = new Accounts(); $accountsRowset = $accountsTable->find(1234); $user1234 = $accountsRowset->current(); $bugsAssignedToUser = $user1234->findDependentRowset('Bugs', 'Engineer');
You can also add criteria, ordering and limits to your relationships using the parent row's select object.
Ejemplo 328. Fetching a Dependent Rowset using a Zend_Db_Table_Select
This example shows getting a Row object from the table
Accounts
,
and finding the
Bugs
assigned to be fixed by the user of that
account, limited only to 3 rows and
ordered by name.
$accountsTable = new Accounts(); $accountsRowset = $accountsTable->find(1234); $user1234 = $accountsRowset->current(); $select = $accountsTable->select()->order('name ASC') ->limit(3); $bugsAssignedToUser = $user1234->findDependentRowset('Bugs', 'Engineer', $select);
Alternatively, you can query rows from a dependent table using a special mechanism
called a "magic method".
Zend_Db_Table_Row_Abstract
invokes the
method:
findDependentRowset('<TableClass>',
'<Rule>')
if you invoke a method on the Row object matching
either of the following patterns:
-
$row->find<TableClass>()
-
$row->find<TableClass>By<Rule>()
In the patterns above,
<TableClass>
and
<Rule>
are
strings that correspond to the class name of the dependent table, and the dependent
table's rule key that references the parent table.
Nota
Some application frameworks, such as Ruby on Rails, use a mechanism called
"inflection" to allow the spelling of identifiers to change depending on usage. For
simplicity,
Zend_Db_Table_Row
does not provide any inflection
mechanism. The table identity and the rule key named
in the method call must match
the spelling of the class and rule key exactly.
Ejemplo 329. Fetching Dependent Rowsets using the Magic Method
This example shows finding dependent Rowsets equivalent to those in the previous examples. In this case, the application uses the magic method invocation instead of specifying the table and rule as strings.
$accountsTable = new Accounts(); $accountsRowset = $accountsTable->find(1234); $user1234 = $accountsRowset->current(); // Use the default reference rule $bugsReportedBy = $user1234->findBugs(); // Specify the reference rule $bugsAssignedTo = $user1234->findBugsByEngineer();
If you have a Row object as the result of a query on a dependent table, you can fetch the row in the parent to which the dependent row refers. Use the method:
$row->findParentRow($table, [$rule]);
There always should be exactly one row in the parent table referenced by a dependent row, therefore this method returns a Row object, not a Rowset object.
The first argument
$table
can be a string that specifies the parent
table by its class name. You can also specify
the parent table by using an object of
that table class.
Ejemplo 330. Fetching the Parent Row
This example shows getting a Row object from the table
Bugs
(for
example one of those bugs with status 'NEW'), and finding the row in the
Accounts
table for the user who reported the bug.
$bugsTable = new Bugs(); $bugsRowset = $bugsTable->fetchAll(array('bug_status = ?' => 'NEW')); $bug1 = $bugsRowset->current(); $reporter = $bug1->findParentRow('Accounts');
The second argument
$rule
is optional. It is a string that names the
rule key in the
$_referenceMap
array of the dependent table class. If
you don't specify a rule, the first rule in the
array that references the parent table
is used. If you need to use a rule other than the
first, you need to specify the key.
In the example above, the rule key is not specified, so the rule used by default is the
first one that matches the parent table. This is the rule
'Reporter'
.
Ejemplo 331. Fetching a Parent Row By a Specific Rule
This example shows getting a Row object from the table
Bugs
, and
finding the account for the engineer assigned to fix that bug. The rule key
string
that corresponds to this reference relationship in this example is
'Engineer'
.
$bugsTable = new Bugs(); $bugsRowset = $bugsTable->fetchAll(array('bug_status = ?', 'NEW')); $bug1 = $bugsRowset->current(); $engineer = $bug1->findParentRow('Accounts', 'Engineer');
Alternatively, you can query rows from a parent table using a "magic method".
Zend_Db_Table_Row_Abstract
invokes the method:
findParentRow('<TableClass>', '<Rule>')
if you
invoke a method on the Row object matching either of the following patterns:
-
$row->findParent<TableClass>([Zend_Db_Table_Select $select])
-
$row->findParent<TableClass>By<Rule>([Zend_Db_Table_Select $select])
In the patterns above,
<TableClass>
and
<Rule>
are strings that correspond to the class name of the parent table, and the dependent
table's rule key that references the parent table.
Nota
The table identity and the rule key named in the method call must match the spelling of the class and rule key exactly.
Ejemplo 332. Fetching the Parent Row using the Magic Method
This example shows finding parent Rows equivalent to those in the previous examples. In this case, the application uses the magic method invocation instead of specifying the table and rule as strings.
$bugsTable = new Bugs(); $bugsRowset = $bugsTable->fetchAll(array('bug_status = ?', 'NEW')); $bug1 = $bugsRowset->current(); // Use the default reference rule $reporter = $bug1->findParentAccounts(); // Specify the reference rule $engineer = $bug1->findParentAccountsByEngineer();
If you have a Row object as the result of a query on one table in a many-to-many relationship (for purposes of the example, call this the "origin" table), you can fetch corresponding rows in the other table (call this the "destination" table) via an intersection table. Use the method:
$row->findManyToManyRowset($table, $intersectionTable, [$rule1, [$rule2, [Zend_Db_Table_Select $select] ] ]);
This method returns a
Zend_Db_Table_Rowset_Abstract
containing
rows from the table
$table
, satisfying the many-to-many relationship.
The current Row object
$row
from the origin table is used to find
rows in the intersection table, and that is joined
to the destination table.
The first argument
$table
can be a string that specifies the
destination table in the many-to-many relationship by
its class name. You can also
specify the destination table by using an object of that
table class.
The second argument
$intersectionTable
can be a string that specifies
the intersection table between the two tables in the
many-to-many relationship by
its class name. You can also specify the intersection table
by using an object of that
table class.
Ejemplo 333. Fetching a Rowset with the Many-to-many Method
This example shows getting a Row object from the origin table
Bugs
, and finding rows from the destination table
Products
, representing products related to that bug.
$bugsTable = new Bugs(); $bugsRowset = $bugsTable->find(1234); $bug1234 = $bugsRowset->current(); $productsRowset = $bug1234->findManyToManyRowset('Products', 'BugsProducts');
The third and fourth arguments
$rule1
and
$rule2
are optional. These are strings that name the rule keys in the
$_referenceMap
array of the intersection table.
The
$rule1
key names the rule for the relationship from the
intersection table to the origin table.
In this example, this is the relationship from
BugsProducts
to
Bugs
.
The
$rule2
key names the rule for the relationship from the
intersection table to the destination
table. In this example, this is the relationship
from
Bugs
to
Products
.
Similarly to the methods for finding parent and dependent rows, if you don't specify a
rule, the method uses the first rule in the
$_referenceMap
array that
matches the tables in the relationship. If you need to use a rule other than
the first,
you need to specify the key.
In the example code above, the rule key is not specified, so the rules used by default
are the first ones that match. In this case,
$rule1
is
'Reporter'
and
$rule2
is
'Product'
.
Ejemplo 334. Fetching a Rowset with the Many-to-many Method By a Specific Rule
This example shows geting a Row object from the origin table
Bugs
, and finding rows from the destination table
Products
, representing products related to that bug.
$bugsTable = new Bugs(); $bugsRowset = $bugsTable->find(1234); $bug1234 = $bugsRowset->current(); $productsRowset = $bug1234->findManyToManyRowset('Products', 'BugsProducts', 'Bug');
Alternatively, you can query rows from the destination table in a many-to-many
relationship using a "magic method."
Zend_Db_Table_Row_Abstract
invokes the method:
findManyToManyRowset('<TableClass>',
'<IntersectionTableClass>', '<Rule1>', '<Rule2>')
if you invoke
a method matching any of the following patterns:
-
$row->find<TableClass>Via<IntersectionTableClass> ([Zend_Db_Table_Select $select])
-
$row->find<TableClass>Via<IntersectionTableClass>By<Rule1> ([Zend_Db_Table_Select $select])
-
$row->find<TableClass>Via<IntersectionTableClass>By<Rule1>And<Rule2> ([Zend_Db_Table_Select $select])
In the patterns above,
<TableClass>
and
<IntersectionTableClass>
are strings that correspond to the class
names of the destination table and the
intersection table, respectively.
<Rule1>
and
<Rule2>
are strings that correspond
to the rule keys in the intersection table that reference the
origin table and the
destination table, respectively.
Nota
The table identities and the rule keys named in the method call must match the spelling of the class and rule key exactly.
Ejemplo 335. Fetching Rowsets using the Magic Many-to-many Method
This example shows finding rows in the destination table of a many-to-many relationship representing products related to a given bug.
$bugsTable = new Bugs(); $bugsRowset = $bugsTable->find(1234); $bug1234 = $bugsRowset->current(); // Use the default reference rule $products = $bug1234->findProductsViaBugsProducts(); // Specify the reference rule $products = $bug1234->findProductsViaBugsProductsByBug();
Declare DRI in the database:
Declaring cascading operations in
Zend_Db_Table
is intended
only
for
RDBMS
brands that do not support
declarative referential integrity (DRI).
For example, if you use MySQL's MyISAM storage engine, or SQLite, these solutions
do
not support DRI. You may find it helpful to declare the cascading operations
with
Zend_Db_Table
.
If your
RDBMS
implements DRI and the
ON DELETE
and
ON UPDATE
clauses, you should declare these clauses in your database
schema, instead of using
the cascading feature in
Zend_Db_Table
. Declaring cascading DRI rules in the
RDBMS
is better for database performance, consistency, and
integrity.
Most importantly, do not declare cascading operations both in the
RDBMS
and in your
Zend_Db_Table
class.
You can declare cascading operations to execute against a dependent table when you
apply
an
UPDATE
or a
DELETE
to a row in a
parent table.
Ejemplo 336. Example of a Cascading Delete
This example shows deleting a row in the
Products
table, which is
configured to automatically delete dependent rows in the
Bugs
table.
$productsTable = new Products(); $productsRowset = $productsTable->find(1234); $product1234 = $productsRowset->current(); $product1234->delete(); // Automatically cascades to Bugs table // and deletes dependent rows.
Similarly, if you use
UPDATE
to change the value of a primary key
in a parent table, you may want the value in foreign
keys of dependent tables to be
updated automatically to match the new value, so that such
references are kept up to
date.
It's usually not necessary to update the value of a primary key that was generated by a sequence or other mechanism. But if you use a natural key that may change value occasionally, it is more likely that you need to apply cascading updates to dependent tables.
To declare a cascading relationship in the
Zend_Db_Table
, edit
the rules in the
$_referenceMap
. Set the associative array keys
'onDelete'
and
'onUpdate'
to the string 'cascade' (or the
constant
self::CASCADE
). Before a row is deleted from the parent
table, or its primary key values updated, any
rows in the dependent table that refer to
the parent's row are deleted or updated first.
Ejemplo 337. Example Declaration of Cascading Operations
In the example below, rows in the
Bugs
table are automatically deleted
if the row in the
Products
table to which they refer is deleted. The
'onDelete'
element of the reference map entry is set to
self::CASCADE
.
No cascading update is done in the example below if the primary key value in the
parent class is changed. The
'onUpdate'
element of the reference map
entry is
self::RESTRICT
. You can get the same result by
omitting the
'onUpdate'
entry.
class BugsProducts extends Zend_Db_Table_Abstract { ... protected $_referenceMap = array( 'Product' => array( 'columns' => array('product_id'), 'refTableClass' => 'Products', 'refColumns' => array('product_id'), 'onDelete' => self::CASCADE, 'onUpdate' => self::RESTRICT ), ... ); }
Cascading operations invoked by
Zend_Db_Table
are
not atomic.
This means that if your database implements and enforces referential integrity
constraints, a cascading
UPDATE
executed by a
Zend_Db_Table
class conflicts with the constraint, and
results in a referential integrity
violation. You can use cascading
UPDATE
in
Zend_Db_Table
only
if your database does not enforce that referential
integrity constraint.
Cascading
DELETE
suffers less from the problem of referential
integrity violations. You can delete
dependent rows as a non-atomic action before
deleting the parent row that they
reference.
However, for both
UPDATE
and
DELETE
,
changing the database in a non-atomic way also creates the risk that another
database user can see the data in an inconsistent state. For example, if you delete
a row and all its dependent rows, there is a small chance that another database
client program can query the database after you have deleted the dependent rows, but
before you delete the parent row. That client program may see the parent row with no
dependent rows, and assume this is the intended state of the data. There is no way
for that client to know that its query read the database in the middle of a change.
The issue of non-atomic change can be mitigated by using transactions to isolate your change. But some RDBMS brands don't support transactions, or allow clients to read "dirty" changes that have not been committed yet.
Cascading operations in
Zend_Db_Table
are invoked
only by
Zend_Db_Table
.
Cascading deletes and updates defined in your
Zend_Db_Table
classes are applied if you execute the
save()
or
delete()
methods on the Row class. However, if you update
or delete data using another
interface, such as a query tool or another application,
the cascading operations are
not applied. Even when using
update()
and
delete()
methods
in the
Zend_Db_Adapter
class, cascading operations defined in
your
Zend_Db_Table
classes are not executed.
No Cascading
INSERT
.
There is no support for a cascading
INSERT
. You must insert a
row to a parent table in one operation, and insert row(s) to a
dependent table in a
separate operation.