Database Access¶
The basic way to run a database query is to use the database connection provided by OCP\IDBConnection.
Inside your database layer class you can now start running queries like:
<?php
// db/authordao.php
namespace OCA\MyApp\Db;
use OCP\IDBConnection;
class AuthorDAO {
private $db;
public function __construct(IDBConnection $db) {
$this->db = $db;
}
public function find($id) {
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `*PREFIX*myapp_authors` ' .
'WHERE `id` = ?';
$stmt = $this->db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->bindParam(1, $id, \PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stmt->execute();
$row = $stmt->fetch();
$stmt->closeCursor();
return $row;
}
}
Mappers¶
The aforementioned example is the most basic way to write a simple database query but the more queries amass, the more code has to be written and the harder it will become to maintain it.
To generalize and simplify the problem, split code into resources and create an Entity and a Mapper class for it. The mapper class provides a way to run SQL queries and maps the result onto the related entities.
To create a mapper, inherit from the mapper base class and call the parent constructor with the following parameters:
- Database connection
- Table name
- Optional: Entity class name, defaults to \OCA\MyApp\Db\Author in the example below
<?php
// db/authormapper.php
namespace OCA\MyApp\Db;
use OCP\IDBConnection;
use OCP\AppFramework\Db\Mapper;
class AuthorMapper extends Mapper {
public function __construct(IDBConnection $db) {
parent::__construct($db, 'myapp_authors');
}
/**
* @throws \OCP\AppFramework\Db\DoesNotExistException if not found
* @throws \OCP\AppFramework\Db\MultipleObjectsReturnedException if more than one result
*/
public function find($id) {
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `*PREFIX*myapp_authors` ' .
'WHERE `id` = ?';
return $this->findEntity($sql, [$id]);
}
public function findAll($limit=null, $offset=null) {
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `*PREFIX*myapp_authors`';
return $this->findEntities($sql, $limit, $offset);
}
public function authorNameCount($name) {
$sql = 'SELECT COUNT(*) AS `count` FROM `*PREFIX*myapp_authors` ' .
'WHERE `name` = ?';
$stmt = $this->execute($sql, [$name]);
$row = $stmt->fetch();
$stmt->closeCursor();
return $row['count'];
}
}
Note
The cursor is closed automatically for all INSERT, DELETE, UPDATE queries and when calling the methods findOneQuery, findEntities, findEntity, delete, insert and update. For custom calls using execute you should always close the cursor after you are done with the fetching to prevent database lock problems on SQLite
Every mapper also implements default methods for deleting and updating an entity based on its id:
$authorMapper->delete($entity);
or:
$authorMapper->update($entity);
Entities¶
Entities are data objects that carry all the table’s information for one row. Every Entity has an id field by default that is set to the integer type. Table rows are mapped from lower case and underscore separated names to lowerCamelCase attributes:
- Table column name: phone_number
- Property name: phoneNumber
<?php
// db/author.php
namespace OCA\MyApp\Db;
use OCP\AppFramework\Db\Entity;
class Author extends Entity {
protected $stars;
protected $name;
protected $phoneNumber;
public function __construct() {
// add types in constructor
$this->addType('stars', 'integer');
}
}
Types¶
The following properties should be annotated by types, to not only assure that the types are converted correctly for storing them in the database (e.g. PHP casts false to the empty string which fails on PostgreSQL) but also for casting them when they are retrieved from the database.
The following types can be added for a field:
- integer
- float
- boolean
Accessing attributes¶
Since all attributes should be protected, getters and setters are automatically generated for you:
<?php
// db/author.php
namespace OCA\MyApp\Db;
use OCP\AppFramework\Db\Entity;
class Author extends Entity {
protected $stars;
protected $name;
protected $phoneNumber;
}
$author = new Author();
$author->setId(3);
$author->getPhoneNumber() // null
Custom attribute to database column mapping¶
By default each attribute will be mapped to a database column by a certain convention, e.g. phoneNumber will be mapped to the column phone_number and vice versa. Sometimes it is needed though to map attributes to different columns because of backwards compatibility. To define a custom mapping, simply override the columnToProperty and propertyToColumn methods of the entity in question:
<?php
// db/author.php
namespace OCA\MyApp\Db;
use OCP\AppFramework\Db\Entity;
class Author extends Entity {
protected $stars;
protected $name;
protected $phoneNumber;
// map attribute phoneNumber to the database column phonenumber
public function columnToProperty($column) {
if ($column === 'phonenumber') {
return 'phoneNumber';
} else {
return parent::columnToProperty($column);
}
}
public function propertyToColumn($property) {
if ($property === 'phoneNumber') {
return 'phonenumber';
} else {
return parent::propertyToColumn($property);
}
}
}
Slugs¶
Slugs are used to identify resources in the URL by a string rather than integer id. Since the URL allows only certain values, the entity base class provides a slugify method for it:
<?php
$author = new Author();
$author->setName('Some*thing');
$author->slugify('name'); // Some-thing