This package allows you to interact with Elasticsearch as you interact with Eloquent models in Laravel.
- PHP >= 8.0
- Elasticsearch >= 7.0
Via Composer
$ composer require isswp101/elasticsearch-eloquent
You should override index
and type
properties to determine the document path.
use Isswp101\Persimmon\Models\BaseElasticsearchModel;
use Isswp101\Persimmon\Persistence\Persistence;
use Isswp101\Persimmon\Contracts\PersistenceContract;
class Product extends BaseElasticsearchModel
{
protected string $index = 'index';
protected string|null $type = 'type'; // optional
// If you have a pre-configured Elasticsearch client you can pass it here (optional)
public function createPersistence(): PersistenceContract
{
return new Persistence($client);
}
}
Use the static create()
method to create the document in Elasticsearch:
$product = Product::create([
'id' => 1,
'name' => 'Product',
'price' => 10
]);
$product = new Product();
$product->id = 1;
$product->name = 'Product';
$product->price = 10;
$product->save();
Use save()
method to store model data in Elasticsearch. Let's see how this looks in Elasticsearch:
{
"_index": "index",
"_type": "type",
"_id": "1",
"_version": 1,
"_source": {
"id": 1,
"name": "Product",
"price": 10,
"created_at": "2021-03-27T11:24:15+00:00",
"updated_at": "2021-03-27T11:24:15+00:00"
}
}
Fields created_at
and updated_at
were created automatically.
$product = Product::find(1);
If you have big data in Elasticsearch you can specify certain fields to retrieve:
$product = Product::find(1, ['name']);
There are the following methods:
findOrFail()
returnsModelNotFoundException
exception if no result found.
There is a smart model cache when you use methods like find()
, findOrFail()
and so on.
$product = Product::find(1, ['name']); // from elasticsearch
$product = Product::find(1, ['name']); // from cache
$product = Product::find(1, ['price']); // from elasticsearch
$product = Product::find(1, ['price']); // from cache
$product = Product::find(1, ['name']); // from cache
$product = Product::find(1); // from elasticsearch
$product = Product::find(1); // from cache
$product = Product::find(1, ['name']); // from cache
$product = Product::find(1, ['price']); // from cache
You can use the partial update to update specific fields quickly.
$product = Product::find(1, ['name']);
$product->name = 'Name';
$product->save(['name']);
$product = Product::find(1);
$product->delete();
You can use the static method:
Product::destroy(1);
Out of the box you are provided with a simple implementation of events.
You can override the following methods to define events:
saving()
is called before saving, updating, creating the modelsaved()
is called after saving, updating, creating the modeldeleting()
is called before deleting the modeldeleted()
is called after deleting the modelsearching()
is called after searching modelssearched()
is called after searching models
For example:
use Isswp101\Persimmon\Models\BaseElasticsearchModel;
class Product extends BaseElasticsearchModel
{
protected function saving(): bool
{
// Disable update if it's free
return $this->price <= 0;
}
protected function deleting(): bool
{
if ($this->user_id != 1) {
throw new DomainException('No permissions to delete this model');
}
return true;
}
}
There are helpers to search documents:
The first($query)
method returns the first document according to the query or null
.
$product = Product::first($query);
The firstOrFail($query)
method returns ModelNotFoundException
exception if first($query)
returns null
.
$product = Product::firstOrFail($query);
The search($query)
method returns documents according to the query.
$products = Product::search($query);
The all($query)
method returns all documents (default 50 items per request) according to the query.
$products = Product::all($query);
If $query
is not passed the query will be as match_all
query.
Consider using these packages:
$ composer test
The MIT License (MIT).