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Jackalope Doctrine-DBAL

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Implementation of the PHP Content Repository API (PHPCR) using a relational database to persist data.

Jackalope uses Doctrine DBAL to abstract the database layer. It is currently tested to work with MySQL, PostgreSQL and SQLite.

For the moment, it is less feature complete, performant and robust than Jackalope-Jackrabbit but it can run on any server with PHP and an SQL database.

Discuss on [email protected] or visit #jackalope on irc.freenode.net

License

This code is dual licensed under the MIT license and the Apache License Version 2.0. Please see the file LICENSE in this folder.

Preconditions

  • PHP version: See composer.json
  • One of the following databases, including the PDO extension for it:
    • MySQL >= 5.1.5 (we need the ExtractValue function)
    • PostgreSQL
    • SQLite

Installation

The recommended way to install jackalope is through composer.

$ mkdir my-project
$ cd my-project
$ composer init
$ composer require jackalope/jackalope-doctrine-dbal

Create a repository

Set up a new database supported by Doctrine DBAL. You can use your favorite GUI frontend or just do something like this:

MySQL

Note that you need at least version 5.1.5 of MySQL, otherwise you will get SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1305 FUNCTION cmf-app.EXTRACTVALUE does not exist

$ mysqladmin -u root -p  create database jackalope
$ echo "grant all privileges on jackalope.* to 'jackalope'@'localhost' identified by '1234test'; flush privileges;" | mysql -u root -p

PostgreSQL

$ psql -c "CREATE ROLE jackalope WITH ENCRYPTED PASSWORD '1234test' NOINHERIT LOGIN;" -U postgres
$ psql -c "CREATE DATABASE jackalope WITH OWNER = jackalope;" -U postgres

SQLite

Database is created automatically if you specify driver and path ("pdo_sqlite", "jackalope.db"). Database name is not needed.

For further details, please see the Doctrine configuration page.

Enable the commands

There are a couple of useful commands to interact with the repository.

To use the console, copy cli-config.php.dist to cli-config.php and configure the connection parameters. Then you can run the commands from the jackalope directory with ./bin/jackalope

NOTE: If you are using PHPCR inside of Symfony, the DoctrinePHPCRBundle provides the commands inside the normal Symfony console and you don't need to prepare anything special.

There is the Jackalope specific command jackalope:init:dbal which you need to run to initialize a database before you can use it.

You have many useful commands available from the phpcr-utils. To get a list of all commands, type:

$ ./bin/jackalope

To get more information on a specific command, use the help command. To learn more about the phpcr:workspace:export command for example, you would type:

$ ./bin/jackalope help phpcr:workspace:export

Bootstrapping

Jackalope relies on autoloading. Namespaces and folders are compliant with PSR-0. You should use the autoload file generated by composer: vendor/autoload.php

If you want to integrate jackalope into other PSR-0 compliant code and use your own classloader, find the mapping in vendor/composer/autoload_namespaces.php

Before you can use jackalope with a database, you need to set the database up. Create a database as described above, then make sure the command line utility is set up (see above "Enable the commands"). Now you can run:

$ bin/jackalope jackalope:init:dbal

Once these steps are done, you can bootstrap the library. A minimalist sample code to get a PHPCR session with the doctrine-dbal backend:

// For further details, please see Doctrine configuration page.
// http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-dbal/en/latest/reference/configuration.html#connection-details

use Doctrine\DBAL\DriverManager;
use Jackalope\RepositoryFactoryDoctrineDBAL;
use PHPCR\SimpleCredentials;

$driver    = 'pdo_mysql'; // pdo_pgsql | pdo_sqlite
$host      = 'localhost';
$user      = 'jackalope';
$pass      = '';
$database  = 'jackalope'; // $path = 'jackalope.db'; // for SQLite
$workspace = 'default';

// Bootstrap Doctrine
$connection = DriverManager::getConnection([
    'driver'    => $driver,
    'host'      => $host,
    'user'      => $user,
    'password'  => $pass,
    'dbname'    => $database,
    // 'path'   => $path, // for SQLite
]);

$factory = new RepositoryFactoryDoctrineDBAL();
$repository = $factory->getRepository(
    ['jackalope.doctrine_dbal_connection' => $connection]
);

// Dummy credentials to comply with the API
$credentials = new SimpleCredentials(null, null);
$session = $repository->login($credentials, $workspace);

To use a workspace different than default you need to create it first. The easiest is to run the command bin/jackalope phpcr:workspace:create <myworkspace> but you can of course also use the PHPCR API to create workspaces from your code.

Usage

The entry point is to create the repository factory. The factory specifies the storage backend as well. From this point on, there are no differences in the usage (except for supported features, that is).

// See Bootstrapping for how to get the session.

$rootNode = $session->getNode('/');
$whitewashing = $rootNode->addNode('www-whitewashing-de');

$session->save();

$posts = $whitewashing->addNode('posts');

$session->save();

$post = $posts->addNode('welcome-to-blog');

$post->addMixin('mix:title');
$post->setProperty('jcr:title', 'Welcome to my Blog!');
$post->setProperty('jcr:description', 'This is the first post on my blog! Do you like it?');

$session->save();

See PHPCR Tutorial for a more detailed tutorial on how to use the PHPCR API.

Performance tweaks

If you know that you will need many child nodes of a node you are about to request, use the depth hint on Session::getNode. This will prefetch the children to reduce the round trips to the database. It is part of the PHPCR standard. You can also globally set a fetch depth, but that is Jackalope specific: Call Session::setSessionOption with Session::OPTION_FETCH_DEPTH to something bigger than 1.

Use Node::getNodeNames if you only need to know the names of child nodes, but don't need the actual nodes. Note that you should not use the typeFilter on getNodeNames with jackalope. Using the typeFilter with getNodes to only fetch the nodes of types that interest you can make a lot of sense however.

Advanced configuration

Logging

Jackalope supports logging, for example to investigate the number and type of queries used. To enable logging, provide a logger instance to the repository factory:

use Jackalope\RepositoryFactoryDoctrineDBAL;
use Jackalope\Transport\Logging\DebugStack;

$factory = new RepositoryFactoryDoctrineDBAL();
$logger = new DebugStack();

$options = [
    'jackalope.doctrine_dbal_connection' => $connection,
    'jackalope.logger' => $logger,
];

$repository = $factory->getRepository($options);

//...

// at the end, output debug information
var_dump($logger->calls);

You can also wrap a PSR-3 compatible logger like monolog with the Psr3Logger class.

Note that when using jackalope in Symfony2, the logger is integrated in the debug toolbar.

Custom UUID generator

By default, Jackalope uses the UUIDHelper class from phpcr-utils. If you want to use something else, you can provide a closure that returns UUIDs as option jackalope.uuid_generator to $factory->getRepository($options)

Implementation notes

See doc/architecture.md for an introduction how Jackalope is built. Have a look at the source files and generate the phpdoc.

Running the tests

Jackalope-doctrine-dbal is integrated with the phpcr-api-tests suite that tests all PHPCR functionality.

If you want to run the tests, please see the README file in the tests folder.

Things left to do

The best overview of what needs to be done are the skipped API tests. Have a look at ImplementationLoader to see what is currently not working and start hacking :-)

Also have a look at the issue trackers of this project and the base jackalope/jackalope.

Contributors