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pop-audit

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Overview

Pop Audit is an auditing component of the Pop PHP Framework. It allows you to track and recall changes in model states, which is useful for rolling back mistakes or recovering lost data. It provides different adapters to achieve this, all of which are interchangeable using the same interface:

  • File
  • Database
  • HTTP

pop-audit is a component of the Pop PHP Framework.

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Install

Install pop-audit using Composer.

composer require popphp/pop-audit

Or, require it in your composer.json file

"require": {
    "popphp/pop-audit" : "^2.0.1"
}

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Quickstart

With the audit component, you can store model state data changes and recall them at a later date.

Storing Changes

To store the model data, there are two required data points - the model name and model ID. After that, optional data points such as user data or the domain can be stored. First we create the auditor and set the data points:

use Pop\Audit\Auditor;
use Pop\Audit\Adapter\File;

$auditor = new Auditor(new File(__DIR__ . '/tmp')); // Folder passed to the File adapter
$auditor->setModel('MyApp\Model\User', 1001);       // Model name and model ID (required)
$auditor->setUser('testuser', 101);                 // Username/ID that made the change (optional)
$auditor->setDomain('users.localhost');             // Domain (optional)

Then, we look at the changed model data. In this example, the model state contains 4 data points, 2 of which have changed: username and phone. Once passed to the auditor's send() method, it will "diff" the two states and record the differences, as well as snapshot of the final changed state:

$old = [
    'id'       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin',
    'email'    => '[email protected]',
    'phone'    => '504-555-5555'
];

$new = [
    'id'       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin2',
    'email'    => '[email protected]',
    'phone'    => '504-555-6666'
];

$auditor->send($old, $new);

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Retrieving Changes

Interacting with the auditor's adapter, the previously stored model states can be retrieved:

List all stored states

var_dump($auditor->adapter()->getStates());

List stored states for a particular model and model ID

var_dump($auditor->adapter()->getStateByModel('MyApp\Model\User', 1001));

Other methods are available to help refine your search for previous states:

  • getStateById()
  • getStateByTimestamp()
  • getStateByDate()

The state structure will look like:

Array
(
    [user_id] => 101
    [username] => testuser
    [domain] => users.localhost
    [route] => 
    [method] => 
    [model] => MyApp\Model\User
    [model_id] => 1001
    [action] => updated
    [old] => Array
        (
            [username] => admin
            [phone] => 504-555-5555
        )

    [new] => Array
        (
            [username] => admin2
            [phone] => 504-555-6666
        )

    [state] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1
            [username] => admin2
            [email] => [email protected]
            [phone] => 504-555-6666
        )

    [metadata] => Array
        (
        )

    [timestamp] => 2023-10-29 16:05:53
)

The storing of the full state is on by default, can be turned off by passing a false boolean to the send() method:

$auditor->send($old, $new, false);

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Diffing

In the above examples, the pop-audit component automatically handles "diffing" for you. If you have another resource that evaluates the differences, you can pass those directly into the auditor as well:

use Pop\Audit\Auditor;
use Pop\Audit\Adapter\File;

$old   = ['username' => 'admin'];
$new   = ['username' => 'admin2'];
$state = [
    'id'       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin2',
    'email'    => '[email protected]',
    'phone'    => '504-555-5555'
]

$auditor = new Auditor(new File(__DIR__ . '/tmp'));
$auditor->setModel('MyApp\Model\User', 1001);
$auditor->setUser('testuser', 101);
$auditor->setDomain('users.localhost');
$auditor->setDiff($old, $new);
$auditor->setStateData($state); // optional if you want to record the final changed state
$auditor->send();

An example of this is the Pop\Db\Record class from the pop-db component. It automatically tracks the "dirty" values that have been changed while working with a record object. You can then used the getDirty() method of the Pop\Db\Record class to return an array with the keys old and new and pass them off to the auditor.

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Using Files

With the file adapter, you set the folder you want to save the audit record to, and save the model state changes like this:

use Pop\Audit\Auditor;
use Pop\Audit\Adapter\File;

$auditor = new Auditor(new File(__DIR__ . '/tmp')); // Folder passed to the File adapter
$auditor->setModel('MyApp\Model\User', 1001);       // Model name and model ID (required)
$auditor->setUser('testuser', 101);                 // Username/ID that made the change (optional)
$auditor->setDomain('users.localhost');             // Domain (optional)

$old = [
    'id'       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin',
    'email'    => '[email protected]',
    'phone'    => '504-555-5555'
];

$new = [
    'id'       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin2',
    'email'    => '[email protected]',
    'phone'    => '504-555-6666'
];

$logFile = $auditor->send($old, $new);

In this case, the variable $logFile would contain the name of the audit log file, for example pop-audit-aed112d5d6de258762c03aa597a47f9b-653ec767ee591-1698613095.log in case it needs to be referenced again. That file will contain the JSON-encoded data that tracks the difference between the model states, as well as a snapshot of the full state (if provided):

{
    "user_id": 101,
    "username": "testuser",
    "domain": "users.localhost",
    "model": "MyApp\\Model\\User",
    "model_id": 1001,
    "action": "updated",
    "old": {
        "username": "admin"
    },
    "new": {
        "username": "admin2"
    },
    "state": {
        "id": 1,
        "username": "admin2",
        "email": "[email protected]",
        "phone": "504-555-6666"
    },
    "timestamp": "2023-08-23 16:56:36"
}

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Using a Database

Using a database connection requires the use of the pop-db component and a database table class that extends the Pop\Db\Record class. Consider a database and table class set up in your application like this:

class AuditLog extends \Pop\Db\Record {}

AuditLog::setDb(\Pop\Db\Db::mysqlConnect([
    'database' => 'MY_DATABASE',
    'username' => 'DB_USER',
    'password' => 'DB_PASS'
]));

Then you can use the table adapter like this:

use Pop\Audit\Auditor;
use Pop\Audit\Adapter\Table;

$old = [
    "id"       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin',
    'email'    => '[email protected]'
];

$new = [
    "id"       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin2',
    'email'    => '[email protected]'
];

$auditor = new Auditor(new Table('AuditLog'));
$auditor->setModel('MyApp\Model\User', 1001);
$auditor->setUser('testuser', 101);
$auditor->setDomain('users.localhost');
$row = $auditor->send($old, $new);

If needed, the variable $row contains the newly created record in the audit table.

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Using HTTP

You can also send your audit data to an HTTP service like this:

use Pop\Http\Client;
use Pop\Http\Auth;
use Pop\Audit\Auditor;
use Pop\Audit\Adapter\Http;

$old = [
    "id"       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin',
    'email'    => '[email protected]'
];

$new = [
    "id"       => 1,
    'username' => 'admin2',
    'email'    => '[email protected]'
];

$client = new Client(
    'http://audit.localhost',
    Auth::createBearer('AUTH_TOKEN'),
    ['method' => 'POST']
);

$auditor = new Auditor(new Http($stream));
$auditor->setModel('MyApp\Model\User', 1001);
$auditor->setUser('testuser', 101);
$auditor->setDomain('users.localhost');
$response = $auditor->send($old, $new);

If needed, the variable $response contains the HTTP response returned by the HTTP request.

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