Eloquent Repository using nilportugues/repository as foundation.
Use Composer to install the package:
$ composer require nilportugues/eloquent-repository
Using this implementation you can switch it out to test your code without setting up databases.
Doesn't sound handy? Let's think of yet another use case you'll love using this. Functional tests
and Unitary tests
.
No database connection will be needed, nor fakes. Using an InMemoryRepository
or FileSystemRepository
implementation will make those a breeze to code. And once the tests finish, all data may be destroyed with no worries at all.
Available drivers:
Also, if you feel like changing the repository implementation, no logic changes would be needed, as there are a set of drivers for you to use out of the box:
composer require nilportugues/repository-cache
for caching.composer require nilportugues/repository
for an InMemoryRepository implementation.composer require nilportugues/filesystem-repository
for a FileSystemRepository implementation.composer require nilportugues/doctrine-repository
for a SQL Doctrine implementation.composer require nilportugues/eloquent-mongodb-repository
for a MongoDB Eloquent implementation.
To set up Eloquent you don't need Laravel or Lumen frameworks at all. This is how you use Eloquent in any project.
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Capsule\Manager as Capsule;
$capsule = new Capsule();
$capsule->addConnection(
[
'driver' => 'sqlite',
'database' => __DIR__.'/database.db',
'prefix' => ''
],
'default' //connection name.
);
$capsule->bootEloquent();
$capsule->setAsGlobal();
Now that Eloquent is running, we can use the Repository.
A well defined repository returns one kind of objects that belong to one Business model.
<?php
use NilPortugues\Foundation\Infrastructure\Model\Repository\Eloquent\EloquentRepository;
class UserRepository extends EloquentRepository
{
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
protected function modelClassName()
{
return User::class;
}
}
To be faithful to the repository pattern, using Eloquent Models internally is OK, but Business objects should be returned.
Therefore, you should translate Eloquent to Business representations and the other way round. This is represented by $userAdapter
in the example below.
The fully implementation should be along the lines:
<?php
use NilPortugues\Foundation\Infrastructure\Model\Repository\Eloquent\EloquentRepository;
class UserRepository extends EloquentRepository
{
protected $userAdapter;
/**
* @param $userAdapter
*/
public function __construct($userAdapter)
{
$this->userAdapter = $userAdapter;
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
protected function modelClassName()
{
return User::class;
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
public function find(Identity $id, Fields $fields = null)
{
$eloquentModel = parent::find($id, $fields);
return $this->userAdapter->fromEloquent($eloquentModel);
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
public function findBy(Filter $filter = null, Sort $sort = null, Fields $fields = null)
{
$eloquentModelArray = parent::findBy($filter, $sort, $fields);
return $this->fromEloquentArray($eloquentModelArray);
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
public function findAll(Pageable $pageable = null)
{
$page = parent::findAll($pageable);
return new Page(
$this->fromEloquentArray($page->content()),
$page->totalElements(),
$page->pageNumber(),
$page->totalPages(),
$page->sortings(),
$page->filters(),
$page->fields()
);
}
/**
* @param array $eloquentModelArray
* @return array
*/
protected function fromEloquentArray(array $eloquentModelArray)
{
$results = [];
foreach ($eloquentModelArray as $eloquentModel) {
//This is required to handle findAll returning array, not objects.
$eloquentModel = (object) $eloquentModel;
$results[] = $this->userAdapter->fromEloquent($eloquentModel);
}
return $results;
}
}
A sample implementation can be found in the /example directory.
While this is not the recommended way, as a repository should only return one kind of Business objects, this works well with Laravel projects.
While the amount of core is less than the previous example, bare in mind that your code will be coupled with Eloquent.
<?php
use NilPortugues\Foundation\Infrastructure\Model\Repository\Eloquent\EloquentRepository as Repository;
class EloquentRepository extends Repository
{
/**
* @var string
*/
protected $modelClass;
/**
* @param string $modelClass
*/
public function __construct($modelClass)
{
$this->modelClass = (string) $modelClass;
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
protected function modelClassName()
{
return $this->modelClass;
}
}
Filtering is as simple as using the Filter
object. For instance, lets retrieve how many users are named Ken
.
<?php
use NilPortugues\Foundation\Domain\Model\Repository\Filter;
$repository = new UserRepository();
$filter = new Filter();
$filter->must()->contain('name', 'Ken');
echo $repository->count($filter);
Notice how the key name
matches the database column name
in the users
table.
Available options
Filter allow you to use must()
, mustNot()
and should()
methods to set up a fine-grained search. These provide a fluent interface with the following methods available:
public function notEmpty($filterName)
public function hasEmpty($filterName)
public function startsWith($filterName, $value)
public function endsWith($filterName, $value)
public function equal($filterName, $value)
public function notEqual($filterName, $value)
public function includeGroup($filterName, array $value)
public function notIncludeGroup($filterName, array $value)
public function range($filterName, $firstValue, $secondValue)
public function notRange($filterName, $firstValue, $secondValue)
public function notContain($filterName, $value)
public function contain($filterName, $value)
public function beGreaterThanOrEqual($filterName, $value)
public function beGreaterThan($filterName, $value)
public function beLessThanOrEqual($filterName, $value)
public function beLessThan($filterName, $value)
Sorting is straight forward. Create an instance of Sort and pass in the column names and ordering.
<?php
use NilPortugues\Foundation\Domain\Model\Repository\Sort;
$repository = new UserRepository();
$filter = null; //all records
$sort = new Sort(['name', 'id'], new Order('ASC', 'DESC'));
$fields = null; //all columns
$results = $repository->findBy($filter, $sort, $fields);
Create a Fields object to fetch only selected columns. If no Fields object is passed, all columns are selected by default.
<?php
use NilPortugues\Foundation\Domain\Model\Repository\Contracts\Fields;
$repository = new UserRepository();
$filter = null; //all records
$sort = null; //existing order
$fields = new Fields(['name', 'id']);
$results = $repository->findBy($filter, $sort, $fields);
Repository allows you to fetch data from the database by using the following methods:
public function findAll(Pageable $pageable = null)
public function find(Identity $id, Fields $fields = null)
public function findBy(Filter $filter = null, Sort $sort = null, Fields $fields = null)
To run the PHPUnit tests at the command line, go to the tests directory and issue phpunit.
This library attempts to comply with PSR-1, PSR-2, PSR-4.
If you notice compliance oversights, please send a patch via Pull Request.
Contributions to the package are always welcome!
- Report any bugs or issues you find on the issue tracker.
- You can grab the source code at the package's Git Repository.
Get in touch with me using one of the following means:
- Emailing me at contact@nilportugues.com
- Opening an Issue
The code base is licensed under the MIT license.