This extension for Doctrine 2 is inspired by Hibernate Envers and allows full versioning of entities and their associations.
There are a bunch of different approaches to auditing or versioning of database tables. This extension creates a mirroring table for each audited entitys table that is suffixed with "_audit". Besides all the columns of the audited entity there are two additional fields:
- rev - Contains the global revision number generated from a "revisions" table.
- revtype - Contains one of 'INS', 'UPD' or 'DEL' as an information to which type of database operation caused this revision log entry.
The global revision table contains an id, timestamp, username and change comment field.
With this approach it is possible to version an application with its changes to associations at the particular points in time.
This extension hooks into the SchemaTool generation process so that it will automatically create the necessary DDL statements for your audited entities.
###Installing the lib/bundle
Simply run assuming you have installed composer.phar or composer binary:
$ composer require simplethings/entity-audit
For standalone usage you have to pass the EntityManager.
use Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager;
use SimpleThings\EntityAudit\AuditManager;
$config = new \Doctrine\ORM\Configuration();
// $config ...
$conn = array();
$em = EntityManager::create($conn, $config, $evm);
$auditManager = AuditManager::create($em);
You need add Auditable
annotation for the entities which you want to auditable.
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use SimpleThings\EntityAudit\Mapping\Annotation as Audit;
/**
* @ORM\Entity()
* @Audit\Auditable()
*/
class Page {
//...
}
You can also ignore fields in an specific entity.
class Page {
/**
* @ORM\Column(type="string")
* @Audit\Ignore()
*/
private $ignoreMe;
}
Querying the auditing information is done using a SimpleThings\EntityAudit\AuditReader
instance.
You can create the audit reader from the audit manager:
$auditReader = $auditManager->createAuditReader();
This command also returns the state of the entity at the given revision, even if the last change to that entity was made in a revision before the given one:
$articleAudit = $auditReader->find(
SimpleThings\EntityAudit\Tests\ArticleAudit::class,
$id = 1,
$rev = 10
);
Instances created through AuditReader#find()
are NOT injected into the EntityManagers UnitOfWork,
they need to be merged into the EntityManager if it should be reattached to the persistence context
in that old version.
$revisions = $auditReader->findRevisions(
SimpleThings\EntityAudit\Tests\ArticleAudit::class,
$id = 1
);
A revision has the following API:
class Revision
{
public function getRev();
public function getTimestamp();
public function getUsername();
}
$changedEntities = $auditReader->findEntitiesChangedAtRevision(10);
A changed entity has the API:
class ChangedEntity
{
public function getClassName();
public function getId();
public function getRevisionType();
public function getEntity();
}
$revision = $auditReader->getCurrentRevision(
'SimpleThings\EntityAudit\Tests\ArticleAudit',
$id = 3
);
Each revision automatically saves the username that changes it. For this to work, the username must be resolved.
You can username callable to a specific value using the AuditConfiguration
.
$auditConfig = new \SimpleThings\EntityAudit\AuditConfiguration();
$auditConfig->setUsernameCallable(function () {
$username = //your customer logic
return username;
});
- MySQL / MariaDB
- PostgesSQL
- SQLite
We can only really support the databases if we can test them via Travis.
Please before commiting, run this command ./vendor/bin/php-cs-fixer fix --verbose
to normalize the coding style.
If you already have the fixer locally you can run php-cs-fixer fix .
.