silverstripe-framework/docs/en/topics/datamodel.md

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Datamodel

SilverStripe uses an object-relational model that assumes the following connections:

  • Each database-table maps to a php-class
  • Each database-row maps to a php-object
  • Each database-column maps to a property on a php-object

All data tables in SilverStripe are defined as subclasses of [api:DataObject]. Inheritance is supported in the data model: seperate tables will be linked together, the data spread across these tables. The mapping and saving/loading logic is handled by sapphire, you don't need to worry about writing SQL most of the time.

The advanced object-relational layer in SilverStripe is one of the main reasons for requiring PHP5. Most of its customizations are possible through PHP5 Object Overloading handled in the [api:Object]-class.

See database-structure for in-depth information on the database-schema.

Generating the database-schema

The SilverStripe database-schema is generated automatically by visiting the URL. http://<mysite>/dev/build

Note: You need to be logged in as an administrator to perform this command.

Querying Data

Every query to data starts with a DataList::create($class) call. For example, this query would return all of the Member objects:

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member');

The ORM uses a "fluent" syntax, where you specify a query by chaining together different methods. Two common methods are filter() and sort():

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam'))->sort('Surname');

Those of you who know a bit about SQL might be thinking "it looks like you're querying all members, and then filtering to those with a first name of 'Sam'. Isn't this very slow?" Is isn't, because the ORM doesn't actually execute the query until you iterate on the result with a foreach() or <% control %>.

:::php
// The SQL query isn't executed here...
$members = DataList::create('Member');
// ...or here
$members = $members->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam'));
// ...or even here
$members = $members->sort('Surname');

// *This* is where the query is executed
foreach($members as $member) {
	echo "<p>$member->FirstName $member->Surname</p>";
}

This also means that getting the count of a list of objects will be done with a single, efficient query.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam'))->sort('Surname');
// This will create an single SELECT COUNT query.
echo $members->Count();

All of this lets you focus on writing your application, and not worrying too much about whether or not your queries are efficient.

Returning a single DataObject

There are a couple of ways of getting a single DataObject from the ORM. If you know the ID number of the object, you can use byID($id):

:::php
$member = DataList::create('Member')->byID(5);

If you have constructed a query that you know should return a single record, you can call First():

:::php
$member = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam', 'Surname' => 'Minnee'))->First();

Filters

FUN FACT: This isn't implemented in the code yet, but will be shortly.

As you might expect, the filter() method filters the list of objects that gets returned. The previous example included this filter, which returns all Members with a first name of "Sam".

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array('FirstName' => 'Sam'));

In SilverStripe 2, we would have passed "\"FirstName\" = 'Sam' to make this query. Now, we pass an array, array('FirstName' => 'Sam'), to minimise the risk of SQL injection bugs. The format of this array follows a few rules:

  • Each element of the array specifies a filter. You can specify as many filters as you like, and they all must be true.
  • The key in the filter corresponds to the field that you want to filter by.
  • The value in the filter corresponds to the value that you want to filter to.

So, this would return only those members called "Sam Minnée".

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'FirstName' => 'Sam',
	'Surname' => 'Minnée',
));

By default, these filters specify case-insensitive exact matches. There are a number of suffixes that you can put on field names to change this: ":StartsWith", ":EndsWith", ":Contains", ":GreaterThan", ":LessThan", ":Not", and ":MatchCase". ":Not" and ":MatchCase" are special in that you can add it to any of the other filters.

This query will return everyone whose first name doesn't start with S, who have logged on since 1/1/2011.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'FirstName:StartsWith:Not' => 'S'
	'LastVisited:GreaterThan' => '2011-01-01'
));

If you wish to match against any of a number of columns, you can list several field names, separated by commas. This will return all members whose first name or surname contain the string 'sam'.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'FirstName,Surname:Contains' => 'sam'
));

If you wish to match against any of a number of values, you can pass an array as the value. This will return all members whose first name is either Sam or Ingo.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'FirstName' => array('sam', 'ingo'),
));

Relation filters

So far we have only filtered a data list by fields on the object that you're requesting. For simple cases, this might be okay, but often, a data model is made up of a number of related objects. For example, in SilverStripe each member can be placed in a number of groups, and each group has a number of permissions.

For this, Sapphire ORM supports Relation Filters. Any ORM request can be filtered by fields on a related object by specifying the filter key as <relation-name>.<field-in-related-object>. You can chain relations together as many times as is necessary.

For example, this will return all members assigned ot a group that has a permission record with the code "ADMIN". In other words, it will return all administrators.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'Groups.Permissions.Code' => 'ADMIN',
));

Note that we are just joining to these tables to filter the records. Even if a member is in more than 1 administrator group, unique members will still be returned by this query.

The other features of filters can be applied to relation filters as well. This will return all members in groups whose names start with 'A' or 'B'.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'Groups.Title:StartsWith' => array('A', 'B'),
));

You can even follow a relation back to the original model class! This will return all members are in at least 1 group that also has a member called Sam.

:::php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->filter(array(
	'Groups.Members.FirstName' => 'Sam'
));

Raw SQL options for advanced users

Occassionally, the system described above won't let you do exactly what you need to do. In these situtations, we have methods that manipulate the SQL query at a lower level. When using these, please ensure that all table & field names are escaped with double quotes, otherwise some DB back-ends (e.g. PostgreSQL) won't work.

In general, we advise against using these methods unless it's absolutely necessary. If the ORM doesn't do quite what you need it to, you may also consider extending the ORM with new data types or filter modifiers (that documentation still needs to be written)

Where clauses

You can specify a WHERE clause fragment (that will be combined with other filters using AND) with the where() method:

:: php
$members = DataList::create('Member')->where("\"FirstName\" = 'Sam'")

Joining

You can specify a join with the innerJoin and leftJoin methods. Both of these methods have the same arguments:

  • The name of the table to join to
  • The filter clause for the join
  • An optional alias

For example:

:: php
// Without an alias
$members = DataList::create('Member')->leftJoin("Group_Members", "\"Group_Members\".\"MemberID\" = \"Member\".\"ID\"");

$members = DataList::create('Member')->innerJoin("Group_Members", "\"Rel\".\"MemberID\" = \"Member\".\"ID\"", "REl");

Passing a $join statement to DataObject::get will filter results further by the JOINs performed against the foreign table. It will NOT return the additionally joined data. The returned $records will always be a [api:DataObject].

Properties

Definition

Data is defined in the static variable $db on each class, in the format: <property-name> => "data-type"

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $db = array(
    "FirstName" => "Varchar",
    "Surname" => "Varchar",
    "Description" => "Text",
    "Status" => "Enum('Active, Injured, Retired')",
    "Birthday" => "Date"
  );
}

See data-types for all available types.

Overloading

"Getters" and "Setters" are functions that help us save fields to our data objects. By default, the methods getField() and setField() are used to set data object fields. They save to the protected array, $obj->record. We can overload the default behaviour by making a function called "get<fieldname>" or "set<fieldname>".

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $db = array(
    "Status" => "Enum('Active, Injured, Retired')"
  );

  // access through $myPlayer->Status
  function getStatus() {
      // check if the Player is actually... born already!
      return (!$this->obj("Birthday")->InPast()) ? "Unborn" : $this->Status;
  }

Customizing

We can create new "virtual properties" which are not actually listed in static $db or stored in the database-row. Here we combined a Player's first name and surname, accessible through $myPlayer->Title.

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  function getTitle() {
    return "{$this->FirstName} {$this->Surname}";
  }

  // access through $myPlayer->Title = "John Doe";
  // just saves data on the object, please use $myPlayer->write() to save the database-row
  function setTitle($title) {
    list($firstName, $surName) = explode(' ', $title);
    $this->FirstName = $firstName;
    $this->Surname = $surName;
  }
}
**CAUTION:** It is common practice to make sure that pairs of custom getters/setter deal with the same data, in a consistent format.
**CAUTION:** Custom setters can be hard to debug: Please double check if you could transform your data in more straight-forward logic embedded to your custom controller or form-saving.

Default Values

Define the default values for all the $db fields. This example sets the "Status"-column on Player to "Active" whenever a new object is created.

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $defaults = array(
    "Status" => 'Active',
  );
}
Note: Alternatively you can set defaults directly in the database-schema (rather than the object-model). See [data-types](data-types) for details.

Casting

Properties defined in static $db are automatically casted to their data-types when used in templates. You can also cast the return-values of your custom functions (e.g. your "virtual properties"). Calling those functions directly will still return whatever type your php-code generates, but using the obj()-method or accessing through a template will cast the value according to the $casting-definition.

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $casting = array(
    "MembershipFee" => 'Currency',
  );

  // $myPlayer->MembershipFee() returns a float (e.g. 123.45)
  // $myPlayer->obj('MembershipFee') returns a object of type Currency
  // In a template: <% control MyPlayer %>MembershipFee.Nice<% end_control %> returns a casted string (e.g. "$123.45")
  function getMembershipFee() {
    return $this->Team()->BaseFee * $this->MembershipYears;
  }
}

Relations

Relations are built through static array definitions on a class, in the format <relationship-name> => <classname>

has_one

A 1-to-1 relation creates a database-column called "<relationship-name>ID", in the example below this would be "TeamID" on the "Player"-table.

:::php
// access with $myPlayer->Team()
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $has_one = array(
    "Team" => "Team",
  );
}

SilverStripe's [api:SiteTree] base-class for content-pages uses a 1-to-1 relationship to link to its parent element in the tree:

:::php
// access with $mySiteTree->Parent()
class SiteTree extends DataObject {
  static $has_one = array(
    "Parent" => "SiteTree",
  );
}

has_many

Defines 1-to-many joins. A database-column named ""<relationship-name>ID"" will to be created in the child-class.

**CAUTION:** Please specify a $has_one-relationship on the related child-class as well, in order to have the necessary accessors available on both ends.
:::php
// access with $myTeam->Players() or $player->Team()
class Team extends DataObject {
  static $has_many = array(
    "Players" => "Player",
  );
}
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $has_one = array(
    "Team" => "Team",
  );
}

To specify multiple $has_manys to the same object you can use dot notation to distinguish them like below

:::php
class Person {
	static $has_many = array(
		"Managing" => "Company.Manager",
		"Cleaning" => "Company.Cleaner",
	);
}

class Company {
	static $has_one = array(
		"Manager" => "Person",
		"Cleaner" => "Person"
	);
}

Multiple $has_one relationships are okay if they aren't linking to the same object type.

:::php
/**
 * THIS IS BAD
 */
class Team extends DataObject {
  static $has_many = array(
    "Players" => "Player",
  );
}
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $has_one = array(
    "Team" => "Team",
    "AnotherTeam" => "Team",
  );
}

many_many

Defines many-to-many joins. A new table, (this-class)_(relationship-name), will be created with a pair of ID fields.

**CAUTION:** Please specify a $belongs_many_many-relationship on the related class as well, in order to have the necessary accessors available on both ends.
:::php
// access with $myTeam->Categories() or $myCategory->Teams()
class Team extends DataObject {
  static $many_many = array(
    "Categories" => "Category",
  );
}
class Category extends DataObject {
  static $belongs_many_many = array(
    "Teams" => "Team",
  );
}

Adding relations

Inside sapphire it doesn't matter if you're editing a has_many- or a many_many-relationship. You need to get a [api:ComponentSet].

:::php
class Team extends DataObject {
  // see "many_many"-description for a sample definition of class "Category"
  static $many_many = array(
    "Categories" => "Category",
  );
	
  /**

   * @param DataObjectSet
   */
  function addCategories($additionalCategories) {
    $existingCategories = $this->Categories();
    
    // method 1: Add many by iteration
    foreach($additionalCategories as $category) {
      $existingCategories->add($category);
    }

    // method 2: Add many by ID-List
    $existingCategories->addMany(array(1,2,45,745));
  }
}

Custom Relations

You can use the flexible datamodel to get a filtered result-list without writing any SQL. For example, this snippet gets you the "Players"-relation on a team, but only containing active players. (See [api:DataObject::$has_many] for more info on the described relations).

:::php
class Team extends DataObject {
  static $has_many = array(
    "Players" => "Player"
  );

  // can be accessed by $myTeam->ActivePlayers()
  function ActivePlayers() {
    return $this->Players("Status='Active'");
  }
}

Data Handling

When saving data through the object model, you don't have to manually escape strings to create SQL-safe commands. You have to make sure though that certain properties are not overwritten, e.g. ID or ClassName.

Creation

:::php
$myPlayer = new Player();
$myPlayer->Firstname = "John"; // sets property on object
$myPlayer->write(); // writes row to database

Update

:::php
$myPlayer = DataObject::get_by_id('Player',99);
if($myPlayer) {
  $myPlayer->Firstname = "John"; // sets property on object
  $myPlayer->write(); // writes row to database
}

Batch Update

:::php
$myPlayer->update(
  ArrayLib::filter_keys(
    $_REQUEST, 
    array('Birthday', 'Firstname')
  )
);

Alternatively you can use castedUpdate() to respect the data-types. This is preferred to manually casting data before saving.

:::php
$myPlayer->castedUpdate(
  ArrayLib::filter_keys(
    $_REQUEST, 
    array('Birthday', 'Firstname')
  )
);

onBeforeWrite

You can customize saving-behaviour for each DataObject, e.g. for adding security. These functions are private, obviously it wouldn't make sense to call them externally on the object. They are triggered when calling write().

Example: Disallow creation of new players if the currently logged-in player is not a team-manager.

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $has_many = array(
    "Teams"=>"Team"
  );

  function onBeforeWrite() {
    // check on first write action, aka "database row creation" (ID-property is not set)
    if(!$this->ID) {
      $currentPlayer = Member::currentUser();
      if(!$currentPlayer->IsTeamManager()) {
        user_error('Player-creation not allowed', E_USER_ERROR);
        exit();
      }
    }

    // check on every write action
    if(!$this->record['TeamID']) {
        user_error('Cannot save player without a valid team-connection', E_USER_ERROR);
        exit();
    }

    // CAUTION: You are required to call the parent-function, otherwise sapphire will not execute the request.
    parent::onBeforeWrite();
  }
}
Note: There are no separate methods for *onBeforeCreate* and *onBeforeUpdate*. Please check for the existence of $this->ID to toggle these two modes, as shown in the example above.

onBeforeDelete

Triggered before executing delete() on an existing object.

Example: Checking for a specific permission to delete this type of object. It checks if a member is logged in who belongs to a group containing the permission "PLAYER_DELETE".

:::php
class Player extends DataObject {
  static $has_many = array(
    "Teams"=>"Team"
  );

  function onBeforeDelete() {
    if(!Permission::check('PLAYER_DELETE')) {
      Security::permissionFailure($this);
      exit();
    }

    parent::onBeforeDelete();
  }
}

Saving data with forms

See forms.

Saving data with custom SQL

See [api:SQLQuery] for custom INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE queries.

Extending DataObjects

You can add properties and methods to existing [api:DataObjects]s like [api:Member] (a core class) without hacking core code or subclassing. Please see [api:DataExtension] for a general description, and [api:Hierarchy] for our most popular examples.

FAQ

Whats the difference between DataObject::get() and a relation-getter?

You can work with both in pretty much the same way, but relationship-getters return a special type of collection: A [api:ComponentSet] with relation-specific functionality.

:::php
$myTeam = DataObject::get_by_id('Team',$myPlayer->TeamID); // returns DataObject
$myTeam->add(new Player()); // fails

$myTeam = $myPlayer->Team(); // returns Componentset
$myTeam->add(new Player()); // works