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CakePHP ORM

The CakePHP ORM provides a powerful and flexible way to work with relational databases. Using a datamapper pattern the ORM allows you to manipulate data as entities allowing you to create expressive domain layers in your applications.

Connecting to the Database

The CakePHP ORM is compatible with:

  • MySQL 5.1+
  • Postgres 8+
  • SQLite3
  • SQLServer 2008+

The first thing you need to do when using this library is register a connection object. Before performing any operations with the connection, you need to specify a driver to use:

use Cake\Datasource\ConnectionManager;

ConnectionManager::config('default', [
	'className' => 'Cake\Database\Connection',
	'driver' => 'Cake\Database\Driver\Mysql',
	'database' => 'test',
	'username' => 'root',
	'password' => 'secret',
	'cacheMetaData' => false // If set to `true` you need to install the optional "cakephp/cache" package.
]);

Once a 'default' connection is registered, it will be used by all the Table mappers if no explicit connection is defined.

Creating Associations

In your table classes you can define the relations between your tables. CakePHP's ORM supports 4 association types out of the box:

  • belongsTo - E.g. Many articles belong to a user.
  • hasOne - E.g. A user has one profile
  • hasMany - E.g. A user has many articles
  • belongsToMany - E.g. An article belongsToMany tags.

You define associations in your table's initialize() method. See the documentation for complete examples.

Reading Data

Once you've defined some table classes you can read existing data in your tables:

use Cake\ORM\TableRegistry;

$articles = TableRegistry::get('Articles');
foreach ($articles->find() as $article) {
	echo $article->title;
}

You can use the query builder to create complex queries, and a variety of methods to access your data.

Saving Data

Table objects provide ways to convert request data into entities, and then persist those entities to the database:

use Cake\ORM\TableRegistry;

$data = [
	'title' => 'My first article',
	'body' => 'It is a great article',
	'user_id' => 1,
	'tags' => [
		'_ids' => [1, 2, 3]
	],
	'comments' => [
		['comment' => 'Good job'],
		['comment' => 'Awesome work'],
	]
];

$articles = TableRegistry::get('Articles');
$article = $articles->newEntity($data, [
	'associated' => ['Tags', 'Comments']
]);
$articles->save($article, [
	'associated' => ['Tags', 'Comments']
])

The above shows how you can easily marshal and save an entity and its associations in a simple & powerful way. Consult the ORM documentation for more in-depth examples.

Deleting Data

Once you have a reference to an entity, you can use it to delete data:

$articles = TableRegistry::get('Articles');
$article = $articles->get(2);
$articles->delete($article);

Additional Documentation

Consult the CakePHP ORM documentation for more in-depth documentation.