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Retrieving Your Data

As stated before, one of the roles of the Model layer is to get data from multiple types of storage. The CakePHP Model class comes with some functions that will help you search for this data, sort it, paginate it, and filter it. The most common function you will use in models is Model::find()

find

find(string $type = 'first', array $params = array())

Find is the multifunctional workhorse of all model data-retrieval functions. $type can be 'all', 'first', 'count', 'list', 'neighbors' or 'threaded', or any custom finder you can define. Keep in mind that $type is case-sensitive. Using an upper case character (for example, All) will not produce the expected results.

$params is used to pass all parameters to the various types of find(), and has the following possible keys by default, all of which are optional:

array(
    'conditions' => array('Model.field' => $thisValue), // array of conditions
    'recursive' => 1, // int
    // array of field names
    'fields' => array('Model.field1', 'DISTINCT Model.field2'),
    // string or array defining order
    'order' => array('Model.created', 'Model.field3 DESC'),
    'group' => array('Model.field'), // fields to GROUP BY
    'limit' => n, // int
    'page' => n, // int
    'offset' => n, // int
    'callbacks' => true, // other possible values are false, 'before', 'after'
    'having' => array('COUNT(Model.field) >' => 1), // array of HAVING conditions
    'lock' => true, // Enable FOR UPDATE locking
)

It’s also possible to add and use other parameters. Some types of find() and behaviors make use of this ability, and your own model methods can, too.

If your find() operation fails to match any records, you will get an empty array.

New in version 2.10.0: The having and lock options were added.

find(‘first’)

find('first', $params) will return one result. You’d use this for any case where you expect only one result. Below are a couple of simple (controller code) examples:

public function some_function() {
    // ...
    $semiRandomArticle = $this->Article->find('first');
    $lastCreated = $this->Article->find('first', array(
        'order' => array('Article.created' => 'desc')
    ));
    $specificallyThisOne = $this->Article->find('first', array(
        'conditions' => array('Article.id' => 1)
    ));
    // ...
}

In the first example, no parameters at all are passed to find, so no conditions or sort order will be used. The format returned from find('first') call is of the form:

Array
(
    [ModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 83
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            [field3] => value3
        )

    [AssociatedModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            [field3] => value3
        )
)

find(‘count’)

find('count', $params) returns an integer value. Below are a couple of simple (controller code) examples:

public function some_function() {
    // ...
    $total = $this->Article->find('count');
    $pending = $this->Article->find('count', array(
        'conditions' => array('Article.status' => 'pending')
    ));
    $authors = $this->Article->User->find('count');
    $publishedAuthors = $this->Article->find('count', array(
       'fields' => 'DISTINCT Article.user_id',
       'conditions' => array('Article.status !=' => 'pending')
    ));
    // ...
}

Note

Don’t pass fields as an array to find('count'). You would only need to specify fields for a DISTINCT count (since otherwise, the count is always the same, dictated by the conditions).

find(‘all’)

find('all', $params) returns an array of potentially multiple results. It is, in fact, the mechanism used by all find() variants, as well as paginate. Below are a couple of simple (controller code) examples:

public function some_function() {
    // ...
    $allArticles = $this->Article->find('all');
    $pending = $this->Article->find('all', array(
        'conditions' => array('Article.status' => 'pending')
    ));
    $allAuthors = $this->Article->User->find('all');
    $allPublishedAuthors = $this->Article->User->find('all', array(
        'conditions' => array('Article.status !=' => 'pending')
    ));
    // ...
}

Note

In the above example, $allAuthors will contain every user in the users table. There will be no condition applied to the find, since none were passed.

The results of a call to find('all') will be of the following form:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [ModelName] => Array
                (
                    [id] => 83
                    [field1] => value1
                    [field2] => value2
                    [field3] => value3
                )

            [AssociatedModelName] => Array
                (
                    [id] => 1
                    [field1] => value1
                    [field2] => value2
                    [field3] => value3
                )

        )
)

find(‘list’)

find('list', $params) returns an indexed array, useful for any place where you would want a list, such as for populating input select boxes. Below are a couple of simple (controller code) examples:

public function some_function() {
    // ...
    $allArticles = $this->Article->find('list');
    $pending = $this->Article->find('list', array(
        'conditions' => array('Article.status' => 'pending')
    ));
    $allAuthors = $this->Article->User->find('list');
    $allPublishedAuthors = $this->Article->find('list', array(
        'fields' => array('User.id', 'User.name'),
        'conditions' => array('Article.status !=' => 'pending'),
        'recursive' => 0
    ));
    // ...
}

Note

In the above example, $allAuthors will contain every user in the users table. There will be no condition applied to the find, since none were passed.

The results of a call to find('list') will be in the following form:

Array
(
    //[id] => 'displayValue',
    [1] => 'displayValue1',
    [2] => 'displayValue2',
    [4] => 'displayValue4',
    [5] => 'displayValue5',
    [6] => 'displayValue6',
    [3] => 'displayValue3',
)

When calling find('list'), the fields passed are used to determine what should be used as the array key and value, and optionally what to group the results by. By default, the primary key for the model is used for the key, and the display field (which can be configured using the model attribute displayField) is used for the value. Some further examples to clarify:

public function some_function() {
    // ...
    $justusernames = $this->Article->User->find('list', array(
        'fields' => array('User.username')
    ));
    $usernameMap = $this->Article->User->find('list', array(
        'fields' => array('User.username', 'User.first_name')
    ));
    $usernameGroups = $this->Article->User->find('list', array(
        'fields' => array('User.username', 'User.first_name', 'User.group')
    ));
    // ...
}

With the above code example, the resultant vars would look something like this:

$justusernames = Array
(
    //[id] => 'username',
    [213] => 'AD7six',
    [25] => '_psychic_',
    [1] => 'PHPNut',
    [2] => 'gwoo',
    [400] => 'jperras',
)

$usernameMap = Array
(
    //[username] => 'firstname',
    ['AD7six'] => 'Andy',
    ['_psychic_'] => 'John',
    ['PHPNut'] => 'Larry',
    ['gwoo'] => 'Gwoo',
    ['jperras'] => 'Joël',
)

$usernameGroups = Array
(
    ['User'] => Array
    (
        ['PHPNut'] => 'Larry',
        ['gwoo'] => 'Gwoo',
    )

    ['Admin'] => Array
    (
        ['_psychic_'] => 'John',
        ['AD7six'] => 'Andy',
        ['jperras'] => 'Joël',
    )

)

find(‘threaded’)

find('threaded', $params) returns a nested array, and is appropriate if you want to use the parent_id field of your model data to build nested results. Below are a couple of simple (controller code) examples:

public function some_function() {
    // ...
    $allCategories = $this->Category->find('threaded');
    $comments = $this->Comment->find('threaded', array(
        'conditions' => array('article_id' => 50)
    ));
    // ...
}

Tip

A better way to deal with nested data is using the Tree behavior

In the above code example, $allCategories will contain a nested array representing the whole category structure. The results of a call to find('threaded') will be of the following form:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
    (
        [ModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 83
            [parent_id] => null
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            [field3] => value3
        )

        [AssociatedModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            [field3] => value3
        )

        [children] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
            (
                [ModelName] => Array
                (
                    [id] => 42
                    [parent_id] => 83
                    [field1] => value1
                    [field2] => value2
                    [field3] => value3
                )

                [AssociatedModelName] => Array
                (
                    [id] => 2
                    [field1] => value1
                    [field2] => value2
                    [field3] => value3
                )

                [children] => Array
                (
                )
            )
            ...
        )
    )
)

The order in which results appear can be changed, as it is influenced by the order of processing. For example, if 'order' => 'name ASC' is passed in the params to find('threaded'), the results will appear in name order. Any order can be used; there is no built-in requirement of this method for the top result to be returned first.

Warning

If you specify fields, you need to always include the id and parent_id (or their current aliases):

public function some_function() {
    $categories = $this->Category->find('threaded', array(
        'fields' => array('id', 'name', 'parent_id')
    ));
}

Otherwise, the returned array will not be of the expected nested structure from above.

find(‘neighbors’)

find('neighbors', $params) will perform a find similar to ‘first’, but will return the row before and after the one you request. Below is a simple (controller code) example:

public function some_function() {
    $neighbors = $this->Article->find(
        'neighbors',
        array('field' => 'id', 'value' => 3)
    );
}

You can see in this example the two required elements of the $params array: field and value. Other elements are still allowed as with any other find. (For example: If your model acts as containable, then you can specify ‘contain’ in $params.) The result returned from a find('neighbors') call is in the form:

Array
(
    [prev] => Array
    (
        [ModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 2
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            ...
        )
        [AssociatedModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 151
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            ...
        )
    )
    [next] => Array
    (
        [ModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 4
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            ...
        )
        [AssociatedModelName] => Array
        (
            [id] => 122
            [field1] => value1
            [field2] => value2
            ...
        )
    )
)

Note

Note how the result always contains only two root elements: prev and next. This function does not honor a model’s default recursive var. The recursive setting must be passed in the parameters on each call.

Creating custom find types

The find method is flexible enough to accept your custom finders. This is done by declaring your own types in a model variable and by implementing a special function in your model class.

A Model Find Type is a shortcut to find() options. For example, the following two finds are equivalent

$this->User->find('first');
$this->User->find('all', array('limit' => 1));

The following are core find types:

  • first

  • all

  • count

  • list

  • threaded

  • neighbors

But what about other types? Let’s say you want a finder for all published articles in your database. The first change you need to do is add your type to the Model::$findMethods variable in the model

class Article extends AppModel {
    public $findMethods = array('available' =>  true);
}

Basically this is just telling CakePHP to accept the value available as the first argument of the find function. The next step is to implement the function _findAvailable. This is done by convention. If you wanted to implement a finder called myFancySearch, then the method to implement would be named _findMyFancySearch.

class Article extends AppModel {
    public $findMethods = array('available' =>  true);

    protected function _findAvailable($state, $query, $results = array()) {
        if ($state === 'before') {
            $query['conditions']['Article.published'] = true;
            return $query;
        }
        return $results;
    }
}

This all comes together in the following example (controller code):

class ArticlesController extends AppController {

    // Will find all published articles and order them by the created column
    public function index() {
        $articles = $this->Article->find('available', array(
            'order' => array('created' => 'desc')
        ));
    }

}

The special _find[Type] methods receive three arguments as shown above. The first one means the state of the query execution, which could be either before or after. It is done this way because this function is just a sort of callback function that has the ability to modify the query before it is done, or to modify the results after they are fetched.

Typically the first thing to check in our custom find function is the state of the query. The before state is the moment to modify the query, bind new associations, apply more behaviors, and interpret any special key that is passed in the second argument of find. This state requires you to return the $query argument (modified or not).

The after state is the perfect place to inspect the results, inject new data, process it in order to return it in another format, or do whatever you like to the recently fetched data. This state requires you to return the $results array (modified or not).

You can create as many custom finders as you like, and they are a great way of reusing code in your application across models.

It is also possible to paginate via a custom find type using the ‘findType’ option as follows:

class ArticlesController extends AppController {

    // Will paginate all published articles
    public function index() {
        $this->paginate = array('findType' => 'available');
        $articles = $this->paginate();
        $this->set(compact('articles'));
    }

}

Setting the $this->paginate property as above on the controller will result in the type of the find becoming available, and will also allow you to continue to modify the find results.

To simply return the count of a custom find type, call count like you normally would, but pass in the find type in an array for the second argument.

class ArticlesController extends AppController {

    // Will find the count of all published articles (using the available find defined above)
    public function index() {
        $count = $this->Article->find('count', array(
            'type' => 'available'
        ));
    }
}

If your pagination page count is becoming corrupt, it may be necessary to add the following code to your AppModel, which should fix the pagination count:

class AppModel extends Model {

/**
 * Removes 'fields' key from count query on custom finds when it is an array,
 * as it will completely break the Model::_findCount() call
 *
 * @param string $state Either "before" or "after"
 * @param array $query
 * @param array $results
 * @return int The number of records found, or false
 * @access protected
 * @see Model::find()
 */
    protected function _findCount($state, $query, $results = array()) {
        if ($state === 'before') {
            if (isset($query['type']) &&
                isset($this->findMethods[$query['type']])) {
                $query = $this->{
                    '_find' . ucfirst($query['type'])
                }('before', $query);
                if (!empty($query['fields']) && is_array($query['fields'])) {
                    if (!preg_match('/^count/i', current($query['fields']))) {
                        unset($query['fields']);
                    }
                }
            }
        }
        return parent::_findCount($state, $query, $results);
    }

}
?>

Changed in version 2.2.

You no longer need to override _findCount for fixing incorrect count results. The 'before' state of your custom finder will now be called again with $query['operation'] = 'count'. The returned $query will be used in _findCount() If necessary, you can distinguish by checking the 'operation' key and return a different $query:

protected function _findAvailable($state, $query, $results = array()) {
    if ($state === 'before') {
        $query['conditions']['Article.published'] = true;
        if (!empty($query['operation']) && $query['operation'] === 'count') {
            return $query;
        }
        $query['joins'] = array(
            //array of required joins
        );
        return $query;
    }
    return $results;
}

Magic Find Types

These magic functions can be used as a shortcut to search your tables by a certain field. Just add the name of the field (in CamelCase format) to the end of these functions, and supply the criteria for that field as the first parameter.

findAllBy() functions will return results in a format like find('all'), while findBy() return in the same format as find('first')

findAllBy

findAllBy<fieldName>(string $value, array $fields, array $order, int $limit, int $page, int $recursive)

findAllBy<x> Example

Corresponding SQL Fragment

$this->Product->findAllByOrderStatus('3');

Product.order_status = 3

$this->Recipe->findAllByType('Cookie');

Recipe.type = 'Cookie'

$this->User->findAllByLastName('Anderson');

User.last_name = 'Anderson'

$this->Cake->findAllById(7);

Cake.id = 7

$this->User->findAllByEmailOrUsername('jhon', 'jhon');

User.email = 'jhon' OR User.username = 'jhon';

$this->User->findAllByUsernameAndPassword('jhon', '123');

User.username = 'jhon' AND User.password = '123';

$this->User->findAllByLastName('psychic', array(), array('User.user_name => 'asc'));

User.last_name = 'psychic' ORDER BY User.user_name ASC

The returned result is an array formatted just as it would be from find('all').

Custom Magic Finders

As of 2.8, you can use any custom finder method with the magic method interface. For example, if your model implements a published finder, you can use those finders with the magic findBy method:

$results = $this->Article->findPublishedByAuthorId(5);

// Is equivalent to
$this->Article->find('published', array(
    'conditions' => array('Article.author_id' => 5)
));

New in version 2.8.0: Custom magic finders were added in 2.8.0.

findBy

findBy<fieldName>(string $value);

The findBy magic functions also accept some optional parameters:

findBy<fieldName>(string $value[, mixed $fields[, mixed $order]]);

findBy<x> Example

Corresponding SQL Fragment

$this->Product->findByOrderStatus('3');

Product.order_status = 3

$this->Recipe->findByType('Cookie');

Recipe.type = 'Cookie'

$this->User->findByLastName('Anderson');

User.last_name = 'Anderson';

$this->User->findByEmailOrUsername('jhon', 'jhon');

User.email = 'jhon' OR User.username = 'jhon';

$this->User->findByUsernameAndPassword('jhon', '123');

User.username = 'jhon' AND User.password = '123';

$this->Cake->findById(7);

Cake.id = 7

findBy() functions return results like find('first')

Model::query()

query(string $query)

SQL calls that you can’t or don’t want to make via other model methods can be made using the model’s query() method (though this should only rarely be necessary).

If you use this method, be sure to properly escape all parameters using the value() method on the database driver. Failing to escape parameters will create SQL injection vulnerabilities.

Note

query() does not honor $Model->cacheQueries as its functionality is inherently disjoint from that of the calling model. To avoid caching calls to query, supply a second argument of false, ie: query($query, $cachequeries = false)

query() uses the table name in the query as the array key for the returned data, rather than the model name. For example:

$this->Picture->query("SELECT * FROM pictures LIMIT 2;");

might return:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
    (
        [pictures] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1304
            [user_id] => 759
        )
    )

    [1] => Array
    (
        [pictures] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1305
            [user_id] => 759
        )
    )
)

To use the model name as the array key, and get a result consistent with that returned by the Find methods, the query can be rewritten:

$this->Picture->query("SELECT * FROM pictures AS Picture LIMIT 2;");

which returns:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
    (
        [Picture] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1304
            [user_id] => 759
        )
    )

    [1] => Array
    (
        [Picture] => Array
        (
            [id] => 1305
            [user_id] => 759
        )
    )
)

Note

This syntax and the corresponding array structure is valid for MySQL only. CakePHP does not provide any data abstraction when running queries manually, so exact results will vary between databases.

Model::field()

field(string $name, array $conditions = null, string $order = null)

Returns the value of a single field, specified as $name, from the first record matched by $conditions as ordered by $order. If no conditions are passed and the model id is set, it will return the field value for the current model result. If no matching record is found, it returns false.

$this->Post->id = 22;
echo $this->Post->field('name'); // echo the name for row id 22

// echo the name of the last created instance
echo $this->Post->field(
    'name',
    array('created <' => date('Y-m-d H:i:s')),
    'created DESC'
);

Model::read()

read($fields, $id)

read() is a method used to set the current model data (Model::$data)–such as during edits–but it can also be used in other circumstances to retrieve a single record from the database.

$fields is used to pass a single field name, as a string, or an array of field names; if left empty, all fields will be fetched.

$id specifies the ID of the record to be read. By default, the currently selected record, as specified by Model::$id, is used. Passing a different value to $id will cause that record to be selected.

read() always returns an array (even if only a single field name is requested). Use field to retrieve the value of a single field.

Warning

As the read method overwrites any information stored in the data and id property of the model, you should be very careful when using this function in general, especially using it in the model callback functions such as beforeValidate and beforeSave. Generally the find function provides a more robust and easy to work with API than the read method.

Complex Find Conditions

Most of the model’s find calls involve passing sets of conditions in one way or another. In general, CakePHP prefers using arrays for expressing any conditions that need to be put after the WHERE clause in any SQL query.

Using arrays is clearer and easier to read, and also makes it very easy to build queries. This syntax also breaks out the elements of your query (fields, values, operators, etc.) into discrete, manipulatable parts. This allows CakePHP to generate the most efficient query possible, ensure proper SQL syntax, and properly escape each individual part of the query. Using associated array syntax also enables CakePHP to secure your queries against any SQL injection attack.

Warning

CakePHP only escapes the associated array values. You should never put user data into the keys, or put user data into numerically indexexed arrays. Doing so will make you vulnerable to SQL injections.

At its most basic, an array-based query looks like this:

$conditions = array("Post.title" => "This is a post", "Post.author_id" => 1);
// Example usage with a model:
$this->Post->find('first', array('conditions' => $conditions));

The structure here is fairly self-explanatory: it will find any post where the title equals “This is a post” and the author id is equal to 1. Note that we could have used just “title” as the field name, but when building queries, it is good practice to always specify the model name, as it improves the clarity of the code, and helps prevent collisions in the future, should you choose to change your schema.

What about other types of matches? These are equally simple. Let’s say we wanted to find all the posts where the title is not “This is a post”:

array("Post.title !=" => "This is a post")

Notice the '!=' that follows the field name. CakePHP can parse out any valid SQL comparison operator, including match expressions using LIKE, BETWEEN, or REGEX, as long as you leave a space between field name and the operator. The one exception here is IN (…)-style matches. Let’s say you wanted to find posts where the title was in a given set of values:

array(
    "Post.title" => array("First post", "Second post", "Third post")
)

To do a NOT IN (…) match to find posts where the title is not in the given set of values, do the following:

array(
    "NOT" => array(
        "Post.title" => array("First post", "Second post", "Third post")
    )
)

Adding additional filters to the conditions is as simple as adding additional key/value pairs to the array:

array (
    "Post.title" => array("First post", "Second post", "Third post"),
    "Post.created >" => date('Y-m-d', strtotime("-2 weeks"))
)

You can also create finds that compare two fields in the database:

array("Post.created = Post.modified")

The above example will return posts where the created date is equal to the modified date (that is, it will return posts that have never been modified).

Remember that if you find yourself unable to form a WHERE clause in this method (for example, boolean operations), you can always specify it as a string like:

array(
    'Model.field & 8 = 1',
    // other conditions as usual
)

By default, CakePHP joins multiple conditions with boolean AND. This means the snippet below would only match posts that have been created in the past two weeks, and have a title that matches one in the given set. However, we could just as easily find posts that match either condition:

array("OR" => array(
    "Post.title" => array("First post", "Second post", "Third post"),
    "Post.created >" => date('Y-m-d', strtotime("-2 weeks"))
))

CakePHP accepts all valid SQL boolean operations, including AND, OR, NOT, XOR, etc., and they can be upper or lower case, whichever you prefer. These conditions are also infinitely nestable. Let’s say you had a belongsTo relationship between Posts and Authors. Let’s say you wanted to find all the posts that contained a certain keyword (“magic”) or were created in the past two weeks, but you wanted to restrict your search to posts written by Bob:

array(
    "Author.name" => "Bob",
    "OR" => array(
        "Post.title LIKE" => "%magic%",
        "Post.created >" => date('Y-m-d', strtotime("-2 weeks"))
    )
)

If you need to set multiple conditions on the same field, like when you want to do a LIKE search with multiple terms, you can do so by using conditions similar to:

array('OR' => array(
    array('Post.title LIKE' => '%one%'),
    array('Post.title LIKE' => '%two%')
))

The wildcard operators ILIKE and RLIKE (RLIKE since version 2.6) are also available.

CakePHP can also check for null fields. In this example, the query will return records where the post title is not null:

array("NOT" => array(
        "Post.title" => null
    )
)

To handle BETWEEN queries, you can use the following:

array('Post.read_count BETWEEN ? AND ?' => array(1, 10))

Note

CakePHP will quote the numeric values depending on the field type in your DB.

How about GROUP BY?:

array(
    'fields' => array(
        'Product.type',
        'MIN(Product.price) as price'
    ),
    'group' => 'Product.type'
)

The data returned for this would be in the following format:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
    (
        [Product] => Array
        (
            [type] => Clothing
        )
        [0] => Array
        (
            [price] => 32
        )
    )
    [1] => Array
    ...

A quick example of doing a DISTINCT query. You can use other operators, such as MIN(), MAX(), etc., in a similar fashion:

array(
    'fields' => array('DISTINCT (User.name) AS my_column_name'),
    'order' =>array('User.id DESC')
)

You can create very complex conditions by nesting multiple condition arrays:

array(
    'OR' => array(
        array('Company.name' => 'Future Holdings'),
        array('Company.city' => 'CA')
    ),
    'AND' => array(
        array(
            'OR' => array(
                array('Company.status' => 'active'),
                'NOT' => array(
                    array('Company.status' => array('inactive', 'suspended'))
                )
            )
        )
    )
)

which produces the following SQL:

SELECT `Company`.`id`, `Company`.`name`,
`Company`.`description`, `Company`.`location`,
`Company`.`created`, `Company`.`status`, `Company`.`size`

FROM
   `companies` AS `Company`
WHERE
   ((`Company`.`name` = 'Future Holdings')
   OR
   (`Company`.`city` = 'CA'))
AND
   ((`Company`.`status` = 'active')
   OR (NOT (`Company`.`status` IN ('inactive', 'suspended'))))

Sub-queries

For this example, imagine that we have a “users” table with “id”, “name” and “status”. The status can be “A”, “B” or “C”. We want to retrieve all the users that have status other than “B” using a sub-query.

In order to achieve that, we are going to get the model data source and ask it to build the query as if we were calling a find() method, but it will just return the SQL statement. After that we make an expression and add it to the conditions array:

$conditionsSubQuery['User2.status'] = 'B';

$db = $this->User->getDataSource();
$subQuery = $db->buildStatement(
    array(
        'fields'     => array('User2.id'),
        'table'      => $db->fullTableName($this->User),
        'alias'      => 'User2',
        'limit'      => null,
        'offset'     => null,
        'joins'      => array(),
        'conditions' => $conditionsSubQuery,
        'order'      => null,
        'group'      => null
    ),
    $this->User
);
$subQuery = 'User.id NOT IN (' . $subQuery . ') ';
$subQueryExpression = $db->expression($subQuery);

$conditions[] = $subQueryExpression;

$this->User->find('all', compact('conditions'));

This should generate the following SQL:

SELECT
    User.id AS "User__id",
    User.name AS "User__name",
    User.status AS "User__status"
FROM
    users AS User
WHERE
    User.id NOT IN (
        SELECT
            User2.id
        FROM
            users AS User2
        WHERE
            "User2.status" = 'B'
    )

Also, if you need to pass just part of your query as raw SQL as above, datasource expressions with raw SQL work for any part of the find query.

Prepared Statements

Should you need even more control over your queries, you can make use of prepared statements. This allows you to talk directly to the database driver and send any custom query you like:

$db = $this->getDataSource();
$db->fetchAll(
    'SELECT * from users where username = ? AND password = ?',
    array('jhon', '12345')
);
$db->fetchAll(
    'SELECT * from users where username = :username AND password = :password',
    array('username' => 'jhon','password' => '12345')
);