Page Contents
- Saving Data
- A Glance Over Saving Data
- Converting Request Data into Entities
- Saving Entities
- Strict Saving
- Find or Create an Entity
- Saving Multiple Entities
- Bulk Updates
This document is for a version of CakePHP that is no longer supported. Please upgrade to a newer release!
After you have loaded your data you will probably want to update and save the changes.
Applications will usually have a couple of ways in which data is saved. The first one is obviously through web forms and the other is by directly generating or changing data in the code to be sent to the database.
The easiest way to insert data in the database is by creating a new entity and
passing it to the save()
method in the Table
class:
use Cake\ORM\TableRegistry;
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articlesTable = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articlesTable->newEntity();
$article->title = 'A New Article';
$article->body = 'This is the body of the article';
if ($articlesTable->save($article)) {
// The $article entity contains the id now
$id = $article->id;
}
The save()
method returns the successfully saved entity or false
on failure.
Updating your data is equally easy, and the save()
method is also used for
that purpose:
use Cake\ORM\TableRegistry;
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articlesTable = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articlesTable->get(12); // Return article with id 12
$article->title = 'CakePHP is THE best PHP framework!';
$articlesTable->save($article);
CakePHP will know whether to perform an insert or an update based on the return
value of the isNew()
method. Entities that were retrieved with get()
or
find()
will always return false
when isNew()
is called on them.
By default the save()
method will also save one level of associations:
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articlesTable = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$author = $articlesTable->Authors->findByUserName('mark')->first();
$article = $articlesTable->newEntity();
$article->title = 'An article by mark';
$article->author = $author;
if ($articlesTable->save($article)) {
// The foreign key value was set automatically.
echo $article->author_id;
}
The save()
method is also able to create new records for associations:
$firstComment = $articlesTable->Comments->newEntity();
$firstComment->body = 'The CakePHP features are outstanding';
$secondComment = $articlesTable->Comments->newEntity();
$secondComment->body = 'CakePHP performance is terrific!';
$tag1 = $articlesTable->Tags->findByName('cakephp')->first();
$tag2 = $articlesTable->Tags->newEntity();
$tag2->name = 'awesome';
$article = $articlesTable->get(12);
$article->comments = [$firstComment, $secondComment];
$article->tags = [$tag1, $tag2];
$articlesTable->save($article);
The previous example demonstrates how to associate a few tags to an article.
Another way of accomplishing the same thing is by using the link()
method in the association:
$tag1 = $articlesTable->Tags->findByName('cakephp')->first();
$tag2 = $articlesTable->Tags->newEntity();
$tag2->name = 'awesome';
$articlesTable->Tags->link($article, [$tag1, $tag2]);
Unlinking many to many records is done via the unlink()
method:
$tags = $articlesTable
->Tags
->find()
->where(['name IN' => ['cakephp', 'awesome']])
->toList();
$articlesTable->Tags->unlink($article, $tags);
When modifying records by directly setting or changing the properties no validation happens, which is a problem when accepting form data. The following sections will demonstrate how to efficiently convert form data into entities so that they can be validated and saved.
Before editing and saving data back to your database, you’ll need to convert the request data from the array format held in the request, and the entities that the ORM uses. The Table class provides an easy and efficient way to convert one or many entities from request data. You can convert a single entity using:
// In a controller
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
// Validate and convert to an Entity object
$entity = $articles->newEntity($this->request->getData());
Note
If you are using newEntity() and the resulting entities are missing some or
all of the data they were passed, double check that the columns you want to
set are listed in the $_accessible
property of your entity. See Mass Assignment.
The request data should follow the structure of your entities. For example if you have an article, which belonged to a user, and had many comments, your request data should resemble:
$data = [
'title' => 'CakePHP For the Win',
'body' => 'Baking with CakePHP makes web development fun!',
'user_id' => 1,
'user' => [
'username' => 'mark'
],
'comments' => [
['body' => 'The CakePHP features are outstanding'],
['body' => 'CakePHP performance is terrific!'],
]
];
By default, the newEntity()
method validates the data that gets passed to
it, as explained in the Validating Data Before Building Entities section. If you wish to
bypass data validation pass the 'validate' => false
option:
$entity = $articles->newEntity($data, ['validate' => false]);
When building forms that save nested associations, you need to define which associations should be marshalled:
// In a controller
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
// New entity with nested associations
$entity = $articles->newEntity($this->request->getData(), [
'associated' => [
'Tags', 'Comments' => ['associated' => ['Users']]
]
]);
The above indicates that the ‘Tags’, ‘Comments’ and ‘Users’ for the Comments should be marshalled. Alternatively, you can use dot notation for brevity:
// In a controller
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
// New entity with nested associations using dot notation
$entity = $articles->newEntity($this->request->getData(), [
'associated' => ['Tags', 'Comments.Users']
]);
You may also disable marshalling of possible nested associations like so:
$entity = $articles->newEntity($data, ['associated' => []]);
// or...
$entity = $articles->patchEntity($entity, $data, ['associated' => []]);
Associated data is also validated by default unless told otherwise. You may also change the validation set to be used per association:
// In a controller
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
// Bypass validation on Tags association and
// Designate 'signup' validation set for Comments.Users
$entity = $articles->newEntity($this->request->getData(), [
'associated' => [
'Tags' => ['validate' => false],
'Comments.Users' => ['validate' => 'signup']
]
]);
The Using A Different Validation Set For Associations chapter has more information on how to use different validators for associated marshalling.
The following diagram gives an overview of what happens inside the
newEntity()
or patchEntity()
method:
You can always count on getting an entity back from newEntity()
. If
validation fails your entity will contain errors, and any invalid fields will
not be populated in the created entity.
If you are saving belongsToMany associations you can either use a list of entity data or a list of ids. When using a list of entity data your request data should look like:
$data = [
'title' => 'My title',
'body' => 'The text',
'user_id' => 1,
'tags' => [
['name' => 'CakePHP'],
['name' => 'Internet'],
]
];
The above will create 2 new tags. If you want to link an article with existing tags you can use a list of ids. Your request data should look like:
$data = [
'title' => 'My title',
'body' => 'The text',
'user_id' => 1,
'tags' => [
'_ids' => [1, 2, 3, 4]
]
];
If you need to link against some existing belongsToMany records, and create new ones at the same time you can use an expanded format:
$data = [
'title' => 'My title',
'body' => 'The text',
'user_id' => 1,
'tags' => [
['name' => 'A new tag'],
['name' => 'Another new tag'],
['id' => 5],
['id' => 21]
]
];
When the above data is converted into entities, you will have 4 tags. The first two will be new objects, and the second two will be references to existing records.
When converting belongsToMany data, you can disable entity creation, by
using the onlyIds
option:
$result = $articles->patchEntity($entity, $data, [
'associated' => ['Tags' => ['onlyIds' => true]],
]);
When used, this option restricts belongsToMany association marshalling to only
use the _ids
data.
New in version 3.1.0: The onlyIds
option was added in 3.1.0
If you want to update existing hasMany associations and update their properties, you should first ensure your entity is loaded with the hasMany association populated. You can then use request data similar to:
$data = [
'title' => 'My Title',
'body' => 'The text',
'comments' => [
['id' => 1, 'comment' => 'Update the first comment'],
['id' => 2, 'comment' => 'Update the second comment'],
['comment' => 'Create a new comment'],
]
];
If you are saving hasMany associations and want to link existing records to a
new parent record you can use the _ids
format:
$data = [
'title' => 'My new article',
'body' => 'The text',
'user_id' => 1,
'comments' => [
'_ids' => [1, 2, 3, 4]
]
];
When converting hasMany data, you can disable the new entity creation, by using
the onlyIds
option. When enabled, this option restricts hasMany marshalling
to only use the _ids
key and ignore all other data.
New in version 3.1.0: The onlyIds
option was added in 3.1.0
When creating forms that create/update multiple records at once you can use
newEntities()
:
// In a controller.
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$entities = $articles->newEntities($this->request->getData());
In this situation, the request data for multiple articles should look like:
$data = [
[
'title' => 'First post',
'published' => 1
],
[
'title' => 'Second post',
'published' => 1
],
];
Once you’ve converted request data into entities you can save()
or
delete()
them:
// In a controller.
foreach ($entities as $entity) {
// Save entity
$articles->save($entity);
// Delete entity
$articles->delete($entity);
}
The above will run a separate transaction for each entity saved. If you’d like
to process all the entities as a single transaction you can use
transactional()
:
// In a controller.
$articles->getConnection()->transactional(function () use ($articles, $entities) {
foreach ($entities as $entity) {
$articles->save($entity, ['atomic' => false]);
}
});
It’s also possible to allow newEntity()
to write into non accessible fields.
For example, id
is usually absent from the _accessible
property. In
such case, you can use the accessibleFields
option. It could be useful to
keep ids of associated entities:
// In a controller
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$entity = $articles->newEntity($this->request->getData(), [
'associated' => [
'Tags', 'Comments' => [
'associated' => [
'Users' => [
'accessibleFields' => ['id' => true]
]
]
]
]
]);
The above will keep the association unchanged between Comments and Users for the concerned entity.
Note
If you are using newEntity() and the resulting entities are missing some or
all of the data they were passed, double check that the columns you want to
set are listed in the $_accessible
property of your entity. See
Mass Assignment.
In order to update entities you may choose to apply request data directly to an
existing entity. This has the advantage that only the fields that actually
changed will be saved, as opposed to sending all fields to the database to be
persisted. You can merge an array of raw data into an existing entity using the
patchEntity()
method:
// In a controller.
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->get(1);
$articles->patchEntity($article, $this->request->getData());
$articles->save($article);
Similar to newEntity()
, the patchEntity
method will validate the data
before it is copied to the entity. The mechanism is explained in the
Validating Data Before Building Entities section. If you wish to disable validation while
patching an entity, pass the validate
option as follows:
// In a controller.
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->get(1);
$articles->patchEntity($article, $data, ['validate' => false]);
You may also change the validation set used for the entity or any of the associations:
$articles->patchEntity($article, $this->request->getData(), [
'validate' => 'custom',
'associated' => ['Tags', 'Comments.Users' => ['validate' => 'signup']]
]);
As explained in the previous section, the request data should follow the
structure of your entity. The patchEntity()
method is equally capable of
merging associations, by default only the first level of associations are
merged, but if you wish to control the list of associations to be merged or
merge deeper to deeper levels, you can use the third parameter of the method:
// In a controller.
$associated = ['Tags', 'Comments.Users'];
$article = $articles->get(1, ['contain' => $associated]);
$articles->patchEntity($article, $this->request->getData(), [
'associated' => $associated
]);
$articles->save($article);
Associations are merged by matching the primary key field in the source entities to the corresponding fields in the data array. Associations will construct new entities if no previous entity is found for the association’s target property.
For example give some request data like the following:
$data = [
'title' => 'My title',
'user' => [
'username' => 'mark'
]
];
Trying to patch an entity without an entity in the user property will create a new user entity:
// In a controller.
$entity = $articles->patchEntity(new Article, $data);
echo $entity->user->username; // Echoes 'mark'
The same can be said about hasMany and belongsToMany associations, with an important caveat:
Note
For belongsToMany associations, ensure the relevant entity has a property accessible for the associated entity.
If a Product belongsToMany Tag:
// in the Product Entity
protected $_accessible = [
// .. other properties
'tags' => true,
];
Note
For hasMany and belongsToMany associations, if there were any entities that could not be matched by primary key to a record in the data array, then those records will be discarded from the resulting entity.
Remember that using either patchEntity()
or patchEntities()
does not
persist the data, it just edits (or creates) the given entities. In order to
save the entity you will have to call the table’s save()
method.
For example, consider the following case:
$data = [
'title' => 'My title',
'body' => 'The text',
'comments' => [
['body' => 'First comment', 'id' => 1],
['body' => 'Second comment', 'id' => 2],
]
];
$entity = $articles->newEntity($data);
$articles->save($entity);
$newData = [
'comments' => [
['body' => 'Changed comment', 'id' => 1],
['body' => 'A new comment'],
]
];
$articles->patchEntity($entity, $newData);
$articles->save($entity);
At the end, if the entity is converted back to an array you will obtain the following result:
[
'title' => 'My title',
'body' => 'The text',
'comments' => [
['body' => 'Changed comment', 'id' => 1],
['body' => 'A new comment'],
]
];
As you can see, the comment with id 2 is no longer there, as it could not be
matched to anything in the $newData
array. This happens because CakePHP is
reflecting the new state described in the request data.
Some additional advantages of this approach is that it reduces the number of operations to be executed when persisting the entity again.
Please note that this does not mean that the comment with id 2 was removed from the database, if you wish to remove the comments for that article that are not present in the entity, you can collect the primary keys and execute a batch delete for those not in the list:
// In a controller.
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$comments = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Comments');
$present = (new Collection($entity->comments))->extract('id')->filter()->toList();
$comments->deleteAll([
'article_id' => $article->id,
'id NOT IN' => $present
]);
As you can see, this also helps creating solutions where an association needs to be implemented like a single set.
You can also patch multiple entities at once. The consideration made for patching hasMany and belongsToMany associations apply for patching multiple entities: Matches are done by the primary key field value and missing matches in the original entities array will be removed and not present in the result:
// In a controller.
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$list = $articles->find('popular')->toList();
$patched = $articles->patchEntities($list, $this->request->getData());
foreach ($patched as $entity) {
$articles->save($entity);
}
Similarly to using patchEntity()
, you can use the third argument for
controlling the associations that will be merged in each of the entities in the
array:
// In a controller.
$patched = $articles->patchEntities(
$list,
$this->request->getData(),
['associated' => ['Tags', 'Comments.Users']]
);
If you need to modify request data before it is converted into entities, you can
use the Model.beforeMarshal
event. This event lets you manipulate the
request data just before entities are created:
// Include use statements at the top of your file.
use Cake\Event\Event;
use ArrayObject;
// In a table or behavior class
public function beforeMarshal(Event $event, ArrayObject $data, ArrayObject $options)
{
if (isset($data['username'])) {
$data['username'] = mb_strtolower($data['username']);
}
}
The $data
parameter is an ArrayObject
instance, so you don’t have to
return it to change the data used to create entities.
The main purpose of beforeMarshal
is to assist the users to pass the
validation process when simple mistakes can be automatically resolved, or when
data needs to be restructured so it can be put into the right fields.
The Model.beforeMarshal
event is triggered just at the start of the
validation process, one of the reasons is that beforeMarshal
is allowed to
change the validation rules and the saving options, such as the field whitelist.
Validation is triggered just after this event is finished. A common example of
changing the data before it is validated is trimming all fields before saving:
// Include use statements at the top of your file.
use Cake\Event\Event;
use ArrayObject;
// In a table or behavior class
public function beforeMarshal(Event $event, ArrayObject $data, ArrayObject $options)
{
foreach ($data as $key => $value) {
if (is_string($value)) {
$data[$key] = trim($value);
}
}
}
Because of how the marshalling process works, if a field does not pass validation it will automatically be removed from the data array and not be copied into the entity. This is to prevent inconsistent data from entering the entity object.
Moreover, the data in beforeMarshal
is a copy of the passed data. This is
because it is important to preserve the original user input, as it may be used
elsewhere.
The Validating Data chapter has more information on how to use the validation features of CakePHP to ensure your data stays correct and consistent.
When creating or merging entities from request data you need to be careful of
what you allow your users to change or add in the entities. For example, by
sending an array in the request containing the user_id
an attacker could
change the owner of an article, causing undesirable effects:
// Contains ['user_id' => 100, 'title' => 'Hacked!'];
$data = $this->request->getData();
$entity = $this->patchEntity($entity, $data);
$this->save($entity);
There are two ways of protecting you against this problem. The first one is by setting the default columns that can be safely set from a request using the Mass Assignment feature in the entities.
The second way is by using the fieldList
option when creating or merging
data into an entity:
// Contains ['user_id' => 100, 'title' => 'Hacked!'];
$data = $this->request->getData();
// Only allow title to be changed
$entity = $this->patchEntity($entity, $data, [
'fieldList' => ['title']
]);
$this->save($entity);
You can also control which properties can be assigned for associations:
// Only allow changing the title and tags
// and the tag name is the only column that can be set
$entity = $this->patchEntity($entity, $data, [
'fieldList' => ['title', 'tags'],
'associated' => ['Tags' => ['fieldList' => ['name']]]
]);
$this->save($entity);
Using this feature is handy when you have many different functions your users can access and you want to let your users edit different data based on their privileges.
The fieldList
options is also accepted by the newEntity()
,
newEntities()
and patchEntities()
methods.
Deprecated since version 3.4.0: Use fields
instead of fieldList
.
When saving request data to your database you need to first hydrate a new entity
using newEntity()
for passing into save()
. For example:
// In a controller
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->newEntity($this->request->getData());
if ($articles->save($article)) {
// ...
}
The ORM uses the isNew()
method on an entity to determine whether or not an
insert or update should be performed. If the isNew()
method returns true
and the entity has a primary key value, an ‘exists’ query will be issued. The
‘exists’ query can be suppressed by passing 'checkExisting' => false
in the
$options
argument:
$articles->save($article, ['checkExisting' => false]);
Once you’ve loaded some entities you’ll probably want to modify them and update your database. This is a pretty simple exercise in CakePHP:
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->find('all')->where(['id' => 2])->first();
$article->title = 'My new title';
$articles->save($article);
When saving, CakePHP will apply your rules, and wrap
the save operation in a database transaction. It will also only update
properties that have changed. The above save()
call would generate SQL
like:
UPDATE articles SET title = 'My new title' WHERE id = 2;
If you had a new entity, the following SQL would be generated:
INSERT INTO articles (title) VALUES ('My new title');
When an entity is saved a few things happen:
Rule checking will be started if not disabled.
Rule checking will trigger the Model.beforeRules
event. If this event is
stopped, the save operation will fail and return false
.
Rules will be checked. If the entity is being created, the create
rules
will be used. If the entity is being updated, the update
rules will be
used.
The Model.afterRules
event will be triggered.
The Model.beforeSave
event is dispatched. If it is stopped, the save will
be aborted, and save() will return false
.
Parent associations are saved. For example, any listed belongsTo associations will be saved.
The modified fields on the entity will be saved.
Child associations are saved. For example, any listed hasMany, hasOne, or belongsToMany associations will be saved.
The Model.afterSave
event will be dispatched.
The Model.afterSaveCommit
event will be dispatched.
The following diagram illustrates the above process:
See the Applying Application Rules section for more information on creating and using rules.
Warning
If no changes are made to the entity when it is saved, the callbacks will not fire because no save is performed.
The save()
method will return the modified entity on success, and false
on failure. You can disable rules and/or transactions using the
$options
argument for save:
// In a controller or table method.
$articles->save($article, ['checkRules' => false, 'atomic' => false]);
When you are saving an entity, you can also elect to save some or all of the associated entities. By default all first level entities will be saved. For example saving an Article, will also automatically update any dirty entities that are directly related to articles table.
You can fine tune which associations are saved by using the associated
option:
// In a controller.
// Only save the comments association
$articles->save($entity, ['associated' => ['Comments']]);
You can define save distant or deeply nested associations by using dot notation:
// Save the company, the employees and related addresses for each of them.
$companies->save($entity, ['associated' => ['Employees.Addresses']]);
Moreover, you can combine the dot notation for associations with the options array:
$companies->save($entity, [
'associated' => [
'Employees',
'Employees.Addresses'
]
]);
Your entities should be structured in the same way as they are when loaded from the database. See the form helper documentation for how to build inputs for associations.
If you are building or modifying association data after building your entities
you will have to mark the association property as modified with setDirty()
:
$company->author->name = 'Master Chef';
// Prior to 3.5 use dirty()
$company->setDirty('author', true);
When saving belongsTo associations, the ORM expects a single nested entity named with the singular, underscored version of the association name. For example:
// In a controller.
$data = [
'title' => 'First Post',
'user' => [
'id' => 1,
'username' => 'mark'
]
];
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->newEntity($data, [
'associated' => ['Users']
]);
$articles->save($article);
When saving hasOne associations, the ORM expects a single nested entity named with the singular, underscored version of the association name. For example:
// In a controller.
$data = [
'id' => 1,
'username' => 'cakephp',
'profile' => [
'twitter' => '@cakephp'
]
];
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Users')
$users = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Users');
$user = $users->newEntity($data, [
'associated' => ['Profiles']
]);
$users->save($user);
When saving hasMany associations, the ORM expects an array of entities named with the plural, underscored version of the association name. For example:
// In a controller.
$data = [
'title' => 'First Post',
'comments' => [
['body' => 'Best post ever'],
['body' => 'I really like this.']
]
];
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->newEntity($data, [
'associated' => ['Comments']
]);
$articles->save($article);
When saving hasMany associations, associated records will either be updated, or inserted. For the case that the record already has associated records in the database, you have the choice between two saving strategies:
Associated records are updated in the database or, if not matching any existing record, inserted.
Any existing records that do not match the records provided will be deleted from the database. Only provided records will remain (or be inserted).
By default the append
saving strategy is used.
See HasMany Associations for details on defining the saveStrategy
.
Whenever you add new records to an existing association you should always mark the association property as ‘dirty’. This lets the ORM know that the association property has to be persisted:
$article->comments[] = $comment;
// Prior to 3.5 use dirty()
$article->setDirty('comments', true);
Without the call to setDirty()
the updated comments will not be saved.
If you are creating a new entity, and want to add existing records to a has many/belongs to many association you need to initialize the association property first:
$article->comments = [];
Without initialization calling $article->comments[] = $comment;
will have no effect.
When saving belongsToMany associations, the ORM expects an array of entities named with the plural, underscored version of the association name. For example:
// In a controller.
$data = [
'title' => 'First Post',
'tags' => [
['tag' => 'CakePHP'],
['tag' => 'Framework']
]
];
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$article = $articles->newEntity($data, [
'associated' => ['Tags']
]);
$articles->save($article);
When converting request data into entities, the newEntity()
and
newEntities()
methods will handle both arrays of properties, as well as a
list of ids at the _ids
key. Using the _ids
key makes it easy to build a
select box or checkbox based form controls for belongs to many associations. See
the Converting Request Data into Entities section for more information.
When saving belongsToMany associations, you have the choice between two saving strategies:
Only new links will be created between each side of this association. This strategy will not destroy existing links even though they may not be present in the array of entities to be saved.
When saving, existing links will be removed and new links will be created in the junction table. If there are existing link in the database to some of the entities intended to be saved, those links will be updated, not deleted and then re-saved.
See BelongsToMany Associations for details on defining the saveStrategy
.
By default the replace
strategy is used. Whenever you add new records into
an existing association you should always mark the association property as
‘dirty’. This lets the ORM know that the association property has to be
persisted:
$article->tags[] = $tag;
// Prior to 3.5 use dirty()
$article->setDirty('tags', true);
Without the call to setDirty()
the updated tags will not be saved.
Often you’ll find yourself wanting to make an association between two existing
entities, eg. a user coauthoring an article. This is done by using the method
link()
, like this:
$article = $this->Articles->get($articleId);
$user = $this->Users->get($userId);
$this->Articles->Users->link($article, [$user]);
When saving belongsToMany Associations, it can be relevant to save some
additional data to the junction Table. In the previous example of tags, it could
be the vote_type
of person who voted on that article. The vote_type
can
be either upvote
or downvote
and is represented by a string. The
relation is between Users and Articles.
Saving that association, and the vote_type
is done by first adding some data
to _joinData
and then saving the association with link()
, example:
$article = $this->Articles->get($articleId);
$user = $this->Users->get($userId);
$user->_joinData = new Entity(['vote_type' => $voteType], ['markNew' => true]);
$this->Articles->Users->link($article, [$user]);
In some situations the table joining your BelongsToMany association, will have
additional columns on it. CakePHP makes it simple to save properties into these
columns. Each entity in a belongsToMany association has a _joinData
property
that contains the additional columns on the junction table. This data can be
either an array or an Entity instance. For example if Students BelongsToMany
Courses, we could have a junction table that looks like:
id | student_id | course_id | days_attended | grade
When saving data you can populate the additional columns on the junction table
by setting data to the _joinData
property:
$student->courses[0]->_joinData->grade = 80.12;
$student->courses[0]->_joinData->days_attended = 30;
$studentsTable->save($student);
The _joinData
property can be either an entity, or an array of data if you
are saving entities built from request data. When saving junction table data
from request data your POST data should look like:
$data = [
'first_name' => 'Sally',
'last_name' => 'Parker',
'courses' => [
[
'id' => 10,
'_joinData' => [
'grade' => 80.12,
'days_attended' => 30
]
],
// Other courses.
]
];
$student = $this->Students->newEntity($data, [
'associated' => ['Courses._joinData']
]);
See the Creating Inputs for Associated Data documentation for how to build inputs with
FormHelper
correctly.
Tables are capable of storing data represented in basic types, like strings, integers, floats, booleans, etc. But It can also be extended to accept more complex types such as arrays or objects and serialize this data into simpler types that can be saved in the database.
This functionality is achieved by using the custom types system. See the Adding Custom Types section to find out how to build custom column Types:
// Only prior to 3.6, you have to add a new type map in config/bootstrap.php
use Cake\Database\Type;
Type::map('json', 'Cake\Database\Type\JsonType');
// In src/Model/Table/UsersTable.php
use Cake\Database\Schema\TableSchema;
class UsersTable extends Table
{
protected function _initializeSchema(TableSchema $schema)
{
$schema->setColumnType('preferences', 'json');
// Prior to 3.6 you should use ``columnType`` instead of ``setcolumnType``.
$schema->columnType('preferences', 'json');
return $schema;
}
}
The code above maps the preferences
column to the json
custom type.
This means that when retrieving data for that column, it will be unserialized
from a JSON string in the database and put into an entity as an array.
Likewise, when saved, the array will be transformed back into its JSON representation:
$user = new User([
'preferences' => [
'sports' => ['football', 'baseball'],
'books' => ['Mastering PHP', 'Hamlet']
]
]);
$usersTable->save($user);
When using complex types it is important to validate that the data you are receiving from the end user is the correct type. Failing to correctly handle complex data could result in malicious users being able to store data they would not normally be able to.
Using this method will throw an
Cake\ORM\Exception\PersistenceFailedException
if:
the application rules checks failed
the entity contains errors
the save was aborted by a callback.
Using this can be helpful when you performing complex database operations without human monitoring, for example, inside a Shell task.
Note
If you use this method in a controller, be sure to catch the
PersistenceFailedException
that could be raised.
If you want to track down the entity that failed to save, you can use the
Cake\ORMException\PersistenceFailedException::getEntity()
method:
try {
$table->saveOrFail($entity);
} catch (\Cake\ORM\Exception\PersistenceFailedException $e) {
echo $e->getEntity();
}
As this internally perfoms a Cake\ORM\Table::save()
call, all
corresponding save events will be triggered.
New in version 3.4.1.
Find an existing record based on $search
or create a new record using the
properties in $search
and calling the optional $callback
. This method is
ideal in scenarios where you need to reduce the chance of duplicate records:
$record = $table->findOrCreate(
['email' => '[email protected]'],
function ($entity) use ($otherData) {
// Only called when a new record is created.
$entity->name = $otherData['name'];
}
);
If your find conditions require custom order, associations or conditions, then
the $search
parameter can be a callable or Query
object. If you use
a callable, it should take a Query
as its argument.
The returned entity will have been saved if it was a new record. The supported options for this method are:
atomic
Should the find and save operation be done inside a transaction.
defaults
Set to false
to not set $search
properties into the
created entity.
Using this method you can save multiple entities atomically. $entities
can
be an array of entities created using newEntities()
/ patchEntities()
.
$options
can have the same options as accepted by save()
:
$data = [
[
'title' => 'First post',
'published' => 1
],
[
'title' => 'Second post',
'published' => 1
],
];
// Prior to 3.6 use TableRegistry::get('Articles')
$articles = TableRegistry::getTableLocator()->get('Articles');
$entities = $articles->newEntities($data);
$result = $articles->saveMany($entities);
The result will be updated entities on success or false
on failure.
New in version 3.2.8.
There may be times when updating rows individually is not efficient or necessary. In these cases it is more efficient to use a bulk-update to modify many rows at once, by assigning the new field values, and conditions for the update:
// Publish all the unpublished articles.
function publishAllUnpublished()
{
$this->updateAll(
[ // fields
'published' => true,
'publish_date' => FrozenTime::now()
],
[ // conditions
'published' => false
]
);
}
If you need to do bulk updates and use SQL expressions, you will need to use an
expression object as updateAll()
uses prepared statements under the hood:
use Cake\Database\Expression\QueryExpression;
...
function incrementCounters()
{
$expression = new QueryExpression('view_count = view_count + 1');
$this->updateAll([$expression], ['published' => true]);
}
A bulk-update will be considered successful if 1 or more rows are updated.
Warning
updateAll will not trigger beforeSave/afterSave events. If you need those first load a collection of records and update them.
updateAll()
is for convenience only. You can use this more flexible
interface as well:
// Publish all the unpublished articles.
function publishAllUnpublished()
{
$this->query()
->update()
->set(['published' => true])
->where(['published' => false])
->execute();
}
Also see: Updating Data.