You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
Qiang Xue 25fb11e93f Merge pull request #1295 from yiisoft/elasticsearch 11 years ago
..
ActiveQuery.php moved elasticsearch to extensions 11 years ago
ActiveRecord.php Merge branch 'master' into elasticsearch 11 years ago
ActiveRelation.php moved redis to extensions 11 years ago
Cache.php updated properties of extensions 11 years ago
Connection.php moved redis to extensions 11 years ago
LICENSE.md moved redis to extensions 11 years ago
LuaScriptBuilder.php moved redis to extensions 11 years ago
README.md Merge branch 'master' into elasticsearch 11 years ago
Session.php fixed redis session init() call 11 years ago
composer.json added redis Session 11 years ago

README.md

Redis Cache, Session and ActiveRecord for Yii 2

This extension provides the redis key-value store support for the Yii2 framework. It includes a Cache and Session storage handler and implents the ActiveRecord pattern that allows you to store active records in redis.

To use this extension, you have to configure the Connection class in your application configuration:

return [
	//....
	'components' => [
        'redis' => [
            'class' => 'yii\redis\Connection',
            'hostname' => 'localhost',
            'port' => 6379,
            'database' => 0,
        ],
	]
];

Installation

The preferred way to install this extension is through composer.

Either run

php composer.phar require yiisoft/yii2-redis "*"

or add

"yiisoft/yii2-redis": "*"

to the require section of your composer.json.

Using the Cache component

To use the Cache component, in addtition to configuring the connection as described above, you also have to configure the cache component to be yii\redis\Cache:

return [
	//....
	'components' => [
	    // ...
        'cache' => [
            'class' => 'yii\redis\Cache',
        ],
	]
];

If you only use the redis cache, you can also configure the parameters of the connection within the cache component (no connection application component needs to be configured in this case):

return [
	//....
	'components' => [
	    // ...
        'cache' => [
            'class' => 'yii\redis\Cache',
            'redis' => [
                'hostname' => 'localhost',
                'port' => 6379,
                'database' => 0,
            ],
        ],
	]
];

Using the Session component

To use the Session component, in addtition to configuring the connection as described above, you also have to configure the session component to be yii\redis\Session:

return [
	//....
	'components' => [
	    // ...
        'session' => [
            'class' => 'yii\redis\Session',
        ],
	]
];

If you only use the redis session, you can also configure the parameters of the connection within the cache component (no connection application component needs to be configured in this case):

return [
	//....
	'components' => [
	    // ...
        'session' => [
            'class' => 'yii\redis\Session',
            'redis' => [
                'hostname' => 'localhost',
                'port' => 6379,
                'database' => 0,
            ],
        ],
	]
];

Using the redis ActiveRecord

For general information on how to use yii's ActiveRecord please refer to the guide.

For defining a redis ActiveRecord class your record class needs to extend from yii\redis\ActiveRecord and implement at least the attributes() method to define the attributes of the record. A primary key can be defined via primaryKey() which defaults to id if not specified. The primaryKey needs to be part of the attributes so make sure you have an id attribute defined if you do not specify your own primary key.

The following is an example model called Customer:

class Customer extends \yii\redis\ActiveRecord
{
     /**
      * @return array the list of attributes for this record
      */
     public function attributes()
     {
         return ['id', 'name', 'address', 'registration_date'];
     }

     /**
      * @return ActiveRelation defines a relation to the Order record (can be in other database, e.g. elasticsearch or sql)
      */
     public function getOrders()
     {
         return $this->hasMany(Order::className(), ['customer_id' => 'id']);
     }

     /**
      * Defines a scope that modifies the `$query` to return only active(status = 1) customers
      */
     public static function active($query)
     {
         $query->andWhere(array('status' => 1));
     }
}

The general usage of redis ActiveRecord is very similar to the database ActiveRecord as described in the guide. It supports the same interface and features except the following limitations:

  • As redis does not support SQL the query API is limited to the following methods: where(), limit(), offset(), orderBy() and indexBy(). (orderBy() is not yet implemented: #1305)
  • via-relations can not be defined via a table as there are not tables in redis. You can only define relations via other records.

It is also possible to define relations from redis ActiveRecords to normal ActiveRecord classes and vice versa.

Usage example:

$customer = new Customer();
$customer->attributes = ['name' => 'test'];
$customer->save();
echo $customer->id; // id will automatically be incremented if not set explicitly

$customer = Customer::find()->where(['name' => 'test'])->one(); // find by query
$customer = Customer::find()->active()->all(); // find all by query (using the `active` scope)