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Active Record

ActiveRecord implements the Active Record design pattern. The idea is that an ActiveRecord object is associated with a row in a database table so object properties are mapped to columns of the corresponding database row. For example, a Customer object is associated with a row in the tbl_customer table.

Instead of writing raw SQL statements to access the data in the table, you can call intuitive methods available in the corresponding ActiveRecord class to achieve the same goals. For example, calling save() would insert or update a row in the underlying table:

$customer = new Customer();
$customer->name = 'Qiang';
$customer->save();

Declaring ActiveRecord Classes

To declare an ActiveRecord class you need to extend \yii\db\ActiveRecord and implement the tableName method like the following:

class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	/**
	 * @return string the name of the table associated with this ActiveRecord class.
	 */
	public static function tableName()
	{
		return 'tbl_customer';
	}
}

Connecting to Database

ActiveRecord relies on a Connection to perform the underlying DB operations. By default, it assumes that there is an application component named db which gives the needed Connection instance. Usually this component is configured via application configuration like the following:

return array(
	'components' => array(
		'db' => array(
			'class' => 'yii\db\Connection',
			'dsn' => 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb',
			'username' => 'demo',
			'password' => 'demo',
			// turn on schema caching to improve performance in production mode
			// 'schemaCacheDuration' => 3600,
		),
	),
);

Please read the Database basics section to learn more on how to configure and use database connections.

Getting Data from Database

There are two ActiveRecord methods for getting data from database:

They both return an ActiveQuery instance. Coupled with various query methods provided by ActiveQuery, ActiveRecord supports very flexible and powerful data retrieval approaches.

The followings are some examples,

// to retrieve all *active* customers and order them by their ID:
$customers = Customer::find()
	->where(array('status' => $active))
	->orderBy('id')
	->all();

// to return a single customer whose ID is 1:
$customer = Customer::find(1);

// the above code is equivalent to the following:
$customer = Customer::find()
	->where(array('id' => 1))
	->one();

// to retrieve customers using a raw SQL statement:
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM tbl_customer';
$customers = Customer::findBySql($sql)->all();

// to return the number of *active* customers:
$count = Customer::find()
	->where(array('status' => $active))
	->count();

// to return customers in terms of arrays rather than `Customer` objects:
$customers = Customer::find()->asArray()->all();
// each $customers element is an array of name-value pairs

// to index the result by customer IDs:
$customers = Customer::find()->indexBy('id')->all();
// $customers array is indexed by customer IDs

Accessing Column Data

ActiveRecord maps each column of the corresponding database table row to an attribute in the ActiveRecord object. An attribute is like a regular object property whose name is the same as the corresponding column name and is case sensitive.

To read the value of a column, we can use the following expression:

// "id" is the name of a column in the table associated with $customer ActiveRecord object
$id = $customer->id;
// or alternatively,
$id = $customer->getAttribute('id');

We can get all column values through the attributes property:

$values = $customer->attributes;

Saving Data to Database

ActiveRecord provides the following methods to insert, update and delete data in the database:

Note that updateAll(), updateAllCounters() and deleteAll() apply to the whole database table, while the rest of the methods only apply to the row associated with the ActiveRecord object.

The followings are some examples:

// to insert a new customer record
$customer = new Customer;
$customer->name = 'James';
$customer->email = 'james@example.com';
$customer->save();  // equivalent to $customer->insert();

// to update an existing customer record
$customer = Customer::find($id);
$customer->email = 'james@example.com';
$customer->save();  // equivalent to $customer->update();
// Note that model attributes will be validated first and
// model will not be saved unless it's valid.

// to delete an existing customer record
$customer = Customer::find($id);
$customer->delete();

// to increment the age of all customers by 1
Customer::updateAllCounters(array('age' => 1));

Getting Relational Data

Using ActiveRecord you can expose relationships as properties. For example, with an appropriate declaration, $customer->orders can return an array of Order objects which represent the orders placed by the specified customer.

To declare a relationship, define a getter method which returns an ActiveRelation object. For example,

class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	public function getOrders()
	{
		return $this->hasMany('Order', array('customer_id' => 'id'));
	}
}

class Order extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	public function getCustomer()
	{
		return $this->hasOne('Customer', array('id' => 'customer_id'));
	}
}

Within the getter methods above, we call hasMany() or hasOne() methods to create a new ActiveRelation object. The hasMany() method declares a one-many relationship. For example, a customer has many orders. And the hasOne() method declares a many-one or one-one relationship. For example, an order has one customer. Both methods take two parameters:

  • $class: the name of the class of the related model(s). If specified without a namespace, the namespace of the related model class will be taken from the declaring class.
  • $link: the association between columns from the two tables. This should be given as an array. The keys of the array are the names of the columns from the table associated with $class, while the values of the array are the names of the columns from the declaring class. It is a good practice to define relationships based on table foreign keys.

After declaring relationships getting relational data is as easy as accessing a component property that is defined by the getter method:

// the orders of a customer
$customer = Customer::find($id);
$orders = $customer->orders;  // $orders is an array of Order objects

// the customer of the first order
$customer2 = $orders[0]->customer;  // $customer == $customer2

Because ActiveRelation extends from ActiveQuery, it has the same query building methods, which allows us to customize the query for retrieving the related objects. For example, we may declare a bigOrders relationship which returns orders whose subtotal exceeds certain amount:

class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	public function getBigOrders($threshold = 100)
	{
		return $this->hasMany('Order', array('customer_id' => 'id'))
			->where('subtotal > :threshold', array(':threshold' => $threshold))
			->orderBy('id');
	}
}

Sometimes, two tables are related together via an intermediary table called pivot table. To declare such relationships, we can customize the ActiveRelation object by calling its ActiveRelation::via() or ActiveRelation::viaTable() method.

For example, if table tbl_order and table tbl_item are related via pivot table tbl_order_item, we can declare the items relation in the Order class like the following:

class Order extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	public function getItems()
	{
		return $this->hasMany('Item', array('id' => 'item_id'))
			->viaTable('tbl_order_item', array('order_id' => 'id'));
	}
}

ActiveRelation::via() method is similar to ActiveRelation::viaTable() except that the first parameter of ActiveRelation::via() takes a relation name declared in the ActiveRecord class instead of the pivot table name. For example, the above items relation can be equivalently declared as follows:

class Order extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	public function getOrderItems()
	{
		return $this->hasMany('OrderItem', array('order_id' => 'id'));
	}

	public function getItems()
	{
		return $this->hasMany('Item', array('id' => 'item_id'))
			->via('orderItems');
	}
}

When you access the related objects the first time, behind the scene ActiveRecord performs a DB query to retrieve the corresponding data and populate it into the related objects. No query will be performed if you access the same related objects again. We call this lazy loading. For example,

// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer WHERE id=1
$customer = Customer::find(1);
// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_order WHERE customer_id=1
$orders = $customer->orders;
// no SQL executed
$orders2 = $customer->orders;

Lazy loading is very convenient to use. However, it may suffer from performance issue in the following scenario:

// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer LIMIT 100
$customers = Customer::find()->limit(100)->all();

foreach ($customers as $customer) {
	// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_order WHERE customer_id=...
	$orders = $customer->orders;
	// ...handle $orders...
}

How many SQL queries will be performed in the above code, assuming there are more than 100 customers in the database? 101! The first SQL query brings back 100 customers. Then for each customer, a SQL query is performed to bring back the customer's orders.

To solve the above performance problem, you can use the so-called eager loading approach by calling ActiveQuery::with():

// SQL executed: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer LIMIT 100
//               SELECT * FROM tbl_orders WHERE customer_id IN (1,2,...)
$customers = Customer::find()->limit(100)
	->with('orders')->all();

foreach ($customers as $customer) {
	// no SQL executed
	$orders = $customer->orders;
	// ...handle $orders...
}

As you can see, only two SQL queries are needed for the same task.

Sometimes, you may want to customize the relational queries on the fly. It can be done for both lazy loading and eager loading. For example,

$customer = Customer::find(1);
// lazy loading: SELECT * FROM tbl_order WHERE customer_id=1 AND subtotal>100
$orders = $customer->getOrders()->where('subtotal>100')->all();

// eager loading: SELECT * FROM tbl_customer LIMIT 10
                  SELECT * FROM tbl_order WHERE customer_id IN (1,2,...) AND subtotal>100
$customers = Customer::find()->limit(100)->with(array(
	'orders' => function($query) {
		$query->andWhere('subtotal>100');
	},
))->all();

Working with Relationships

ActiveRecord provides the following two methods for establishing and breaking a relationship between two ActiveRecord objects:

For example, given a customer and a new order, we can use the following code to make the order owned by the customer:

$customer = Customer::find(1);
$order = new Order;
$order->subtotal = 100;
$customer->link('orders', $order);

The link() call above will set the customer_id of the order to be the primary key value of $customer and then call save() to save the order into database.

Data Input and Validation

ActiveRecord inherits data validation and data input features from \yii\base\Model. Data validation is called automatically when save() is performed and is canceling saving in case attributes aren't valid.

For more details refer to Model section of the guide.

Life Cycles of an ActiveRecord Object

An ActiveRecord object undergoes different life cycles when it is used in different cases. Subclasses or ActiveRecord behaviors may "inject" custom code in these life cycles through method overriding and event handling mechanisms.

When instantiating a new ActiveRecord instance, we will have the following life cycles:

  1. constructor
  2. init(): will trigger an EVENT_INIT event

When getting an ActiveRecord instance through the find() method, we will have the following life cycles:

  1. constructor
  2. init(): will trigger an EVENT_INIT event
  3. afterFind(): will trigger an EVENT_AFTER_FIND event

When calling save() to insert or update an ActiveRecord, we will have the following life cycles:

  1. beforeValidate(): will trigger an EVENT_BEFORE_VALIDATE event
  2. afterValidate(): will trigger an EVENT_AFTER_VALIDATE event
  3. beforeSave(): will trigger an EVENT_BEFORE_INSERT or EVENT_BEFORE_UPDATE event
  4. perform the actual data insertion or updating
  5. afterSave(): will trigger an EVENT_AFTER_INSERT or EVENT_AFTER_UPDATE event

Finally when calling delete() to delete an ActiveRecord, we will have the following life cycles:

  1. beforeDelete(): will trigger an EVENT_BEFORE_DELETE event
  2. perform the actual data deletion
  3. afterDelete(): will trigger an EVENT_AFTER_DELETE event

Scopes

A scope is a method that customizes a given ActiveQuery object. Scope methods are defined in the ActiveRecord classes. They can be invoked through the ActiveQuery object that is created via find() or findBySql(). The following is an example:

class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	// ...

	/**
	 * @param ActiveQuery $query
	 */
	public static function active($query)
	{
		$query->andWhere('status = 1');
	}
}

$customers = Customer::find()->active()->all();

In the above, the active() method is defined in Customer while we are calling it through ActiveQuery returned by Customer::find().

Scopes can be parameterized. For example, we can define and use the following olderThan scope:

class Customer extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	// ...

	/**
	 * @param ActiveQuery $query
	 * @param integer $age
	 */
	public static function olderThan($query, $age = 30)
	{
		$query->andWhere('age > :age', array(':age' => $age));
	}
}

$customers = Customer::find()->olderThan(50)->all();

The parameters should follow after the $query parameter when defining the scope method, and they can take default values like shown above.

Atomic operations and scenarios

TODO: FIXME: WIP, TBD, https://github.com/yiisoft/yii2/issues/226

Imagine situation where you have to save something related to the main model in beforeSave(), afterSave(), beforeDelete() and/or afterDelete() life cycle methods. Developer may come to the solution of overriding ActiveRecord save() method with database transaction wrapping or even using transaction in controller action, which is strictly speaking doesn't seems to be a good practice (recall skinny-controller fat-model fundamental rule).

Here these ways are (DO NOT use them unless you're sure what are you actually doing). Models:

class Feature extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	// ...

	public function getProduct()
	{
		return $this->hasOne('Product', array('product_id' => 'id'));
	}
}

class Product extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	// ...

	public function getFeatures()
	{
		return $this->hasMany('Feature', array('id' => 'product_id'));
	}
}

Overriding save() method:


class ProductController extends \yii\web\Controller
{
	public function actionCreate()
	{
		// FIXME: TODO: WIP, TBD
	}
}

Using transactions within controller layer:

class ProductController extends \yii\web\Controller
{
	public function actionCreate()
	{
		// FIXME: TODO: WIP, TBD
	}
}

Instead of using these fragile methods you should consider using atomic scenarios and operations feature.

class Feature extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	// ...

	public function getProduct()
	{
		return $this->hasOne('Product', array('product_id' => 'id'));
	}

	public function scenarios()
	{
		return array(
			'userCreates' => array(
				'attributes' => array('name', 'value'),
				'atomic' => array(self::OP_INSERT),
			),
		);
	}
}

class Product extends \yii\db\ActiveRecord
{
	// ...

	public function getFeatures()
	{
		return $this->hasMany('Feature', array('id' => 'product_id'));
	}

	public function scenarios()
	{
		return array(
			'userCreates' => array(
				'attributes' => array('title', 'price'),
				'atomic' => array(self::OP_INSERT),
			),
		);
	}

	public function afterValidate()
	{
		parent::afterValidate();
		// FIXME: TODO: WIP, TBD
	}

	public function afterSave($insert)
	{
		parent::afterSave();
		if ($this->getScenario() === 'userCreates') {
			// FIXME: TODO: WIP, TBD
		}
	}
}

Controller is very thin and neat:

class ProductController extends \yii\web\Controller
{
	public function actionCreate()
	{
		// FIXME: TODO: WIP, TBD
	}
}

See also