A new addition to the CakePHP 1.2 core is the ContainableBehavior
.
This model behavior allows you to filter and limit model find
operations. Using Containable will help you cut down on needless wear
and tear on your database, increasing the speed and overall performance
of your application. The class will also help you search and filter your
data for your users in a clean and consistent way.
Containable allows you to streamline and simplify operations on your
model bindings. It works by temporarily or permanently altering the
associations of your models. It does this by using the supplied
containments to generate a series of bindModel
and unbindModel
calls.
To use the new behavior, you can add it to the $actsAs property of your model:
class Post extends AppModel {
var $actsAs = array('Containable');
}
You can also attach the behavior on the fly:
$this->Post->Behaviors->attach('Containable');
To see how Containable works, let’s look at a few examples. First, we’ll start off with a find() call on a model named Post. Let’s say that Post hasMany Comment, and Post hasAndBelongsToMany Tag. The amount of data fetched in a normal find() call is rather extensive:
debug($this->Post->find('all'));
[0] => Array
(
[Post] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[title] => First article
[content] => aaa
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
[Comment] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[post_id] => 1
[author] => Daniel
[email] => dan@example.com
[website] => http://example.com
[comment] => First comment
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
[1] => Array
(
[id] => 2
[post_id] => 1
[author] => Sam
[email] => sam@example.net
[website] => http://example.net
[comment] => Second comment
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
)
[Tag] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[name] => Awesome
)
[1] => Array
(
[id] => 2
[name] => Baking
)
)
)
[1] => Array
(
[Post] => Array
(...
For some interfaces in your application, you may not need that much
information from the Post model. One thing the ContainableBehavior
does is help you cut down on what find() returns.
For example, to get only the post-related information, you can do the following:
$this->Post->contain();
$this->Post->find('all');
You can also invoke Containable’s magic from inside the find() call:
$this->Post->find('all', array('contain' => false));
Having done that, you end up with something a lot more concise:
[0] => Array
(
[Post] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[title] => First article
[content] => aaa
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
)
[1] => Array
(
[Post] => Array
(
[id] => 2
[title] => Second article
[content] => bbb
[created] => 2008-05-19 00:00:00
)
)
This sort of help isn’t new: in fact, you can do that without the
ContainableBehavior
doing something like this:
$this->Post->recursive = -1;
$this->Post->find('all');
Containable really shines when you have complex associations, and you
want to pare down things that sit at the same level. The model’s
$recursive
property is helpful if you want to hack off an entire
level of recursion, but not when you want to pick and choose what to
keep at each level. Let’s see how it works by using the contain()
method.
The contain method’s first argument accepts the name, or an array of names, of the models to keep in the find operation. If we wanted to fetch all posts and their related tags (without any comment information), we’d try something like this:
$this->Post->contain('Tag');
$this->Post->find('all');
Again, we can use the contain key inside a find() call:
$this->Post->find('all', array('contain' => 'Tag'));
Without Containable, you’d end up needing to use the unbindModel()
method of the model, multiple times if you’re paring off multiple
models. Containable creates a cleaner way to accomplish this same task.
Containable also goes a step deeper: you can filter the data of the associated models. If you look at the results of the original find() call, notice the author field in the Comment model. If you are interested in the posts and the names of the comment authors — and nothing else — you could do something like the following:
$this->Post->contain('Comment.author');
$this->Post->find('all');
//or..
$this->Post->find('all', array('contain' => 'Comment.author'));
Here, we’ve told Containable to give us our post information, and just the author field of the associated Comment model. The output of the find call might look something like this:
[0] => Array
(
[Post] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[title] => First article
[content] => aaa
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
[Comment] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[author] => Daniel
[post_id] => 1
)
[1] => Array
(
[author] => Sam
[post_id] => 1
)
)
)
[1] => Array
(...
As you can see, the Comment arrays only contain the author field (plus the post_id which is needed by CakePHP to map the results).
You can also filter the associated Comment data by specifying a condition:
$this->Post->contain('Comment.author = "Daniel"');
$this->Post->find('all');
//or...
$this->Post->find('all', array('contain' => 'Comment.author = "Daniel"'));
This gives us a result that gives us posts with comments authored by Daniel:
[0] => Array
(
[Post] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[title] => First article
[content] => aaa
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
[Comment] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[post_id] => 1
[author] => Daniel
[email] => dan@example.com
[website] => http://example.com
[comment] => First comment
[created] => 2008-05-18 00:00:00
)
)
)
Additional filtering can be performed by supplying the standard
Model->find()
options:
$this->Post->find('all', array('contain' => array(
'Comment' => array(
'conditions' => array('Comment.author =' => "Daniel"),
'order' => 'Comment.created DESC'
)
)));
Here’s an example of using the ContainableBehavior
when you’ve got
deep and complex model relationships.
Let’s consider the following model associations:
User->Profile
User->Account->AccountSummary
User->Post->PostAttachment->PostAttachmentHistory->HistoryNotes
User->Post->Tag
This is how we retrieve the above associations with Containable:
$this->User->find('all', array(
'contain'=>array(
'Profile',
'Account' => array(
'AccountSummary'
),
'Post' => array(
'PostAttachment' => array(
'fields' => array('id', 'name'),
'PostAttachmentHistory' => array(
'HistoryNotes' => array(
'fields' => array('id', 'note')
)
)
),
'Tag' => array(
'conditions' => array('Tag.name LIKE' => '%happy%')
)
)
)
));
Keep in mind that contain
key is only used once in the main model,
you don’t need to use ‘contain’ again for related models
When using ‘fields’ and ‘contain’ options - be careful to include all foreign keys that your query directly or indirectly requires. Please also note that because Containable must to be attached to all models used in containment, you may consider attaching it to your AppModel.
By including the ‘contain’ parameter in the $paginate
property it
will apply to both the find(‘count’) and the find(‘all’) done on the
model
See the section Using Containable for further details.
Here’s an example of how to contain associations when paginating.
$this->paginate['User'] = array(
'contain' => array('Profile', 'Account'),
'order' => 'User.username'
);
$users = $this->paginate('User');
The ContainableBehavior
has a number of options that can be set when
the Behavior is attached to a model. The settings allow you to fine tune
the behavior of Containable and work with other behaviors more easily.
true
.true
.true
.You can change ContainableBehavior settings at run time by reattaching the behavior as seen in Behaviors
ContainableBehavior can sometimes cause issues with other behaviors or
queries that use aggregate functions and/or GROUP BY statements. If you
get invalid SQL errors due to mixing of aggregate and non-aggregate
fields, try disabling the autoFields
setting.
$this->Post->Behaviors->attach('Containable', array('autoFields' => false));