Sample application used for training.
This example code is no production code and should be used for training purposes only.
- PDO a lightweight, consistent interface for accessing databases in PHP.
- PHPUnit a unit testing framework for PHP projects.
- Data-Mapper Pattern
- Identity-Map Pattern
By using Data-Mapper pattern without an identity map, you can easily run into problems because you may have more than one object that references the same domain entity.
$userMapper = new UserMapper($pdo);
$user1 = $userMapper->find(1); // creates new object
$user2 = $userMapper->find(1); // creates new object
echo $user1->getNickname(); // joe123
echo $user2->getNickname(); // joe123
$user1->setNickname('bob78');
echo $user1->getNickname(); // bob78
echo $user2->getNickname(); // joe123 -> ?!?
The identity map solves this problem by acting as a registry for all loaded domain instances.
$userMapper = new UserMapper($pdo);
$user1 = $userMapper->find(1); // creates new object
$user2 = $userMapper->find(1); // returns same object
echo $user1->getNickname(); // joe123
echo $user2->getNickname(); // joe123
$user1->setNickname('bob78');
echo $user1->getNickname(); // bob78
echo $user2->getNickname(); // bob78 -> yes, much better
By using an identity map you can be confident that your domain entity is shared throughout your application for the duration of the request.
Note that using an identity map is not the same as adding a cache layer to your mappers. Although caching is useful and encouraged, it can still produce duplicate objects for the same domain entity.
$repository = new Repository($this->db);
$userMapper = $repository->load('User');
$insertId = $userMapper->insert(new User('billy', 'gatter'));