An extension of CodeIgniter's base Model class to remove repetition and increase productivity by providing a couple handy methods. Most of the functionality of CI_Base_Model taken from following two library
- Basic CRUD Functionality
- validation-in-model
- Simple Event Callback system
- Blamable
- Soft-Deletable
- Timestampable
- Multiple database group support
- Easy to use
- Support both CamelCase and underscore version of a function (you can use findAll/find_all both will do the same). As codeigniter's convention the library implemented in underscore version of the functions
class Post_model extends MY_Model { }
$this->load->model('post_model', 'post');
$this->post->get_all();
$this->post->get(1);
$this->post->get_by('title', 'Pigs CAN Fly!');
$this->post->get_many_by('status', 'open');
//or $this->post->getManyBy('status', 'open');
$this->post->insert(array(
'status' => 'open',
'title' => "I'm too sexy for my shirt"
));
$this->post->update(1, array( 'status' => 'closed' ));
$this->post->delete(1);
Download and copy the MY_Model.php and CI_Base_Model.php file into your application/core folder. CodeIgniter will load and initialise this class automatically for you.
Extend your model classes from MY_Model
and all the functionality will be baked in automatically. You may wondering why we use two file? Here are the benefits.
- You can implement all your global implementation in MY_Model.
- You can update CI_Base_Model any time. Your own global implementation will not affected.
Note: The MY_ prefix is the default prefix used to extend a class in CodeIgniter. If you have modified this in your _application/config/config.php, use your prefix as appropriate. and modify the MY_Model class
This class will try to guess the name of the table to use, by finding the plural of the class name.
For instance:
class Post_model extends MY_Model { }
...will guess a table name of posts
. It also works with _m
:
class Book_m extends MY_Model { }
...will guess books
.
If you need to set it to something else, you can declare the $_table instance variable and set it to the table name:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $_table = 'blogposts';
}
Some of the CRUD functions will try to guess your primary key ID column. You can overwrite this functionality by setting the $primary_key instance variable:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $primary_key = 'post_id';
}
There are many times when you'll need to alter your model data before it's inserted or returned. This could be adding timestamps, pulling in relationships or deleting dependent rows. The MVC pattern states that these sorts of operations need to go in the model. In order to facilitate this, CI_Base_Model contains a series of callbacks/observers -- methods that will be called at certain points.
The default list of observers are as follows:
- $before_create
- $after_create
- $before_update
- $after_update
- $before_get
- $after_get
- $before_delete
- $after_delete
These are instance variables usually defined at the class level. They are arrays of methods on this class to be called at certain points. An example:
class Book_model extends MY_Model
{
public $before_create = array( 'timestamps' );
protected function timestamps($book)
{
$book['created_at'] = $book['updated_at'] = date('Y-m-d H:i:s');
return $book;
}
}
Remember to always always always return the $row
object you're passed. Each observer overwrites its predecessor's data, sequentially, in the order the observers are defined.
Observers can also take parameters in their name, much like CodeIgniter's Form Validation library. Parameters are then accessed in $this->callback_parameters
:
public $before_create = array( 'data_process(name)' );
public $before_update = array( 'data_process(date)' );
protected function data_process($row)
{
$row[$this->callback_parameters[0]] = $this->_process($row[$this->callback_parameters[0]]);
return $row;
}
MY_Model uses CodeIgniter's built in form validation to validate data on insert.
You can enable validation by setting the $validate
instance to the usual form validation library rules array:
class User_model extends MY_Model
{
public $validate = array(
array( 'field' => 'email',
'label' => 'email',
'rules' => 'required|valid_email|is_unique[users.email]' ),
array( 'field' => 'password',
'label' => 'password',
'rules' => 'required' ),
array( 'field' => 'password_confirmation',
'label' => 'confirm password',
'rules' => 'required|matches[password]' ),
);
}
Anything valid in the form validation library can be used here. To find out more about the rules array, please view the library's documentation.
With this array set, each call to insert()
or update()
will validate the data before allowing the query to be run. Unlike the CodeIgniter validation library, this won't validate the POST data, rather, it validates the data passed directly through.
You can skip the validation with skip_validation()
:
$this->user_model->skip_validation();
$this->user_model->insert(array( 'email' => 'blah' ));
Alternatively, pass through a TRUE
to insert()
:
$this->user_model->insert(array( 'email' => 'blah' ), TRUE);
Under the hood, this calls validate()
.
If you're lazy like me, you'll be grabbing the data from the form and throwing it straight into the model. While some of the pitfalls of this can be avoided with validation, it's a very dangerous way of entering data; any attribute on the model (any column in the table) could be modified, including the ID.
To prevent this from happening, MY_Model supports protected attributes. These are columns of data that cannot be modified.
You can set protected attributes with the $protected_attributes
array:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $protected_attributes = array( 'id', 'hash' );
}
Now, when update
is called, the attributes will automatically be removed from the array, and, thus, protected:
$this->post_model->update(1, array(
'id' => 2,
'hash' => 'aqe3fwrga23fw243fWE',
'title' => 'A new post'
));
// SQL: INSERT INTO posts (title) VALUES ('A new post')
MY_Model now has support for basic belongs_to and has_many relationships. These relationships are easy to define:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $belongs_to = array( 'author' );
public $has_many = array( 'comments' );
}
It will assume that a MY_Model API-compatible model with the singular relationship's name has been defined. By default, this will be relationship_model
. The above example, for instance, would require two other models:
class Author_model extends MY_Model { }
class Comment_model extends MY_Model { }
If you'd like to customise this, you can pass through the model name as a parameter:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $belongs_to = array( 'author' => array( 'model' => 'author_m' ) );
public $has_many = array( 'comments' => array( 'model' => 'model_comments' ) );
}
You can then access your related data using the with()
method:
$post = $this->post_model->with('author')
->with('comments')
->get(1);
The related data will be embedded in the returned value from get
:
echo $post->author->name;
foreach ($post->comments as $comment)
{
echo $message;
}
Separate queries will be run to select the data, so where performance is important, a separate JOIN and SELECT call is recommended.
The primary key can also be configured. For belongs_to calls, the related key is on the current object, not the foreign one. Pseudocode:
SELECT * FROM authors WHERE id = $post->author_id
...and for a has_many call:
SELECT * FROM comments WHERE post_id = $post->id
To change this, use the primary_key
value when configuring:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $belongs_to = array( 'author' => array( 'primary_key' => 'post_author_id' ) );
public $has_many = array( 'comments' => array( 'primary_key' => 'parent_post_id' ) );
}
By default, MY_Model is setup to return objects using CodeIgniter's QB's row()
and result()
methods. If you'd like to use their array counterparts, there are a couple of ways of customising the model.
If you'd like all your calls to use the array methods, you can set the $return_type
variable to array
.
class Book_model extends MY_Model
{
protected $return_type = 'array';
}
If you'd like just your next call to return a specific type, there are two scoping methods you can use:
$this->book_model->as_array()
->get(1);
$this->book_model->as_object()
->get_by('column', 'value');
By default, the delete mechanism works with an SQL DELETE
statement. However, you might not want to destroy the data, you might instead want to perform a 'soft delete'.
If you enable soft deleting, the deleted row will be marked as deleted
rather than actually being removed from the database.
Take, for example, a Book_model
:
class Book_model extends MY_Model { }
We can enable soft delete by setting the $this->deleted_at_key
key:
class Book_model extends MY_Model
{
protected $deleted_at_key = 'deleted_at';
}
By default, MY_Model expects a Datetime
or TIMESTAMP
column named deleted_at
. If you'd like to customise this, you can set $deleted_at_key
:
class Book_model extends MY_Model
{
protected $deleted_at_key = 'book_deleted_at';
}
If you wish to track the deleted by you can set $deleted_by_key
member,
class Book_model extends MY_Model
{
protected $deleted_at_key = 'book_deleted_at';
protected $deleted_by_key = 'book_deleted_by';
}
Now, when you make a call to any of the get_
methods, a constraint will be added to not withdraw deleted columns:
=> $this->book_model->get_by('user_id', 1);
-> SELECT * FROM books WHERE user_id = 1 AND deleted < NOW()
If you'd like to include deleted columns, you can use the with_deleted()
scope:
=> $this->book_model->with_deleted()->get_by('user_id', 1);
-> SELECT * FROM books WHERE user_id = 1
If you'd like to include only the columns that have been deleted, you can use the only_deleted()
scope:
=> $this->book_model->only_deleted()->get_by('user_id', 1);
-> SELECT * FROM books WHERE user_id = 1 AND deleted >= NOW()
You can delete in future!!
=> $this->book_model->delete_at(1, (new \DateTime())->modify('+1 day'));
Take, for example, a Book_model
:
class Book_model extends MY_Model { }
We can enable blamable by setting the $this->created_by_key
abd $this->updated_by_key
key. And you need to implement the get_current_user() function, in the MY_Model
class Book_model extends MY_Model
{
protected $created_by_key = 'created_by';
protected $updated_by_key = 'updated_by';
}
class MY_Model extends CI_Base_Model{
protected $current_user_id_session_key = 'user_id';
}
Now, when you make a call to any of the insert
, update
, update_
methods the Model will automatically insert/update the created_by/updated_by entry
=> $this->book_model->insert(array('title' => 'A new book'));
-> SQL: INSERT INTO books (title, updated_by) VALUES ('A new post', 1) //Assuming current user id is 1
CI_Base_Model contains a few built-in observers. The timestamps (MySQL compatible) created_at
and updated_at
are now available as built-in observers:
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
public $before_create = array( 'created_at', 'updated_at' );
public $before_update = array( 'updated_at' );
}
CI_Base_Model also contains serialisation observers for serialising and unserializing native PHP objects. This allows you to pass complex structures like arrays and objects into rows and have it be serialised automatically in the background. Call the serialize
and unserialize
observers with the column name(s) as a parameter:
class Event_model extends MY_Model
{
public $before_create = array( 'serialize_row(seat_types)' );
public $before_update = array( 'serialize_row(seat_types)' );
public $after_get = array( 'unserialize_row(seat_types)' );
}
The class will automatically use the default database connection, and even load it for you if you haven't yet.
You can specify a database connection on a per-model basis by declaring the $_database_group .
See "Connecting to your Database" for more information.
class Post_model extends MY_Model
{
protected $_database_group = 'group_name';
}
- find_by($field, $value, $fields, $order) [alias findBy]
- find_by_{$field}($value, $fields, $order) [alias findBy{$field}]
- find_all_by($field, $value, $fields, $order, $start, $limit) [alias findAllBy]
- find_all_by_{$field}($value, $fields, $order, $start, $limit) [alias findAllBy{$field}]
- find_field_by($field, $value, $fields = '*', $order = NULL) [alias findFieldBy]
- find_field_by_{$field}($value, $fields = '*', $order = NULL) [alias findFieldBy{$field}]
- find_all($conditions, $fields, $order, $start, $limit) [alias findAll]
- find($conditions, $fields, $order)
- field($conditions, $name, $fields, $order)
- get($id)
- get_all()
- get_by()
- get_many(array $primary_values)
- get_many_by()
- find_count($conditions) [alias findCount]
- insert($data, $skip_validation = FALSE)
- insert_many($data, $skip_validation = FALSE, $insert_individual = false)
- update($primary_value, $data, $skip_validation = FALSE)
- update_many($primary_values, $data, $skip_validation = FALSE)
- update_by()
- update_all($data)
- update_batch($data, $where_key)
- on_duplicate_update($data, $update)
- delete($id)
- delete_by() //argument can be in any form supported by $this->db->where();
- delete_many(array $primary_values) [alias deleteMany]
- delete_at($id, $time) [alias deleteAt]
- delete_by_at($condition, $time) [alias deleteByAt]
- delete_many_at(array $primary_values, $time) [alias deleteManyAt]
- execute_query($query) [alias executeQuery]
- order_by($orders) [alias orderBy]
- dropdown() [can be called dropdown($name_field) or dropdown($key_field, $name_field)]
- subscribe($event, $observer, $handler_name)
- is_subscribed($event, $handler_name)
MY_Model contains a robust set of unit tests to ensure that the system works as planned.
Install the testing framework (PHPUnit) with Composer:
$ curl -s https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
$ php composer.phar install
You can then run the tests using the vendor/bin/phpunit
binary and specify the tests file:
$ vendor/bin/phpunit
If you find a bug or want to add a feature to CI_Base_Model, great! In order to make it easier and quicker for me to verify and merge changes in, it would be amazing if you could follow these few basic steps:
- Fork the project.
- Branch out into a new branch.
git checkout -b name_of_new_feature_or_bug
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don’t break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit.
- Send me a pull request!