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Persistence in PHP with Doctrine ORM

You're reading from   Persistence in PHP with Doctrine ORM This book is designed for PHP developers and architects who want to modernize their skills through better understanding of Persistence and ORM. You'll learn through explanations and code samples, all tied to the full development of a web application.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782164104
Length 114 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Kevin Dunglas Kevin Dunglas
Author Profile Icon Kevin Dunglas
Kevin Dunglas
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Toc

Bootstrapping the app


The following steps need to be performed for bootstrapping the app:

  1. Create a new file called config/config.php that will contain configuration parameters of our app as shown in the following code:

      <?php
    
      // App configuration
      $dbParams = [
        'driver' => 'pdo_sqlite',
        'path' => __DIR__.'/../data/blog.db'
      ];
    
      // Dev mode?
      $dev = true;

    The Doctrine configuration parameters are stored in the $dbParams array. We will use a SQLite Database called blog.db stored in the data/ directory. If you want to use MySQL or any other DBMS, it's here that you will configure the driver to use, the database name, and the access credentials.

    Note

    The following is a sample configuration to use MySQL instead of SQLite:

    $dbParams = [
        'driver' => 'pdo_mysql',
        'host' => '127.0.0.1',
        'dbname' => 'blog',
        'user' => 'root',
        'password' => ''
    ];

    Config keys are self-explanatory.

    If the $dev variable is true, some optimizations will be disabled to ease debugging. Disabling the dev mode allows Doctrine to put a lot of data such as metadata in powerful caches to increase overall performances of the app.

    Note

    It requires cache driver installation and extra configuration, which is available at http://docs.doctrine-project.org/en/latest/reference/caching.html.

  2. Next, we need a way to bootstrap our app. Create a file called bootstrap.php in the src/ directory. This file will load everything we need as given in the following code:

      <?php
    
      require_once __DIR__.'/../vendor/autoload.php';
      require_once __DIR__.'/../config/config.php';

    The first line requires the Composer autoloader. It allows you to automatically load the Doctrine's classes, the project's classes (that will be in the src/ directory), and any class of a library installed with Composer.

    The second line imports the configuration file of the app. The project structure is created and the initialization process of the app is done. We are ready to start using Doctrine.

You have been reading a chapter from
Persistence in PHP with Doctrine ORM
Published in: Dec 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781782164104
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