This package is a fork from the original package by Bao Pham.
For advanced users only. If you're not familiar with Laravel, Laravel Eloquent and DynamoDB, then I suggest that you get familiar with those first.
- Laravel DynamoDB
- Install
- Install (for Lumen)
- Usage
- Query Builder
- AWS SDK
- Supported features
- Indexes
- Composite Keys
- Query Builder
- FAQ
Install the package using Composer:
$ composer require rennokki/dynamodb
If your Laravel package does not support auto-discovery, add this to your config/app.php
file:
'providers' => [
...
Rennokki\DynamoDb\DynamoDbServiceProvider::class,
...****
];
Publish the config files.
php artisan vendor:publish
For Lumen, try this to install the vendor:publish
command and load configuration file and enable Eloquent support in bootstrap/app.php
:
$app = new Laravel\Lumen\Application(
realpath(__DIR__.'/../')
);
// Load dynamodb config file
$app->configure('dynamodb');
// Enable Eloquent support
$app->withEloquent();
Extend your model with Rennokki\DynamoDb\DynamoDbModel
, then you can use Eloquent methods that are supported.
The idea here is that you can switch back to Eloquent without changing your queries.
use Rennokki\DynamoDb\DynamoDbModel;
class MyModel extends DynamoDbModel
{
//
}
To sync your DB table with a DynamoDb table, use trait Rennokki\DynamoDb\ModelTrait
.
This trait will call a PutItem
after the model is saved, update or deleted.
use Rennokki\DynamoDb\ModelTrait as DynamoDbable;
class MyModel extends Model
{
use DynamoDbable;
}
You can use the query builder facade to build more complex queries.
AWS SDK v3 for PHP uses guzzlehttp promises to allow for asynchronous workflows. Using this package you can run eloquent queries like delete, update, save asynchronously on DynamoDb.
$model->find($id, array $columns = []);
$model->findMany($ids, array $columns = []);
$model->delete();
$model->deleteAsync()->wait();
// Using getIterator()
// If 'key' is the primary key or a global/local index and it is a supported Query condition,
// will use 'Query', otherwise 'Scan'.
$model->where('key', 'key value')->get();
$model->where(['key' => 'key value']);
// Chainable for 'AND'.
$model->where('foo', 'bar')
->where('foo2', '!=' 'bar2')
->get();
// Chainable for 'OR'.
$model->where('foo', 'bar')
->orWhere('foo2', '!=' 'bar2')
->get();
// Other types of conditions
$model->where('count', '>', 0)->get();
$model->where('count', '>=', 0)->get();
$model->where('count', '<', 0)->get();
$model->where('count', '<=', 0)->get();
$model->whereIn('count', [0, 100])->get();
$model->whereNotIn('count', [0, 100])->get();
$model->where('count', 'between', [0, 100])->get();
$model->where('description', 'begins_with', 'foo')->get();
$model->where('description', 'contains', 'foo')->get();
$model->where('description', 'not_contains', 'foo')->get();
// Nested conditions
$model
->where('name', 'foo')
->where(function ($query) {
return $query
->where('count', 10)
->orWhere('count', 20);
})->get();
// Nested attributes
$model->where('nestedMap.foo', 'bar')->where('list[0]', 'baz')->get();
NULL and NOT_NULL only check for the attribute presence not its value being null Please see: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/APIReference/API_Condition.html
$model->whereNull('name');
$model->whereNotNull('name');
// Using scan operator, not too reliable since DynamoDb will only give 1MB total of data.
$model->all();
// Basically a scan but with limit of 1 item.
$model->first();
Unfortunately, offset of how many records to skip does not make sense for DynamoDb. Instead, provide the last result of the previous query as the starting point for the next query.
Examples:
For query such as the following:
$query = $model->where('count', 10)->limit(2);
$items = $query->all();
$last = $items->last();
Take the last item of this query result as the next "offset":
$nextPage = $query->after($last)->limit(2)->all();
// or
$nextPage = $query->afterKey($items->lastKey())->limit(2)->all();
// or (for query without index condition only)
$nextPage = $query->afterKey($last->getKeys())->limit(2)->all();
$model->update($attributes);
// update asynchronously and wait on the promise for completion.
$model->updateAsync($attributes)->wait();
$model = new Model();
// Define fillable attributes in your Model class.
$model->fillableAttr1 = 'foo';
$model->fillableAttr2 = 'foo';
// DynamoDb doesn't support incremented Id, so you need to use UUID for the primary key.
$model->id = 'de305d54-75b4-431b-adb2-eb6b9e546014';
$model->save();
Saving single model asynchronously and waiting on the promise for completion.
$model = new Model;
// Define fillable attributes in your Model class.
$model->fillableAttr1 = 'foo';
$model->fillableAttr2 = 'bar';
// DynamoDb doesn't support incremented Id, so you need to use UUID for the primary key.
$model->id = 'de305d54-75b4-431b-adb2-eb6b9e546014';
$model->saveAsync()->wait();
Saving multiple models asynchronously and waiting on all of them simultaneously.
for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) {
$model = new Model;
// Define fillable attributes in your Model class.
$model->fillableAttr1 = 'foo';
$model->fillableAttr2 = 'bar';
// DynamoDb doesn't support incremented Id, so you need to use UUID for the primary key.
$model->id = uniqid();
// Returns a promise which you can wait on later.
$promises[] = $model->saveAsync();
}
\GuzzleHttp\Promise\all($promises)->wait();
$model->delete();
$model->deleteAsync()->wait();
$model->chunk(10, function ($records) {
foreach ($records as $record) {
//
}
});
// Use this with caution unless your limit is small.
// DynamoDB has a limit of 1MB so if your limit is very big, the results will not be expected.
$model->where('name', 'foo')->take(3)->get();
$model->where('name', 'foo')->firstOrFail();
// for composite key
$model->where('id', 'foo')->where('id2', 'bar')->firstOrFail();
$model->findOrFail('foo');
// for composite key
$model->findOrFail(['id' => 'foo', 'id2' => 'bar']);
$model = Model::first();
$model->refresh();
// returns the approximate total count of the table items
$total = Model::getItemsCount(); // ex: 5
class Foo extends DynamoDbModel
{
protected static function boot()
{
parent::boot();
static::addGlobalScope('count', function (DynamoDbQueryBuilder $builder) {
$builder->where('count', '>', 6);
});
}
public function scopeCountUnderFour($builder)
{
return $builder->where('count', '<', 4);
}
public function scopeCountUnder($builder, $count)
{
return $builder->where('count', '<', $count);
}
}
$foo = new Foo();
// Global scope will be applied
$foo->all();
// Local scope
$foo->withoutGlobalScopes()->countUnderFour()->get();
// Dynamic local scope
$foo->withoutGlobalScopes()->countUnder(6)->get();
$model = new Model();
$model->where('id', 'foo')->removeAttribute('name', 'description', 'nested.foo', 'nestedArray[0]');
// Equivalent of:
Model::find('foo')->removeAttribute('name', 'description', 'nested.foo', 'nestedArray[0]');
For debugging purposes, you can choose to convert to the actual DynamoDb query
$raw = $model->where('count', '>', 10)->toDynamoDbQuery();
// $op is either "Scan" or "Query"
$op = $raw->op;
// The query body being sent to AWS
$query = $raw->query;
The $raw
variable is an instance of RawDynamoDbQuery
Use decorate
when you want to enhance the query.
To set the order of the sort key:
$items = $model
->where('hash', 'hash-value')
->where('range', '>', 10)
->decorate(function (RawDynamoDbQuery $raw) {
// desc order
$raw->query['ScanIndexForward'] = false;
})->get();
To force to use "Query" instead of "Scan" if the library fails to detect the correct operation:
$items = $model
->where('hash', 'hash-value')
->decorate(function (RawDynamoDbQuery $raw) {
$raw->op = 'Query';
})->get();
If your table has indexes, make sure to declare them in your model class like so
/**
* The DynamoDb indexes.
* [
* '<simple_index_name>' => [
* 'hash' => '<index_key>'
* ],
* '<composite_index_name>' => [
* 'hash' => '<index_hash_key>',
* 'range' => '<index_range_key>'
* ],
* ]
*
* @var array
*/
protected $dynamoDbIndexKeys = [
'count_index' => [
'hash' => 'count'
],
];
Note that order of index matters when a key exists in multiple indexes.
For example, for the following query, count_index
will be used:
$model->where('user_id', 123)->where('count', '>', 10)->get();
protected $dynamoDbIndexKeys = [
'count_index' => [
'hash' => 'user_id',
'range' => 'count'
],
'user_index' => [
'hash' => 'user_id',
],
];
Most of the time, you should not have to do anything but if you need to use a specific index, you can specify it like so
$model
->where('user_id', 123)
->where('count', '>', 10)
->withIndex('count_index')
->get();
To use composite keys with your model:
Set $compositeKey
to an array of the attributes names comprising the key, e.g.
protected $primaryKey = 'customer_id';
protected $compositeKey = ['customer_id', 'agent_id'];
To find a record with a composite key:
$model->find(['customer_id' => 'value1', 'agent_id' => 'value2']);
Use DynamoDb
facade to build raw queries.
use Rennokki\DynamoDb\Facades\DynamoDb;
DynamoDb::table('articles')
// call set<key_name> to build the query body to be sent to AWS
->setFilterExpression('#name = :name')
->setExpressionAttributeNames(['#name' => 'author_name'])
->setExpressionAttributeValues([':name' => DynamoDb::marshalValue('Bao')])
->prepare()
// the query body will be sent upon calling this.
->scan(); // supports any DynamoDbClient methods (e.g. batchWriteItem, batchGetItem, etc.)
DynamoDb::table('articles')
->setIndex('author_name')
->setKeyConditionExpression('#name = :name')
->setProjectionExpression('id, author_name')
// Can set the attribute mapping one by one instead
->setExpressionAttributeName('#name', 'author_name')
->setExpressionAttributeValue(':name', DynamoDb::marshalValue('Bao'))
->prepare()
->query();
DynamoDb::table('articles')
->setKey(DynamoDb::marshalItem(['id' => 'ae025ed8']))
->setUpdateExpression('REMOVE #c, #t')
->setExpressionAttributeName('#c', 'comments')
->setExpressionAttributeName('#t', 'tags')
->prepare()
->updateItem();
DynamoDb::table('articles')
->setKey(DynamoDb::marshalItem(['id' => 'ae025ed8']))
->prepare()
->deleteItem();
DynamoDb::table('articles')
->setItem(
DynamoDb::marshalItem(['id' => 'ae025ed8', 'author_name' => 'New Name'])
)
->prepare()
->putItem();
// Or, instead of ::table()
DynamoDb::newQuery()
->setTableName('articles')
// Or access the DynamoDbClient instance directly
DynamoDb::client();
// pass in the connection name to get a different client instance other than the default.
DynamoDb::client('test');
The query builder methods are in the form of set<key_name>
, where <key_name>
is the key name of the query body to be sent.
For example, to build an UpdateTable
query:
[
'AttributeDefinitions' => ...,
'GlobalSecondaryIndexUpdates' => ...,
'TableName' => ...
]
Do:
$query = DynamoDb::table('articles')
->setAttributeDefinitions(...)
->setGlobalSecondaryIndexUpdates(...);
And when ready:
$query->prepare()->updateTable();
Q: Cannot assign id
property if its not in the fillable array
A: Try this?
Q: How to create migration? A: Please see this issue
Q: How to use with factory? A: Please see this issue
Q: How do I use with Job? Getting a SerializesModels error
A: You can either write your own restoreModel or remove the SerializesModels
trait from your Job.
If you discover any security related issues, please email alex@renoki.org instead of using the issue tracker.
- Bao Pham
- warrick-loyaltycorp
- Alexander Ward
- Quang Ngo
- David Higgins
- Damon Williams
- Alex Renoki
- All Contributors
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.