To use different Entity Manager / Connection based on URL in Symfony if fairly easy. With the following routing configuration
connection:
pattern: /a/{connection}
defaults: { _controller: AcmeTestBundle:User:index }
and from the following Cookbook;
How to work with Multiple Entity Managers and Connections
My controller would look something like this;
class UserController extends Controller
{
public function indexAction($connection)
{
$products = $this->get('doctrine')
->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product', $connection)
->findAll()
;
..................
and I'll be able to fetch product information from different em/connection/database.
Now, if I add something like this to my routing;
login:
pattern: /a/{connection}/login
defaults: { _controller: FOSUserBundle:Security:login }
How can I easily make the login to use connection as defined in the connection variable?
This setup assume each database has their own user login information (the fos_user table).
Edit: Updated routing information
Edit2:
I'm still new with PHP/Symfony/Doctrine though, so please forgive me if I'm completely wrong here. I tried to manually set the connection at FOS\UserBundle\Doctrine\UserManager. The following is the constructor of the class
//
use Doctrine\Common\Persistence\ObjectManager;
//
public function __construct(EncoderFactoryInterface $encoderFactory, CanonicalizerInterface $usernameCanonicalizer, CanonicalizerInterface $emailCanonicalizer, ObjectManager $om, $class)
{
parent::__construct($encoderFactory, $usernameCanonicalizer, $emailCanonicalizer);
$this->objectManager = $om;
$this->repository = $om->getRepository($class);
$metadata = $om->getClassMetadata($class);
$this->class = $metadata->getName();
}
In a controller, we can use the following method to change the em to 'testing'
$em = $this->get('doctrine')->getManager('testing');
$repository = $this->get('doctrine')->getRepository($class, 'testing')
For that I changed the code to the following to use EntityManager instead of ObjectManager.
//
//use Doctrine\Common\Persistence\ObjectManager;
use Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager;
//
public function __construct(EncoderFactoryInterface $encoderFactory, CanonicalizerInterface $usernameCanonicalizer, CanonicalizerInterface $emailCanonicalizer, EntityManager $om, $class)
{
parent::__construct($encoderFactory, $usernameCanonicalizer, $emailCanonicalizer);
$this->objectManager = $om;
$this->repository = $om->getRepository($class);
$metadata = $om->getClassMetadata($class);
$this->class = $metadata->getName();
}
My app works fine with no error.
From the way it works with the controller, I tried changing the connection by adding a parameter to this line then, but it's still using the default connection.
$this->repository = $om->getRepository($class, 'testing');
What else could I be missing here?
As you can see, FOSUserBundle can have only one EntityManager. You can see it from the settings orm.xml
<service id="fos_user.entity_manager" factory-service="doctrine" factory-method="getManager" class="Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager" public="false">
<argument>%fos_user.model_manager_name%</argument>
</service>
Parameter %fos_user.model_manager_name% specified in settings as model_manager_name
fos_user:
db_driver: ~ # Required
user_class: ~ # Required
firewall_name: ~ # Required
model_manager_name: ~
So into the constructor comes the instance of EntityManager, which does not accept the second parameter in the getRepository. Therefore, the standard FOSUserBundle can only work with one database.
But this is not the end of story, it's Symfony :) We can write out UserManager, that can use different db connections. In the setting see that fos_user.user_manager is a fos_user.user_manager.default. We find it in orm.xml
<service id="fos_user.user_manager.default" class="FOS\UserBundle\Doctrine\UserManager" public="false">
<argument type="service" id="security.encoder_factory" />
<argument type="service" id="fos_user.util.username_canonicalizer" />
<argument type="service" id="fos_user.util.email_canonicalizer" />
<argument type="service" id="fos_user.entity_manager" />
<argument>%fos_user.model.user.class%</argument>
</service>
We can override this class to add an additional parameter that will determine what kind of connection you want to use. Further by ManagerFactory you can get the desired ObjectManager. I wrote simple example for the two databeses (if you need more databases you can write your factory for this service)
define your services in services.yml
services:
acme.user_manager.conn1:
class: Acme\DemoBundle\Service\UserManager
public: true
arguments:
- @security.encoder_factory
- @fos_user.util.username_canonicalizer
- @fos_user.util.email_canonicalizer
- @doctrine
- 'conn1_manager'
- %fos_user.model.user.class%
acme.user_manager.conn2:
class: Acme\DemoBundle\Service\UserManager
public: true
arguments:
- @security.encoder_factory
- @fos_user.util.username_canonicalizer
- @fos_user.util.email_canonicalizer
- @doctrine
- 'conn2_manager'
- %fos_user.model.user.class%
Your manager
/**
* Constructor.
*
* @param EncoderFactoryInterface $encoderFactory
* @param CanonicalizerInterface $usernameCanonicalizer
* @param CanonicalizerInterface $emailCanonicalizer
* @param RegistryInterface $doctrine
* @param string $connName
* @param string $class
*/
public function __construct(EncoderFactoryInterface $encoderFactory, CanonicalizerInterface $usernameCanonicalizer,
CanonicalizerInterface $emailCanonicalizer, RegistryInterface $doctrine, $connName, $class)
{
$om = $doctrine->getEntityManager($connName);
parent::__construct($encoderFactory, $usernameCanonicalizer, $emailCanonicalizer, $om, $class);
}
/**
* Just for test
* @return EntityManager
*/
public function getOM()
{
return $this->objectManager;
}
and simple test
/**
* phpunit -c app/ src/Acme/DemoBundle/Tests/FOSUser/FOSUserMultiConnection.php
*/
class FOSUserMultiConnection extends WebTestCase
{
public function test1()
{
$client = static::createClient();
/** @var $user_manager_conn1 UserManager */
$user_manager_conn1 = $client->getContainer()->get('acme.user_manager.conn1');
/** @var $user_manager_conn2 UserManager */
$user_manager_conn2 = $client->getContainer()->get('acme.user_manager.conn2');
/** @var $om1 EntityManager */
$om1 = $user_manager_conn1->getOM();
/** @var $om2 EntityManager */
$om2 = $user_manager_conn2->getOM();
$this->assertNotEquals($om1->getConnection()->getDatabase(), $om2->getConnection()->getDatabase());
}
}
I'm sorry that the answer was so big. If something is not clear to the end, I put the code on github
FosUserBundle is not able to have more than one entity manager.
The easiest way I found to use 2 databases, is to override the 'checkLoginAction' of the SecurityController.
<?php
//in myuserBunle/Controller/SecurityController.php
class SecurityController extends BaseController
{
/**
* check the user information
*/
public function checkLoginAction(Request $request){
$username = \trim($request->request->get("_username"));
$user = $this->container->get('fos_user.user_manager')->findUserByUsername($username);
$userDB2 = .....
$password = \trim($request->request->get('_password'));
if ($user) {
// Get the encoder for the users password
$encoder = $this->container->get('security.encoder_factory')->getEncoder($user);
$encoded_pass = $encoder->encodePassword($password, $user->getSalt());
if (($user->getPassword() == $encoded_pass) || $this->checkSecondEM()) {
$this->logUser($request, $user);
return new RedirectResponse($this->container->get('router')->generate($this->container->get('session')->get('route'), $request->query->all() ));
} else {
// Password bad
return parent::loginAction($request);
}
} else {
// Username bad
return parent::loginAction($request);
}
}
}
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With