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Is there a good object-relational-mapping library for PHP?

I know of PDO/ADO, but they seem to only provide abstraction of differences between database vendors not an actual mapping between the domain model and the relational model. I'm looking for a PHP library that functions similarly to the way Hibernate does for Java and .NET.

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34 Answers

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Have you looked in to Doctrine?

http://www.doctrine-project.org/

Doctrine 1.2 implements Active Record
Doctrine 2+ is a DataMapper ORM

Also, check out Xyster.. It's based on the Data Mapper pattern.

http://xyster.devweblog.org/

Also take a look at DataMapper vs. Active Record

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9  
Is the +45 for Doctrine or Xyster? – Petr Peller Apr 25 '11 at 17:24
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From another answer it seems to be for Doctrine. – David Freitas Apr 30 '11 at 18:01
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Try RedBean, its requires:

  • No configuration
  • No database (it creates everything on the fly)
  • No models
  • etc.

It even does all the locking and transactions for you and monitors performance in the background. (Heck! it even does garbage collection....) Best of all... you don't have to write a single... line of code... Jesus this, ORM layer, saved me ass!

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redbean is hands down the best database abstraction layer i've ever worked with. not "one of the best" - the best. – Nir Gavish Feb 15 '10 at 18:15
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but: stackoverflow.com/questions/3212917/… – Sirber Aug 2 '10 at 15:19
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There are only two good ones: Doctrine and Propel. We favor Doctrine, and it works well with Symfony. However if you're looking for database support besides the main ones you'll have to write your own code.

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good? by what standards? – stillstanding Aug 7 '10 at 17:23
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@stillstanding Maybe he should have said 2 "known" ones – jblue Sep 20 '10 at 10:11
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I've been developing Pork.dbObject on my own. (a simple PHP orm / Active Record implementation) The main reason is that i find most orms's too heavy.

The main thought of Pork.dbObejct is to be light-weight and simple to set up. No bunch of xml file, just one function call in the constructor to bind it, and an addRelation or addCustomRelation to define a relation to another dbObject.

Give it a look: Pork.dbObject

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I was looking for a lightweight PHP ORM implementation today, and found Pork.dbObject thanks to this post. It works great! +1 – E Dominique Apr 14 '09 at 17:21
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Duude! This is pretty interesting. I see that the latest update happened somewhere in '09. Is this still maintained? If not... I just might revive it :) – Vlad Fratila Dec 6 '10 at 14:22
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Axon ORM is part of the Fat-Free Framework - it features an on-the-fly mapper. No code generators. No stupid XML/YAML configuration files. It reads the database schema directly from the backend, so in most CRUD operations you don't even have to extend a base model. It works with all major PDO-supported database engines: MySQL, SQLite, MSSQL/Sybase, Oracle, PostgreSQL, etc.

/* SQL */
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_id INTEGER,
    description VARCHAR(128),
    PRIMARY KEY (product_id)
);

/* PHP */
// Create
$product=new Axon('products'); // automatically reads the above schema
$product->product_id=123;
$product->description='Sofa bed';
$product->save(); // ORM knows it's a new record

// Retrieve
$product->load('product_id=123');
echo $product->description;

// Update
$product->description='A better sofa bed';
$product->save(); // ORM knows it's an existing record

// Delete
$product->erase();

Most of all, the plug-in and accompanying SQL data access layer are just as lightweight as the framework: 14KB (Axon) + 6KB (SQLdb). Fat-Free is just 55KB.

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It always worries me when I see something like $product->load('product_id=123') in an example. – Znarkus Apr 11 '11 at 10:57
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for paranoids, the alternative syntax is $product->load(array('product_id=:id',array(':id'=>123))); – stillstanding Apr 11 '11 at 17:45
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Try Doctrine2, it's probably the most powerfull ORM tool for PHP. I'm mentioning it separately from Doctrine 1, because it's completely different piece of software. It's been rewritten from scratch, still in beta phase, but it's usable now and developed.

It's very complex ORM, but well designed. Lot of magic from original Doctrine 1 disappeared. It provides complete solution, you can write your own ORM on top of Doctrine2 or use just one of it's layers.

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@jblue: It's not a problem, it's a feature ;-). Large libraries like Doctrine need namespaces. – tomp Sep 21 '10 at 13:33
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Check out Outlet ORM. It is simpler than Propel and Doctrine and it works similar to Hibernate, only with more of a PHP feel to it.

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I tried this. I had to specify the same object properties in 3 places - config, model and database schema. That's a lot of work for implementing an ORM IMO. – mixdev Jun 15 '10 at 23:32
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I just started with Kohana, and it seems the closest to Ruby on Rails without invoking all the complexity of multiple configuration files like with Propel.

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I really like Propel, here you can get an overview, the documentation is pretty good, and you can get it through PEAR or SVN.

You only need a working PHP5 install, and Phing to start generating classes.

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I found ORM related classes in the php library Flourish.

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I am currently working on phpDataMapper, which is an ORM designed to have simple syntax like Ruby's Datamapper project. It's still in early development as well, but it works great.

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Give a shot to dORM, an object relational mapper for PHP 5. It supports all kinds of relationships (1-to-1), (1-to-many), (many-to-many) and data types. It is completely unobtrusive: no code generation or class extending required. In my opinion it is superior to any ORM out there, Doctrine and Propel included. However, it is still in beta and might change significantly in the next couple months. http://www.getdorm.com

It also has a very small learning curve. The three main methods you will use are:

<?php 
$object = $dorm->getClassName('id_here');
$dorm->save($object);
$dorm->delete($object);
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You can check out Repose if you are feeling adventurous. Like Outlet, it is modeled after Hibernate.

It is still very early in its development, but so far the only restrictions on the domain model are that the classes are not marked final and properties are not marked private. Once I get into the land of PHP >= 5.3, I'll try to implement support for private properties as well.

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I have had great experiences with Idiorm and Paris. Idiorm is a small, simple ORM library. Paris is an equally simple Active Record implementation built on Idiorm. It's for PHP 5.2+ with PDO. It's perfect if you want something simple that you can just drop into an existing application.

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Until PHP 5.3 release don't expect to have a good ORM. It's a OO limitation of PHP.

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the main reason is the introduction of late static binding ("static" keyword). read about it on blog.felho.hu/… – knoopx Mar 7 '09 at 11:51
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ORM don't really need static variables, they can be well designed using instance variables only. – tomp Jul 23 '10 at 21:55
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My friend Kien and I have improved upon an earlier version of an ORM that he had written prior to PHP 5.3. We have essentially ported over ActiveRecord on rails for PHP. It is still lacking some key features we want such as transactions, composite PK support, a few more adapters (only mysql/sqlite3 work right now). But, we are very close to finishing this stuff up. You can take a look here:

http://www.derivante.com/2009/05/14/php-activerecord-with-php-53/

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Try PHP adodb I cant say it's the best because I havent use the others. But it's fast, it supports memcached, and supports caching. and it's waaaay faster than Zend's DB/Select

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2  
adodb lends itself more to the Thin Model/Fat Controller flavor, which is generally not a good thing. – jblue Sep 20 '10 at 10:14
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ADOdb is a DAL, not an ORM – Michael Mior Apr 17 '11 at 1:18
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Have a look at the LEAP ORM for Kohana. It works with a bunch of databases, including DB2, Drizzle, Firebird, MariaDB, MS SQL, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, and SQLite. With a simple autoload function, it can work with almost any PHP framework. The source code is on github at https://github.com/spadefoot/kohana-orm-leap. You can checkout LEAP's tutorials online.

The ORM library works with non-integer primary keys and composite keys. Connections are managed via a database connection pool and it works with raw SQL queries. The ORM even has a query builder that makes building SQL statement super simple.

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if you are looking for an ORM like hibernate, you should have look at PMO:

http://pmo.developpez.com

It can be easly integrate in an SOA architecture (only a webservice classe to develop)

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PHP ORM Faces For PDO extension PHP Faces Framework

$urun = new Product();
$urun->name=”CPU”
$urun->prince=”124”;
$urun->save();
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There's a fantastic ORM included in the QCubed framework; it's based on code generation and scaffolding. Unlike the ActiveRecord that's based on reflection and is generally slow, code generation makes skeleton classes for you based on the DB and lets you customize them afterward. Works like a charm.

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Look at http://code.google.com/p/lworm/ . It is a really simple, but powerful, lightweight ORM system for PHP. You can also easily extend it, if you want.

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Have you looked at Syrius ORM?

http://code.google.com/p/syrius/

It's a new ORM, the project was in debug, but in the next mouth it will be release a 1.0 version.

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Try PdoMap Wikipedia claims that is inspired by Hybernate, since I never use Hybernate I cannot judge :), but I would say from my experience that is good and fast ORM that easy to implement, with not that steep learning curve as other ORMs.

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Another great open source PHP ORM that we use is PHPSmartDb. It is stable and makes your code more secure and clean. The database functionality within it is hands down the easiest I have ever used with PHP 5.3.

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Sado is a simple PHP ORM package

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If you are looking for an ORM that implements the Data Mapper paradigm rather than Active Record specifically then I would strongly suggest that you take a look at GacelaPHP.

Gacela Features:

  • Data mapper
  • Foreign key mapping
  • Association mapping
  • Dependent mapping
  • Concrete table inheritance
  • Query object
  • Metadata mapping
  • Lazy & eager loading
  • Full Memcache support

Other ORM solutions are too bloated or have burdensome limitations when developing anything remotely complicated. Gacela resolves the limitations of the active record approach by implementing the Data Mapper Pattern while keeping bloat to a minimum by using PDO for all interactions with the DB and memcache.

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Brazilian ORM: http://www.hufersil.com.br/lumine , works with PHP 5.2+ . In my opinion, the best choice for portuguese/brazilian people, because it has an easy to understand documentation and a lot of examples for download.

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