2

I can think of several ad-hoc ways to do this, but I'm really looking for a 'best practices' type of solution.

I have 3 tables involved
- users (user_id)
- usages ('user_id', 'provider_id', 'nurse_id', 'patient_id')
- usage_alerts ('usage_id')

Im trying to eager load alerts using hasManyThrough() based on a user's role.

The user_id field is agnostic, and can apply to any role, so merging and filtering needs to take place.

Using $this->hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage')->get() will return a collection, making the ->merge() method available. However, when eager loading, on return, i get an error since it's a collection object.

Call to undefined method Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection::addEagerConstraints()

For example, this is my current relation (returns the error above)

public function alerts() 
{ 

    $alerts = $this->hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage')->get();

    if(Sentry::getUser()->inGroup(Sentry::findGroupByName('provider')))
        $alerts->merge($this->hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage', 'provider_id'));

    if(Sentry::getUser()->inGroup(Sentry::findGroupByName('patient')))
        $alerts->merge($this->hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage', 'patient_id'));

    if(Sentry::getUser()->inGroup(Sentry::findGroupByName('nurse')))
        $alerts->merge($this->hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage', 'nurse_id'));

    return $alerts;

}

Any suggestions?
Pperhaps too much complexity for a relationship?

1 Answer 1

5

Best practice manipulates the relationship, though official documentation on how lacks. For your scenario, you can union the additional queries into the primary "agnostic" relationship:

$relation = $this->hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage');

foreach (['provider','patient','nurse'] as $group) {
    if (Sentry::getUser()->inGroup(Sentry::findGroupByName($group))) {
        $relation->getBaseQuery()->union(
            $this->
            hasManyThrough('UsageAlert', 'Usage', $group . '_id')->
            getBaseQuery()->
            select('UsageAlert.*') // limits union to common needed columns
        );
    }
}

return $relation;

This approach returns a Relation, rather than a Collection, as would be expected by API users.

3
  • This seems to work when removing getBaseQuery() from the first line (otherwise, returns a Builder instance), but then i get a Cardinality violation as the first hasManyThrough() is selecting one additional field (the foreign key in the intermediary table). (select `usage_alerts`.*, `usages`.`user_id` from `usage_alerts` inner join `usages` on `usages`.`id` = `usage_alerts`.`usage_id` where `usages`.`user_id` = 2) union (select * from `usage_alerts` inner join `usages` on `usages`.`id` = `usage_alerts`.`usage_id` where `usages`.`provider_id` = 2)
    – c-griffin
    Aug 30, 2014 at 16:48
  • 1
    Not near a terminal to test, but -- if I'm following -- you can limit the selection in the unioned query. I've edited my code in response (but again, not near a terminal to test). (And, aside, I thought one needed the eloquent builder to perform the union against, but true I was returning the builder not the relation. I've updated my code to also account for this.)
    – bishop
    Aug 30, 2014 at 17:05
  • 1
    Fantastic! Adding the select() did the trick. Thanks for your help!
    – c-griffin
    Aug 30, 2014 at 17:39

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