14

Working on several projects which use the same database, we made a Symfony2 Bundle to map all common functions.

Now the issue is that we have a second database, and we need the same kind of service, just as the first one.

config.yml

doctrine:
  dbal:
    default_connection: main
    connections:
      main:
        /* ... */
      sub:
        /* ... */

  orm:
      default_entity_manager:   main
      entity_managers:
          main:
              connection:       main
              mappings:
                  AcmeMainBundle: ~
          sub:
              connection:       sub
              mappings:
                  AcmeSubBundle: ~
      auto_generate_proxy_classes: %kernel.debug%

@AcmeMainBundle > services.yml

services:
    mainmanager:
      class: Acme\MainBundle\MainManager
      arguments: [ @doctrine.orm.entity_manager ]

Acme\MainBundle\MainManager

class MainManager
{
    public function __construct(EntityManager $em)
    {
        $em->getRepository('AcmeMainBundle:Foo');
    }
}

This set works fine, I get all expected results since default_entity_manager is set to main which is the right EntityManager.

But now here's the issue.

@AcmeSubBundle > services.yml

submanager:
  class: Acme\SubBundle\SubManager
  arguments: [ @doctrine.orm.entity_manager ]

Acme\SubBundle\SubManager

class SubManager
{
    public function __construct(EntityManager $em)
    {
        $em->getRepository('AcmeSubBundle:Bar'); // Throws exception
    }
}

Unknown entity namespace alias AcmeSubBundle

Since EntityManager goes into main by default.

My question is, is there a "clean" way to inject a specific entity manager as argument in services.yml ?

1 Answer 1

18

Answer at 18/02/13

Here is a way to pass a specific entity manager from services.yml
Doctrine generates a new service name relative to their names.

Example:

@doctrine.orm.default_entity_manager

In this case, it generates 2 others entity manager

@doctrine.orm.main_entity_manager
@doctrine.orm.sub_entity_manager

The argument passed is a Doctrine\ORM\EntityManager object

In my case:

services.yml

submanager:
    arguments: [ @doctrine.orm.sub_entity_manager ]

Update 22/08/13

An alternative to this would be to directly give the repository instead of the manager.

To do such, you must create a service which will hold the repository.

services.yml

services:
    acme.foo_repository:
        class: Doctrine\Common\Persistence\ObjectRepository
        factory_service: doctrine.orm.main_entity_manager
        factory_method:  getRepository
        arguments:
            - "AcmeMainBundle:Foo"

We let doctrine generate the given repository.
Then we can inject it in another service

services:
    mainmanager:
        class: Acme\MainBundle\MainManager
        arguments:
            - @acme.foo_repository
0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.