Your entity doesn't contain annotations, and doctrine have no idea what to do with this entity. But if you add to you entity something like:
<?php
namespace AppBundle\Entity;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
/**
* @ORM\Entity
* @ORM\Table(name="user")
*/
class User
{
/**
* @ORM\Column(type="integer")
* @ORM\Id
* @ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO")
*/
private $id;
/**
* @ORM\Column(type="string", length=60, unique=true)
*/
private $email;
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
public function setUserEmail($userEmail)
{
$this->userEmail = $userEmail;
return $this;
}
}
OR
if you add file: User.orm.xml
like:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<doctrine-mapping xmlns="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping.xsd">
<entity name="AppBundle\Entity\User" table="user">
<unique-constraints>
<unique-constraint name="UNIQ_797E6294E7927C74" columns="email"/>
</unique-constraints>
<id name="id" type="integer" column="id">
<generator strategy="IDENTITY"/>
</id>
<field name="email" type="string" column="email" length="60" nullable="false"/>
</entity>
</doctrine-mapping>
to your Resources/config/doctrine/
directory,
you'll be able to run command:
php app/console doctrine:schema:update --force
and as result you'll receive:
Updating database schema...
Database schema updated successfully! "1" queries were executed
Truly believe that it will solve your problem...