I am wondering about the best practices for loading complex objects. To begin with, i'm going to outline some boilerplate before getting to the problem. Assume the following: A simple domain model Client is loaded using a tablegateway, with factories used at every stage to inject dependencies:
namespace My\Model\Client;
class Client implements InputFilterProviderInterface
{
/**@var integer*/
protected $id;
/**@var InputFilter*/
protected $inputFilter;
/**@var Preferences */
protected $preferences;
/**@var Orders*/
protected $orders;
/**@var Contacts*/
protected $contacts;
}
A factory for this Client object:
namespace My\Model\Client;
class ClientFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function($container, $requestedName, $options)
{
$client = new Client();
$client->setInputFilter($container->get('InputFilterManager')->get('ClientInputFilter'));
return $client;
}
}
Next the mapper factory, which uses a TableGateway:
namespace My\Model\Client\Mapper;
class ClientMapperFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function __invoke($container, $requestedName, $options)
{
return new ClientMapper($container->get(ClientTableGateway::class));
}
}
The TableGatewayFactory:
namespace My\Model\Client\TableGateway
class ClientTableGatewayFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function __invoke(ContainerInterface $container, $requestedName, array $options = null)
{
$hydrator = new ArraySerialisable();
$rowObjectPrototype = $container->get(Client::class);
$resultSet = new HydratingResultSet($hydrator, $rowObjectPrototype);
$tableGateway = new TableGateway('clients', $container->get(Adapter::class), null, $resultSet);
return $tableGateway;
Note the use of a HydratingResultset to return fully formed Client objects from the ResultSet. This all works nicely. Now the Client object has several related objects as properties, so whilst using the HydratingResultSet, i'm going to add an AggregateHydrator to load them:
class ClientTableGatewayFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function __invoke(ContainerInterface $container, $requestedName, array $options = null)
{
**$hydrator = $container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientHydrator::class);**
$rowObjectPrototype = $container->get(Client::class);
$resultSet = new HydratingResultSet($hydrator, $rowObjectPrototype);
$tableGateway = new TableGateway('clients', $container->get(Adapter::class), null, $resultSet);
return $tableGateway;
}
Finally, the Clients hydrator factory:
class ClientHydratorFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function __invoke(ContainerInterface $container, $requestedName, array $options = null)
{
//base ArraySerializable for Client object hydration
$arrayHydrator = new ArraySerializable();
$arrayHydrator->addStrategy('dateRegistered', new DateTimeStrategy());
$aggregateHydrator = new AggregateHydrator();
$aggregateHydrator->add($arrayHydrator);
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsAddressHydrator::class));
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsOrdersHydrator::class));
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsPreferencesHydrator::class));
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsContactsHydrator::class));
return $aggregateHydrator;
}
}
... with the gist of the above hydrators being like:
class ClientsAddressHydrator implements HydratorInterface
{
/** @var AddressMapper */
protected $addressMapper;
public function __construct(AddressMapper $addressMapper){
$this->addressMapper = $addressMapper;
}
public function extract($object){return $object;}
public function hydrate(array $data, $object)
{
if(!$object instanceof Client){
return;
}
if(array_key_exists('id', $data)){
$address = $this->addressMapper->findClientAddress($data['id']);
if($address instanceof Address){
$object->setAddress($address);
}
}
return $object;
}
}
Finally we're at the issue. The above works perfectly and will load quite cleanly a Client object with all the related objects fully formed. But i have some resources where the entire object graph is not needed - for instance, when viewing a table of all clients - there is no need for any more information to be loaded.
So i've been thinking of ways of using the factories to choose which dependencies to include.
Solution 1 A factory for each use case. If only the Client data is needed (with no dependencies), then create a series of factories ie ClientFactory, SimpleClientFactory, ComplexClientFactory, ClientWithAppointmentsFactory etc. Seems redundant and not very reusable.
Solution 2 Use the options param defined in the FactoryInterface to pass "loading" options to the hydrator factory, eg:
class ViewClientDetailsControllerFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
//all Client info needed - full object graph
public function __invoke($container, $requestedName, $options)
{
$controller = new ViewClientDetailsController();
$loadDependencies = [
'loadPreferences' => true,
'loadOrders' => true,
'loadContacts' => true
];
$clientMapper = $container->get(ClientMapper::class, '', $loadDependencies);
return $controller;
}
}
class ViewAllClientsControllerFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
//Only need Client data - no related objects
public function __invoke($container, $requestedName, $options)
{
$controller = new ViewAllClientsController();
$loadDependencies = [
'loadPreferences' => false,
'loadOrders' => false,
'loadContacts' => false
];
$clientMapper = $container->get(ClientMapper::class, '', $loadDependencies);
return $controller;
}
}
The mapper factory passes the options to the tablegateway factory, that passes them on to the hydrator factory:
class ClientTableGatewayFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function __invoke(ContainerInterface $container, $requestedName, array $options = null)
{
$hydrator = $container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientHydrator::class, '', $options);
$rowObjectPrototype = $container->get(Client::class);
$resultSet = new HydratingResultSet($hydrator, $rowObjectPrototype);
$tableGateway = new TableGateway('clients', $container->get(Adapter::class), null, $resultSet);
return $tableGateway;
}
Finally, we can define here how much info to load into the Client:
class ClientHydratorFactory implements FactoryInterface
{
public function __invoke(ContainerInterface $container, $requestedName, array $options = null)
{
//base ArraySerializable for Client object hydration
$arrayHydrator = new ArraySerializable();
$arrayHydrator->addStrategy('dateRegistered', new DateTimeStrategy());
$aggregateHydrator = new AggregateHydrator();
$aggregateHydrator->add($arrayHydrator);
if($options['loadAddress'] === true){
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsAddressHydrator::class));
}
if($options['loadOrders'] === true){
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsOrdersHydrator::class));
}
if($options['loadPreferences'] === true){
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsPreferencesHydrator::class));
}
if($options['loadContacts'] === true){
$aggregateHydrator->add($container->get('HydratorManager')->get(ClientsContactsHydrator::class));
}
return $aggregateHydrator;
}
}
This seems to be a clean solution, as the dependencies can be defined per request. However i don't think that this is using the options param as intended - the documentation states that this parameter is supposed to be for passing constructor params to the object, not defining what logic the factory should use to load dependencies.
Any advice, or alternative solutions to achieve the above, would be great. Thanks for reading.