The following options can be used in the configuration file.
Namespaces of generated PHP classes can be set globally, respectively for entities, enumerations and interfaces (if used with Doctrine Resolve Target Entity Listener option).
Example:
namespaces:
entity: "Dunglas\EcommerceBundle\Entity"
enum: "Dunglas\EcommerceBundle\Enum"
interface: "Dunglas\EcommerceBundle\Model"
Namespaces can also be specified for a specific type. It will take precedence over any globally configured namespace.
Example:
types:
Thing:
namespaces:
class: "Dunglas\CoreBundle\Entity" # Namespace for the Thing entity (works for enumerations too)
interface: "Schema\Model" # Namespace of the related interface
Schema.org allows a property to have several types. However, the generator allows only one type by property. If not configured,
it will use the first defined type.
The range
option is useful to set the type of a given property. It can also be used to force a type (even if not in the
Schema.org definition).
Example:
types:
Brand:
properties:
logo: { range: "ImageObject" } # Force the range of the logo property to ImageObject (can also be URL according to Schema.org)
PostalAddress:
properties:
addressCountry: { range: "Text" } # Force the type to Text instead of Country
The cardinality of a property is automatically guessed. The cardinality
option allows to override the guessed value.
Supported cardinalities are:
(0..1)
: scalar, not required(0..*)
: array, not required(1..1)
: scalar, required(1..*)
: array, required(*..0)
(*..1)
(*..*)
Cardinalities are enforced by the class generator, the Doctrine ORM generator and the Symfony validation generator.
Example:
types:
Product:
properties:
sku:
cardinality: "(0..1)"
The relation table name between two entities is automatically guessed by Doctrine. The relationTableName
option allows
to override the default value.
This is useful when you need two entities to have more than one relation.
Example:
Organization:
properties:
contactPoint: { range: Person, relationTableName: organization_contactPoint }
member: { range: Person, cardinality: (1..*) } ## Will be default value : organization_person
Override the guessed class hierarchy of a given type with this option.
Example:
ImageObject:
parent: Thing # Force the parent to be Thing instead of CreativeWork > MediaObject
properties: ~
Drug:
parent: false # No parent
Force a class to be (or to not be) abstract
.
Example:
Person:
abstract: true
Force a property to be (or to not be) nullable
.
By default this option is true
.
Example:
Person:
properties:
name: { nullable: false }
The @Assert\NotNull
constrain is automatically added.
<?php
/**
* @var string The name of the item.
*
* @ORM\Column
* @Assert\Type(type="string")
* @Assert\NotNull
*/
private $name;
Force a property to be (or to not be) unique
.
By default this option is false
.
Example:
Person:
properties:
email: { unique: true }
Output:
<?php
...
use Symfony\Bridge\Doctrine\Validator\Constraints\UniqueEntity;
/**
* A person (alive, dead, undead, or fictional).
*
* @see http://schema.org/Person Documentation on Schema.org
*
* @ORM\Entity
* @UniqueEntity("email")
* @Iri("http://schema.org/Person")
*/
class Person
{
/**
* @var string Email address.
*
* @ORM\Column
* @Assert\Email
*/
private $email;
A property can be marked read-only with the following configuration:
Person:
properties:
email: { writable: false }
In such case, no mutator method will be generated.
A property can be marked write-only with the following configuration:
Person:
properties:
email: { readable: false }
In this case, no getter method will be generated.
Force a property to be in a groups
.
Enabling the SerializerGroupsAnnotationGenerator
generator:
annotationGenerators:
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\SerializerGroupsAnnotationGenerator
...
This option expects an array of scalar value { groups: [ groups1, group2, ... ] }
Example:
Person:
properties:
name: { groups: [ public ] }
Output:
<?php
...
use Symfony\Component\Serializer\Annotation\Groups;
/**
* A person (alive, dead, undead, or fictional).
*
* @see http://schema.org/Person Documentation on Schema.org
*
* @ORM\Entity
* @Iri("http://schema.org/Person")
*/
class Person
{
/**
* @var string The name of the item.
*
* @ORM\Column(nullable=true)
* @Assert\Type(type="string")
* @Iri("https://schema.org/name")
* @Groups({"public"})
*/
private $name;
Force an embeddable
class to be embedded
.
Example:
GeoCoordinates:
embeddable: true
Place:
coordinates: { range: "GeoCoordinates", embedded: true, columnPrefix: false }
Add a @author
PHPDoc annotation to class’ DocBlock.
Example:
author: "Kévin Dunglas <[email protected]>"
By default, all generators except DunglasJsonLdApi
(API Platform v1) and SerializerGroups
are enabled.
You can specify the list of generators to use with the annotationGenerators
option.
Example (enabling only the PHPDoc generator):
annotationGenerators:
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\PhpDocAnnotationGenerator
You can write your generators by implementing the AnnotationGeneratorInterface
.
The AbstractAnnotationGenerator
provides helper methods
useful when creating your own generators.
Enabling a custom generator and the PHPDoc generator:
annotationGenerators:
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\PhpDocAnnotationGenerator
- Acme\Generators\MyGenerator
It’s possible to skip the generation of accessor methods. This is particularly useful combined with the visibility: public
option.
To skip the generation of accessor methods, use the following config:
accessorMethods: false
id
GeneratorBy default, the generator adds a property called id
not provided by Schema.org.
This is useful when generating an entity for use with an ORM or an ODM but not when generating DTOs.
This behavior can be disabled with the following setting:
id:
generate: false
It’s also possible to let the DBMS generate UUIDs instead of autoincremented integers:
id:
generationStrategy: uuid
To manually set a UUID instead of letting the DBMS generate it, use the following config:
id:
generationStrategy: uuid
writable: true
With this configuration option, an $id
property of type string
and the corresponding getters and setters will be
generated, but the DBMS will not generate anything. The ID must be set manually.
id:
generationStrategy: none
By default, the generator uses classes provided by the Doctrine Collections library to store collections of entities. This is useful (and required) when using Doctrine ORM or Doctrine ODM. This behavior can be disabled (to fallback to standard arrays) with the following setting:
doctrine:
useCollection: false
Generated fields have a private
visibility and are exposed through getters and setters.
The default visibility can be changed with the fieldVisibility
option.
Example:
fieldVisibility: "protected"
@Assert\Type
AnnotationsIt’s possible to automatically generate Symfony validator’s @Assert\Type
annotations using the following config:
validator:
assertType: true
The standard behavior of the generator is to use the @MappedSuperclass
Doctrine annotation for classes with children and
@Entity
for classes with no child.
The inheritance annotation can be forced for a given type in the following way:
types:
Product:
doctrine:
inheritanceMapping: "@MappedSuperclass"
This setting is only relevant when using the Doctrine ORM generator.
ResolveTargetEntityListener
is a feature of Doctrine to keep modules independent. It allows to specify interfaces and abstract
classes in relation
mappings.
If you set the option useInterface
to true, the generator will generate an interface corresponding to each generated
entity and will use them in relation mappings.
To let PHP Schema generate the XML mapping file usable with Symfony, add the following to your config file:
doctrine:
resolveTargetEntityConfigPath: path/to/doctrine.xml
The generator can use your own schema definitions. They must be written in RDFa and follow the format of the Schema.org’s definition. This is useful to document your Schema.org extensions and use them to generate the PHP data model of your application.
Example:
rdfa:
- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/schemaorg/schemaorg/master/data/schema.rdfa # Experimental version of Schema.org
- http://example.com/data/myschema.rfa # Additional types
You can also use any other vocabulary. Check the Linked Open Vocabularies to find one fitting your needs.
For instance, to generate a data model from the Video Game Ontology, use the following config file:
rdfa:
- http://vocab.linkeddata.es/vgo/GameOntologyv3.owl # The URL of the vocabulary definition
types:
Session:
vocabularyNamespace: http://purl.org/net/VideoGameOntology#
# ...
If the checkIsGoodRelations
option is set to true
, the generator will emit a warning if an encountered property is not
par of the GoodRelations schema.
This is useful when generating e-commerce data models.
Prepend all generated PHP files with a custom comment.
Example:
header: |
/*
* This file is part of the Ecommerce package.
*
* (c) Kévin Dunglas <[email protected]>
*
* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE
* file that was distributed with this source code.
*/
config:
# RDFa files
rdfa:
# Prototype
-
# RDFa URI to use
uri: 'https://schema.org/docs/schema_org_rdfa.html' # Example: https://schema.org/docs/schema_org_rdfa.html
# RDFa URI data format
format: null # Example: rdfxml
# OWL relation files to use
relations:
# Default:
- https://purl.org/goodrelations/v1.owl
# Debug mode
debug: false
# IDs configuration
id:
# Automatically add an id field to entities
generate: true
# The ID generation strategy to use ("none" to not let the database generate IDs).
generationStrategy: auto # One of "auto"; "none"; "uuid"; "mongoid"
# Is the ID writable? Only applicable if "generationStrategy" is "uuid".
writable: false
# Generate interfaces and use Doctrine's Resolve Target Entity feature
useInterface: false
# Emit a warning if a property is not derived from GoodRelations
checkIsGoodRelations: false
# A license or any text to use as header of generated files
header: false # Example: // (c) Kévin Dunglas <[email protected]>
# PHP namespaces
namespaces:
# The namespace of the generated entities
entity: App\Entity # Example: Acme\Entity
# The namespace of the generated enumerations
enum: App\Enum # Example: Acme\Enum
# The namespace of the generated interfaces
interface: App\Model # Example: Acme\Model
# Doctrine
doctrine:
# Use Doctrine's ArrayCollection instead of standard arrays
useCollection: true
# The Resolve Target Entity Listener config file pass
resolveTargetEntityConfigPath: null
# Symfony Validator Component
validator:
# Generate @Assert\Type annotation
assertType: false
# The value of the phpDoc's @author annotation
author: false # Example: Kévin Dunglas <[email protected]>
# Visibility of entities fields
fieldVisibility: private # One of "private"; "protected"; "public"
# Set this flag to false to not generate getter, setter, adder and remover methods
accessorMethods: true
# Set this flag to true to generate fluent setter, adder and remover methods
fluentMutatorMethods: false
# Schema.org's types to use
types:
# Prototype
id:
# Namespace of the vocabulary the type belongs to.
vocabularyNamespace: 'http://schema.org/'
# Is the class abstract? (null to guess)
abstract: null
# Is the class embeddable?
embeddable: false
# Type namespaces
namespaces:
# The namespace for the generated class (override any other defined namespace)
class: null
# The namespace for the generated interface (override any other defined namespace)
interface: null
doctrine:
# The Doctrine inheritance mapping type (override the guessed one)
inheritanceMapping: null
# The parent class, set to false for a top level class
parent: false
# If declaring a custom class, this will be the class from which properties type will be guessed
guessFrom: Thing
# Import all existing properties
allProperties: false
# Properties of this type to use
properties:
# Prototype
id:
# The property range
range: null # Example: Offer
# The relation table name
relationTableName: null # Example: organization_member
cardinality: unknown # One of "(0..1)"; "(0..*)"; "(1..1)"; "(1..*)"; "(*..0)"; "(*..1)"; "(*..*)"; "unknown"
# The doctrine column annotation content
ormColumn: null # Example: type="decimal", precision=5, scale=1, options={"comment" = "my comment"}
# Symfony Serialization Groups
groups: []
# Is the property readable?
readable: true
# Is the property writable?
writable: true
# Is the property nullable?
nullable: true
# The property unique
unique: false
# Is the property embedded?
embedded: false
# The property columnPrefix
columnPrefix: false
# Annotation generators to use
annotationGenerators:
# Defaults:
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\PhpDocAnnotationGenerator
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\DoctrineOrmAnnotationGenerator
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\ApiPlatformCoreAnnotationGenerator
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\ConstraintAnnotationGenerator
- ApiPlatform\SchemaGenerator\AnnotationGenerator\SerializerGroupsAnnotationGenerator
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