API Platform Core provides a generic system to apply filters and sort criteria on collections. Useful filters for Doctrine ORM, MongoDB ODM and ElasticSearch are provided with the library.
You can also create custom filters that fit your specific needs. You can also add filtering support to your custom data providers by implementing interfaces provided by the library.
By default, all filters are disabled. They must be enabled explicitly.
When a filter is enabled, it automatically appears in the OpenAPI and GraphQL documentations.
It is also automatically documented as a hydra:search
property for JSON-LD responses.
Watch the Filtering & Searching screencast
Filters are services (see the section on custom filters), and they can be linked to a Resource in two ways:
Through the resource declaration, as the filters
attribute.
For example having a filter service declaration:
# api/config/services.yaml
services:
# ...
offer.date_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.date_filter'
arguments: [ { dateProperty: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
We’re linking the filter offer.date_filter
with the resource like this:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
#[ApiResource(attributes: ['filters' => ['offer.date_filter']])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# api/config/api_platform/resources.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.date_filter']
# ...
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<!-- api/config/api_platform/resources.xml -->
<resources xmlns="https://api-platform.com/schema/metadata"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="https://api-platform.com/schema/metadata
https://api-platform.com/schema/metadata/metadata-2.0.xsd">
<resource class="App\Entity\Offer">
<collectionOperations>
<collectionOperation name="get">
<attribute name="filters">
<attribute>offer.date_filter</attribute>
</attribute>
</collectionOperation>
<!-- ... -->
</collectionOperations>
</resource>
</resources>
By using the #[ApiFilter]
attribute.
This attribute automatically declares the service, and you just have to use the filter class you want:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(DateFilter::class, properties: ['dateProperty'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
Learn more on how the ApiFilter attribute works.
For the sake of consistency, we’re using the attribute in the below documentation.
For MongoDB ODM, all the filters are in the namespace ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\MongoDbOdm\Filter
. The filter
services all begin with api_platform.doctrine_mongodb.odm
.
If Doctrine ORM or MongoDB ODM support is enabled, adding filters is as easy as registering a filter service in the
api/config/services.yaml
file and adding an attribute to your resource configuration.
The search filter supports exact
, partial
, start
, end
, and word_start
matching strategies:
partial
strategy uses LIKE %text%
to search for fields that contain text
.start
strategy uses LIKE text%
to search for fields that start with text
.end
strategy uses LIKE %text
to search for fields that end with text
.word_start
strategy uses LIKE text% OR LIKE % text%
to search for fields that contain words starting with text
.Prepend the letter i
to the filter if you want it to be case insensitive. For example ipartial
or iexact
. Note that
this will use the LOWER
function and will impact performance if there is no proper index.
Case insensitivity may already be enforced at the database level depending on the collation
used. If you are using MySQL, note that the commonly used utf8_unicode_ci
collation (and its sibling utf8mb4_unicode_ci
)
are already case-insensitive, as indicated by the _ci
part in their names.
Note: Search filters with the exact
strategy can have multiple values for the same property (in this case the condition will be similar to a SQL IN clause).
Syntax: ?property[]=foo&property[]=bar
In the following example, we will see how to allow the filtering of a list of e-commerce offers:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\SearchFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['id' => 'exact', 'price' => 'exact', 'description' => 'partial'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.search_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.search_filter'
arguments: [ { id: 'exact', price: 'exact', description: 'partial' } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.search_filter']
http://localhost:8000/api/offers?price=10
will return all offers with a price being exactly 10
.
http://localhost:8000/api/offers?description=shirt
will return all offers with a description containing the word “shirt”.
Filters can be combined together: http://localhost:8000/api/offers?price=10&description=shirt
It is possible to filter on relations too, if Offer
has a Product
relation:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\SearchFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['product' => 'exact'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.search_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.search_filter'
arguments: [ { product: 'exact' } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.search_filter']
With this service definition, it is possible to find all offers belonging to the product identified by a given IRI.
Try the following: http://localhost:8000/api/offers?product=/api/products/12
.
Using a numeric ID is also supported: http://localhost:8000/api/offers?product=12
The above URLs will return all offers for the product having the following IRI as JSON-LD identifier (@id
): http://localhost:8000/api/products/12
.
The date filter allows to filter a collection by date intervals.
Syntax: ?property[<after|before|strictly_after|strictly_before>]=value
The value can take any date format supported by the \DateTime
constructor.
The after
and before
filters will filter including the value whereas strictly_after
and strictly_before
will filter excluding the value.
Like others filters, the date filter must be explicitly enabled:
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter; use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource; use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter;
#[ApiResource] #[ApiFilter(DateFilter::class, properties: [‘createdAt’])] class Offer { // … }
```yaml
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.date_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.date_filter'
arguments: [ { createdAt: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.date_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /offers
, you can filter offers by date with the following query: /offers?createdAt[after]=2018-03-19
.
It will return all offers where createdAt
is superior or equal to 2018-03-19
.
null
ValuesThe date filter is able to deal with date properties having null
values.
Four behaviors are available at the property level of the filter:
Description | Strategy to set |
---|---|
Use the default behavior of the DBMS | null |
Exclude items | ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter::EXCLUDE_NULL (exclude_null ) |
Consider items as oldest | ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter::INCLUDE_NULL_BEFORE (include_null_before ) |
Consider items as youngest | ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter::INCLUDE_NULL_AFTER (include_null_after ) |
Always include items | ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter::INCLUDE_NULL_BEFORE_AND_AFTER (include_null_before_and_after ) |
For instance, exclude entries with a property value of null
with the following service definition:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(DateFilter::class, properties: ['dateProperty' => DateFilter::EXCLUDE_NULL])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.date_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.date_filter'
arguments: [ { dateProperty: exclude_null } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.date_filter']
The boolean filter allows you to search on boolean fields and values.
Syntax: ?property=<true|false|1|0>
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\BooleanFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(BooleanFilter::class, properties: ['isAvailableGenericallyInMyCountry'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.boolean_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.boolean_filter'
arguments: [ { isAvailableGenericallyInMyCountry: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.boolean_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /offers
, you can filter offers with the following query: /offers?isAvailableGenericallyInMyCountry=true
.
It will return all offers where isAvailableGenericallyInMyCountry
equals true
.
The numeric filter allows you to search on numeric fields and values.
Syntax: ?property=<int|bigint|decimal...>
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\NumericFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(NumericFilter::class, properties: ['sold'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.numeric_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.numeric_filter'
arguments: [ { sold: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.numeric_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /offers
, you can filter offers with the following query: /offers?sold=1
.
It will return all offers with sold
equals 1
.
The range filter allows you to filter by a value lower than, greater than, lower than or equal, greater than or equal and between two values.
Syntax: ?property[<lt|gt|lte|gte|between>]=value
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\RangeFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(RangeFilter::class, properties: ['price'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.range_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.range_filter'
arguments: [ { price: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.range_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /offers
, you can filter the price with the following query: /offers?price[between]=12.99..15.99
.
It will return all offers with price
between 12.99 and 15.99.
You can filter offers by joining two values, for example: /offers?price[gt]=12.99&price[lt]=19.99
.
The exists filter allows you to select items based on a nullable field value. It will also check the emptiness of a collection association.
Syntax: ?exists[property]=<true|false|1|0>
Previous syntax (deprecated): ?property[exists]=<true|false|1|0>
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\ExistsFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(ExistsFilter::class, properties: ['transportFees'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.exists_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.exists_filter'
arguments: [ { transportFees: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.exists_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /offers
, you can filter offers on nullable field with the following query: /offers?exists[transportFees]=true
.
It will return all offers where transportFees
is not null
.
A conflict will occur if exists
is also the name of a property with the search filter enabled.
Luckily, the query parameter name to use is configurable:
# api/config/packages/api_platform.yaml
api_platform:
collection:
exists_parameter_name: 'not_null' # the URL query parameter to use is now "not_null"
The order filter allows to sort a collection against the given properties.
Syntax: ?order[property]=<asc|desc>
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['id', 'name'], arguments: ['orderParameterName' => 'order'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.order_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.order_filter'
arguments:
$properties: { id: ~, name: ~ }
$orderParameterName: order
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.order_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /offers
, you can filter offers by name in ascending order and then by ID in descending
order with the following query: /offers?order[name]=desc&order[id]=asc
.
By default, whenever the query does not specify the direction explicitly (e.g.: /offers?order[name]&order[id]
), filters
will not be applied unless you configure a default order direction to use:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['id' => 'ASC', 'name' => 'DESC'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.order_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.order_filter'
arguments: [ { id: 'ASC', name: 'DESC' } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.order_filter']
When the property used for ordering can contain null
values, you may want to specify how null
values are treated in
the comparison:
Description | Strategy to set |
---|---|
Use the default behavior of the DBMS | null |
Consider items as smallest | ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter::NULLS_SMALLEST (nulls_smallest ) |
Consider items as largest | ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter::NULLS_LARGEST (nulls_largest ) |
For instance, treat entries with a property value of null
as the smallest, with the following service definition:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['validFrom' => ['nulls_comparison' => OrderFilter::NULLS_SMALLEST, 'default_direction' => 'DESC']])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.order_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.order_filter'
arguments: [ { validFrom: { nulls_comparison: 'nulls_smallest', default_direction: 'DESC' } } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.order_filter']
A conflict will occur if order
is also the name of a property with the search filter enabled.
Luckily, the query parameter name to use is configurable:
# api/config/packages/api_platform.yaml
api_platform:
collection:
order_parameter_name: '_order' # the URL query parameter to use is now "_order"
Sometimes, you need to be able to perform filtering based on some linked resources (on the other side of a relation). All
built-in filters support nested properties using the dot (.
) syntax, e.g.:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\SearchFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['product.releaseDate'])]
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['product.color' => 'exact'])]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.order_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.order_filter'
arguments: [ { product.releaseDate: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
offer.search_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.search_filter'
arguments: [ { product.color: 'exact' } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.order_filter', 'offer.search_filter']
The above allows you to find offers by their respective product’s color: http://localhost:8000/api/offers?product.color=red
,
or order offers by the product’s release date: http://localhost:8000/api/offers?order[product.releaseDate]=desc
As we have seen in previous examples, properties where filters can be applied must be explicitly declared. If you don’t care about security and performance (e.g. an API with restricted access), it is also possible to enable built-in filters for all properties:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\OrderFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class)]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
offer.order_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.order_filter'
arguments: [ ~ ] # Pass null to enable the filter for all properties
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Offer.yaml
App\Entity\Offer:
# ...
collectionOperations:
get:
filters: ['offer.order_filter']
Note: Filters on nested properties must still be enabled explicitly, in order to keep things sane.
Regardless of this option, filters can be applied on a property only if:
asc
or desc
for the order filters).It means that the filter will be silently ignored if the property:
The order filter allows to sort a collection against the given properties.
Syntax: ?order[property]=<asc|desc>
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Model/Tweet.php
namespace App\Model;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\OrderFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['id', 'date'], arguments: ['orderParameterName' => 'order'])]
class Tweet
{
// ...
}
# config/services.yaml
services:
tweet.order_filter:
parent: 'api_platform.doctrine.orm.order_filter'
arguments:
$properties: { id: ~, date: ~ }
$orderParameterName: 'order'
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
# The following are mandatory only if a _defaults section is defined with inverted values.
# You may want to isolate filters in a dedicated file to avoid adding the following lines (by adding them in the defaults section)
autowire: false
autoconfigure: false
public: false
# config/api/Tweet.yaml
App\Entity\Tweet:
# ...
filters: ['tweet.order_filter']
Given that the collection endpoint is /tweets
, you can filter tweets by id and date in ascending or descending order:
/tweets?order[id]=asc&order[date]=desc
.
By default, whenever the query does not specify the direction explicitly (e.g: /tweets?order[id]&order[date]
), filters
will not be applied unless you configure a default order direction to use:
<?php
// api/src/Model/Tweet.php
namespace App\Model;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\OrderFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['id' => 'asc', 'date' => 'desc'])]
class Tweet
{
// ...
}
A conflict will occur if order
is also the name of a property with the term filter enabled. Luckily, the query
parameter name to use is configurable:
# api/config/packages/api_platform.yaml
api_platform:
collection:
order_parameter_name: '_order' # the URL query parameter to use is now "_order"
The match filter allows to find resources that match the specified text on full text fields.
Syntax: ?property[]=value
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Model/Tweet.php
namespace App\Model;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\MatchFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(MatchFilter::class, properties: ['message'])]
class Tweet
{
// ...
}
Given that the collection endpoint is /tweets
, you can filter tweets by message content.
/tweets?message=Hello%20World
will return all tweets that match the text Hello World
.
The term filter allows to find resources that contain the exact specified terms.
Syntax: ?property[]=value
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Model/User.php
namespace App\Model;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\TermFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(TermFilter::class, properties: ['gender', 'age'])]
class User
{
// ...
}
Given that the collection endpoint is /users
, you can filter users by gender and age.
/users?gender=female
will return all users whose gender is female
.
/users?age=42
will return all users whose age is 42
.
Filters can be combined together: /users?gender=female&age=42
.
Sometimes, you need to be able to perform filtering based on some linked resources (on the other side of a relation).
All built-in filters support nested properties using the (.
) syntax.
<?php
// api/src/Model/Tweet.php
namespace App\Model;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\OrderFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\TermFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(OrderFilter::class, properties: ['author.firstName'])]
#[ApiFilter(TermFilter::class, properties: ['author.gender'])]
class Tweet
{
// ...
}
The above allows you to find tweets by their respective author’s gender /tweets?author.gender=male
, or order tweets by the
author’s first name /tweets?order[author.firstName]=desc
.
The group filter allows you to filter by serialization groups.
Syntax: ?groups[]=<group>
You can add as many groups as you need.
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Book.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Serializer\Filter\GroupFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(GroupFilter::class, arguments: ['parameterName' => 'groups', 'overrideDefaultGroups' => false, 'whitelist' => ['allowed_group']])]
class Book
{
// ...
}
Three arguments are available to configure the filter:
parameterName
is the query parameter name (default groups
)overrideDefaultGroups
allows to override the default serialization groups (default false
)whitelist
groups whitelist to avoid uncontrolled data exposure (default null
to allow all groups)Given that the collection endpoint is /books
, you can filter by serialization groups with the following query: /books?groups[]=read&groups[]=write
.
Note: We strongly recommend using Vulcain instead of this filter. Vulcain is faster, allows a better hit rate, and is supported out of the box in the API Platform distribution.
The property filter adds the possibility to select the properties to serialize (sparse fieldsets).
Syntax: ?properties[]=<property>&properties[<relation>][]=<property>
You can add as many properties as you need.
Enable the filter:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Book.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Serializer\Filter\PropertyFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(PropertyFilter::class, arguments: ['parameterName' => 'properties', 'overrideDefaultProperties' => false, 'whitelist' => ['allowed_property']])]
class Book
{
// ...
}
Three arguments are available to configure the filter:
parameterName
is the query parameter name (default properties
)overrideDefaultProperties
allows to override the default serialization properties (default false
)whitelist
properties whitelist to avoid uncontrolled data exposure (default null
to allow all properties)Given that the collection endpoint is /books
, you can filter the serialization properties with the following query: /books?properties[]=title&properties[]=author
.
If you want to include some properties of the nested “author” document, use: /books?properties[]=title&properties[author][]=name
.
Custom filters can be written by implementing the ApiPlatform\Core\Api\FilterInterface
interface.
API Platform provides a convenient way to create Doctrine ORM and MongoDB ODM filters. If you use custom data providers, you can still create filters by implementing the previously mentioned interface, but - as API Platform isn’t aware of your persistence system’s internals - you have to create the filtering logic by yourself.
Doctrine ORM filters have access to the context created from the HTTP request and to the QueryBuilder
instance used to
retrieve data from the database. They are only applied to collections. If you want to deal with the DQL query generated
to retrieve items, extensions are the way to go.
A Doctrine ORM filter is basically a class implementing the ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\FilterInterface
.
API Platform includes a convenient abstract class implementing this interface and providing utility methods: ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\AbstractFilter
.
In the following example, we create a class to filter a collection by applying a regexp to a property. The REGEXP
DQL
function used in this example can be found in the DoctrineExtensions
library. This library must be properly installed and registered to use this example (works only with MySQL).
<?php
// api/src/Filter/RegexpFilter.php
namespace App\Filter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\AbstractContextAwareFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Util\QueryNameGeneratorInterface;
use Doctrine\ORM\QueryBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\PropertyInfo\Type;
final class RegexpFilter extends AbstractContextAwareFilter
{
protected function filterProperty(string $property, $value, QueryBuilder $queryBuilder, QueryNameGeneratorInterface $queryNameGenerator, string $resourceClass, string $operationName = null)
{
// otherwise filter is applied to order and page as well
if (
!$this->isPropertyEnabled($property, $resourceClass) ||
!$this->isPropertyMapped($property, $resourceClass)
) {
return;
}
$parameterName = $queryNameGenerator->generateParameterName($property); // Generate a unique parameter name to avoid collisions with other filters
$queryBuilder
->andWhere(sprintf('REGEXP(o.%s, :%s) = 1', $property, $parameterName))
->setParameter($parameterName, $value);
}
// This function is only used to hook in documentation generators (supported by Swagger and Hydra)
public function getDescription(string $resourceClass): array
{
if (!$this->properties) {
return [];
}
$description = [];
foreach ($this->properties as $property => $strategy) {
$description["regexp_$property"] = [
'property' => $property,
'type' => Type::BUILTIN_TYPE_STRING,
'required' => false,
'description' => 'Filter using a regex. This will appear in the OpenApi documentation!',
'openapi' => [
'example' => 'Custom example that will be in the documentation and be the default value of the sandbox',
'allowReserved' => false,// if true, query parameters will be not percent-encoded
'allowEmptyValue' => true,
'explode' => false, // to be true, the type must be Type::BUILTIN_TYPE_ARRAY, ?product=blue,green will be ?product=blue&product=green
],
];
}
return $description;
}
}
Thanks to Symfony’s automatic service loading, which is enabled by default in the API Platform distribution, the filter is automatically registered as a service!
Finally, add this filter to resources you want to be filtered by using the ApiFilter
attribute:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use App\Filter\RegexpFilter;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(RegexpFilter::class)]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
You can now use this filter in the URL like http://example.com/offers?regexp_email=^[FOO]
. This new filter will also
appear in OpenAPI and Hydra documentations.
In the previous example, the filter can be applied on any property. You can also apply this filter on a specific property:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use App\Filter\RegexpFilter;
#[ApiResource]
class Offer
{
// ...
#[ApiFilter(RegexpFilter::class)]
public string $name;
}
If you don’t use Symfony’s automatic service loading, you have to register the filter as a service by yourself. Use the following service definition (remember, by default, this isn’t needed!):
# api/config/services.yaml
services:
# ...
# This whole definition can be omitted if automatic service loading is enabled
'App\Filter\RegexpFilter':
# The "arguments" key can be omitted if the autowiring is enabled
arguments: [ '@doctrine', ~, '@?logger' ]
# The "tags" key can be omitted if the autoconfiguration is enabled
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
In the previous example, the filter can be applied on any property. However, thanks to the AbstractFilter
class,
it can also be enabled for some properties:
# api/config/services.yaml
services:
'App\Filter\RegexpFilter':
arguments: [ '@doctrine', ~, '@?logger', { email: ~, anOtherProperty: ~ } ]
tags: [ 'api_platform.filter' ]
Finally, if you don’t want to use the #[ApiFilter]
attribute, you can register the filter on an API resource class using the filters
attribute:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Offer.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use App\Filter\RegexpFilter;
#[ApiResource(
attributes => [
'filters' => [RegexpFilter::class],
],
)]
class Offer
{
// ...
}
Doctrine MongoDB ODM filters have access to the context created from the HTTP request and to the aggregation builder instance used to retrieve data from the database and to execute complex operations on data. They are only applied to collections. If you want to deal with the aggregation pipeline generated to retrieve items, extensions are the way to go.
A Doctrine MongoDB ODM filter is basically a class implementing the ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\MongoDbOdm\Filter\FilterInterface
.
API Platform includes a convenient abstract class implementing this interface and providing utility methods: ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\MongoDbOdm\Filter\AbstractFilter
.
Elasticsearch filters have access to the context created from the HTTP request and to the Elasticsearch query clause. They are only applied to collections. If you want to deal with the query DSL through the search request body, extensions are the way to go.
Existing Elasticsearch filters are applied through a constant score query.
A constant score query filter is basically a class implementing the ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\ConstantScoreFilterInterface
and the ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\FilterInterface
. API Platform includes a convenient
abstract class implementing this last interface and providing utility methods: ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Filter\AbstractFilter
.
Suppose you want to use the match filter on a property named $fullName
and you want to add the and operator to your query:
<?php
// api/src/ElasticSearch/AndOperatorFilterExtension.php
namespace App\ElasticSearch;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Elasticsearch\DataProvider\Extension\RequestBodySearchCollectionExtensionInterface;
class AndOperatorFilterExtension implements RequestBodySearchCollectionExtensionInterface
{
public function applyToCollection(array $requestBody, string $resourceClass, ?string $operationName = null, array $context = []): array
{
$requestBody['query'] = $requestBody['query'] ?? [];
$andQuery = [
'query' => $context['filters']['fullName'],
'operator' => 'and',
];
$requestBody['query']['constant_score']['filter']['bool']['must'][0]['match']['full_name'] = $andQuery;
return $requestBody;
}
}
Doctrine ORM features a filter system that allows the developer to add SQL to the conditional clauses of queries, regardless of the place where the SQL is generated (e.g. from a DQL query, or by loading associated entities). These are applied on collections and items and therefore are incredibly useful.
The following information, specific to Doctrine filters in Symfony, is based upon a great article posted on Michaël Perrin’s blog.
Suppose we have a User
entity and an Order
entity related to the User
one. A user should only see his orders and no one else’s.
<?php
// api/src/Entity/User.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
#[ApiResource]
class User
{
// ...
}
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Order.php
namespace App\Entity;
use App\Entity\User;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
#[ApiResource]
class Order
{
// ...
#[ORM\ManyToOne(User::class)]
#[ORM\JoinColumn(name: "user_id", referencedColumnName: "id")]
public User $user;
// ...
}
The whole idea is that any query on the order table should add a WHERE user_id = :user_id
condition.
Start by creating a custom attribute to mark restricted entities:
<?php
// api/Annotation/UserAware.php
namespace App\Attribute;
use Attribute;
#[Attribute(Attribute::TARGET_CLASS)]
final class UserAware
{
public $userFieldName;
}
Then, let’s mark the Order
entity as a “user aware” entity.
<?php
// api/src/Entity/Order.php
namespace App\Entity;
use App\Attribute\UserAware;
#[UserAware(userFieldName: "user_id")]
class Order {
// ...
}
Now, create a Doctrine filter class:
<?php
// api/src/Filter/UserFilter.php
namespace App\Filter;
use App\Attribute\UserAware;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping\ClassMetadata;
use Doctrine\ORM\Query\Filter\SQLFilter;
final class UserFilter extends SQLFilter
{
public function addFilterConstraint(ClassMetadata $targetEntity, $targetTableAlias): string
{
// The Doctrine filter is called for any query on any entity
// Check if the current entity is "user aware" (marked with an attribute)
$userAware = $targetEntity->getReflectionClass()->getAttributes(UserAware::class)[0] ?? null;
$fieldName = $userAware?->getArguments()['userFieldName'] ?? null;
if ($fieldName === '' || is_null($fieldName)) {
return '';
}
try {
// Don't worry, getParameter automatically escapes parameters
$userId = $this->getParameter('id');
} catch (\InvalidArgumentException $e) {
// No user id has been defined
return '';
}
if (empty($fieldName) || empty($userId)) {
return '';
}
return sprintf('%s.%s = %s', $targetTableAlias, $fieldName, $userId);
}
}
Now, we must configure the Doctrine filter.
# api/config/packages/api_platform.yaml
doctrine:
orm:
filters:
user_filter:
class: App\Filter\UserFilter
enabled: true
Done: Doctrine will automatically filter all UserAware
entities!
The attribute can be used on a property
or on a class
.
If the attribute is given over a property, the filter will be configured on the property. For example, let’s add a search filter on name
and on the prop
property of the colors
relation:
<?php
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\SearchFilter;
use Doctrine\Common\Collections\ArrayCollection;
use Doctrine\Common\Collections\Collection;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use App\Entity\DummyCarColor;
#[ApiResource]
class DummyCar
{
#[ORM\Id, ORM\Column, ORM\GeneratedValue]
private ?int $id = null;
#[ORM\Column]
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, strategy: 'partial')]
public ?string $name = null;
#[ORM\OneToMany(mappedBy: "car", targetEntity: DummyCarColor::class)]
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['colors.prop' => 'ipartial'])]
public Collection $colors;
public function __construct()
{
$this->colors = new ArrayCollection();
}
// ...
}
On the first property, name
, it’s straightforward. The first attribute argument is the filter class, the second specifies options, here, the strategy:
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, strategy: 'partial')]
In the second attribute, we specify properties
on which the filter should apply. It’s necessary here because we don’t want to filter colors
but the prop
property of the colors
association.
Note that for each given property we specify the strategy:
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['colors.prop' => 'ipartial'])]
The ApiFilter
attribute can be set on the class as well. If you don’t specify any properties, it’ll act on every property of the class.
For example, let’s define three data filters (DateFilter
, SearchFilter
and BooleanFilter
) and two serialization filters (PropertyFilter
and GroupFilter
) on our DummyCar
class:
<?php
// api/src/Entity/DummyCar.php
namespace App\Entity;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Annotation\ApiResource;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\BooleanFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\DateFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Bridge\Doctrine\Orm\Filter\SearchFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Serializer\Filter\GroupFilter;
use ApiPlatform\Core\Serializer\Filter\PropertyFilter;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
#[ApiResource]
#[ApiFilter(BooleanFilter::class)]
#[ApiFilter(DateFilter::class, strategy: DateFilter::EXCLUDE_NULL)]
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['colors.prop' => 'ipartial', 'name' => 'partial'])]
#[ApiFilter(PropertyFilter::class, arguments: ['parameterName' => 'foobar'])]
#[ApiFilter(GroupFilter::class, arguments: ['parameterName' => 'foobargroups'])]
class DummyCar
{
// ...
}
The BooleanFilter
is applied to every Boolean
property of the class. Indeed, in each core filter we check the Doctrine type. It’s written only by using the filter class:
#[ApiFilter(BooleanFilter::class)]
The DateFilter
given here will be applied to every Date
property of the DummyCar
class with the DateFilter::EXCLUDE_NULL
strategy:
#[ApiFilter(DateFilter::class, strategy: DateFilter::EXCLUDE_NULL)]
The SearchFilter
here adds properties. The result is the exact same as the example with attributes on properties:
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: ['colors.prop' => 'ipartial', 'name' => 'partial'])]
Note that you can specify the properties
argument on every filter.
The next filters are not related to how the data is fetched but rather to how the serialization is done on those. We can give an arguments
option (see here for the available arguments):
#[ApiFilter(PropertyFilter::class, arguments: ['parameterName' => 'foobar'])]
#[ApiFilter(GroupFilter::class, arguments: ['parameterName' => 'foobargroups'])]
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