⚠ Please go to DoctrineExtensions for the "real deal".
A set of extensions to Doctrine 2 that add support for functions available in MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL and SQLite.
DB | Functions |
---|---|
MySQL | ACOS, AES_DECRYPT, AES_ENCRYPT, ANY_VALUE, ASCII, ASIN, ATAN, ATAN2, BINARY, BIT_COUNT, BIT_XOR, CAST, CEIL, CHAR_LENGTH, COLLATE, CONCAT_WS, CONVERT_TZ, COS, COT, COUNTIF, CRC32, DATE, DATE_FORMAT, DATEADD, DATEDIFF, DATESUB, DAY, DAYNAME, DAYOFWEEK, DAYOFYEAR, DEGREES, DIV, EXP, EXTRACT, FIELD, FIND_IN_SET, FLOOR, FROM_UNIXTIME, GREATEST, GROUP_CONCAT, HEX, HOUR, IFELSE, IFNULL, INET_ATON, INET_NTOA, INET6_ATON, INET6_NTOA, INSTR, IS_IPV4, IS_IPV4_COMPAT, IS_IPV4_MAPPED, IS_IPV6, LAST_DAY, LEAST, LOG, LOG10, LOG2, LPAD, MATCH, MD5, MINUTE, MONTH, MONTHNAME, NOW, NULLIF, PERIOD_DIFF, PI, POWER, QUARTER, RADIANS, RAND, REGEXP, REPLACE, ROUND, RPAD, SECOND, SECTOTIME, SHA1, SHA2, SIN, SOUNDEX, STD, STDDEV, STRTODATE, STR_TO_DATE, SUBSTRING_INDEX, TAN, TIME, TIMEDIFF, TIMESTAMPADD, TIMESTAMPDIFF, TIMETOSEC, UNHEX, UNIX_TIMESTAMP, UTC_TIMESTAMP, UUID_SHORT, VARIANCE, WEEK, WEEKDAY, YEAR, YEARMONTH, YEARWEEK |
Oracle | DAY, LISTAGG, MONTH, NVL, TO_CHAR, TO_DATE, TRUNC, YEAR |
Sqlite | DATE, MINUTE, HOUR, DAY, WEEK, WEEKDAY, MONTH, YEAR, STRFTIME, DATE_FORMAT*, CASE WHEN THEN ELSE END, IFNULL, REPLACE, ROUND |
PostgreSQL | TO_DATE, TO_CHAR, AT_TIME_ZONE, COUNT_FILTER, STRING_AGG |
Note: Sqlite date functions are implemented as
strftime(format, value)
. Sqlite only supports the most common formats, sodate_format
will convert the mysql substitutions to the closest available sqlite substitutions. This meansdate_format(field, '%b %D %Y') -> Jan 1st 2015
becomesstrftime('%m %d %Y', field) -> 01 01 2015
.
To install this library, run the command below and you will get the latest version:
composer require beberlei/DoctrineExtensions
If you want to run phpunit:
make test
If you want to run php-cs-fixer:
make fix # (or make lint for a dry-run)
If you are using DoctrineExtensions with Symfony, you should read their documentation on How to Register custom DQL Functions.
You can find example Symfony configuration for using DoctrineExtensions custom DQL functions in config.
If you are using DoctrineExtensions standalone, you might want to fire up the autoloader:
<?php
$classLoader = new \Doctrine\Common\ClassLoader('DoctrineExtensions', '/path/to/extensions');
$classLoader->register();
For more information check out the documentation of Doctrine DQL User Defined Functions.