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Change Tracking Policies

Change tracking is the process of determining what has changed in managed documents since the last time they were synchronized with the database.

Doctrine provides 3 different change tracking policies, each having its particular advantages and disadvantages. The change tracking policy can be defined on a per-class basis (or more precisely, per-hierarchy).

Deferred Implicit

The deferred implicit policy is the default change tracking policy and the most convenient one. With this policy, Doctrine detects the changes by a property-by-property comparison at commit time and also detects changes to documents or new documents that are referenced by other managed documents. Although the most convenient policy, it can have negative effects on performance if you are dealing with large units of work. Since Doctrine can't know what has changed, it needs to check all managed documents for changes every time you invoke DocumentManager#flush(), making this operation rather costly.

Deferred Explicit

The deferred explicit policy is similar to the deferred implicit policy in that it detects changes through a property-by-property comparison at commit time. The difference is that only documents are considered that have been explicitly marked for change detection through a call to DocumentManager#persist(document) or through a save cascade. All other documents are skipped. This policy therefore gives improved performance for larger units of work while sacrificing the behavior of automatic dirty checking.

Therefore, flush() operations are potentially cheaper with this policy. The negative aspect this has is that if you have a rather large application and you pass your objects through several layers for processing purposes and business tasks you may need to track yourself which documents have changed on the way so you can pass them to DocumentManager#persist().

This policy can be configured as follows:

1<?php /** * @Document * @ChangeTrackingPolicy("DEFERRED_EXPLICIT") */ class User { // ... }
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Notify

This policy is based on the assumption that the documents notify interested listeners of changes to their properties. For that purpose, a class that wants to use this policy needs to implement the NotifyPropertyChanged interface from the Doctrine namespace. As a guideline, such an implementation can look as follows:

1<?php use Doctrine\Common\NotifyPropertyChanged, Doctrine\Common\PropertyChangedListener; /** * @Document * @ChangeTrackingPolicy("NOTIFY") */ class MyDocument implements NotifyPropertyChanged { // ... private $_listeners = array(); public function addPropertyChangedListener(PropertyChangedListener $listener) { $this->_listeners[] = $listener; } }
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Then, in each property setter of this class or derived classes, you need to notify all the PropertyChangedListener instances. As an example we add a convenience method on MyDocument that shows this behavior:

1<?php // ... class MyDocument implements NotifyPropertyChanged { // ... protected function _onPropertyChanged($propName, $oldValue, $newValue) { if ($this->_listeners) { foreach ($this->_listeners as $listener) { $listener->propertyChanged($this, $propName, $oldValue, $newValue); } } } public function setData($data) { if ($data != $this->data) { $this->_onPropertyChanged('data', $this->data, $data); $this->data = $data; } } }
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You have to invoke _onPropertyChanged inside every method that changes the persistent state of MyDocument.

The check whether the new value is different from the old one is not mandatory but recommended. That way you also have full control over when you consider a property changed.

The negative point of this policy is obvious: You need implement an interface and write some plumbing code. But also note that we tried hard to keep this notification functionality abstract. Strictly speaking, it has nothing to do with the persistence layer. You may find that property notification events come in handy in many other scenarios as well. As mentioned earlier, the Doctrine\Common namespace is not that evil and consists solely of very small classes and interfaces that have almost no external dependencies and that you can easily take with you should you want to swap out the persistence layer. This change tracking policy does not introduce a dependency on the Doctrine persistence layer.

The positive point and main advantage of this policy is its effectiveness. It has the best performance characteristics of the 3 policies with larger units of work and a flush() operation is very cheap when nothing has changed.