Doctrine2's default GUID works as a native data type for platforms that support it (Oracle, MSSQL, PostgreSQL) but falls back to VARCHAR in others (MySQL, SQLite).
- BINARY:
binary_guid
is an alternative of the defaultguid
type which uses BINARY(16) on all platforms (or VARBINARY(16) on platforms without fixed length binary). The default GeneratedValue (UUID
) is used as the generator function andhex2bin
/bin2hex
converters are used.BinaryGuidType
extendsBinaryType
. - SHORT:
short_guid
is an extension of the defaultguid
type which uses BIGINT as a fallback type for UUIDs in MySQL instead of VARCHAR. TheUUID_SHORT()
function from MySQL is used as the generator function and the results are handled as integers.ShortGuidType
extendsGuidType
.
N.B.: !!! MySQl's short UUIDs are not standard UUIDs and they are not guaranteed to be unique across (...more than 256...) servers.
Sets and enums are not supported in Doctrine2 by default but they can be treated as strings in most scenarios.
- SET:
set
is a naive implementation of MySQL'sset
data type represented in PHP as an array of strings. The type only supports generating create statements and implode / explode converters.SetType
extendsSimpleArrayType
.
Adding the following lines in your app/config.yml
(for Symfony2 projects) should do the trick:
doctrine:
dbal:
types:
binary_guid: MS\DoctrineTypes\DBAL\Types\BinaryGuidType
short_guid: MS\DoctrineTypes\DBAL\Types\ShortGuidType
set: MS\DoctrineTypes\DBAL\Types\SetType
mapping_types:
binary_guid: binary_guid
short_guid: short_guid
set: set
And adding the following Annotation comments in your entity definitions should finish the job:
/**
* @Id
* @Column(type="binary_guid")
* @GeneratedValue(strategy="UUID")
*/
or
/**
* @Id
* @Column(type="short_guid")
* @GeneratedValue(strategy="CUSTOM")
* @CustomIdGenerator(class="MS\DoctrineTypes\ORM\Id\ShortGuidGenerator")
*/
or
/**
* @Column(type="set", options={ "values"={"value1", "value2"} })
*/