A PHP object mapper for Redis.
An Object Mapper for Redis®, designed to providing an intuitive and familiar interface for PHP developers to interact with Redis.
- Doctrine-like methods and architecture
- Symfony bundle integration
- Easy integration with existing PHP applications
- High performance and scalability with Redis®
- Support for Redis JSON module
- Automatic schema generation
- Search and query capabilities
- Auto-expiration of your objects
- API Platform support (beta)
- PHP 8.2 or higher
- Redis 4.0 or higher
- Redisearch module (available by default with Redis >8 or in redis-stack distribution) (installation)
- php-redis extension OR Predis library
- Redis JSON module (optional, include in redis-stack)
- Composer
- scalar (string, int, float, bool, double)
- timestamp
- json
- null
- DateTimeImmutable
- DateTime
- array and nested arrays
- object and nested objects
- stdClass
Install the library via Composer:
composer require talleu/php-redis-om
Depending on your configuration, use phpredis or Predis
In a Symfony application, you may need to add this line to config/bundles.php
Talleu\RedisOm\Bundle\TalleuRedisOmBundle::class => ['all' => true],
And that's it, your installation is complete ! 🚀
For API Platform users, a basic implementation is provided here: API Platfom X Redis
Add the RedisOm attribute to your class to map it to a Redis schema:
<?php use Talleu\RedisOm\Om\Mapping as RedisOm; #[RedisOm\Entity] class User { #[RedisOm\Id] #[RedisOm\Property] public int $id; #[RedisOm\Property(index:true)] public string $name; #[RedisOm\Property] public \DateTimeImmutable $createdAt; }
After add the RedisOm attribute to your class, you have to run the following command to create the Redis schema for your classes (default path is ./src
):
For Symfony users:
bin/console redis-om:migrate
For others PHP applications:
vendor/bin/redisMigration <YOUR DIRECTORY PATH>
Then you can use the ObjectManager to persist your objects from Redis ! 💪
For Symfony users, just inject the RedisObjectManagerInterface in the constructor:
<?php namespace App\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController; use Talleu\RedisOm\Om\RedisObjectManagerInterface; use App\Entity\Book; class MySymfonyController extends AbstractController { public function __construct(private RedisObjectManagerInterface $redisObjectManager) {} #[Route('/', name: 'app_home')] public function index(): Response { $book = new Book(); $book->name = 'Martin Eden'; $this->redisObjectManager->persist($book); $this->redisObjectManager->flush(); //.. } }
For others PHP applications:
<?php use Talleu\RedisOm\Om\RedisObjectManager; $user = new User() $user->id = 1; $user->name = 'John Doe'; // Persist the object in redis $objectManager = new RedisObjectManager(); $objectManager->persist($user); $objectManager->flush();
🥳 Congratulations, your PHP object is now registered in Redis !
You can now retrieve your user wherever you like using the repository provided by the Object Manager (or the object manager directly):
// Retrieve the object from redis $user = $this->redisObjectManager->find(User::class, 1); $user = $this->redisObjectManager->getRepository(User::class)->find(1); $user = $this->redisObjectManager->getRepository(User::class)->findOneBy(['name' => 'John Doe']); // Retrieve a collection of objects $users = $this->redisObjectManager->getRepository(User::class)->findAll(); $users = $this->redisObjectManager->getRepository(User::class)->findBy(['name' => 'John Doe'], ['createdAt' => 'DESC'], 10);