Doctrine event for executeQuery aren't fired
Using Doctrine with Symfony, I noticed that events (as in this Symfony docs example) for executeQuery are not fired: they fire only when dealing with entities but not direct SQL (Connection->executeQuery).
Am I missing something or is this how it should work by design?
symfony event-handling doctrine
add a comment |
Using Doctrine with Symfony, I noticed that events (as in this Symfony docs example) for executeQuery are not fired: they fire only when dealing with entities but not direct SQL (Connection->executeQuery).
Am I missing something or is this how it should work by design?
symfony event-handling doctrine
1
It would improve your question if you could describe which events you did define how? "This is how it should work by design." The events are "Doctrine ORM" whileexecuteQuery
is using "Doctrine DBAL", the database abstraction layer.
– YetiCGN
Nov 21 '18 at 11:24
1
Nope. Not missing anything. Doctrine events are for the ORM layer. Not the Database Access Layer (DBAL).
– Cerad
Nov 21 '18 at 12:41
add a comment |
Using Doctrine with Symfony, I noticed that events (as in this Symfony docs example) for executeQuery are not fired: they fire only when dealing with entities but not direct SQL (Connection->executeQuery).
Am I missing something or is this how it should work by design?
symfony event-handling doctrine
Using Doctrine with Symfony, I noticed that events (as in this Symfony docs example) for executeQuery are not fired: they fire only when dealing with entities but not direct SQL (Connection->executeQuery).
Am I missing something or is this how it should work by design?
symfony event-handling doctrine
symfony event-handling doctrine
edited Nov 21 '18 at 12:46
numediaweb
asked Nov 21 '18 at 10:53
numediawebnumediaweb
9,25185380
9,25185380
1
It would improve your question if you could describe which events you did define how? "This is how it should work by design." The events are "Doctrine ORM" whileexecuteQuery
is using "Doctrine DBAL", the database abstraction layer.
– YetiCGN
Nov 21 '18 at 11:24
1
Nope. Not missing anything. Doctrine events are for the ORM layer. Not the Database Access Layer (DBAL).
– Cerad
Nov 21 '18 at 12:41
add a comment |
1
It would improve your question if you could describe which events you did define how? "This is how it should work by design." The events are "Doctrine ORM" whileexecuteQuery
is using "Doctrine DBAL", the database abstraction layer.
– YetiCGN
Nov 21 '18 at 11:24
1
Nope. Not missing anything. Doctrine events are for the ORM layer. Not the Database Access Layer (DBAL).
– Cerad
Nov 21 '18 at 12:41
1
1
It would improve your question if you could describe which events you did define how? "This is how it should work by design." The events are "Doctrine ORM" while
executeQuery
is using "Doctrine DBAL", the database abstraction layer.– YetiCGN
Nov 21 '18 at 11:24
It would improve your question if you could describe which events you did define how? "This is how it should work by design." The events are "Doctrine ORM" while
executeQuery
is using "Doctrine DBAL", the database abstraction layer.– YetiCGN
Nov 21 '18 at 11:24
1
1
Nope. Not missing anything. Doctrine events are for the ORM layer. Not the Database Access Layer (DBAL).
– Cerad
Nov 21 '18 at 12:41
Nope. Not missing anything. Doctrine events are for the ORM layer. Not the Database Access Layer (DBAL).
– Cerad
Nov 21 '18 at 12:41
add a comment |
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1
It would improve your question if you could describe which events you did define how? "This is how it should work by design." The events are "Doctrine ORM" while
executeQuery
is using "Doctrine DBAL", the database abstraction layer.– YetiCGN
Nov 21 '18 at 11:24
1
Nope. Not missing anything. Doctrine events are for the ORM layer. Not the Database Access Layer (DBAL).
– Cerad
Nov 21 '18 at 12:41