I have Event bel开发者_开发技巧ongsTo Venue association. When a user tries to delete a venue, I don't want it to happen when one or more event is associated with it. What's the most automagic way to do it?
If you setup a counterCache on the relationship and use deleteAll instead of delete you can pass conditions to the delete query based on the number of events attached to the venue.
<?php
/**
* Event Model
*
* uses table events
* @fields array( id, venue_id, ... )
*
*/
class Event extends AppModel {
public $name = "Event";
// setup the relationship to venues table with a counterCache
public $belongsTo = array(
'Venue' => array(
'className' => 'Venue',
'counterCache' => true
)
);
}
?>
<?php
/**
* Venue Model
*
* uses venues table
* @fields array( id, event_count, ... )
*
*/
class Venue extends AppModel {
public $name = "Venue";
// setup the relationship to events table
public $hasMany = array(
'Event' => array(
'className' => 'Event',
)
);
}
?>
<?php
/**
* Venues Controller
*
* example of a delete function using deleteAll to include conditions instead of delete which only takes an id
*
*/
class VenuesController extends AppController {
/**
* delete a venue
*
* checks to make sure a venue has no events and then deletes it.
*/
public function delete( $id = null ){
if( $id ){
// make sure the conditions array checks for event_count re: counterCache
$conditions = array( 'Venue.id' => $id, 'Venue.event_count' => 0 );
// run deleteAll but enable callbacks so that the deleteAll functions as a normal delete
( $this->Venue->deleteAll( $conditions, true, true )) ? $this->Session->setFlash( "Event deleted" ) : $this->Session->setFlash( "Event still has attached events and could not be deleted." );
}
return $this->redirect( array( 'controller' => 'venues', 'action' => 'index' ));
}
}
?>
I'd just code it, probably on the Venue model.
See http://book.cakephp.org/view/685/beforeDelete
If you're using InnoDB tables you can add a foreign key constraint that prevents Venues from being deleted if it has events and if the Venue ID is updated, it automatically updates the venue_id values in the events table.
ALTER TABLE `events` ADD FOREIGN KEY ( `venue_id` ) REFERENCES `venues` (`id`) ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE CASCADE ;
Or something like that anyway.
It just an option that you can use if you want that adds that extra robustness at the data level in case there is a bug in your app that prevents the restriction being detected in the code. I would add it in the code as well so your app doesn't get an SQL warning/error.
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