Can anyone assist in pointing me to a tutorial, library, etc. that will allow me to work with MongoDB from CodeIgniter?
问题:
回答1:
I'm not sure if its the "CodeIgniter way" but I created a CodeIgniter library that extends the Mongo class with an extra property to store the current database connection.
Here are the relevant code files from my project.
config/mongo.php
$config['mongo_server'] = null;
$config['mongo_dbname'] = 'mydb';
libraries/Mongo.php
class CI_Mongo extends Mongo
{
var $db;
function CI_Mongo()
{
// Fetch CodeIgniter instance
$ci = get_instance();
// Load Mongo configuration file
$ci->load->config('mongo');
// Fetch Mongo server and database configuration
$server = $ci->config->item('mongo_server');
$dbname = $ci->config->item('mongo_dbname');
// Initialise Mongo
if ($server)
{
parent::__construct($server);
}
else
{
parent::__construct();
}
$this->db = $this->$dbname;
}
}
And a sample controller
controllers/posts.php
class Posts extends Controller
{
function Posts()
{
parent::Controller();
}
function index()
{
$posts = $this->mongo->db->posts->find();
foreach ($posts as $id => $post)
{
var_dump($id);
var_dump($post);
}
}
function create()
{
$post = array('title' => 'Test post');
$this->mongo->db->posts->insert($post);
var_dump($post);
}
}
回答2:
MongoDB is very well supported within CodeIgniter community, take the time and dive in :p
- CodeIgniter MongoDB Active Document Library
- CodeIgniter MongoDB Session Library
- CodeIgniter MongoDB Authentication Library
- CodeIgniter MongoDB REST Server Library
- CodeIgniter MongoDB Base Model
回答3:
I like Stephen Curran's example as it is simple and allows an interface to Mongo without too much functionality written within Php, I tend to find huge abstraction clases a bit much at times for what I am after.
I have extended his example to include database authentication. Go here: http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Security+and+Authentication to read about mongo authentication, don't forget to enable authentication for the Mongo Server you are connecting to.
I have also changed the old style constructor function to be __construct and am handling Mongo Connection Exceptions as they can reveal your username and password.
config/mongo.php
<?php if ( ! defined('BASEPATH')) exit('No direct script access allowed');
$config['mongo_server'] = 'localhost';
$config['mongo_dbname'] = 'my_mongo_db';
$config['mongo_username'] = 'mongo_user';
$config['mongo_password'] = 'password1234';
/* End of file mongo.php */
libraries/Mongo.php
<?php
class CI_Mongo extends Mongo{
protected $db;
function __construct()
{
// Fetch CodeIgniter instance
$ci = get_instance();
// Load Mongo configuration file
$ci->load->config('mongo');
// Fetch Mongo server and database configuration
$server = $ci->config->item('mongo_server');
$username = $ci->config->item('mongo_username');
$password = $ci->config->item('mongo_password');
$dbname = $ci->config->item('mongo_dbname');
// Initialise Mongo - Authentication required
try{
parent::__construct("mongodb://$username:$password@$server/$dbname");
$this->db = $this->$dbname;
}catch(MongoConnectionException $e){
//Don't show Mongo Exceptions as they can contain authentication info
$_error =& load_class('Exceptions', 'core');
exit($_error->show_error('MongoDB Connection Error', 'A MongoDB error occured while trying to connect to the database!', 'error_db'));
}catch(Exception $e){
$_error =& load_class('Exceptions', 'core');
exit($_error->show_error('MongoDB Error',$e->getMessage(), 'error_db'));
}
}
}
回答4:
Working with MongoDB in CodeIgniter wouldn't be much different than working with it anywhere else.
You could knock together a MongoDB library that would connect in the constructor and store $this->conn to be used in methods later on.
then either work directly with the conn property in your controllers or create a few methods in your MongoDB library to do this for you.
Take a look here to see the plain PHP tutorial for working with MongoDB.
I'd happily create you a library for this but it would come with a price. :-p
回答5:
I'm using MongoDB w/ CI and came up with the following. It works for me, but I'm sure it can be tweaked somewhat. I'll worry about tweaking it later but right now it does what I want.
I created a model called "database_conn.php"
class Database_Conn extends Model {
function _connect() {
$m = new Mongo();
$db = $m->selectDB( "YOUR DATABASE NAME" );
return $db;
}
}
Then, if I need to connect to a collection from my models.
$collection = Database_Conn::_connect()->selectCollection( "COLLECTION NAME" );