1. Adapter Agavi is really great FW, peace of art IMO – but I’ve been using Zend Framework for a while before I found it (Agavi) and lack of Zend_Db integration bothered me enough to make Me create that by myself.
http://pastie.caboo.se/170051 It is not sophisticated, but works. I think there is few features that I can add later (more profiler options maybe?). It’s an extension, so enabling it in application just needs some adjustments in databases.xml e.g.: <database name="zend" class="BaseZendDbDatabase"> <parameters> <parameter name="adapter">Pdo_Sqlite</parameter> <parameter name="config"> <parameters> <parameter name="dbname">/usr/www/mczp/app/data/mczp.sqlite</parameter> </parameters> </parameter> <parameter name="use_profiler">true</parameter> </parameters> </database> Of course don’t forget add /BaseZendDbDatabase/ class to autoloads e.g. <autoload name="BaseZendDbDatabase">%core.lib_dir%/database/BaseZendDbDatabase.class.php</autoload> 2. Models But what about integration with Agavis models management? It required few lines of code more: http://pastie.caboo.se/170085 and autoload line e.g. <autoload name="BaseZendDbModel">%core.lib_dir%/model/BaseZendDbModel.class.php</autoload> et voila, creating agavis models using Zend_Db_Table is as simple as: <?php class Blog_PostsModel extends BaseZendDbModel { protected $_name = 'news'; protected $_primary = 'id'; } ?> P.S. I know there is a problem of metadata (if cache is not provided, Zend_Db_Table queries database for table details each request),but in my case I would rather set that cache on my own, or even var_export that data and hard code it in the class. _______________________________________________ users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.agavi.org/mailman/listinfo/users
