I am trying to use email as my table's primary key, so my eloquent code is-
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class UserVerification extends Model
{
protected $table = 'user_verification';
protected $fillable = [
'email',
'verification_token'
];
//$timestamps = false;
protected $primaryKey = 'verification_token';
}
And my DB is like this-
but if I do this-
UserVerification::where('verification_token', $token)->first();
I am getting this-
{
"email": "[email protected]",
"verification_token": 0,
"created_at": "2016-01-03 22:27:44",
"updated_at": "2016-01-03 22:27:44"
}
So, the verification token/primary key becomes 0.
Can anyone please help?
This was added to the upgrade documentation on Dec 29, 2015, so if you upgraded before then you probably missed it.
When fetching any attribute from the model it checks if that column should be cast as an integer, string, etc.
By default, for auto-incrementing tables, the ID is assumed to be an integer in this method:
https://github.com/laravel/framework/blob/5.2/src/Illuminate/Database/Eloquent/Model.php#L2790
So the solution is:
class UserVerification extends Model
{
protected $primaryKey = 'your_key_name'; // or null
public $incrementing = false;
// In Laravel 6.0+ make sure to also set $keyType
protected $keyType = 'string';
}