cascade={"remove"} VS orphanRemoval=true VS ondelete="CASCADE

Alexis_D picture Alexis_D · Dec 14, 2014 · Viewed 39.1k times · Source

I tried to gather few information about those following way to delete automatically child entity when a parent entity is deleted. Seems that the most common way is to use one those three annotation: cascade={"remove"} OR orphanRemoval=true OR ondelete="CASCADE".

I am a bit confuse about the third one: ondelete="CASCADE", as explanation in doctrine official documentation about this one are very scarce) and I would love if someone could confirm me the following information I gathered and understand from my research on the net and experience...

WHAT IT DOES

cascade={"remove"}
==> the entity on the inverse side is deleted when the owning side entity is. Even if you are in a manytomany with other owning side entity.
- should be used on collection (so in OneToMany or ManyToMany relationship)
- implementation in the ORM

orphanRemoval=true
==> the entity on the inverse side is deleted when the owning side entity is AND it is not connected to any other owning side entity anymore. (ref. doctrine official_doc - implementation in the ORM
- can be used with OneToOne, OnetoMany or ManyToMany

onDelete="CASCADE"
==> this will add On Delete Cascade to the foreign key column in the database
- This strategy is a bit tricky to get right but can be very powerful and fast. (ref. doctrine official_doc ... but haven't read more explainations)
- ORM has to do less work (compared to the two previous way of doing) and therefore should have better performance.

other information
- all those 3 way of doing are implemented on bidirectionnal relationnship entities (right???)
- using cascade={"remove"} completely by-passes any foreign key onDelete=CASCADE. (ref. doctrine_official_doc)

EXAMPLE ON HOW TO USE IT IN CODE

  • orphanRemoval and cascade={"remove"} are defined in the inversed entity class.
  • ondelete="CASCADE" is defined in the owner entity
  • you can also just write @ORM\JoinColumn(onDelete="CASCADE") and let doctrine handle the column names

cascade={"remove"}

/**
* @OneToMany(targetEntity="Phonenumber", mappedBy="contact", cascade={"remove"})
*/
protected $Phonenumbers

orphanRemoval=true

/**
* @OneToMany(targetEntity="Phonenumber", mappedBy="contact", orphanRemoval=true)
*/
protected $Phonenumbers

onDelete="CASCADE"

/** 
* @ManyToOne(targetEntity="Contact", inversedBy="phonenumbers")
* @JoinColumn(name="contact_id", referencedColumnName="contact_id", onDelete="CASCADE")
*/ 
protected $contact; 

Answer

Waaghals picture Waaghals · Dec 14, 2014

onDelete="CASCADE" is managed by the database itself. cascade={"remove"} is managed by doctrine.

onDelete="CASCADE" is faster because the operations are performed on database level instead by doctrine. The removing is performed by the database server and not Doctrine. With cascade={"remove"} doctrine has to manage the entity itself and will perform extra checks to see if it doesn't have any other owning entities. When no other exists it will delete the entity. But this creates overhead.


cascade={"remove"}

  • the entity on the inverse side is deleted when the owning side entity is. Even if you are in a manytomany with other owning side entity. No, if the entity is owned by something else. It won't be deleted.
  • should be used on collection (so in OneToMany or ManyToMany relationship)
  • implementation in the ORM

orphanRemoval="true"

  • the entity on the inverse side is deleted when the owning side entity is AND it is not connected to any other owning side entity anymore. Not exactly, this makes doctrine behave like it is not owned by an other entity, and thus remove it.
  • implementation in the ORM
  • can be used with OneToOne, OnetoMany or ManyToMany

onDelete="CASCADE"

  • this will add On Delete Cascade to the foreign key column IN THE DATABASE
  • This strategy is a bit tricky to get right but can be very powerful and fast. (this is a quote from doctrine official tutorial... but haven't seen much more explaination)
  • ORM has to do less work (compared to the two previous way of doing) and therefore should have better performance.