Eloquent: Relationships
Introduction
Database tables are often related to one another. For example, a blog post may have many comments, or an order could be related to the user who placed it. Eloquent makes managing and working with these relationships easy, and supports several different types of relationships:
- One To One
- One To Many
- Many To Many
- Has One Through
- Has Many Through
- One To One (Polymorphic)
- One To Many (Polymorphic)
- Many To Many (Polymorphic)
Defining Relationships
Eloquent relationships are defined as methods on your Eloquent model classes. Since, like Eloquent models themselves, relationships also serve as powerful query builders, defining relationships as methods provides powerful method chaining and querying capabilities. For example, we may chain additional constraints on this posts
relationship:
$user->posts()->where('active', 1)->get();
But, before diving too deep into using relationships, let's learn how to define each type.
Relationship names cannot collide with attribute names as that could lead to your model not being able to know which one to resolve.
One To One
A one-to-one relationship is a very basic relation. For example, a User
model might be associated with one Phone
. To define this relationship, we place a phone
method on the User
model. The phone
method should call the hasOne
method and return its result:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class User extends Model
{
/**
* Get the phone record associated with the user.
*/
public function phone()
{
return $this->hasOne('App\Phone');
}
}
The first argument passed to the hasOne
method is the name of the related model. Once the relationship is defined, we may retrieve the related record using Eloquent's dynamic properties. Dynamic properties allow you to access relationship methods as if they were properties defined on the model:
$phone = User::find(1)->phone;
Eloquent determines the foreign key of the relationship based on the model name. In this case, the Phone
model is automatically assumed to have a user_id
foreign key. If you wish to override this convention, you may pass a second argument to the hasOne
method:
return $this->hasOne('App\Phone', 'foreign_key');
Additionally, Eloquent assumes that the foreign key should have a value matching the id
(or the custom $primaryKey
) column of the parent. In other words, Eloquent will look for the value of the user's id
column in the user_id
column of the Phone
record. If you would like the relationship to use a value other than id
, you may pass a third argument to the hasOne
method specifying your custom key:
return $this->hasOne('App\Phone', 'foreign_key', 'local_key');
Defining The Inverse Of The Relationship
So, we can access the Phone
model from our User
. Now, let's define a relationship on the Phone
model that will let us access the User
that owns the phone. We can define the inverse of a hasOne
relationship using the belongsTo
method:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Phone extends Model
{
/**
* Get the user that owns the phone.
*/
public function user()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\User');
}
}
In the example above, Eloquent will try to match the user_id
from the Phone
model to an id
on the User
model. Eloquent determines the default foreign key name by examining the name of the relationship method and suffixing the method name with _id
. However, if the foreign key on the Phone
model is not user_id
, you may pass a custom key name as the second argument to the belongsTo
method:
/**
* Get the user that owns the phone.
*/
public function user()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\User', 'foreign_key');
}
If your parent model does not use id
as its primary key, or you wish to join the child model to a different column, you may pass a third argument to the belongsTo
method specifying your parent table's custom key:
/**
* Get the user that owns the phone.
*/
public function user()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\User', 'foreign_key', 'other_key');
}
One To Many
A one-to-many relationship is used to define relationships where a single model owns any amount of other models. For example, a blog post may have an infinite number of comments. Like all other Eloquent relationships, one-to-many relationships are defined by placing a function on your Eloquent model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Post extends Model
{
/**
* Get the comments for the blog post.
*/
public function comments()
{
return $this->hasMany('App\Comment');
}
}
Remember, Eloquent will automatically determine the proper foreign key column on the Comment
model. By convention, Eloquent will take the "snake case" name of the owning model and suffix it with _id
. So, for this example, Eloquent will assume the foreign key on the Comment
model is post_id
.
Once the relationship has been defined, we can access the collection of comments by accessing the comments
property. Remember, since Eloquent provides "dynamic properties", we can access relationship methods as if they were defined as properties on the model:
$comments = App\Post::find(1)->comments;
foreach ($comments as $comment) {
//
}
Since all relationships also serve as query builders, you can add further constraints to which comments are retrieved by calling the comments
method and continuing to chain conditions onto the query:
$comment = App\Post::find(1)->comments()->where('title', 'foo')->first();
Like the hasOne
method, you may also override the foreign and local keys by passing additional arguments to the hasMany
method:
return $this->hasMany('App\Comment', 'foreign_key');
return $this->hasMany('App\Comment', 'foreign_key', 'local_key');
One To Many (Inverse)
Now that we can access all of a post's comments, let's define a relationship to allow a comment to access its parent post. To define the inverse of a hasMany
relationship, define a relationship function on the child model which calls the belongsTo
method:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Comment extends Model
{
/**
* Get the post that owns the comment.
*/
public function post()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\Post');
}
}
Once the relationship has been defined, we can retrieve the Post
model for a Comment
by accessing the post
"dynamic property":
$comment = App\Comment::find(1);
echo $comment->post->title;
In the example above, Eloquent will try to match the post_id
from the Comment
model to an id
on the Post
model. Eloquent determines the default foreign key name by examining the name of the relationship method and suffixing the method name with a _
followed by the name of the primary key column. However, if the foreign key on the Comment
model is not post_id
, you may pass a custom key name as the second argument to the belongsTo
method:
/**
* Get the post that owns the comment.
*/
public function post()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\Post', 'foreign_key');
}
If your parent model does not use id
as its primary key, or you wish to join the child model to a different column, you may pass a third argument to the belongsTo
method specifying your parent table's custom key:
/**
* Get the post that owns the comment.
*/
public function post()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\Post', 'foreign_key', 'other_key');
}
Many To Many
Many-to-many relations are slightly more complicated than hasOne
and hasMany
relationships. An example of such a relationship is a user with many roles, where the roles are also shared by other users. For example, many users may have the role of "Admin".
Table Structure
To define this relationship, three database tables are needed: users
, roles
, and role_user
. The role_user
table is derived from the alphabetical order of the related model names, and contains the user_id
and role_id
columns:
users
id - integer
name - string
roles
id - integer
name - string
role_user
user_id - integer
role_id - integer
Model Structure
Many-to-many relationships are defined by writing a method that returns the result of the belongsToMany
method. For example, let's define the roles
method on our User
model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class User extends Model
{
/**
* The roles that belong to the user.
*/
public function roles()
{
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role');
}
}
Once the relationship is defined, you may access the user's roles using the roles
dynamic property:
$user = App\User::find(1);
foreach ($user->roles as $role) {
//
}
Like all other relationship types, you may call the roles
method to continue chaining query constraints onto the relationship:
$roles = App\User::find(1)->roles()->orderBy('name')->get();
As mentioned previously, to determine the table name of the relationship's joining table, Eloquent will join the two related model names in alphabetical order. However, you are free to override this convention. You may do so by passing a second argument to the belongsToMany
method:
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role', 'role_user');
In addition to customizing the name of the joining table, you may also customize the column names of the keys on the table by passing additional arguments to the belongsToMany
method. The third argument is the foreign key name of the model on which you are defining the relationship, while the fourth argument is the foreign key name of the model that you are joining to:
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role', 'role_user', 'user_id', 'role_id');
Defining The Inverse Of The Relationship
To define the inverse of a many-to-many relationship, you place another call to belongsToMany
on your related model. To continue our user roles example, let's define the users
method on the Role
model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Role extends Model
{
/**
* The users that belong to the role.
*/
public function users()
{
return $this->belongsToMany('App\User');
}
}
As you can see, the relationship is defined exactly the same as its User
counterpart, with the exception of referencing the App\User
model. Since we're reusing the belongsToMany
method, all of the usual table and key customization options are available when defining the inverse of many-to-many relationships.
Retrieving Intermediate Table Columns
As you have already learned, working with many-to-many relations requires the presence of an intermediate table. Eloquent provides some very helpful ways of interacting with this table. For example, let's assume our User
object has many Role
objects that it is related to. After accessing this relationship, we may access the intermediate table using the pivot
attribute on the models:
$user = App\User::find(1);
foreach ($user->roles as $role) {
echo $role->pivot->created_at;
}
Notice that each Role
model we retrieve is automatically assigned a pivot
attribute. This attribute contains a model representing the intermediate table, and may be used like any other Eloquent model.
By default, only the model keys will be present on the pivot
object. If your pivot table contains extra attributes, you must specify them when defining the relationship:
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role')->withPivot('column1', 'column2');
If you want your pivot table to have automatically maintained created_at
and updated_at
timestamps, use the withTimestamps
method on the relationship definition:
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role')->withTimestamps();
Customizing The pivot
Attribute Name
As noted earlier, attributes from the intermediate table may be accessed on models using the pivot
attribute. However, you are free to customize the name of this attribute to better reflect its purpose within your application.
For example, if your application contains users that may subscribe to podcasts, you probably have a many-to-many relationship between users and podcasts. If this is the case, you may wish to rename your intermediate table accessor to subscription
instead of pivot
. This can be done using the as
method when defining the relationship:
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Podcast')
->as('subscription')
->withTimestamps();
Once this is done, you may access the intermediate table data using the customized name:
$users = User::with('podcasts')->get();
foreach ($users->flatMap->podcasts as $podcast) {
echo $podcast->subscription->created_at;
}
Filtering Relationships Via Intermediate Table Columns
You can also filter the results returned by belongsToMany
using the wherePivot
, wherePivotIn
, and wherePivotNotIn
methods when defining the relationship:
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role')->wherePivot('approved', 1);
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role')->wherePivotIn('priority', [1, 2]);
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Role')->wherePivotNotIn('priority', [1, 2]);
Defining Custom Intermediate Table Models
If you would like to define a custom model to represent the intermediate table of your relationship, you may call the using
method when defining the relationship. Custom many-to-many pivot models should extend the Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Pivot
class while custom polymorphic many-to-many pivot models should extend the Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\MorphPivot
class. For example, we may define a Role
which uses a custom RoleUser
pivot model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Role extends Model
{
/**
* The users that belong to the role.
*/
public function users()
{
return $this->belongsToMany('App\User')->using('App\RoleUser');
}
}
When defining the RoleUser
model, we will extend the Pivot
class:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Pivot;
class RoleUser extends Pivot
{
//
}
You can combine using
and withPivot
in order to retrieve columns from the intermediate table. For example, you may retrieve the created_by
and updated_by
columns from the RoleUser
pivot table by passing the column names to the withPivot
method:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Role extends Model
{
/**
* The users that belong to the role.
*/
public function users()
{
return $this->belongsToMany('App\User')
->using('App\RoleUser')
->withPivot([
'created_by',
'updated_by',
]);
}
}
Pivot models may not use the SoftDeletes
trait. If you need to soft delete pivot records consider converting your pivot model to an actual Eloquent model.
Custom Pivot Models And Incrementing IDs
If you have defined a many-to-many relationship that uses a custom pivot model, and that pivot model has an auto-incrementing primary key, you should ensure your custom pivot model class defines an incrementing
property that is set to true
.
/**
* Indicates if the IDs are auto-incrementing.
*
* @var bool
*/
public $incrementing = true;
Has One Through
The "has-one-through" relationship links models through a single intermediate relation. For example, if each supplier has one user, and each user is associated with one user history record, then the supplier model may access the user's history through the user. Let's look at the database tables necessary to define this relationship:
users
id - integer
supplier_id - integer
suppliers
id - integer
history
id - integer
user_id - integer
Though the history
table does not contain a supplier_id
column, the hasOneThrough
relation can provide access to the user's history to the supplier model. Now that we have examined the table structure for the relationship, let's define it on the Supplier
model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Supplier extends Model
{
/**
* Get the user's history.
*/
public function userHistory()
{
return $this->hasOneThrough('App\History', 'App\User');
}
}
The first argument passed to the hasOneThrough
method is the name of the final model we wish to access, while the second argument is the name of the intermediate model.
Typical Eloquent foreign key conventions will be used when performing the relationship's queries. If you would like to customize the keys of the relationship, you may pass them as the third and fourth arguments to the hasOneThrough
method. The third argument is the name of the foreign key on the intermediate model. The fourth argument is the name of the foreign key on the final model. The fifth argument is the local key, while the sixth argument is the local key of the intermediate model:
class Supplier extends Model
{
/**
* Get the user's history.
*/
public function userHistory()
{
return $this->hasOneThrough(
'App\History',
'App\User',
'supplier_id', // Foreign key on users table...
'user_id', // Foreign key on history table...
'id', // Local key on suppliers table...
'id' // Local key on users table...
);
}
}
Has Many Through
The "has-many-through" relationship provides a convenient shortcut for accessing distant relations via an intermediate relation. For example, a Country
model might have many Post
models through an intermediate User
model. In this example, you could easily gather all blog posts for a given country. Let's look at the tables required to define this relationship:
countries
id - integer
name - string
users
id - integer
country_id - integer
name - string
posts
id - integer
user_id - integer
title - string
Though posts
does not contain a country_id
column, the hasManyThrough
relation provides access to a country's posts via $country->posts
. To perform this query, Eloquent inspects the country_id
on the intermediate users
table. After finding the matching user IDs, they are used to query the posts
table.
Now that we have examined the table structure for the relationship, let's define it on the Country
model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Country extends Model
{
/**
* Get all of the posts for the country.
*/
public function posts()
{
return $this->hasManyThrough('App\Post', 'App\User');
}
}
The first argument passed to the hasManyThrough
method is the name of the final model we wish to access, while the second argument is the name of the intermediate model.
Typical Eloquent foreign key conventions will be used when performing the relationship's queries. If you would like to customize the keys of the relationship, you may pass them as the third and fourth arguments to the hasManyThrough
method. The third argument is the name of the foreign key on the intermediate model. The fourth argument is the name of the foreign key on the final model. The fifth argument is the local key, while the sixth argument is the local key of the intermediate model:
class Country extends Model
{
public function posts()
{
return $this->hasManyThrough(
'App\Post',
'App\User',
'country_id', // Foreign key on users table...
'user_id', // Foreign key on posts table...
'id', // Local key on countries table...
'id' // Local key on users table...
);
}
}
Polymorphic Relationships
A polymorphic relationship allows the target model to belong to more than one type of model using a single association.
One To One (Polymorphic)
Table Structure
A one-to-one polymorphic relation is similar to a simple one-to-one relation; however, the target model can belong to more than one type of model on a single association. For example, a blog Post
and a User
may share a polymorphic relation to an Image
model. Using a one-to-one polymorphic relation allows you to have a single list of unique images that are used for both blog posts and user accounts. First, let's examine the table structure:
posts
id - integer
name - string
users
id - integer
name - string
images
id - integer
url - string
imageable_id - integer
imageable_type - string
Take note of the imageable_id
and imageable_type
columns on the images
table. The imageable_id
column will contain the ID value of the post or user, while the imageable_type
column will contain the class name of the parent model. The imageable_type
column is used by Eloquent to determine which "type" of parent model to return when accessing the imageable
relation.
Model Structure
Next, let's examine the model definitions needed to build this relationship:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Image extends Model
{
/**
* Get the owning imageable model.
*/
public function imageable()
{
return $this->morphTo();
}
}
class Post extends Model
{
/**
* Get the post's image.
*/
public function image()
{
return $this->morphOne('App\Image', 'imageable');
}
}
class User extends Model
{
/**
* Get the user's image.
*/
public function image()
{
return $this->morphOne('App\Image', 'imageable');
}
}
Retrieving The Relationship
Once your database table and models are defined, you may access the relationships via your models. For example, to retrieve the image for a post, we can use the image
dynamic property:
$post = App\Post::find(1);
$image = $post->image;
You may also retrieve the parent from the polymorphic model by accessing the name of the method that performs the call to morphTo
. In our case, that is the imageable
method on the Image
model. So, we will access that method as a dynamic property:
$image = App\Image::find(1);
$imageable = $image->imageable;
The imageable
relation on the Image
model will return either a Post
or User
instance, depending on which type of model owns the image.
One To Many (Polymorphic)
Table Structure
A one-to-many polymorphic relation is similar to a simple one-to-many relation; however, the target model can belong to more than one type of model on a single association. For example, imagine users of your application can "comment" on both posts and videos. Using polymorphic relationships, you may use a single comments
table for both of these scenarios. First, let's examine the table structure required to build this relationship:
posts
id - integer
title - string
body - text
videos
id - integer
title - string
url - string
comments
id - integer
body - text
commentable_id - integer
commentable_type - string
Model Structure
Next, let's examine the model definitions needed to build this relationship:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Comment extends Model
{
/**
* Get the owning commentable model.
*/
public function commentable()
{
return $this->morphTo();
}
}
class Post extends Model
{
/**
* Get all of the post's comments.
*/
public function comments()
{
return $this->morphMany('App\Comment', 'commentable');
}
}
class Video extends Model
{
/**
* Get all of the video's comments.
*/
public function comments()
{
return $this->morphMany('App\Comment', 'commentable');
}
}
Retrieving The Relationship
Once your database table and models are defined, you may access the relationships via your models. For example, to access all of the comments for a post, we can use the comments
dynamic property:
$post = App\Post::find(1);
foreach ($post->comments as $comment) {
//
}
You may also retrieve the owner of a polymorphic relation from the polymorphic model by accessing the name of the method that performs the call to morphTo
. In our case, that is the commentable
method on the Comment
model. So, we will access that method as a dynamic property:
$comment = App\Comment::find(1);
$commentable = $comment->commentable;
The commentable
relation on the Comment
model will return either a Post
or Video
instance, depending on which type of model owns the comment.
Many To Many (Polymorphic)
Table Structure
Many-to-many polymorphic relations are slightly more complicated than morphOne
and morphMany
relationships. For example, a blog Post
and Video
model could share a polymorphic relation to a Tag
model. Using a many-to-many polymorphic relation allows you to have a single list of unique tags that are shared across blog posts and videos. First, let's examine the table structure:
posts
id - integer
name - string
videos
id - integer
name - string
tags
id - integer
name - string
taggables
tag_id - integer
taggable_id - integer
taggable_type - string
Model Structure
Next, we're ready to define the relationships on the model. The Post
and Video
models will both have a tags
method that calls the morphToMany
method on the base Eloquent class:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Post extends Model
{
/**
* Get all of the tags for the post.
*/
public function tags()
{
return $this->morphToMany('App\Tag', 'taggable');
}
}
Defining The Inverse Of The Relationship
Next, on the Tag
model, you should define a method for each of its related models. So, for this example, we will define a posts
method and a videos
method:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Tag extends Model
{
/**
* Get all of the posts that are assigned this tag.
*/
public function posts()
{
return $this->morphedByMany('App\Post', 'taggable');
}
/**
* Get all of the videos that are assigned this tag.
*/
public function videos()
{
return $this->morphedByMany('App\Video', 'taggable');
}
}
Retrieving The Relationship
Once your database table and models are defined, you may access the relationships via your models. For example, to access all of the tags for a post, you can use the tags
dynamic property:
$post = App\Post::find(1);
foreach ($post->tags as $tag) {
//
}
You may also retrieve the owner of a polymorphic relation from the polymorphic model by accessing the name of the method that performs the call to morphedByMany
. In our case, that is the posts
or videos
methods on the Tag
model. So, you will access those methods as dynamic properties:
$tag = App\Tag::find(1);
foreach ($tag->videos as $video) {
//
}
Custom Polymorphic Types
By default, Laravel will use the fully qualified class name to store the type of the related model. For instance, given the one-to-many example above where a Comment
may belong to a Post
or a Video
, the default commentable_type
would be either App\Post
or App\Video
, respectively. However, you may wish to decouple your database from your application's internal structure. In that case, you may define a "morph map" to instruct Eloquent to use a custom name for each model instead of the class name:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Relation;
Relation::morphMap([
'posts' => 'App\Post',
'videos' => 'App\Video',
]);
You may register the morphMap
in the boot
function of your AppServiceProvider
or create a separate service provider if you wish.
When adding a "morph map" to your existing application, every morphable *_type
column value in your database that still contains a fully-qualified class will need to be converted to its "map" name.
Querying Relations
Since all types of Eloquent relationships are defined via methods, you may call those methods to obtain an instance of the relationship without actually executing the relationship queries. In addition, all types of Eloquent relationships also serve as query builders, allowing you to continue to chain constraints onto the relationship query before finally executing the SQL against your database.
For example, imagine a blog system in which a User
model has many associated Post
models:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class User extends Model
{
/**
* Get all of the posts for the user.
*/
public function posts()
{
return $this->hasMany('App\Post');
}
}
You may query the posts
relationship and add additional constraints to the relationship like so:
$user = App\User::find(1);
$user->posts()->where('active', 1)->get();
You are able to use any of the query builder methods on the relationship, so be sure to explore the query builder documentation to learn about all of the methods that are available to you.
Chaining orWhere
Clauses After Relationships
As demonstrated in the example above, you are free to add additional constraints to relationships when querying them. However, use caution when chaining orWhere
clauses onto a relationship, as the orWhere
clauses will be logically grouped at the same level as the relationship constraint:
$user->posts()
->where('active', 1)
->orWhere('votes', '>=', 100)
->get();
// select * from posts
// where user_id = ? and active = 1 or votes >= 100
In most situations, you likely intend to use constraint groups to logically group the conditional checks between parentheses:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$user->posts()
->where(function (Builder $query) {
return $query->where('active', 1)
->orWhere('votes', '>=', 100);
})
->get();
// select * from posts
// where user_id = ? and (active = 1 or votes >= 100)
Relationship Methods Vs. Dynamic Properties
If you do not need to add additional constraints to an Eloquent relationship query, you may access the relationship as if it were a property. For example, continuing to use our User
and Post
example models, we may access all of a user's posts like so:
$user = App\User::find(1);
foreach ($user->posts as $post) {
//
}
Dynamic properties are "lazy loading", meaning they will only load their relationship data when you actually access them. Because of this, developers often use eager loading to pre-load relationships they know will be accessed after loading the model. Eager loading provides a significant reduction in SQL queries that must be executed to load a model's relations.
Querying Relationship Existence
When accessing the records for a model, you may wish to limit your results based on the existence of a relationship. For example, imagine you want to retrieve all blog posts that have at least one comment. To do so, you may pass the name of the relationship to the has
and orHas
methods:
// Retrieve all posts that have at least one comment...
$posts = App\Post::has('comments')->get();
You may also specify an operator and count to further customize the query:
// Retrieve all posts that have three or more comments...
$posts = App\Post::has('comments', '>=', 3)->get();
Nested has
statements may also be constructed using "dot" notation. For example, you may retrieve all posts that have at least one comment and vote:
// Retrieve posts that have at least one comment with votes...
$posts = App\Post::has('comments.votes')->get();
If you need even more power, you may use the whereHas
and orWhereHas
methods to put "where" conditions on your has
queries. These methods allow you to add customized constraints to a relationship constraint, such as checking the content of a comment:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
// Retrieve posts with at least one comment containing words like foo%...
$posts = App\Post::whereHas('comments', function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('content', 'like', 'foo%');
})->get();
// Retrieve posts with at least ten comments containing words like foo%...
$posts = App\Post::whereHas('comments', function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('content', 'like', 'foo%');
}, '>=', 10)->get();
Querying Relationship Absence
When accessing the records for a model, you may wish to limit your results based on the absence of a relationship. For example, imagine you want to retrieve all blog posts that don't have any comments. To do so, you may pass the name of the relationship to the doesntHave
and orDoesntHave
methods:
$posts = App\Post::doesntHave('comments')->get();
If you need even more power, you may use the whereDoesntHave
and orWhereDoesntHave
methods to put "where" conditions on your doesntHave
queries. These methods allows you to add customized constraints to a relationship constraint, such as checking the content of a comment:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$posts = App\Post::whereDoesntHave('comments', function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('content', 'like', 'foo%');
})->get();
You may use "dot" notation to execute a query against a nested relationship. For example, the following query will retrieve all posts with comments from authors that are not banned:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$posts = App\Post::whereDoesntHave('comments.author', function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('banned', 0);
})->get();
Querying Polymorphic Relationships
To query the existence of MorphTo
relationships, you may use the whereHasMorph
method and its corresponding methods:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
// Retrieve comments associated to posts or videos with a title like foo%...
$comments = App\Comment::whereHasMorph(
'commentable',
['App\Post', 'App\Video'],
function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('title', 'like', 'foo%');
}
)->get();
// Retrieve comments associated to posts with a title not like foo%...
$comments = App\Comment::whereDoesntHaveMorph(
'commentable',
'App\Post',
function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('title', 'like', 'foo%');
}
)->get();
You may use the $type
parameter to add different constraints depending on the related model:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$comments = App\Comment::whereHasMorph(
'commentable',
['App\Post', 'App\Video'],
function (Builder $query, $type) {
$query->where('title', 'like', 'foo%');
if ($type === 'App\Post') {
$query->orWhere('content', 'like', 'foo%');
}
}
)->get();
Instead of passing an array of possible polymorphic models, you may provide *
as a wildcard and let Laravel retrieve all the possible polymorphic types from the database. Laravel will execute an additional query in order to perform this operation:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$comments = App\Comment::whereHasMorph('commentable', '*', function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('title', 'like', 'foo%');
})->get();
Counting Related Models
If you want to count the number of results from a relationship without actually loading them you may use the withCount
method, which will place a {relation}_count
column on your resulting models. For example:
$posts = App\Post::withCount('comments')->get();
foreach ($posts as $post) {
echo $post->comments_count;
}
You may add the "counts" for multiple relations as well as add constraints to the queries:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$posts = App\Post::withCount(['votes', 'comments' => function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('content', 'like', 'foo%');
}])->get();
echo $posts[0]->votes_count;
echo $posts[0]->comments_count;
You may also alias the relationship count result, allowing multiple counts on the same relationship:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
$posts = App\Post::withCount([
'comments',
'comments as pending_comments_count' => function (Builder $query) {
$query->where('approved', false);
},
])->get();
echo $posts[0]->comments_count;
echo $posts[0]->pending_comments_count;
If you're combining withCount
with a select
statement, ensure that you call withCount
after the select
method:
$posts = App\Post::select(['title', 'body'])->withCount('comments')->get();
echo $posts[0]->title;
echo $posts[0]->body;
echo $posts[0]->comments_count;
In addition, using the loadCount
method, you may load a relationship count after the parent model has already been retrieved:
$book = App\Book::first();
$book->loadCount('genres');
If you need to set additional query constraints on the eager loading query, you may pass an array keyed by the relationships you wish to load. The array values should be Closure
instances which receive the query builder instance:
$book->loadCount(['reviews' => function ($query) {
$query->where('rating', 5);
}])
Eager Loading
When accessing Eloquent relationships as properties, the relationship data is "lazy loaded". This means the relationship data is not actually loaded until you first access the property. However, Eloquent can "eager load" relationships at the time you query the parent model. Eager loading alleviates the N + 1 query problem. To illustrate the N + 1 query problem, consider a Book
model that is related to Author
:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Book extends Model
{
/**
* Get the author that wrote the book.
*/
public function author()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\Author');
}
}
Now, let's retrieve all books and their authors:
$books = App\Book::all();
foreach ($books as $book) {
echo $book->author->name;
}
This loop will execute 1 query to retrieve all of the books on the table, then another query for each book to retrieve the author. So, if we have 25 books, this loop would run 26 queries: 1 for the original book, and 25 additional queries to retrieve the author of each book.
Thankfully, we can use eager loading to reduce this operation to just 2 queries. When querying, you may specify which relationships should be eager loaded using the with
method:
$books = App\Book::with('author')->get();
foreach ($books as $book) {
echo $book->author->name;
}
For this operation, only two queries will be executed:
select * from books
select * from authors where id in (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ...)
Eager Loading Multiple Relationships
Sometimes you may need to eager load several different relationships in a single operation. To do so, just pass additional arguments to the with
method:
$books = App\Book::with(['author', 'publisher'])->get();
Nested Eager Loading
To eager load nested relationships, you may use "dot" syntax. For example, let's eager load all of the book's authors and all of the author's personal contacts in one Eloquent statement:
$books = App\Book::with('author.contacts')->get();
Nested Eager Loading morphTo
Relationships
If you would like to eager load a morphTo
relationship, as well as nested relationships on the various entities that may be returned by that relationship, you may use the with
method in combination with the morphTo
relationship's morphWith
method. To help illustrate this method, let's consider the following model:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class ActivityFeed extends Model
{
/**
* Get the parent of the activity feed record.
*/
public function parentable()
{
return $this->morphTo();
}
}
In this example, let's assume Event
, Photo
, and Post
models may create ActivityFeed
models. Additionally, let's assume that Event
models belong to a Calendar
model, Photo
models are associated with Tag
models, and Post
models belong to an Author
model.
Using these model definitions and relationships, we may retrieve ActivityFeed
model instances and eager load all parentable
models and their respective nested relationships:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\MorphTo;
$activities = ActivityFeed::query()
->with(['parentable' => function (MorphTo $morphTo) {
$morphTo->morphWith([
Event::class => ['calendar'],
Photo::class => ['tags'],
Post::class => ['author'],
]);
}])->get();
Eager Loading Specific Columns
You may not always need every column from the relationships you are retrieving. For this reason, Eloquent allows you to specify which columns of the relationship you would like to retrieve:
$books = App\Book::with('author:id,name')->get();
When using this feature, you should always include the id
column and any relevant foreign key columns in the list of columns you wish to retrieve.
Eager Loading By Default
Sometimes you might want to always load some relationships when retrieving a model. To accomplish this, you may define a $with
property on the model:
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Book extends Model
{
/**
* The relationships that should always be loaded.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $with = ['author'];
/**
* Get the author that wrote the book.
*/
public function author()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\Author');
}
}
If you would like to remove an item from the $with
property for a single query, you may use the without
method:
$books = App\Book::without('author')->get();
Constraining Eager Loads
Sometimes you may wish to eager load a relationship, but also specify additional query conditions for the eager loading query. Here's an example:
$users = App\User::with(['posts' => function ($query) {
$query->where('title', 'like', '%first%');
}])->get();
In this example, Eloquent will only eager load posts where the post's title
column contains the word first
. You may call other query builder methods to further customize the eager loading operation:
$users = App\User::with(['posts' => function ($query) {
$query->orderBy('created_at', 'desc');
}])->get();
The limit
and take
query builder methods may not be used when constraining eager loads.
Lazy Eager Loading
Sometimes you may need to eager load a relationship after the parent model has already been retrieved. For example, this may be useful if you need to dynamically decide whether to load related models:
$books = App\Book::all();
if ($someCondition) {
$books->load('author', 'publisher');
}
If you need to set additional query constraints on the eager loading query, you may pass an array keyed by the relationships you wish to load. The array values should be Closure
instances which receive the query instance:
$author->load(['books' => function ($query) {
$query->orderBy('published_date', 'asc');
}]);
To load a relationship only when it has not already been loaded, use the loadMissing
method:
public function format(Book $book)
{
$book->loadMissing('author');
return [
'name' => $book->name,
'author' => $book->author->name,
];
}
Nested Lazy Eager Loading & morphTo
If you would like to eager load a morphTo
relationship, as well as nested relationships on the various entities that may be returned by that relationship, you may use the loadMorph
method.
This method accepts the name of the morphTo
relationship as its first argument, and an array of model / relationship pairs as its second argument. To help illustrate this method, let's consider the following model:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class ActivityFeed extends Model
{
/**
* Get the parent of the activity feed record.
*/
public function parentable()
{
return $this->morphTo();
}
}
In this example, let's assume Event
, Photo
, and Post
models may create ActivityFeed
models. Additionally, let's assume that Event
models belong to a Calendar
model, Photo
models are associated with Tag
models, and Post
models belong to an Author
model.
Using these model definitions and relationships, we may retrieve ActivityFeed
model instances and eager load all parentable
models and their respective nested relationships:
$activities = ActivityFeed::with('parentable')
->get()
->loadMorph('parentable', [
Event::class => ['calendar'],
Photo::class => ['tags'],
Post::class => ['author'],
]);