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26.

Filtering on Relations

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Earlier, we added a bunch of nice filters to DragonTreasure. Let's add a few more - starting with User - so we can show off some filtering superpowers for relations.

Using PropertyFilter Across Relations

Start like normal: ApiFilter and let's first use PropertyFilter::class. Remember: this is kind of a fake filter that allows our API client to select which fields they want. And this is all pretty familiar so far.

176 lines | src/Entity/User.php
// ... lines 1 - 4
use ApiPlatform\Metadata\ApiFilter;
// ... line 6
use ApiPlatform\Serializer\Filter\PropertyFilter;
// ... lines 8 - 22
#[ApiFilter(PropertyFilter::class)]
// ... lines 24 - 25
class User implements UserInterface, PasswordAuthenticatedUserInterface
{
// ... lines 28 - 174
}

When we head over, refresh, and go to the GET collection endpoint... we see a new properties[] field. We could choose to return just username... or username and dragonTreasures.

When we hit "Execute"... perfect! We see the two fields... where dragonTreasures is an array of objects, each containing the fields we chose to embedded.

Again, this is super duper normal. So let's try something more interesting. In fact, what we're going to try isn't supported directly in the interactive docs.

So, copy this URL... paste and add .jsonld to the end.

Here's the goal: I want to return the username field and then only the name field of each dragon treasure. The syntax is a bit ugly: it's [dragonTreasures], followed by []=name.

And just like that... it only shows name! So right out of the box, PropertyFilter allows us to reach across relationships.

Searching Relation Fields

Let's do something else. Head back to DragonTreasure. It might be handy to filter by the $owner: we could quickly get a list of all treasures for a specific user.

No sweat! Just add ApiFilter above the $owner property, passing in the trusty SearchFilter::class followed by strategy: 'exact'.

217 lines | src/Entity/DragonTreasure.php
// ... lines 1 - 55
class DragonTreasure
{
// ... lines 58 - 101
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, strategy: 'exact')]
private ?User $owner = null;
// ... lines 104 - 215
}

Back over on the docs, if we open up the GET collection endpoint for treasures and give it a whirl... let's see... here we go - "owner". Enter something like /api/users/4... assuming that's actually a real user in our database, and... yes! Here are the five treasures owned by that user!

But I want to get crazier: I want to find all treasures that are owned by a user matching a specific username. So instead of filtering on owner, we need to filter on owner.username.

How? Well, when we want to filter simply by owner, we can put the ApiFilter right above that property. But since we want to filter on owner.username, we can't put that above a property... because owner.username isn't a property. This is one of the cases where we need to put the filter above the class. And... that also means we need to add a properties option set to an array. Inside, say 'owner.username' and set that to the partial strategy.

220 lines | src/Entity/DragonTreasure.php
// ... lines 1 - 55
#[ApiFilter(SearchFilter::class, properties: [
'owner.username' => 'partial',
])]
class DragonTreasure
{
// ... lines 61 - 218
}

Ok! Head back over and refresh. We know we have an owner whose username is "Smaug"... so let's go back to the GET collection endpoint and... here in owner.username, search for "maug"... and hit "Execute".

Let's see... That worked! This shows all treasures owned by any user whose username contains maug. Pretty cool!

Ok squad: get ready for the grand finale - Subresources. These have seriously changed in API Platform 3. Let's dive into them next.