Clone an Eloquent object including all relationships?

LaravelLaravel 4CloneEloquent

Laravel Problem Overview


Is there any way to easily clone an Eloquent object, including all of its relationships?

For example, if I had these tables:

users ( id, name, email )
roles ( id, name )
user_roles ( user_id, role_id )

In addition to creating a new row in the users table, with all columns being the same except id, it should also create a new row in the user_roles table, assigning the same role to the new user.

Something like this:

$user = User::find(1);
$new_user = $user->clone();

Where the User model has

class User extends Eloquent {
    public function roles() {
        return $this->hasMany('Role', 'user_roles');
    }
}

Laravel Solutions


Solution 1 - Laravel

tested in laravel 4.2 for belongsToMany relationships

if you're in the model:

    //copy attributes
    $new = $this->replicate();

    //save model before you recreate relations (so it has an id)
    $new->push();

    //reset relations on EXISTING MODEL (this way you can control which ones will be loaded
    $this->relations = [];

    //load relations on EXISTING MODEL
    $this->load('relation1','relation2');

    //re-sync everything
    foreach ($this->relations as $relationName => $values){
        $new->{$relationName}()->sync($values);
    }

Solution 2 - Laravel

You may also try the replicate function provided by eloquent:

http://laravel.com/api/4.2/Illuminate/Database/Eloquent/Model.html#method_replicate

$user = User::find(1);
$new_user = $user->replicate();
$new_user->push();

Solution 3 - Laravel

For Laravel 5. Tested with hasMany relation.

$model = User::find($id);

$model->load('invoices');
                                
$newModel = $model->replicate();
$newModel->push();
		

foreach($model->getRelations() as $relation => $items){
	foreach($items as $item){
		unset($item->id);
		$newModel->{$relation}()->create($item->toArray());
	}
}

Solution 4 - Laravel

You may try this (Object Cloning):

$user = User::find(1);
$new_user = clone $user;

Since clone doesn't deep copy so child objects won't be copied if there is any child object available and in this case you need to copy the child object using clone manually. For example:

$user = User::with('role')->find(1);
$new_user = clone $user; // copy the $user
$new_user->role = clone $user->role; // copy the $user->role

In your case roles will be a collection of Role objects so each Role object in the collection needs to be copied manually using clone.

Also, you need to be aware of that, if you don't load the roles using with then those will be not loaded or won't be available in the $user and when you'll call $user->roles then those objects will be loaded at run time after that call of $user->roles and until this, those roles are not loaded.

Update:

This answer was for Larave-4 and now Laravel offers replicate() method, for example:

$user = User::find(1);
$newUser = $user->replicate();
// ...

Solution 5 - Laravel

Here is an updated version of the solution from @sabrina-gelbart that will clone all hasMany relationships instead of just the belongsToMany as she posted:

    //copy attributes from original model
    $newRecord = $original->replicate();
    // Reset any fields needed to connect to another parent, etc
    $newRecord->some_id = $otherParent->id;
    //save model before you recreate relations (so it has an id)
    $newRecord->push();
    //reset relations on EXISTING MODEL (this way you can control which ones will be loaded
    $original->relations = [];
    //load relations on EXISTING MODEL
    $original->load('somerelationship', 'anotherrelationship');
    //re-sync the child relationships
    $relations = $original->getRelations();
    foreach ($relations as $relation) {
        foreach ($relation as $relationRecord) {
            $newRelationship = $relationRecord->replicate();
            $newRelationship->some_parent_id = $newRecord->id;
            $newRelationship->push();
        }
    }

Solution 6 - Laravel

This is in laravel 5.8, havent tried in older version

//# this will clone $eloquent and asign all $eloquent->$withoutProperties = null
$cloned = $eloquent->cloneWithout(Array $withoutProperties)

edit, just today 7 April 2019 laravel 5.8.10 launched

can use replicate now

$post = Post::find(1);
$newPost = $post->replicate();
$newPost->save();

Solution 7 - Laravel

When you fetch an object by any relation you want, and replicate after that, all relations you retrieved are also replicated. for example:

$oldUser = User::with('roles')->find(1);
$newUser = $oldUser->replicate();

Solution 8 - Laravel

If you have a collection named $user, using the code bellow, it creates a new Collection identical from the old one, including all the relations:

$new_user = new \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection ( $user->all() );

this code is for laravel 5.

Solution 9 - Laravel

Here is a trait that will recursively duplicate all the loaded relationships on an object. You could easily expand this for other relationship types like Sabrina's example for belongsToMany.

trait DuplicateRelations
{
    public static function duplicateRelations($from, $to)
    {
        foreach ($from->relations as $relationName => $object){
            if($object !== null) {
                if ($object instanceof Collection) {
                    foreach ($object as $relation) {
                        self::replication($relationName, $relation, $to);
                    }
                } else {
                    self::replication($relationName, $object, $to);
                }
            }
        }
    }

    private static function replication($name, $relation, $to)
    {
        $newRelation = $relation->replicate();
        $to->{$name}()->create($newRelation->toArray());
        if($relation->relations !== null) {
            self::duplicateRelations($relation, $to->{$name});
        }
    }
}

Usage:

//copy attributes
$new = $this->replicate();

//save model before you recreate relations (so it has an id)
$new->push();

//reset relations on EXISTING MODEL (this way you can control which ones will be loaded
$this->relations = [];

//load relations on EXISTING MODEL
$this->load('relation1','relation2.nested_relation');

// duplication all LOADED relations including nested.
self::duplicateRelations($this, $new);

Solution 10 - Laravel

Here's another way to do it if the other solutions don't appease you:

<?php
/** @var \App\Models\Booking $booking */
$booking = Booking::query()->with('segments.stops','billingItems','invoiceItems.applyTo')->findOrFail($id);

$booking->id = null;
$booking->exists = false;
$booking->number = null;
$booking->confirmed_date_utc = null;
$booking->save();

$now = CarbonDate::now($booking->company->timezone);

foreach($booking->segments as $seg) {
    $seg->id = null;
    $seg->exists = false;
    $seg->booking_id = $booking->id;
    $seg->save();

    foreach($seg->stops as $stop) {
        $stop->id = null;
        $stop->exists = false;
        $stop->segment_id = $seg->id;
        $stop->save();
    }
}

foreach($booking->billingItems as $bi) {
    $bi->id = null;
    $bi->exists = false;
    $bi->booking_id = $booking->id;
    $bi->save();
}

$iiMap = [];

foreach($booking->invoiceItems as $ii) {
    $oldId = $ii->id;
    $ii->id = null;
    $ii->exists = false;
    $ii->booking_id = $booking->id;
    $ii->save();
    $iiMap[$oldId] = $ii->id;
}

foreach($booking->invoiceItems as $ii) {
    $newIds = [];
    foreach($ii->applyTo as $at) {
        $newIds[] = $iiMap[$at->id];
    }
    $ii->applyTo()->sync($newIds);
}

The trick is to wipe the id and exists properties so that Laravel will create a new record.

Cloning self-relationships is a little tricky but I've included an example. You just have to create a mapping of old ids to new ids and then re-sync.

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionandrewtweberView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - LaravelSabrina LeggettView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - LaravelPiotr BorekView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - LaravelJIMView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - LaravelThe AlphaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - LaraveldavidethellView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - Laraveldavid valentinoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - Laravelelyas.mView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - LaravelMihai CrăițăView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - LaravelSeanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - LaravelmpenView Answer on Stackoverflow