Illustrations are taken directly from their website : https://dbtoolsbundle.readthedocs.io
About the Bundle
This bundle allows you to backup, restore, and anonymize databases. It is compatible with MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL, and SQLite. For more details, visit their website: https://dbtoolsbundle.readthedocs.io
Set up a GDPR-friendly workflow
All companies trying to set up databases for testing and development purposes face this challenge. It often takes a lot of time and effort to maintain GDPR compliance.
Basic implementation of anonymisation on an entity
Let's take a look at a concrete example:
class User implements UserInterface
{
#[ORM\Id]
#[ORM\GeneratedValue]
#[ORM\Column]
private ?int $id = null;
#[ORM\Column(length: 180, unique: true)]
#[Anonymize(type: 'email')]
private ?string $email = null;
#[ORM\Column(nullable: true)]
#[Anonymize(type: 'password')]
private ?string $password = null;
// [...] etc...
}
By defining the PHP attribute #[Anonymize] on class attributes, you'll define "what and how" you'll anonymize. Many core anonymizers are already available, such as:
- EmailAnonymizer
- PasswordAnonymizer
- IntegerAnonymizer
- FloatAnonymizer
- DateAnonymizer
- NullAnonymizer
- ConstantAnonymizer
- Md5Anonymizer
- StringAnonymizer
- LastnameAnonymizer
- FirstnameAnonymizer
- LoremIpsumAnonymizer
- AddressAnonymizer
You can even develop your own Anonymizer class if you need more specific functionality.
Once your configuration is done, you simply have to run the following command to anonymize your database:
php bin/console db-tools:anonymize [options]
# Real example for local database
# php bin/console db-tools:anonymize --local-database
To reproduce the workflow shown above, you can easily use your favorite CI/CD tools to run pipelines that distribute an up-to-date database, completely anonymized and GDPR-friendly (though not necessarily 100% compliant).
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