<?xml version="1.0" encoding='ISO-8859-1'?> <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" [ <!ENTITY version "2.0"> ]> <book id="doctrinebook"> <bookinfo> <title>Doctrine Documentation</title> <author> <firstname>Ian</firstname> <surname>Christian</surname> <email>pookey@pookey.co.uk</email> </author> <copyright> <holder>Doctrine Project</holder> <year>2007</year> </copyright> <legalnotice id="legalnotice"> <para> The contents of this document are licensed under the Creative Commons <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/">Attribution-ShareAlike License</ulink>. </para> </legalnotice> <abstract> <para> Documentation for the PHP Doctrine project </para> </abstract> </bookinfo> <chapter id="introduction"> <title>Introduction</title> <para> </para> <sect1 id="requirements"> <title>Requirements</title> <para> Doctrine requires PHP >= 5.1, and it doesn't require any external libraries. </para> <para> For database abstraction Doctrine uses PDO which is bundled with php by default. Doctrine also requires a little adodb-hack for table creation, which comes with doctrine. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="getting-started"> <title>Getting Started</title> <para> The installation of doctrine is very easy. Just get the latest revision of Doctrine from <ulink url="http://doctrine.pengus.net/svn/trunk">http://doctrine.pengus.net/svn/trunk</ulink>. </para> </sect1> </chapter> </book>