Commit | Line | Data |
445e5e31 |
1 | package DBIx::Class::InflateColumn::DateTime; |
2 | |
3 | use strict; |
4 | use warnings; |
5 | use base qw/DBIx::Class/; |
341d5ede |
6 | use Carp::Clan qw/^DBIx::Class/; |
ed7ab0f4 |
7 | use Try::Tiny; |
fd323bf1 |
8 | use namespace::clean; |
445e5e31 |
9 | |
0b375b68 |
10 | =head1 NAME |
11 | |
5d0a2955 |
12 | DBIx::Class::InflateColumn::DateTime - Auto-create DateTime objects from date and datetime columns. |
0b375b68 |
13 | |
14 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
15 | |
fd323bf1 |
16 | Load this component and then declare one or more |
679a304a |
17 | columns to be of the datetime, timestamp or date datatype. |
0b375b68 |
18 | |
19 | package Event; |
d88ecca6 |
20 | use base 'DBIx::Class::Core'; |
21 | |
22 | __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/InflateColumn::DateTime/); |
0b375b68 |
23 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
24 | starts_when => { data_type => 'datetime' } |
9c71b5e2 |
25 | create_date => { data_type => 'date' } |
0b375b68 |
26 | ); |
27 | |
28 | Then you can treat the specified column as a L<DateTime> object. |
29 | |
30 | print "This event starts the month of ". |
31 | $event->starts_when->month_name(); |
32 | |
8d689133 |
33 | If you want to set a specific timezone and locale for that field, use: |
dda9af55 |
34 | |
35 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
92ed0695 |
36 | starts_when => { data_type => 'datetime', timezone => "America/Chicago", locale => "de_DE" } |
dda9af55 |
37 | ); |
38 | |
a97fe7e0 |
39 | If you want to inflate no matter what data_type your column is, |
40 | use inflate_datetime or inflate_date: |
41 | |
42 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
43 | starts_when => { data_type => 'varchar', inflate_datetime => 1 } |
44 | ); |
d4daee7b |
45 | |
a97fe7e0 |
46 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
47 | starts_when => { data_type => 'varchar', inflate_date => 1 } |
48 | ); |
49 | |
ff8a6e3b |
50 | It's also possible to explicitly skip inflation: |
d4daee7b |
51 | |
ff8a6e3b |
52 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
53 | starts_when => { data_type => 'datetime', inflate_datetime => 0 } |
54 | ); |
55 | |
8bf37b16 |
56 | NOTE: Don't rely on C<InflateColumn::DateTime> to parse date strings for you. |
57 | The column is set directly for any non-references and C<InflateColumn::DateTime> |
58 | is completely bypassed. Instead, use an input parser to create a DateTime |
59 | object. For instance, if your user input comes as a 'YYYY-MM-DD' string, you can |
60 | use C<DateTime::Format::ISO8601> thusly: |
d6aed638 |
61 | |
62 | use DateTime::Format::ISO8601; |
63 | my $dt = DateTime::Format::ISO8601->parse_datetime('YYYY-MM-DD'); |
64 | |
0b375b68 |
65 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
66 | |
fd323bf1 |
67 | This module figures out the type of DateTime::Format::* class to |
68 | inflate/deflate with based on the type of DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::* |
69 | that you are using. If you switch from one database to a different |
5d0a2955 |
70 | one your code should continue to work without modification (though note |
71 | that this feature is new as of 0.07, so it may not be perfect yet - bug |
72 | reports to the list very much welcome). |
0b375b68 |
73 | |
9c71b5e2 |
74 | If the data_type of a field is C<date>, C<datetime> or C<timestamp> (or |
f59e543b |
75 | a derivative of these datatypes, e.g. C<timestamp with timezone>), this |
9c71b5e2 |
76 | module will automatically call the appropriate parse/format method for |
77 | deflation/inflation as defined in the storage class. For instance, for |
78 | a C<datetime> field the methods C<parse_datetime> and C<format_datetime> |
79 | would be called on deflation/inflation. If the storage class does not |
80 | provide a specialized inflator/deflator, C<[parse|format]_datetime> will |
81 | be used as a fallback. See L<DateTime::Format> for more information on |
82 | date formatting. |
83 | |
943f93f2 |
84 | For more help with using components, see L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Component/USING>. |
de78905b |
85 | |
0b375b68 |
86 | =cut |
87 | |
445e5e31 |
88 | __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/InflateColumn/); |
89 | |
9b83fccd |
90 | =head2 register_column |
91 | |
92 | Chains with the L<DBIx::Class::Row/register_column> method, and sets |
93 | up datetime columns appropriately. This would not normally be |
94 | directly called by end users. |
95 | |
33a126ef |
96 | In the case of an invalid date, L<DateTime> will throw an exception. To |
97 | bypass these exceptions and just have the inflation return undef, use |
98 | the C<datetime_undef_if_invalid> option in the column info: |
d4daee7b |
99 | |
33a126ef |
100 | "broken_date", |
101 | { |
102 | data_type => "datetime", |
103 | default_value => '0000-00-00', |
104 | is_nullable => 1, |
105 | datetime_undef_if_invalid => 1 |
106 | } |
107 | |
9b83fccd |
108 | =cut |
109 | |
445e5e31 |
110 | sub register_column { |
111 | my ($self, $column, $info, @rest) = @_; |
112 | $self->next::method($column, $info, @rest); |
c209c4fd |
113 | return unless defined($info->{data_type}); |
bb90689c |
114 | |
115 | my $type; |
116 | |
abc914bd |
117 | for (qw/date datetime timestamp/) { |
bb90689c |
118 | my $key = "inflate_${_}"; |
119 | |
120 | next unless exists $info->{$key}; |
121 | return unless $info->{$key}; |
122 | |
123 | $type = $_; |
124 | last; |
125 | } |
126 | |
127 | unless ($type) { |
128 | $type = lc($info->{data_type}); |
6c99a3ee |
129 | if ($type eq "timestamp with time zone" || $type eq "timestamptz") { |
130 | $type = "timestamp"; |
131 | $info->{_ic_dt_method} ||= "timestamp_with_timezone"; |
65b386df |
132 | } elsif ($type eq "timestamp without time zone") { |
133 | $type = "timestamp"; |
134 | $info->{_ic_dt_method} ||= "timestamp_without_timezone"; |
4a80eede |
135 | } elsif ($type eq "smalldatetime") { |
136 | $type = "datetime"; |
fb95dc4d |
137 | $info->{_ic_dt_method} ||= "smalldatetime"; |
226d1c35 |
138 | } else { |
139 | $info->{_ic_dt_method} ||= $type; |
6c99a3ee |
140 | } |
bb90689c |
141 | } |
142 | |
226d1c35 |
143 | return unless ($type eq 'datetime' || $type eq 'date' || $type eq 'timestamp'); |
dda9af55 |
144 | |
226d1c35 |
145 | if ($info->{extra}) { |
146 | for my $slot (qw/timezone locale floating_tz_ok/) { |
147 | if ( defined $info->{extra}{$slot} ) { |
148 | carp "Putting $slot into extra => { $slot => '...' } has been deprecated, ". |
149 | "please put it directly into the '$column' column definition."; |
150 | $info->{$slot} = $info->{extra}{$slot} unless defined $info->{$slot}; |
151 | } |
1c2ffef9 |
152 | } |
8d689133 |
153 | } |
d4daee7b |
154 | |
226d1c35 |
155 | # shallow copy to avoid unfounded(?) Devel::Cycle complaints |
156 | my $infcopy = {%$info}; |
157 | |
158 | $self->inflate_column( |
159 | $column => |
160 | { |
161 | inflate => sub { |
162 | my ($value, $obj) = @_; |
163 | |
164 | my $dt = try |
165 | { $obj->_inflate_to_datetime( $value, $infcopy ) } |
166 | catch { |
167 | $self->throw_exception ("Error while inflating ${value} for ${column} on ${self}: $_") |
168 | unless $infcopy->{datetime_undef_if_invalid}; |
169 | undef; # rv |
170 | }; |
171 | |
172 | return (defined $dt) |
173 | ? $obj->_post_inflate_datetime( $dt, $infcopy ) |
174 | : undef |
175 | ; |
176 | }, |
177 | deflate => sub { |
178 | my ($value, $obj) = @_; |
179 | |
180 | $value = $obj->_pre_deflate_datetime( $value, $infcopy ); |
181 | $obj->_deflate_from_datetime( $value, $infcopy ); |
182 | }, |
183 | } |
184 | ); |
445e5e31 |
185 | } |
186 | |
ab969dd4 |
187 | sub _flate_or_fallback |
188 | { |
189 | my( $self, $value, $info, $method_fmt ) = @_; |
190 | |
191 | my $parser = $self->_datetime_parser; |
192 | my $preferred_method = sprintf($method_fmt, $info->{ _ic_dt_method }); |
193 | my $method = $parser->can($preferred_method) ? $preferred_method : sprintf($method_fmt, 'datetime'); |
194 | return $parser->$method($value); |
195 | } |
196 | |
197 | sub _inflate_to_datetime { |
198 | my( $self, $value, $info ) = @_; |
199 | return $self->_flate_or_fallback( $value, $info, 'parse_%s' ); |
200 | } |
201 | |
202 | sub _deflate_from_datetime { |
203 | my( $self, $value, $info ) = @_; |
204 | return $self->_flate_or_fallback( $value, $info, 'format_%s' ); |
205 | } |
abc914bd |
206 | |
445e5e31 |
207 | sub _datetime_parser { |
f568d83b |
208 | shift->result_source->storage->datetime_parser (@_); |
445e5e31 |
209 | } |
210 | |
f856fe01 |
211 | sub _post_inflate_datetime { |
212 | my( $self, $dt, $info ) = @_; |
213 | |
c3ed0bde |
214 | $dt->set_time_zone($info->{timezone}) if defined $info->{timezone}; |
215 | $dt->set_locale($info->{locale}) if defined $info->{locale}; |
f856fe01 |
216 | |
217 | return $dt; |
218 | } |
219 | |
220 | sub _pre_deflate_datetime { |
221 | my( $self, $dt, $info ) = @_; |
222 | |
c3ed0bde |
223 | if (defined $info->{timezone}) { |
f856fe01 |
224 | carp "You're using a floating timezone, please see the documentation of" |
225 | . " DBIx::Class::InflateColumn::DateTime for an explanation" |
226 | if ref( $dt->time_zone ) eq 'DateTime::TimeZone::Floating' |
227 | and not $info->{floating_tz_ok} |
228 | and not $ENV{DBIC_FLOATING_TZ_OK}; |
229 | |
c3ed0bde |
230 | $dt->set_time_zone($info->{timezone}); |
f856fe01 |
231 | } |
232 | |
c3ed0bde |
233 | $dt->set_locale($info->{locale}) if defined $info->{locale}; |
f856fe01 |
234 | |
235 | return $dt; |
236 | } |
237 | |
445e5e31 |
238 | 1; |
0b375b68 |
239 | __END__ |
240 | |
45147005 |
241 | =head1 USAGE NOTES |
242 | |
97983826 |
243 | If you have a datetime column with an associated C<timezone>, and subsequently |
45147005 |
244 | create/update this column with a DateTime object in the L<DateTime::TimeZone::Floating> |
245 | timezone, you will get a warning (as there is a very good chance this will not have the |
246 | result you expect). For example: |
247 | |
248 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
92ed0695 |
249 | starts_when => { data_type => 'datetime', timezone => "America/Chicago" } |
45147005 |
250 | ); |
251 | |
252 | my $event = $schema->resultset('EventTZ')->create({ |
253 | starts_at => DateTime->new(year=>2007, month=>12, day=>31, ), |
254 | }); |
255 | |
256 | The warning can be avoided in several ways: |
257 | |
258 | =over |
259 | |
260 | =item Fix your broken code |
261 | |
262 | When calling C<set_time_zone> on a Floating DateTime object, the timezone is simply |
263 | set to the requested value, and B<no time conversion takes place>. It is always a good idea |
264 | to be supply explicit times to the database: |
265 | |
266 | my $event = $schema->resultset('EventTZ')->create({ |
267 | starts_at => DateTime->new(year=>2007, month=>12, day=>31, time_zone => "America/Chicago" ), |
268 | }); |
269 | |
270 | =item Suppress the check on per-column basis |
271 | |
272 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns( |
92ed0695 |
273 | starts_when => { data_type => 'datetime', timezone => "America/Chicago", floating_tz_ok => 1 } |
45147005 |
274 | ); |
275 | |
276 | =item Suppress the check globally |
277 | |
278 | Set the environment variable DBIC_FLOATING_TZ_OK to some true value. |
279 | |
280 | =back |
281 | |
92ed0695 |
282 | Putting extra attributes like timezone, locale or floating_tz_ok into extra => {} has been |
283 | B<DEPRECATED> because this gets you into trouble using L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Versioned>. |
284 | Instead put it directly into the columns definition like in the examples above. If you still |
285 | use the old way you'll see a warning - please fix your code then! |
45147005 |
286 | |
0b375b68 |
287 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
288 | |
289 | =over 4 |
290 | |
fd323bf1 |
291 | =item More information about the add_columns method, and column metadata, |
0b375b68 |
292 | can be found in the documentation for L<DBIx::Class::ResultSource>. |
293 | |
45147005 |
294 | =item Further discussion of problems inherent to the Floating timezone: |
fd323bf1 |
295 | L<Floating DateTimes|DateTime/Floating_DateTimes> |
45147005 |
296 | and L<< $dt->set_time_zone|DateTime/"Set" Methods >> |
297 | |
0b375b68 |
298 | =back |
299 | |
300 | =head1 AUTHOR |
301 | |
302 | Matt S. Trout <mst@shadowcatsystems.co.uk> |
303 | |
304 | =head1 CONTRIBUTORS |
305 | |
306 | Aran Deltac <bluefeet@cpan.org> |
307 | |
308 | =head1 LICENSE |
309 | |
310 | You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. |
311 | |