Added pointer to DBIx::Class::DynamicSubclass.
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Manual / Cookbook.pod
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0132e136 1=head1 NAME
9c82c181 2
40dbc108 3DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook - Miscellaneous recipes
ee38fa40 4
d2f3e87b 5=head1 SEARCHING
2913b2d3 6
d2f3e87b 7=head2 Paged results
faf62551 8
bade79c4 9When you expect a large number of results, you can ask L<DBIx::Class> for a
264f1571 10paged resultset, which will fetch only a defined number of records at a time:
faf62551 11
bade79c4 12 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 13 undef,
bade79c4 14 {
15 page => 1, # page to return (defaults to 1)
16 rows => 10, # number of results per page
17 },
18 );
faf62551 19
bade79c4 20 return $rs->all(); # all records for page 1
faf62551 21
b4664250 22 return $rs->page(2); # records for page 2
23
ec30560d 24You can get a L<Data::Page> object for the resultset (suitable for use
25in e.g. a template) using the C<pager> method:
faf62551 26
bade79c4 27 return $rs->pager();
faf62551 28
d2f3e87b 29=head2 Complex WHERE clauses
2913b2d3 30
40dbc108 31Sometimes you need to formulate a query using specific operators:
32
ea6309e2 33 my @albums = $schema->resultset('Album')->search({
35d4fe78 34 artist => { 'like', '%Lamb%' },
35 title => { 'like', '%Fear of Fours%' },
36 });
40dbc108 37
38This results in something like the following C<WHERE> clause:
39
b10f700d 40 WHERE artist LIKE ? AND title LIKE ?
41
42And the following bind values for the placeholders: C<'%Lamb%'>, C<'%Fear of
43Fours%'>.
40dbc108 44
45Other queries might require slightly more complex logic:
46
ea6309e2 47 my @albums = $schema->resultset('Album')->search({
35d4fe78 48 -or => [
49 -and => [
50 artist => { 'like', '%Smashing Pumpkins%' },
51 title => 'Siamese Dream',
52 ],
53 artist => 'Starchildren',
54 ],
55 });
40dbc108 56
57This results in the following C<WHERE> clause:
58
35d4fe78 59 WHERE ( artist LIKE '%Smashing Pumpkins%' AND title = 'Siamese Dream' )
60 OR artist = 'Starchildren'
40dbc108 61
62For more information on generating complex queries, see
63L<SQL::Abstract/WHERE CLAUSES>.
ee38fa40 64
b9823354 65=head2 Retrieve one and only one row from a resultset
66
b4664250 67Sometimes you need only the first "top" row of a resultset. While this
68can be easily done with L<< $rs->first|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/first
69>>, it is suboptimal, as a full blown cursor for the resultset will be
70created and then immediately destroyed after fetching the first row
71object. L<< $rs->single|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/single >> is designed
72specifically for this case - it will grab the first returned result
0132e136 73without even instantiating a cursor.
b9823354 74
0132e136 75Before replacing all your calls to C<first()> with C<single()> please observe the
b9823354 76following CAVEATS:
77
78=over
79
80=item *
b4664250 81
b9823354 82While single() takes a search condition just like search() does, it does
83_not_ accept search attributes. However one can always chain a single() to
84a search():
85
b4664250 86 my $top_cd = $cd_rs->search({}, { order_by => 'rating' })->single;
b9823354 87
88
89=item *
b4664250 90
b9823354 91Since single() is the engine behind find(), it is designed to fetch a
92single row per database query. Thus a warning will be issued when the
93underlying SELECT returns more than one row. Sometimes however this usage
94is valid: i.e. we have an arbitrary number of cd's but only one of them is
95at the top of the charts at any given time. If you know what you are doing,
96you can silence the warning by explicitly limiting the resultset size:
97
b4664250 98 my $top_cd = $cd_rs->search ({}, { order_by => 'rating', rows => 1 })->single;
b9823354 99
100=back
101
d2f3e87b 102=head2 Arbitrary SQL through a custom ResultSource
321d9634 103
104Sometimes you have to run arbitrary SQL because your query is too complex
105(e.g. it contains Unions, Sub-Selects, Stored Procedures, etc.) or has to
0132e136 106be optimized for your database in a special way, but you still want to
107get the results as a L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet>.
321d9634 108
7adc2091 109This is accomplished by defining a
110L<ResultSource::View|DBIx::Class::ResultSource::View> for your query,
111almost like you would define a regular ResultSource.
0132e136 112
b4664250 113 package My::Schema::Result::UserFriendsComplex;
114 use strict;
115 use warnings;
321d9634 116 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
0132e136 117
b4664250 118 __PACKAGE__->load_components('Core');
119 __PACKAGE__->table_class('DBIx::Class::ResultSource::View');
120
121 # ->table, ->add_columns, etc.
122
7adc2091 123 # do not attempt to deploy() this view
b4664250 124 __PACKAGE__->result_source_instance->is_virtual(1);
7adc2091 125
b4664250 126 __PACKAGE__->result_source_instance->view_definition(q[
127 SELECT u.* FROM user u
128 INNER JOIN user_friends f ON u.id = f.user_id
129 WHERE f.friend_user_id = ?
130 UNION
131 SELECT u.* FROM user u
132 INNER JOIN user_friends f ON u.id = f.friend_user_id
133 WHERE f.user_id = ?
134 ]);
321d9634 135
136Next, you can execute your complex query using bind parameters like this:
137
b4664250 138 my $friends = $schema->resultset( 'UserFriendsComplex' )->search( {},
321d9634 139 {
140 bind => [ 12345, 12345 ]
141 }
b4664250 142 );
0132e136 143
d00a5c68 144... and you'll get back a perfect L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> (except, of course,
145that you cannot modify the rows it contains, ie. cannot call L</update>,
146L</delete>, ... on it).
147
b4664250 148Note that you cannot have bind parameters unless is_virtual is set to true.
321d9634 149
7adc2091 150=over
151
152=item * NOTE
153
154If you're using the old deprecated C<< $rsrc_instance->name(\'( SELECT ...') >>
155method for custom SQL execution, you are highly encouraged to update your code
156to use a virtual view as above. If you do not want to change your code, and just
157want to suppress the deprecation warning when you call
158L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>, add this line to your source definition, so that
159C<deploy> will exclude this "table":
a8fcfb9f 160
161 sub sqlt_deploy_hook { $_[1]->schema->drop_table ($_[1]) }
162
7adc2091 163=back
164
d2f3e87b 165=head2 Using specific columns
faf62551 166
324572ca 167When you only want specific columns from a table, you can use
168C<columns> to specify which ones you need. This is useful to avoid
169loading columns with large amounts of data that you aren't about to
170use anyway:
faf62551 171
bade79c4 172 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
5e8b1b2a 173 undef,
bade79c4 174 {
5e8b1b2a 175 columns => [qw/ name /]
bade79c4 176 }
177 );
faf62551 178
bade79c4 179 # Equivalent SQL:
180 # SELECT artist.name FROM artist
faf62551 181
324572ca 182This is a shortcut for C<select> and C<as>, see below. C<columns>
183cannot be used together with C<select> and C<as>.
184
d2f3e87b 185=head2 Using database functions or stored procedures
faf62551 186
bade79c4 187The combination of C<select> and C<as> can be used to return the result of a
188database function or stored procedure as a column value. You use C<select> to
189specify the source for your column value (e.g. a column name, function, or
190stored procedure name). You then use C<as> to set the column name you will use
191to access the returned value:
faf62551 192
bade79c4 193 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
324572ca 194 {},
bade79c4 195 {
196 select => [ 'name', { LENGTH => 'name' } ],
197 as => [qw/ name name_length /],
198 }
199 );
faf62551 200
bade79c4 201 # Equivalent SQL:
98b65433 202 # SELECT name name, LENGTH( name )
bade79c4 203 # FROM artist
faf62551 204
324bc214 205Note that the C<as> attribute B<has absolutely nothing to do> with the sql
206syntax C< SELECT foo AS bar > (see the documentation in
207L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES>). You can control the C<AS> part of the
208generated SQL via the C<-as> field attribute as follows:
209
210 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
211 {},
212 {
213 join => 'cds',
214 distinct => 1,
496846a4 215 '+select' => [ { count => 'cds.cdid', -as => 'amount_of_cds' } ],
216 '+as' => [qw/num_cds/],
324bc214 217 order_by => { -desc => 'amount_of_cds' },
218 }
219 );
220
221 # Equivalent SQL
222 # SELECT me.artistid, me.name, me.rank, me.charfield, COUNT( cds.cdid ) AS amount_of_cds
223 # FROM artist me LEFT JOIN cd cds ON cds.artist = me.artistid
224 # GROUP BY me.artistid, me.name, me.rank, me.charfield
225 # ORDER BY amount_of_cds DESC
226
227
228If your alias exists as a column in your base class (i.e. it was added with
229L<add_columns|DBIx::Class::ResultSource/add_columns>), you just access it as
230normal. Our C<Artist> class has a C<name> column, so we just use the C<name>
231accessor:
faf62551 232
bade79c4 233 my $artist = $rs->first();
234 my $name = $artist->name();
faf62551 235
236If on the other hand the alias does not correspond to an existing column, you
324572ca 237have to fetch the value using the C<get_column> accessor:
faf62551 238
bade79c4 239 my $name_length = $artist->get_column('name_length');
faf62551 240
bade79c4 241If you don't like using C<get_column>, you can always create an accessor for
faf62551 242any of your aliases using either of these:
243
bade79c4 244 # Define accessor manually:
245 sub name_length { shift->get_column('name_length'); }
0132e136 246
bade79c4 247 # Or use DBIx::Class::AccessorGroup:
248 __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('column' => 'name_length');
faf62551 249
3f12e6c3 250See also L</Using SQL functions on the left hand side of a comparison>.
251
d2f3e87b 252=head2 SELECT DISTINCT with multiple columns
faf62551 253
58a20107 254 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
324572ca 255 {},
bade79c4 256 {
cd87b928 257 columns => [ qw/artist_id name rank/ ],
58a20107 258 distinct => 1
0132e136 259 }
58a20107 260 );
261
262 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
263 {},
264 {
cd87b928 265 columns => [ qw/artist_id name rank/ ],
266 group_by => [ qw/artist_id name rank/ ],
bade79c4 267 }
268 );
faf62551 269
58a20107 270 # Equivalent SQL:
cd87b928 271 # SELECT me.artist_id, me.name, me.rank
58a20107 272 # FROM artist me
cd87b928 273 # GROUP BY artist_id, name, rank
58a20107 274
d2f3e87b 275=head2 SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT colname)
6607ee1b 276
58a20107 277 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
324572ca 278 {},
bade79c4 279 {
58a20107 280 columns => [ qw/name/ ],
281 distinct => 1
bade79c4 282 }
283 );
6607ee1b 284
58a20107 285 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
286 {},
287 {
288 columns => [ qw/name/ ],
289 group_by => [ qw/name/ ],
290 }
291 );
292
293 my $count = $rs->count;
294
295 # Equivalent SQL:
0132e136 296 # SELECT COUNT( * ) FROM (SELECT me.name FROM artist me GROUP BY me.name) count_subq:
3d565896 297
d2f3e87b 298=head2 Grouping results
bade79c4 299
300L<DBIx::Class> supports C<GROUP BY> as follows:
301
302 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
324572ca 303 {},
bade79c4 304 {
305 join => [qw/ cds /],
51458a6a 306 select => [ 'name', { count => 'cds.id' } ],
bade79c4 307 as => [qw/ name cd_count /],
308 group_by => [qw/ name /]
309 }
310 );
6607ee1b 311
bade79c4 312 # Equivalent SQL:
51458a6a 313 # SELECT name, COUNT( cd.id ) FROM artist
314 # LEFT JOIN cd ON artist.id = cd.artist
bade79c4 315 # GROUP BY name
6607ee1b 316
d676881f 317Please see L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> documentation if you
318are in any way unsure about the use of the attributes above (C< join
319>, C< select >, C< as > and C< group_by >).
320
70bb942d 321=head2 Subqueries (EXPERIMENTAL)
03834f77 322
323You can write subqueries relatively easily in DBIC.
324
325 my $inside_rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search({
326 name => [ 'Billy Joel', 'Brittany Spears' ],
327 });
328
68a797c1 329 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search({
03834f77 330 artist_id => { 'IN' => $inside_rs->get_column('id')->as_query },
331 });
332
333The usual operators ( =, !=, IN, NOT IN, etc) are supported.
334
335B<NOTE>: You have to explicitly use '=' when doing an equality comparison.
336The following will B<not> work:
337
68a797c1 338 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search({
a268a910 339 artist_id => $inside_rs->get_column('id')->as_query, # does NOT work
03834f77 340 });
341
0a62f675 342=head3 Support
343
344Subqueries are supported in the where clause (first hashref), and in the
345from, select, and +select attributes.
346
68a797c1 347=head3 Correlated subqueries
348
349 my $cdrs = $schema->resultset('CD');
350 my $rs = $cdrs->search({
351 year => {
352 '=' => $cdrs->search(
cd87b928 353 { artist_id => { '=' => \'me.artist_id' } },
68a797c1 354 { alias => 'inner' }
355 )->get_column('year')->max_rs->as_query,
356 },
357 });
358
359That creates the following SQL:
360
361 SELECT me.cdid, me.artist, me.title, me.year, me.genreid, me.single_track
362 FROM cd me
363 WHERE year = (
364 SELECT MAX(inner.year)
365 FROM cd inner
cd87b928 366 WHERE artist_id = me.artist_id
68a797c1 367 )
368
6a9530d1 369=head3 EXPERIMENTAL
370
371Please note that subqueries are considered an experimental feature.
372
d2f3e87b 373=head2 Predefined searches
74dc2edc 374
324572ca 375You can write your own L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> class by inheriting from it
0132e136 376and defining often used searches as methods:
74dc2edc 377
378 package My::DBIC::ResultSet::CD;
379 use strict;
380 use warnings;
381 use base 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet';
382
383 sub search_cds_ordered {
384 my ($self) = @_;
385
386 return $self->search(
387 {},
388 { order_by => 'name DESC' },
389 );
390 }
391
392 1;
393
394To use your resultset, first tell DBIx::Class to create an instance of it
395for you, in your My::DBIC::Schema::CD class:
396
9dc1bfce 397 # class definition as normal
398 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/ Core /);
399 __PACKAGE__->table('cd');
400
401 # tell DBIC to use the custom ResultSet class
74dc2edc 402 __PACKAGE__->resultset_class('My::DBIC::ResultSet::CD');
403
9dc1bfce 404Note that C<resultset_class> must be called after C<load_components> and C<table>, or you will get errors about missing methods.
405
74dc2edc 406Then call your new method in your code:
407
408 my $ordered_cds = $schema->resultset('CD')->search_cds_ordered();
409
d2f3e87b 410=head2 Using SQL functions on the left hand side of a comparison
1c133e22 411
2552bd76 412Using SQL functions on the left hand side of a comparison is generally not a
413good idea since it requires a scan of the entire table. (Unless your RDBMS
414supports indexes on expressions - including return values of functions -, and
415you create an index on the return value of the function in question.) However,
1c133e22 416it can be accomplished with C<DBIx::Class> when necessary.
417
418If you do not have quoting on, simply include the function in your search
419specification as you would any column:
420
421 $rs->search({ 'YEAR(date_of_birth)' => 1979 });
422
5084f156 423With quoting on, or for a more portable solution, use literal SQL values with
424placeholders:
1c133e22 425
5084f156 426 $rs->search(\[ 'YEAR(date_of_birth)', [ dummy => 1979 ] ]);
1c133e22 427
5084f156 428 # Equivalent SQL:
429 # SELECT * FROM employee WHERE YEAR(date_of_birth) = ?
1c133e22 430
5084f156 431 $rs->search({
432 name => 'Bob',
433 -nest => \[ 'YEAR(date_of_birth)', [ dummy => 1979 ] ],
1c133e22 434 });
435
5084f156 436 # Equivalent SQL:
437 # SELECT * FROM employee WHERE name = ? AND YEAR(date_of_birth) = ?
438
439See also L<SQL::Abstract/Literal SQL with placeholders and bind values
440(subqueries)>.
1c133e22 441
d2f3e87b 442=head1 JOINS AND PREFETCHING
443
87980de7 444=head2 Using joins and prefetch
445
bade79c4 446You can use the C<join> attribute to allow searching on, or sorting your
cd87b928 447results by, one or more columns in a related table.
448
449This requires that you have defined the L<DBIx::Class::Relationship>. For example :
450
451 My::Schema::CD->has_many( artists => 'My::Schema::Artist', 'artist_id');
452
453To return all CDs matching a particular artist name, you specify the name of the relationship ('artists'):
ea6309e2 454
bade79c4 455 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
456 {
0132e136 457 'artists.name' => 'Bob Marley'
bade79c4 458 },
459 {
cd87b928 460 join => 'artists', # join the artist table
bade79c4 461 }
462 );
463
464 # Equivalent SQL:
465 # SELECT cd.* FROM cd
466 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
467 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
468
cd87b928 469In that example both the join, and the condition use the relationship name rather than the table name
0132e136 470(see L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Joining> for more details on aliasing ).
cd87b928 471
bade79c4 472If required, you can now sort on any column in the related tables by including
cd87b928 473it in your C<order_by> attribute, (again using the aliased relation name rather than table name) :
bade79c4 474
475 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
476 {
cd87b928 477 'artists.name' => 'Bob Marley'
bade79c4 478 },
479 {
cd87b928 480 join => 'artists',
481 order_by => [qw/ artists.name /]
bade79c4 482 }
2f81ed0f 483 );
ea6309e2 484
bade79c4 485 # Equivalent SQL:
486 # SELECT cd.* FROM cd
487 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
488 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
489 # ORDER BY artist.name
ea6309e2 490
bade79c4 491Note that the C<join> attribute should only be used when you need to search or
492sort using columns in a related table. Joining related tables when you only
493need columns from the main table will make performance worse!
ea6309e2 494
bade79c4 495Now let's say you want to display a list of CDs, each with the name of the
496artist. The following will work fine:
ea6309e2 497
bade79c4 498 while (my $cd = $rs->next) {
499 print "CD: " . $cd->title . ", Artist: " . $cd->artist->name;
500 }
ea6309e2 501
bade79c4 502There is a problem however. We have searched both the C<cd> and C<artist> tables
503in our main query, but we have only returned data from the C<cd> table. To get
504the artist name for any of the CD objects returned, L<DBIx::Class> will go back
505to the database:
ea6309e2 506
bade79c4 507 SELECT artist.* FROM artist WHERE artist.id = ?
ea6309e2 508
509A statement like the one above will run for each and every CD returned by our
510main query. Five CDs, five extra queries. A hundred CDs, one hundred extra
511queries!
512
bade79c4 513Thankfully, L<DBIx::Class> has a C<prefetch> attribute to solve this problem.
897342e4 514This allows you to fetch results from related tables in advance:
ea6309e2 515
bade79c4 516 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
517 {
cd87b928 518 'artists.name' => 'Bob Marley'
bade79c4 519 },
520 {
cd87b928 521 join => 'artists',
522 order_by => [qw/ artists.name /],
523 prefetch => 'artists' # return artist data too!
bade79c4 524 }
525 );
ea6309e2 526
bade79c4 527 # Equivalent SQL (note SELECT from both "cd" and "artist"):
528 # SELECT cd.*, artist.* FROM cd
529 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
530 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
531 # ORDER BY artist.name
ea6309e2 532
533The code to print the CD list remains the same:
534
bade79c4 535 while (my $cd = $rs->next) {
536 print "CD: " . $cd->title . ", Artist: " . $cd->artist->name;
537 }
ea6309e2 538
bade79c4 539L<DBIx::Class> has now prefetched all matching data from the C<artist> table,
ea6309e2 540so no additional SQL statements are executed. You now have a much more
541efficient query.
542
bade79c4 543Also note that C<prefetch> should only be used when you know you will
ea6309e2 544definitely use data from a related table. Pre-fetching related tables when you
545only need columns from the main table will make performance worse!
546
51458a6a 547=head2 Multiple joins
548
549In the examples above, the C<join> attribute was a scalar. If you
550pass an array reference instead, you can join to multiple tables. In
551this example, we want to limit the search further, using
552C<LinerNotes>:
553
554 # Relationships defined elsewhere:
555 # CD->belongs_to('artist' => 'Artist');
556 # CD->has_one('liner_notes' => 'LinerNotes', 'cd');
557 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
558 {
559 'artist.name' => 'Bob Marley'
560 'liner_notes.notes' => { 'like', '%some text%' },
561 },
562 {
563 join => [qw/ artist liner_notes /],
564 order_by => [qw/ artist.name /],
565 }
566 );
567
568 # Equivalent SQL:
569 # SELECT cd.*, artist.*, liner_notes.* FROM cd
570 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
571 # JOIN liner_notes ON cd.id = liner_notes.cd
572 # WHERE artist.name = 'Bob Marley'
573 # ORDER BY artist.name
574
d2f3e87b 575=head2 Multi-step joins
ea6309e2 576
577Sometimes you want to join more than one relationship deep. In this example,
bade79c4 578we want to find all C<Artist> objects who have C<CD>s whose C<LinerNotes>
579contain a specific string:
580
581 # Relationships defined elsewhere:
582 # Artist->has_many('cds' => 'CD', 'artist');
583 # CD->has_one('liner_notes' => 'LinerNotes', 'cd');
584
585 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
586 {
587 'liner_notes.notes' => { 'like', '%some text%' },
588 },
589 {
590 join => {
591 'cds' => 'liner_notes'
592 }
593 }
594 );
ea6309e2 595
bade79c4 596 # Equivalent SQL:
597 # SELECT artist.* FROM artist
51458a6a 598 # LEFT JOIN cd ON artist.id = cd.artist
599 # LEFT JOIN liner_notes ON cd.id = liner_notes.cd
bade79c4 600 # WHERE liner_notes.notes LIKE '%some text%'
ea6309e2 601
602Joins can be nested to an arbitrary level. So if we decide later that we
603want to reduce the number of Artists returned based on who wrote the liner
604notes:
605
bade79c4 606 # Relationship defined elsewhere:
607 # LinerNotes->belongs_to('author' => 'Person');
608
609 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
610 {
611 'liner_notes.notes' => { 'like', '%some text%' },
612 'author.name' => 'A. Writer'
613 },
614 {
615 join => {
616 'cds' => {
617 'liner_notes' => 'author'
ea6309e2 618 }
bade79c4 619 }
620 }
621 );
ea6309e2 622
bade79c4 623 # Equivalent SQL:
624 # SELECT artist.* FROM artist
51458a6a 625 # LEFT JOIN cd ON artist.id = cd.artist
626 # LEFT JOIN liner_notes ON cd.id = liner_notes.cd
627 # LEFT JOIN author ON author.id = liner_notes.author
bade79c4 628 # WHERE liner_notes.notes LIKE '%some text%'
629 # AND author.name = 'A. Writer'
87980de7 630
51458a6a 631=head2 Multi-step and multiple joins
632
633With various combinations of array and hash references, you can join
634tables in any combination you desire. For example, to join Artist to
635CD and Concert, and join CD to LinerNotes:
636
637 # Relationships defined elsewhere:
638 # Artist->has_many('concerts' => 'Concert', 'artist');
639
640 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
641 { },
642 {
643 join => [
644 {
645 cds => 'liner_notes'
646 },
647 'concerts'
648 ],
649 }
650 );
651
652 # Equivalent SQL:
653 # SELECT artist.* FROM artist
654 # LEFT JOIN cd ON artist.id = cd.artist
655 # LEFT JOIN liner_notes ON cd.id = liner_notes.cd
656 # LEFT JOIN concert ON artist.id = concert.artist
657
897342e4 658=head2 Multi-step prefetch
659
d76788de 660C<prefetch> can be nested more than one relationship
897342e4 661deep using the same syntax as a multi-step join:
662
663 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Tag')->search(
ac2803ef 664 {},
897342e4 665 {
666 prefetch => {
667 cd => 'artist'
668 }
669 }
670 );
671
672 # Equivalent SQL:
673 # SELECT tag.*, cd.*, artist.* FROM tag
51458a6a 674 # JOIN cd ON tag.cd = cd.id
675 # JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.id
897342e4 676
677Now accessing our C<cd> and C<artist> relationships does not need additional
678SQL statements:
679
680 my $tag = $rs->first;
681 print $tag->cd->artist->name;
682
d2f3e87b 683=head1 ROW-LEVEL OPERATIONS
684
685=head2 Retrieving a row object's Schema
686
687It is possible to get a Schema object from a row object like so:
688
689 my $schema = $cd->result_source->schema;
690 # use the schema as normal:
0132e136 691 my $artist_rs = $schema->resultset('Artist');
d2f3e87b 692
693This can be useful when you don't want to pass around a Schema object to every
694method.
695
696=head2 Getting the value of the primary key for the last database insert
697
698AKA getting last_insert_id
699
d76788de 700Thanks to the core component PK::Auto, this is straightforward:
d2f3e87b 701
702 my $foo = $rs->create(\%blah);
703 # do more stuff
704 my $id = $foo->id; # foo->my_primary_key_field will also work.
705
706If you are not using autoincrementing primary keys, this will probably
707not work, but then you already know the value of the last primary key anyway.
708
709=head2 Stringification
710
0132e136 711Employ the standard stringification technique by using the L<overload>
d2f3e87b 712module.
713
714To make an object stringify itself as a single column, use something
b24d86a1 715like this (replace C<name> with the column/method of your choice):
d2f3e87b 716
717 use overload '""' => sub { shift->name}, fallback => 1;
718
719For more complex stringification, you can use an anonymous subroutine:
720
721 use overload '""' => sub { $_[0]->name . ", " .
722 $_[0]->address }, fallback => 1;
723
724=head3 Stringification Example
725
726Suppose we have two tables: C<Product> and C<Category>. The table
727specifications are:
728
729 Product(id, Description, category)
730 Category(id, Description)
731
732C<category> is a foreign key into the Category table.
733
734If you have a Product object C<$obj> and write something like
735
736 print $obj->category
737
738things will not work as expected.
739
740To obtain, for example, the category description, you should add this
741method to the class defining the Category table:
742
743 use overload "" => sub {
744 my $self = shift;
745
746 return $self->Description;
747 }, fallback => 1;
748
749=head2 Want to know if find_or_create found or created a row?
750
751Just use C<find_or_new> instead, then check C<in_storage>:
752
753 my $obj = $rs->find_or_new({ blah => 'blarg' });
754 unless ($obj->in_storage) {
755 $obj->insert;
756 # do whatever else you wanted if it was a new row
757 }
758
0132e136 759=head2 Static sub-classing DBIx::Class result classes
6fc80947 760
761AKA adding additional relationships/methods/etc. to a model for a
762specific usage of the (shared) model.
763
0132e136 764B<Schema definition>
765
766 package My::App::Schema;
767
768 use base DBIx::Class::Schema;
6fc80947 769
770 # load subclassed classes from My::App::Schema::Result/ResultSet
771 __PACKAGE__->load_namespaces;
772
773 # load classes from shared model
774 load_classes({
775 'My::Shared::Model::Result' => [qw/
776 Foo
777 Bar
778 /]});
779
780 1;
0132e136 781
782B<Result-Subclass definition>
783
6fc80947 784 package My::App::Schema::Result::Baz;
0132e136 785
786 use strict;
787 use warnings;
788 use base My::Shared::Model::Result::Baz;
789
6fc80947 790 # WARNING: Make sure you call table() again in your subclass,
791 # otherwise DBIx::Class::ResultSourceProxy::Table will not be called
792 # and the class name is not correctly registered as a source
0132e136 793 __PACKAGE__->table('baz');
794
795 sub additional_method {
796 return "I'm an additional method only needed by this app";
6fc80947 797 }
798
799 1;
0132e136 800
801=head2 Dynamic Sub-classing DBIx::Class proxy classes
d2f3e87b 802
803AKA multi-class object inflation from one table
0132e136 804
d2f3e87b 805L<DBIx::Class> classes are proxy classes, therefore some different
806techniques need to be employed for more than basic subclassing. In
807this example we have a single user table that carries a boolean bit
808for admin. We would like like to give the admin users
0132e136 809objects (L<DBIx::Class::Row>) the same methods as a regular user but
d2f3e87b 810also special admin only methods. It doesn't make sense to create two
811seperate proxy-class files for this. We would be copying all the user
812methods into the Admin class. There is a cleaner way to accomplish
813this.
814
815Overriding the C<inflate_result> method within the User proxy-class
816gives us the effect we want. This method is called by
817L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> when inflating a result from storage. So we
818grab the object being returned, inspect the values we are looking for,
819bless it if it's an admin object, and then return it. See the example
820below:
0132e136 821
822B<Schema Definition>
823
824 package My::Schema;
825
826 use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema/;
827
6fc80947 828 __PACKAGE__->load_namespaces;
829
830 1;
0132e136 831
832
833B<Proxy-Class definitions>
834
835 package My::Schema::Result::User;
836
837 use strict;
838 use warnings;
839 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
840
841 ### Define what our admin class is, for ensure_class_loaded()
842 my $admin_class = __PACKAGE__ . '::Admin';
843
844 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/Core/);
845
846 __PACKAGE__->table('users');
847
848 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/user_id email password
849 firstname lastname active
850 admin/);
851
852 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('user_id');
853
854 sub inflate_result {
855 my $self = shift;
856 my $ret = $self->next::method(@_);
857 if( $ret->admin ) {### If this is an admin, rebless for extra functions
858 $self->ensure_class_loaded( $admin_class );
859 bless $ret, $admin_class;
860 }
861 return $ret;
862 }
863
864 sub hello {
865 print "I am a regular user.\n";
866 return ;
867 }
868
6fc80947 869 1;
870
0132e136 871
872 package My::Schema::Result::User::Admin;
873
874 use strict;
875 use warnings;
876 use base qw/My::Schema::Result::User/;
04d29efe 877
878 # This line is important
879 __PACKAGE__->table('users');
0132e136 880
881 sub hello
882 {
883 print "I am an admin.\n";
884 return;
885 }
886
887 sub do_admin_stuff
888 {
889 print "I am doing admin stuff\n";
890 return ;
6fc80947 891 }
892
893 1;
0132e136 894
895B<Test File> test.pl
896
897 use warnings;
898 use strict;
899 use My::Schema;
900
901 my $user_data = { email => 'someguy@place.com',
902 password => 'pass1',
903 admin => 0 };
904
905 my $admin_data = { email => 'someadmin@adminplace.com',
906 password => 'pass2',
907 admin => 1 };
908
909 my $schema = My::Schema->connection('dbi:Pg:dbname=test');
910
911 $schema->resultset('User')->create( $user_data );
912 $schema->resultset('User')->create( $admin_data );
913
914 ### Now we search for them
915 my $user = $schema->resultset('User')->single( $user_data );
916 my $admin = $schema->resultset('User')->single( $admin_data );
917
918 print ref $user, "\n";
919 print ref $admin, "\n";
920
921 print $user->password , "\n"; # pass1
922 print $admin->password , "\n";# pass2; inherited from User
923 print $user->hello , "\n";# I am a regular user.
924 print $admin->hello, "\n";# I am an admin.
925
926 ### The statement below will NOT print
927 print "I can do admin stuff\n" if $user->can('do_admin_stuff');
928 ### The statement below will print
929 print "I can do admin stuff\n" if $admin->can('do_admin_stuff');
d2f3e87b 930
cec66b21 931Alternatively you can use L<DBIx::Class::DynamicSubclass> that implements
932exactly the above functionality.
933
a5b29361 934=head2 Skip row object creation for faster results
d2f3e87b 935
936DBIx::Class is not built for speed, it's built for convenience and
937ease of use, but sometimes you just need to get the data, and skip the
938fancy objects.
0132e136 939
d2f3e87b 940To do this simply use L<DBIx::Class::ResultClass::HashRefInflator>.
0132e136 941
d2f3e87b 942 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD');
0132e136 943
d2f3e87b 944 $rs->result_class('DBIx::Class::ResultClass::HashRefInflator');
0132e136 945
d2f3e87b 946 my $hash_ref = $rs->find(1);
a5b29361 947
d2f3e87b 948Wasn't that easy?
bc96f260 949
db2b2eb6 950Beware, changing the Result class using
951L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/result_class> will replace any existing class
952completely including any special components loaded using
953load_components, eg L<DBIx::Class::InflateColumn::DateTime>.
954
d2f3e87b 955=head2 Get raw data for blindingly fast results
956
957If the L<HashRefInflator|DBIx::Class::ResultClass::HashRefInflator> solution
958above is not fast enough for you, you can use a DBIx::Class to return values
db2b2eb6 959exactly as they come out of the database with none of the convenience methods
d2f3e87b 960wrapped round them.
961
2d7d8459 962This is used like so:
d2f3e87b 963
964 my $cursor = $rs->cursor
965 while (my @vals = $cursor->next) {
966 # use $val[0..n] here
967 }
968
969You will need to map the array offsets to particular columns (you can
db2b2eb6 970use the L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/select> attribute of L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search> to force ordering).
d2f3e87b 971
972=head1 RESULTSET OPERATIONS
973
974=head2 Getting Schema from a ResultSet
975
db2b2eb6 976To get the L<DBIx::Class::Schema> object from a ResultSet, do the following:
d2f3e87b 977
978 $rs->result_source->schema
979
980=head2 Getting Columns Of Data
981
982AKA Aggregating Data
ac2803ef 983
984If you want to find the sum of a particular column there are several
985ways, the obvious one is to use search:
986
987 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Items')->search(
988 {},
0132e136 989 {
ac2803ef 990 select => [ { sum => 'Cost' } ],
d676881f 991 as => [ 'total_cost' ], # remember this 'as' is for DBIx::Class::ResultSet not SQL
ac2803ef 992 }
993 );
994 my $tc = $rs->first->get_column('total_cost');
995
996Or, you can use the L<DBIx::Class::ResultSetColumn>, which gets
997returned when you ask the C<ResultSet> for a column using
998C<get_column>:
999
1000 my $cost = $schema->resultset('Items')->get_column('Cost');
1001 my $tc = $cost->sum;
1002
1003With this you can also do:
1004
1005 my $minvalue = $cost->min;
1006 my $maxvalue = $cost->max;
1007
1008Or just iterate through the values of this column only:
1009
1010 while ( my $c = $cost->next ) {
1011 print $c;
1012 }
1013
1014 foreach my $c ($cost->all) {
1015 print $c;
1016 }
1017
0132e136 1018C<ResultSetColumn> only has a limited number of built-in functions. If
709353af 1019you need one that it doesn't have, then you can use the C<func> method
1020instead:
1021
1022 my $avg = $cost->func('AVERAGE');
1023
1024This will cause the following SQL statement to be run:
1025
1026 SELECT AVERAGE(Cost) FROM Items me
1027
1028Which will of course only work if your database supports this function.
ac2803ef 1029See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSetColumn> for more documentation.
1030
204e5c03 1031=head2 Creating a result set from a set of rows
1032
0132e136 1033Sometimes you have a (set of) row objects that you want to put into a
204e5c03 1034resultset without the need to hit the DB again. You can do that by using the
1035L<set_cache|DBIx::Class::Resultset/set_cache> method:
1036
2d7a4e46 1037 my @uploadable_groups;
204e5c03 1038 while (my $group = $groups->next) {
1039 if ($group->can_upload($self)) {
1040 push @uploadable_groups, $group;
1041 }
1042 }
1043 my $new_rs = $self->result_source->resultset;
1044 $new_rs->set_cache(\@uploadable_groups);
1045 return $new_rs;
1046
1047
d2f3e87b 1048=head1 USING RELATIONSHIPS
acee4e4d 1049
d2f3e87b 1050=head2 Create a new row in a related table
acee4e4d 1051
6f1434fd 1052 my $author = $book->create_related('author', { name => 'Fred'});
acee4e4d 1053
d2f3e87b 1054=head2 Search in a related table
acee4e4d 1055
1056Only searches for books named 'Titanic' by the author in $author.
1057
6f1434fd 1058 my $books_rs = $author->search_related('books', { name => 'Titanic' });
acee4e4d 1059
d2f3e87b 1060=head2 Delete data in a related table
acee4e4d 1061
1062Deletes only the book named Titanic by the author in $author.
1063
6f1434fd 1064 $author->delete_related('books', { name => 'Titanic' });
acee4e4d 1065
d2f3e87b 1066=head2 Ordering a relationship result set
f8bad769 1067
0132e136 1068If you always want a relation to be ordered, you can specify this when you
f8bad769 1069create the relationship.
1070
6f1434fd 1071To order C<< $book->pages >> by descending page_number, create the relation
1072as follows:
f8bad769 1073
6f1434fd 1074 __PACKAGE__->has_many('pages' => 'Page', 'book', { order_by => \'page_number DESC'} );
f8bad769 1075
7c0825ab 1076=head2 Filtering a relationship result set
1077
1078If you want to get a filtered result set, you can just add add to $attr as follows:
1079
1080 __PACKAGE__->has_many('pages' => 'Page', 'book', { where => { scrap => 0 } } );
1081
d2f3e87b 1082=head2 Many-to-many relationships
f8bad769 1083
d2f3e87b 1084This is straightforward using L<ManyToMany|DBIx::Class::Relationship/many_to_many>:
f8bad769 1085
d2f3e87b 1086 package My::User;
6f1434fd 1087 use base 'DBIx::Class';
1088 __PACKAGE__->load_components('Core');
d2f3e87b 1089 __PACKAGE__->table('user');
1090 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/id name/);
1091 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('id');
1092 __PACKAGE__->has_many('user_address' => 'My::UserAddress', 'user');
1093 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('addresses' => 'user_address', 'address');
87980de7 1094
d2f3e87b 1095 package My::UserAddress;
6f1434fd 1096 use base 'DBIx::Class';
1097 __PACKAGE__->load_components('Core');
d2f3e87b 1098 __PACKAGE__->table('user_address');
1099 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/user address/);
1100 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key(qw/user address/);
1101 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to('user' => 'My::User');
1102 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to('address' => 'My::Address');
181a28f4 1103
d2f3e87b 1104 package My::Address;
6f1434fd 1105 use base 'DBIx::Class';
1106 __PACKAGE__->load_components('Core');
d2f3e87b 1107 __PACKAGE__->table('address');
1108 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/id street town area_code country/);
1109 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('id');
1110 __PACKAGE__->has_many('user_address' => 'My::UserAddress', 'address');
1111 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('users' => 'user_address', 'user');
1112
1113 $rs = $user->addresses(); # get all addresses for a user
1114 $rs = $address->users(); # get all users for an address
1115
db2b2eb6 1116=head2 Relationships across DB schemas
1117
1118Mapping relationships across L<DB schemas|DBIx::Class::Manual::Glossary/DB schema>
1119is easy as long as the schemas themselves are all accessible via the same DBI
1120connection. In most cases, this means that they are on the same database host
1121as each other and your connecting database user has the proper permissions to them.
1122
1123To accomplish this one only needs to specify the DB schema name in the table
1124declaration, like so...
1125
1126 package MyDatabase::Main::Artist;
1127 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
1128 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/PK::Auto Core/);
0132e136 1129
db2b2eb6 1130 __PACKAGE__->table('database1.artist'); # will use "database1.artist" in FROM clause
0132e136 1131
cd87b928 1132 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ artist_id name /);
1133 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('artist_id');
db2b2eb6 1134 __PACKAGE__->has_many('cds' => 'MyDatabase::Main::Cd');
1135
1136 1;
1137
1138Whatever string you specify there will be used to build the "FROM" clause in SQL
1139queries.
1140
1141The big drawback to this is you now have DB schema names hardcoded in your
1142class files. This becomes especially troublesome if you have multiple instances
1143of your application to support a change lifecycle (e.g. DEV, TEST, PROD) and
1144the DB schemas are named based on the environment (e.g. database1_dev).
1145
1146However, one can dynamically "map" to the proper DB schema by overriding the
1147L<connection|DBIx::Class::Schama/connection> method in your Schema class and
1148building a renaming facility, like so:
1149
1150 package MyDatabase::Schema;
1151 use Moose;
0132e136 1152
db2b2eb6 1153 extends 'DBIx::Class::Schema';
0132e136 1154
db2b2eb6 1155 around connection => sub {
1156 my ( $inner, $self, $dsn, $username, $pass, $attr ) = ( shift, @_ );
0132e136 1157
db2b2eb6 1158 my $postfix = delete $attr->{schema_name_postfix};
0132e136 1159
db2b2eb6 1160 $inner->(@_);
0132e136 1161
db2b2eb6 1162 if ( $postfix ) {
1163 $self->append_db_name($postfix);
1164 }
1165 };
1166
1167 sub append_db_name {
1168 my ( $self, $postfix ) = @_;
0132e136 1169
1170 my @sources_with_db
1171 = grep
1172 { $_->name =~ /^\w+\./mx }
1173 map
1174 { $self->source($_) }
db2b2eb6 1175 $self->sources;
0132e136 1176
db2b2eb6 1177 foreach my $source (@sources_with_db) {
1178 my $name = $source->name;
1179 $name =~ s{^(\w+)\.}{${1}${postfix}\.}mx;
0132e136 1180
db2b2eb6 1181 $source->name($name);
1182 }
1183 }
1184
1185 1;
1186
1187By overridding the L<connection|DBIx::Class::Schama/connection>
1188method and extracting a custom option from the provided \%attr hashref one can
1189then simply iterate over all the Schema's ResultSources, renaming them as
1190needed.
1191
0132e136 1192To use this facility, simply add or modify the \%attr hashref that is passed to
db2b2eb6 1193L<connection|DBIx::Class::Schama/connect>, as follows:
1194
0132e136 1195 my $schema
db2b2eb6 1196 = MyDatabase::Schema->connect(
0132e136 1197 $dsn,
1198 $user,
db2b2eb6 1199 $pass,
1200 {
1201 schema_name_postfix => '_dev'
0132e136 1202 # ... Other options as desired ...
db2b2eb6 1203 })
1204
1205Obviously, one could accomplish even more advanced mapping via a hash map or a
1206callback routine.
1207
d2f3e87b 1208=head1 TRANSACTIONS
1209
1210As of version 0.04001, there is improved transaction support in
1211L<DBIx::Class::Storage> and L<DBIx::Class::Schema>. Here is an
1212example of the recommended way to use it:
1213
1214 my $genus = $schema->resultset('Genus')->find(12);
1215
1216 my $coderef2 = sub {
1217 $genus->extinct(1);
1218 $genus->update;
1219 };
70634260 1220
181a28f4 1221 my $coderef1 = sub {
35d4fe78 1222 $genus->add_to_species({ name => 'troglodyte' });
1223 $genus->wings(2);
1224 $genus->update;
6f1434fd 1225 $schema->txn_do($coderef2); # Can have a nested transaction. Only the outer will actualy commit
181a28f4 1226 return $genus->species;
1227 };
1228
181a28f4 1229 my $rs;
1230 eval {
70634260 1231 $rs = $schema->txn_do($coderef1);
181a28f4 1232 };
1233
1234 if ($@) { # Transaction failed
1235 die "the sky is falling!" #
1236 if ($@ =~ /Rollback failed/); # Rollback failed
1237
1238 deal_with_failed_transaction();
35d4fe78 1239 }
87980de7 1240
181a28f4 1241Nested transactions will work as expected. That is, only the outermost
1242transaction will actually issue a commit to the $dbh, and a rollback
1243at any level of any transaction will cause the entire nested
1244transaction to fail. Support for savepoints and for true nested
40dbc108 1245transactions (for databases that support them) will hopefully be added
1246in the future.
ee38fa40 1247
0132e136 1248=head1 SQL
ee38fa40 1249
d2f3e87b 1250=head2 Creating Schemas From An Existing Database
ea6309e2 1251
0132e136 1252L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> will connect to a database and create a
d2f3e87b 1253L<DBIx::Class::Schema> and associated sources by examining the database.
bade79c4 1254
0132e136 1255The recommend way of achieving this is to use the
d2f3e87b 1256L<make_schema_at|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/make_schema_at> method:
bade79c4 1257
6f1434fd 1258 perl -MDBIx::Class::Schema::Loader=make_schema_at,dump_to_dir:./lib \
1259 -e 'make_schema_at("My::Schema", { debug => 1 }, [ "dbi:Pg:dbname=foo","postgres" ])'
362500af 1260
d2f3e87b 1261This will create a tree of files rooted at C<./lib/My/Schema/> containing
1262source definitions for all the tables found in the C<foo> database.
362500af 1263
d2f3e87b 1264=head2 Creating DDL SQL
362500af 1265
264f1571 1266The following functionality requires you to have L<SQL::Translator>
1267(also known as "SQL Fairy") installed.
362500af 1268
264f1571 1269To create a set of database-specific .sql files for the above schema:
362500af 1270
264f1571 1271 my $schema = My::Schema->connect($dsn);
1272 $schema->create_ddl_dir(['MySQL', 'SQLite', 'PostgreSQL'],
1273 '0.1',
d2f3e87b 1274 './dbscriptdir/'
264f1571 1275 );
1276
1277By default this will create schema files in the current directory, for
1278MySQL, SQLite and PostgreSQL, using the $VERSION from your Schema.pm.
1279
1280To create a new database using the schema:
1281
1282 my $schema = My::Schema->connect($dsn);
1283 $schema->deploy({ add_drop_tables => 1});
1284
1285To import created .sql files using the mysql client:
1286
1287 mysql -h "host" -D "database" -u "user" -p < My_Schema_1.0_MySQL.sql
1288
1289To create C<ALTER TABLE> conversion scripts to update a database to a
1290newer version of your schema at a later point, first set a new
d2f3e87b 1291C<$VERSION> in your Schema file, then:
264f1571 1292
1293 my $schema = My::Schema->connect($dsn);
1294 $schema->create_ddl_dir(['MySQL', 'SQLite', 'PostgreSQL'],
1295 '0.2',
1296 '/dbscriptdir/',
1297 '0.1'
1298 );
1299
1300This will produce new database-specific .sql files for the new version
1301of the schema, plus scripts to convert from version 0.1 to 0.2. This
1302requires that the files for 0.1 as created above are available in the
1303given directory to diff against.
362500af 1304
6f1434fd 1305=head2 Select from dual
16cd5b28 1306
1307Dummy tables are needed by some databases to allow calling functions
1308or expressions that aren't based on table content, for examples of how
1309this applies to various database types, see:
1310L<http://troels.arvin.dk/db/rdbms/#other-dummy_table>.
1311
1312Note: If you're using Oracles dual table don't B<ever> do anything
1313other than a select, if you CRUD on your dual table you *will* break
1314your database.
1315
1316Make a table class as you would for any other table
0132e136 1317
16cd5b28 1318 package MyAppDB::Dual;
1319 use strict;
1320 use warnings;
1321 use base 'DBIx::Class';
1322 __PACKAGE__->load_components("Core");
1323 __PACKAGE__->table("Dual");
1324 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(
1325 "dummy",
1326 { data_type => "VARCHAR2", is_nullable => 0, size => 1 },
1327 );
0132e136 1328
16cd5b28 1329Once you've loaded your table class select from it using C<select>
1330and C<as> instead of C<columns>
0132e136 1331
16cd5b28 1332 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Dual')->search(undef,
1333 { select => [ 'sydate' ],
1334 as => [ 'now' ]
1335 },
1336 );
0132e136 1337
16cd5b28 1338All you have to do now is be careful how you access your resultset, the below
1339will not work because there is no column called 'now' in the Dual table class
0132e136 1340
16cd5b28 1341 while (my $dual = $rs->next) {
1342 print $dual->now."\n";
1343 }
6f1434fd 1344 # Can't locate object method "now" via package "MyAppDB::Dual" at headshot.pl line 23.
0132e136 1345
16cd5b28 1346You could of course use 'dummy' in C<as> instead of 'now', or C<add_columns> to
1347your Dual class for whatever you wanted to select from dual, but that's just
1348silly, instead use C<get_column>
0132e136 1349
16cd5b28 1350 while (my $dual = $rs->next) {
1351 print $dual->get_column('now')."\n";
1352 }
0132e136 1353
16cd5b28 1354Or use C<cursor>
0132e136 1355
16cd5b28 1356 my $cursor = $rs->cursor;
1357 while (my @vals = $cursor->next) {
1358 print $vals[0]."\n";
1359 }
336256bc 1360
1361In case you're going to use this "trick" together with L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy> or
1362L<DBIx::Class::Schema/create_ddl_dir> a table called "dual" will be created in your
1363current schema. This would overlap "sys.dual" and you could not fetch "sysdate" or
1364"sequence.nextval" anymore from dual. To avoid this problem, just tell
1365L<SQL::Translator> to not create table dual:
1366
1367 my $sqlt_args = {
1368 add_drop_table => 1,
1369 parser_args => { sources => [ grep $_ ne 'Dual', schema->sources ] },
1370 };
1371 $schema->create_ddl_dir( [qw/Oracle/], undef, './sql', undef, $sqlt_args );
0132e136 1372
16cd5b28 1373Or use L<DBIx::Class::ResultClass::HashRefInflator>
0132e136 1374
16cd5b28 1375 $rs->result_class('DBIx::Class::ResultClass::HashRefInflator');
1376 while ( my $dual = $rs->next ) {
1377 print $dual->{now}."\n";
1378 }
0132e136 1379
16cd5b28 1380Here are some example C<select> conditions to illustrate the different syntax
0132e136 1381you could use for doing stuff like
16cd5b28 1382C<oracles.heavily(nested(functions_can('take', 'lots'), OF), 'args')>
0132e136 1383
16cd5b28 1384 # get a sequence value
1385 select => [ 'A_SEQ.nextval' ],
0132e136 1386
16cd5b28 1387 # get create table sql
1388 select => [ { 'dbms_metadata.get_ddl' => [ "'TABLE'", "'ARTIST'" ]} ],
0132e136 1389
16cd5b28 1390 # get a random num between 0 and 100
1391 select => [ { "trunc" => [ { "dbms_random.value" => [0,100] } ]} ],
0132e136 1392
16cd5b28 1393 # what year is it?
1394 select => [ { 'extract' => [ \'year from sysdate' ] } ],
0132e136 1395
16cd5b28 1396 # do some math
1397 select => [ {'round' => [{'cos' => [ \'180 * 3.14159265359/180' ]}]}],
0132e136 1398
16cd5b28 1399 # which day of the week were you born on?
6f1434fd 1400 select => [{'to_char' => [{'to_date' => [ "'25-DEC-1980'", "'dd-mon-yyyy'" ]}, "'day'"]}],
0132e136 1401
16cd5b28 1402 # select 16 rows from dual
1403 select => [ "'hello'" ],
1404 as => [ 'world' ],
1405 group_by => [ 'cube( 1, 2, 3, 4 )' ],
0132e136 1406
1407
16cd5b28 1408
d2f3e87b 1409=head2 Adding Indexes And Functions To Your SQL
362500af 1410
d2f3e87b 1411Often you will want indexes on columns on your table to speed up searching. To
0132e136 1412do this, create a method called C<sqlt_deploy_hook> in the relevant source
1413class (refer to the advanced
2d7d8459 1414L<callback system|DBIx::Class::ResultSource/sqlt_deploy_callback> if you wish
1415to share a hook between multiple sources):
b0a20454 1416
23471103 1417 package My::Schema::Result::Artist;
b0a20454 1418
d2f3e87b 1419 __PACKAGE__->table('artist');
1420 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(id => { ... }, name => { ... })
b0a20454 1421
d2f3e87b 1422 sub sqlt_deploy_hook {
1423 my ($self, $sqlt_table) = @_;
1424
1425 $sqlt_table->add_index(name => 'idx_name', fields => ['name']);
1426 }
1427
1428 1;
1429
0132e136 1430Sometimes you might want to change the index depending on the type of the
d2f3e87b 1431database for which SQL is being generated:
1432
1433 my ($db_type = $sqlt_table->schema->translator->producer_type)
1434 =~ s/^SQL::Translator::Producer:://;
1435
0132e136 1436You can also add hooks to the schema level to stop certain tables being
d2f3e87b 1437created:
1438
1439 package My::Schema;
1440
1441 ...
1442
1443 sub sqlt_deploy_hook {
1444 my ($self, $sqlt_schema) = @_;
1445
1446 $sqlt_schema->drop_table('table_name');
1447 }
1448
2d7d8459 1449You could also add views, procedures or triggers to the output using
1450L<SQL::Translator::Schema/add_view>,
1451L<SQL::Translator::Schema/add_procedure> or
1452L<SQL::Translator::Schema/add_trigger>.
1453
b0a20454 1454
362500af 1455=head2 Schema versioning
1456
1457The following example shows simplistically how you might use DBIx::Class to
1458deploy versioned schemas to your customers. The basic process is as follows:
1459
da4779ad 1460=over 4
1461
1462=item 1.
1463
1464Create a DBIx::Class schema
1465
1466=item 2.
1467
1468Save the schema
1469
1470=item 3.
1471
1472Deploy to customers
1473
1474=item 4.
1475
1476Modify schema to change functionality
1477
1478=item 5.
1479
1480Deploy update to customers
1481
1482=back
362500af 1483
d2f3e87b 1484B<Create a DBIx::Class schema>
362500af 1485
1486This can either be done manually, or generated from an existing database as
d2f3e87b 1487described under L</Creating Schemas From An Existing Database>
362500af 1488
d2f3e87b 1489B<Save the schema>
362500af 1490
d2f3e87b 1491Call L<DBIx::Class::Schema/create_ddl_dir> as above under L</Creating DDL SQL>.
362500af 1492
d2f3e87b 1493B<Deploy to customers>
362500af 1494
1495There are several ways you could deploy your schema. These are probably
1496beyond the scope of this recipe, but might include:
1497
da4779ad 1498=over 4
1499
1500=item 1.
1501
1502Require customer to apply manually using their RDBMS.
1503
1504=item 2.
1505
1506Package along with your app, making database dump/schema update/tests
362500af 1507all part of your install.
1508
da4779ad 1509=back
1510
d2f3e87b 1511B<Modify the schema to change functionality>
362500af 1512
264f1571 1513As your application evolves, it may be necessary to modify your schema
1514to change functionality. Once the changes are made to your schema in
1515DBIx::Class, export the modified schema and the conversion scripts as
d2f3e87b 1516in L</Creating DDL SQL>.
362500af 1517
d2f3e87b 1518B<Deploy update to customers>
362500af 1519
264f1571 1520Add the L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Versioned> schema component to your
1521Schema class. This will add a new table to your database called
ecea7937 1522C<dbix_class_schema_vesion> which will keep track of which version is installed
264f1571 1523and warn if the user trys to run a newer schema version than the
1524database thinks it has.
1525
1526Alternatively, you can send the conversion sql scripts to your
1527customers as above.
362500af 1528
96849b7f 1529=head2 Setting quoting for the generated SQL
d2f3e87b 1530
1531If the database contains column names with spaces and/or reserved words, they
1532need to be quoted in the SQL queries. This is done using:
1533
0bc1c11e 1534 $schema->storage->sql_maker->quote_char([ qw/[ ]/] );
1535 $schema->storage->sql_maker->name_sep('.');
d2f3e87b 1536
1537The first sets the quote characters. Either a pair of matching
1538brackets, or a C<"> or C<'>:
0132e136 1539
0bc1c11e 1540 $schema->storage->sql_maker->quote_char('"');
d2f3e87b 1541
1542Check the documentation of your database for the correct quote
1543characters to use. C<name_sep> needs to be set to allow the SQL
1544generator to put the quotes the correct place.
1545
0132e136 1546In most cases you should set these as part of the arguments passed to
d68b0c69 1547L<DBIx::Class::Schema/connect>:
d2f3e87b 1548
1549 my $schema = My::Schema->connect(
1550 'dbi:mysql:my_db',
1551 'db_user',
1552 'db_password',
1553 {
1554 quote_char => '"',
1555 name_sep => '.'
1556 }
1557 )
1558
0bc1c11e 1559In some cases, quoting will be required for all users of a schema. To enforce
88f937fb 1560this, you can also overload the C<connection> method for your schema class:
0bc1c11e 1561
88f937fb 1562 sub connection {
0bc1c11e 1563 my $self = shift;
1564 my $rv = $self->next::method( @_ );
1565 $rv->storage->sql_maker->quote_char([ qw/[ ]/ ]);
1566 $rv->storage->sql_maker->name_sep('.');
1567 return $rv;
1568 }
1569
7be93b07 1570=head2 Setting limit dialect for SQL::Abstract::Limit
1571
324572ca 1572In some cases, SQL::Abstract::Limit cannot determine the dialect of
1573the remote SQL server by looking at the database handle. This is a
1574common problem when using the DBD::JDBC, since the DBD-driver only
1575know that in has a Java-driver available, not which JDBC driver the
1576Java component has loaded. This specifically sets the limit_dialect
1577to Microsoft SQL-server (See more names in SQL::Abstract::Limit
1578-documentation.
7be93b07 1579
1580 __PACKAGE__->storage->sql_maker->limit_dialect('mssql');
1581
324572ca 1582The JDBC bridge is one way of getting access to a MSSQL server from a platform
7be93b07 1583that Microsoft doesn't deliver native client libraries for. (e.g. Linux)
1584
0132e136 1585The limit dialect can also be set at connect time by specifying a
d2f3e87b 1586C<limit_dialect> key in the final hash as shown above.
2437a1e3 1587
05697a49 1588=head2 Working with PostgreSQL array types
1589
20ea616f 1590You can also assign values to PostgreSQL array columns by passing array
1591references in the C<\%columns> (C<\%vals>) hashref of the
1592L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/create> and L<DBIx::Class::Row/update> family of
1593methods:
05697a49 1594
1595 $resultset->create({
1596 numbers => [1, 2, 3]
1597 });
1598
1599 $row->update(
1600 {
1601 numbers => [1, 2, 3]
1602 },
1603 {
1604 day => '2008-11-24'
1605 }
1606 );
1607
1608In conditions (eg. C<\%cond> in the L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search> family of
1609methods) you cannot directly use array references (since this is interpreted as
1610a list of values to be C<OR>ed), but you can use the following syntax to force
1611passing them as bind values:
1612
1613 $resultset->search(
1614 {
31eb3263 1615 numbers => \[ '= ?', [numbers => [1, 2, 3]] ]
05697a49 1616 }
1617 );
1618
1619See L<SQL::Abstract/array_datatypes> and L<SQL::Abstract/Literal SQL with
31eb3263 1620placeholders and bind values (subqueries)> for more explanation. Note that
1621L<DBIx::Class> sets L<SQL::Abstract/bindtype> to C<columns>, so you must pass
1622the bind values (the C<[1, 2, 3]> arrayref in the above example) wrapped in
1623arrayrefs together with the column name, like this: C<< [column_name => value]
1624>>.
05697a49 1625
0132e136 1626=head1 BOOTSTRAPPING/MIGRATING
2437a1e3 1627
d2f3e87b 1628=head2 Easy migration from class-based to schema-based setup
2437a1e3 1629
d2f3e87b 1630You want to start using the schema-based approach to L<DBIx::Class>
1631(see L<SchemaIntro.pod>), but have an established class-based setup with lots
1632of existing classes that you don't want to move by hand. Try this nifty script
1633instead:
1634
1635 use MyDB;
1636 use SQL::Translator;
0132e136 1637
d2f3e87b 1638 my $schema = MyDB->schema_instance;
0132e136 1639
1640 my $translator = SQL::Translator->new(
d2f3e87b 1641 debug => $debug || 0,
1642 trace => $trace || 0,
1643 no_comments => $no_comments || 0,
1644 show_warnings => $show_warnings || 0,
1645 add_drop_table => $add_drop_table || 0,
1646 validate => $validate || 0,
1647 parser_args => {
1648 'DBIx::Schema' => $schema,
1649 },
1650 producer_args => {
1651 'prefix' => 'My::Schema',
1652 },
1653 );
0132e136 1654
d2f3e87b 1655 $translator->parser('SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class');
1656 $translator->producer('SQL::Translator::Producer::DBIx::Class::File');
0132e136 1657
d2f3e87b 1658 my $output = $translator->translate(@args) or die
1659 "Error: " . $translator->error;
0132e136 1660
d2f3e87b 1661 print $output;
2437a1e3 1662
d2f3e87b 1663You could use L<Module::Find> to search for all subclasses in the MyDB::*
1664namespace, which is currently left as an exercise for the reader.
2437a1e3 1665
d2f3e87b 1666=head1 OVERLOADING METHODS
086b93a2 1667
ab872312 1668L<DBIx::Class> uses the L<Class::C3> package, which provides for redispatch of
1669method calls, useful for things like default values and triggers. You have to
1670use calls to C<next::method> to overload methods. More information on using
1671L<Class::C3> with L<DBIx::Class> can be found in
086b93a2 1672L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Component>.
1673
d2f3e87b 1674=head2 Setting default values for a row
1675
1676It's as simple as overriding the C<new> method. Note the use of
1677C<next::method>.
1678
1679 sub new {
1680 my ( $class, $attrs ) = @_;
1681
1682 $attrs->{foo} = 'bar' unless defined $attrs->{foo};
1683
1684 my $new = $class->next::method($attrs);
1685
1686 return $new;
1687 }
1688
0132e136 1689For more information about C<next::method>, look in the L<Class::C3>
d2f3e87b 1690documentation. See also L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Component> for more
1691ways to write your own base classes to do this.
1692
1693People looking for ways to do "triggers" with DBIx::Class are probably
0132e136 1694just looking for this.
d2f3e87b 1695
1696=head2 Changing one field whenever another changes
086b93a2 1697
0132e136 1698For example, say that you have three columns, C<id>, C<number>, and
086b93a2 1699C<squared>. You would like to make changes to C<number> and have
1700C<squared> be automagically set to the value of C<number> squared.
1701You can accomplish this by overriding C<store_column>:
1702
1703 sub store_column {
1704 my ( $self, $name, $value ) = @_;
1705 if ($name eq 'number') {
1706 $self->squared($value * $value);
1707 }
1708 $self->next::method($name, $value);
1709 }
1710
1711Note that the hard work is done by the call to C<next::method>, which
324572ca 1712redispatches your call to store_column in the superclass(es).
086b93a2 1713
d2f3e87b 1714=head2 Automatically creating related objects
086b93a2 1715
0132e136 1716You might have a class C<Artist> which has many C<CD>s. Further, you
086b93a2 1717want to create a C<CD> object every time you insert an C<Artist> object.
ccbebdbc 1718You can accomplish this by overriding C<insert> on your objects:
086b93a2 1719
1720 sub insert {
ccbebdbc 1721 my ( $self, @args ) = @_;
1722 $self->next::method(@args);
086b93a2 1723 $self->cds->new({})->fill_from_artist($self)->insert;
1724 return $self;
1725 }
1726
1727where C<fill_from_artist> is a method you specify in C<CD> which sets
1728values in C<CD> based on the data in the C<Artist> object you pass in.
1729
d2f3e87b 1730=head2 Wrapping/overloading a column accessor
1731
1732B<Problem:>
1733
1734Say you have a table "Camera" and want to associate a description
1735with each camera. For most cameras, you'll be able to generate the description from
1736the other columns. However, in a few special cases you may want to associate a
1737custom description with a camera.
1738
1739B<Solution:>
1740
1741In your database schema, define a description field in the "Camera" table that
1742can contain text and null values.
1743
1744In DBIC, we'll overload the column accessor to provide a sane default if no
1745custom description is defined. The accessor will either return or generate the
1746description, depending on whether the field is null or not.
1747
1748First, in your "Camera" schema class, define the description field as follows:
1749
1750 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(description => { accessor => '_description' });
1751
1752Next, we'll define the accessor-wrapper subroutine:
1753
1754 sub description {
1755 my $self = shift;
1756
1757 # If there is an update to the column, we'll let the original accessor
1758 # deal with it.
1759 return $self->_description(@_) if @_;
1760
1761 # Fetch the column value.
1762 my $description = $self->_description;
1763
1764 # If there's something in the description field, then just return that.
1765 return $description if defined $description && length $descripton;
1766
1767 # Otherwise, generate a description.
1768 return $self->generate_description;
1769 }
1770
1771=head1 DEBUGGING AND PROFILING
1772
1773=head2 DBIx::Class objects with Data::Dumper
1def3451 1774
1775L<Data::Dumper> can be a very useful tool for debugging, but sometimes it can
1776be hard to find the pertinent data in all the data it can generate.
1777Specifically, if one naively tries to use it like so,
1778
1779 use Data::Dumper;
1780
1781 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find(1);
1782 print Dumper($cd);
1783
1784several pages worth of data from the CD object's schema and result source will
1785be dumped to the screen. Since usually one is only interested in a few column
1786values of the object, this is not very helpful.
1787
1788Luckily, it is possible to modify the data before L<Data::Dumper> outputs
1789it. Simply define a hook that L<Data::Dumper> will call on the object before
1790dumping it. For example,
1791
1792 package My::DB::CD;
1793
1794 sub _dumper_hook {
99fb1058 1795 $_[0] = bless {
1796 %{ $_[0] },
1def3451 1797 result_source => undef,
99fb1058 1798 }, ref($_[0]);
1def3451 1799 }
1800
1801 [...]
1802
1803 use Data::Dumper;
1804
22139027 1805 local $Data::Dumper::Freezer = '_dumper_hook';
1def3451 1806
1807 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find(1);
1808 print Dumper($cd);
1809 # dumps $cd without its ResultSource
1810
1811If the structure of your schema is such that there is a common base class for
1812all your table classes, simply put a method similar to C<_dumper_hook> in the
1813base class and set C<$Data::Dumper::Freezer> to its name and L<Data::Dumper>
1814will automagically clean up your data before printing it. See
1815L<Data::Dumper/EXAMPLES> for more information.
1816
4c248161 1817=head2 Profiling
1818
85f78622 1819When you enable L<DBIx::Class::Storage>'s debugging it prints the SQL
4c248161 1820executed as well as notifications of query completion and transaction
1821begin/commit. If you'd like to profile the SQL you can subclass the
1822L<DBIx::Class::Storage::Statistics> class and write your own profiling
1823mechanism:
1824
1825 package My::Profiler;
1826 use strict;
1827
1828 use base 'DBIx::Class::Storage::Statistics';
1829
1830 use Time::HiRes qw(time);
1831
1832 my $start;
1833
1834 sub query_start {
1835 my $self = shift();
1836 my $sql = shift();
1837 my $params = @_;
1838
70f39278 1839 $self->print("Executing $sql: ".join(', ', @params)."\n");
4c248161 1840 $start = time();
1841 }
1842
1843 sub query_end {
1844 my $self = shift();
1845 my $sql = shift();
1846 my @params = @_;
1847
70f39278 1848 my $elapsed = sprintf("%0.4f", time() - $start);
1849 $self->print("Execution took $elapsed seconds.\n");
4c248161 1850 $start = undef;
1851 }
1852
1853 1;
1854
1855You can then install that class as the debugging object:
1856
70f39278 1857 __PACKAGE__->storage->debugobj(new My::Profiler());
1858 __PACKAGE__->storage->debug(1);
4c248161 1859
1860A more complicated example might involve storing each execution of SQL in an
1861array:
1862
1863 sub query_end {
1864 my $self = shift();
1865 my $sql = shift();
1866 my @params = @_;
1867
1868 my $elapsed = time() - $start;
1869 push(@{ $calls{$sql} }, {
1870 params => \@params,
1871 elapsed => $elapsed
1872 });
1873 }
1874
1875You could then create average, high and low execution times for an SQL
1876statement and dig down to see if certain parameters cause aberrant behavior.
70f39278 1877You might want to check out L<DBIx::Class::QueryLog> as well.
4c248161 1878
bc96f260 1879=head1 STARTUP SPEED
1880
1881L<DBIx::Class|DBIx::Class> programs can have a significant startup delay
1882as the ORM loads all the relevant classes. This section examines
1883techniques for reducing the startup delay.
1884
1885These tips are are listed in order of decreasing effectiveness - so the
1886first tip, if applicable, should have the greatest effect on your
1887application.
1888
1889=head2 Statically Define Your Schema
1890
1891If you are using
1892L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> to build the
1893classes dynamically based on the database schema then there will be a
1894significant startup delay.
1895
1896For production use a statically defined schema (which can be generated
1897using L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> to dump
1898the database schema once - see
1899L<make_schema_at|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/make_schema_at> and
1900L<dump_directory|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/dump_directory> for more
1901details on creating static schemas from a database).
1902
1903=head2 Move Common Startup into a Base Class
1904
1905Typically L<DBIx::Class> result classes start off with
1906
1907 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
1908 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/InflateColumn::DateTime Core/);
1909
1910If this preamble is moved into a common base class:-
1911
1912 package MyDBICbase;
0132e136 1913
bc96f260 1914 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
1915 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/InflateColumn::DateTime Core/);
1916 1;
1917
1918and each result class then uses this as a base:-
1919
1920 use base qw/MyDBICbase/;
1921
1922then the load_components is only performed once, which can result in a
1923considerable startup speedup for schemas with many classes.
1924
1925=head2 Explicitly List Schema Result Classes
1926
1927The schema class will normally contain
1928
1929 __PACKAGE__->load_classes();
1930
1931to load the result classes. This will use L<Module::Find|Module::Find>
1932to find and load the appropriate modules. Explicitly defining the
1933classes you wish to load will remove the overhead of
0132e136 1934L<Module::Find|Module::Find> and the related directory operations:
bc96f260 1935
1936 __PACKAGE__->load_classes(qw/ CD Artist Track /);
1937
1938If you are instead using the L<load_namespaces|DBIx::Class::Schema/load_namespaces>
1939syntax to load the appropriate classes there is not a direct alternative
1940avoiding L<Module::Find|Module::Find>.
7aaec96c 1941
f4db5947 1942=head1 MEMORY USAGE
1943
1944=head2 Cached statements
1945
1946L<DBIx::Class> normally caches all statements with L<< prepare_cached()|DBI/prepare_cached >>.
1947This is normally a good idea, but if too many statements are cached, the database may use too much
1948memory and may eventually run out and fail entirely. If you suspect this may be the case, you may want
1949to examine DBI's L<< CachedKids|DBI/CachedKidsCachedKids_(hash_ref) >> hash:
1950
1951 # print all currently cached prepared statements
1952 print for keys %{$schema->storage->dbh->{CachedKids}};
1953 # get a count of currently cached prepared statements
1954 my $count = scalar keys %{$schema->storage->dbh->{CachedKids}};
1955
1956If it's appropriate, you can simply clear these statements, automatically deallocating them in the
1957database:
1958
1959 my $kids = $schema->storage->dbh->{CachedKids};
1960 delete @{$kids}{keys %$kids} if scalar keys %$kids > 100;
1961
1962But what you probably want is to expire unused statements and not those that are used frequently.
1963You can accomplish this with L<Tie::Cache> or L<Tie::Cache::LRU>:
1964
1965 use Tie::Cache;
1966 use DB::Main;
1967 my $schema = DB::Main->connect($dbi_dsn, $user, $pass, {
1968 on_connect_do => sub { tie %{shift->_dbh->{CachedKids}}, 'Tie::Cache', 100 },
1969 });
1970
40dbc108 1971=cut