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1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | |
3 | DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting - Got a problem? Shoot it. |
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4 | |
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5 | =head2 "Can't locate storage blabla" |
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6 | |
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7 | You're trying to make a query on a non-connected schema. Make sure you got |
8 | the current resultset from $schema->resultset('Artist') on a schema object |
9 | you got back from connect(). |
10 | |
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11 | =head2 Tracing SQL |
12 | |
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13 | The C<DBIC_TRACE> environment variable controls |
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14 | SQL tracing, so to see what is happening try |
15 | |
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16 | export DBIC_TRACE=1 |
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17 | |
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18 | Alternatively use the C<< storage->debug >> class method:- |
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19 | |
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20 | $schema->storage->debug(1); |
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21 | |
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22 | To send the output somewhere else set debugfh:- |
23 | |
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24 | $schema->storage->debugfh(IO::File->new('/tmp/trace.out', 'w'); |
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25 | |
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26 | Alternatively you can do this with the environment variable, too:- |
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27 | |
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28 | export DBIC_TRACE="1=/tmp/trace.out" |
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29 | |
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30 | =head2 Can't locate method result_source_instance |
31 | |
32 | For some reason the table class in question didn't load fully, so the |
33 | ResultSource object for it hasn't been created. Debug this class in |
34 | isolation, then try loading the full schema again. |
35 | |
36 | =head2 Can't get last insert ID under Postgres with serial primary keys |
37 | |
38 | Older L<DBI> and L<DBD::Pg> versions do not handle C<last_insert_id> |
39 | correctly, causing code that uses auto-incrementing primary key |
40 | columns to fail with a message such as: |
41 | |
42 | Can't get last insert id at /.../DBIx/Class/Row.pm line 95 |
43 | |
44 | In particular the RHEL 4 and FC3 Linux distributions both ship with |
45 | combinations of L<DBI> and L<DBD::Pg> modules that do not work |
46 | correctly. |
47 | |
48 | L<DBI> version 1.50 and L<DBD::Pg> 1.43 are known to work. |
49 | |
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50 | =head2 Can't locate object method "source_name" via package |
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51 | |
52 | There's likely a syntax error in the table class referred to elsewhere |
53 | in this error message. In particular make sure that the package |
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54 | declaration is correct. For example, for a schema C< MySchema > |
55 | you need to specify a fully qualified namespace: C< package MySchema::MyTable; >. |
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56 | |
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57 | =head2 syntax error at or near "<something>" ... |
58 | |
59 | This can happen if you have a relation whose name is a word reserved by your |
60 | database, e.g. "user": |
61 | |
62 | package My::Schema::User; |
63 | ... |
64 | __PACKAGE__->table('users'); |
65 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ id name /); |
66 | __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('id'); |
67 | ... |
68 | 1; |
69 | |
70 | package My::Schema::ACL; |
71 | ... |
72 | __PACKAGE__->table('acl'); |
73 | __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ user_id /); |
74 | __PACKAGE__->belongs_to( 'user' => 'My::Schema::User', 'user_id' ); |
75 | ... |
76 | 1; |
77 | |
78 | $schema->resultset('ACL')->search( |
79 | {}, |
80 | { |
81 | join => [qw/ user /], |
82 | '+select' => [ 'user.name' ] |
83 | } |
84 | ); |
85 | |
86 | The SQL generated would resemble something like: |
87 | |
88 | SELECT me.user_id, user.name FROM acl me |
89 | JOIN users user ON me.user_id = user.id |
90 | |
91 | If, as is likely, your database treats "user" as a reserved word, you'd end |
92 | up with the following errors: |
93 | |
94 | 1) syntax error at or near "." - due to "user.name" in the SELECT clause |
95 | |
96 | 2) syntax error at or near "user" - due to "user" in the JOIN clause |
97 | |
98 | The solution is to enable quoting - see |
99 | L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/Setting_quoting_for_the_generated_SQL> for |
100 | details. |
101 | |
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102 | =head2 column "foo DESC" does not exist ... |
103 | |
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104 | This can happen if you are still using the obsolete order hack, and also |
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105 | happen to turn on SQL-quoting. |
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106 | |
107 | $rs->search( {}, { order_by => [ 'name DESC' ] } ); |
108 | |
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109 | Since L<DBIx::Class> >= 0.08100 and L<SQL::Abstract> >= 1.50 the above |
110 | should be written as: |
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111 | |
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112 | $rs->search( {}, { order_by => { -desc => 'name' } } ); |
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113 | |
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114 | For more ways to express order clauses refer to |
115 | L<SQL::Abstract/ORDER_BY_CLAUSES> |
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116 | |
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117 | =head2 Perl Performance Issues on Red Hat Systems |
118 | |
119 | There is a problem with slow performance of certain DBIx::Class |
120 | operations using the system perl on some Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise |
121 | Linux system (as well as their derivative distributions such as Centos, |
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122 | White Box and Scientific Linux). |
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123 | |
124 | Distributions affected include Fedora 5 through to Fedora 8 and RHEL5 |
125 | upto and including RHEL5 Update 2. Fedora 9 (which uses perl 5.10) has |
126 | never been affected - this is purely a perl 5.8.8 issue. |
127 | |
128 | As of September 2008 the following packages are known to be fixed and so |
129 | free of this performance issue (this means all Fedora and RHEL5 systems |
130 | with full current updates will not be subject to this problem):- |
131 | |
132 | Fedora 8 - perl-5.8.8-41.fc8 |
133 | RHEL5 - perl-5.8.8-15.el5_2.1 |
134 | |
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135 | This issue is due to perl doing an exhaustive search of blessed objects |
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136 | under certain circumstances. The problem shows up as performance |
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137 | degradation exponential to the number of L<DBIx::Class> row objects in |
138 | memory, so can be unnoticeable with certain data sets, but with huge |
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139 | performance impacts on other datasets. |
140 | |
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141 | A pair of tests for susceptibility to the issue and performance effects |
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142 | of the bless/overload problem can be found in the L<DBIx::Class> test |
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143 | suite, in the C<t/99rh_perl_perf_bug.t> file. |
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144 | |
145 | Further information on this issue can be found in |
146 | L<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=379791>, |
147 | L<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=460308> and |
148 | L<http://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2008-0876.html> |
149 | |
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150 | =head2 Excessive Memory Allocation with TEXT/BLOB/etc. Columns and Large LongReadLen |
151 | |
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152 | It has been observed, using L<DBD::ODBC>, that creating a L<DBIx::Class::Row> |
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153 | object which includes a column of data type TEXT/BLOB/etc. will allocate |
154 | LongReadLen bytes. This allocation does not leak, but if LongReadLen |
155 | is large in size, and many such row objects are created, e.g. as the |
156 | output of a ResultSet query, the memory footprint of the Perl interpreter |
157 | can grow very large. |
158 | |
159 | The solution is to use the smallest practical value for LongReadLen. |
160 | |
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161 | =cut |
162 | |