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1 | package DBIx::Class::Ordered; |
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2 | use strict; |
3 | use warnings; |
4 | use base qw( DBIx::Class ); |
5 | |
6 | =head1 NAME |
7 | |
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8 | DBIx::Class::Ordered - Modify the position of objects in an ordered list. |
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9 | |
10 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
11 | |
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12 | Create a table for your ordered data. |
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13 | |
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14 | CREATE TABLE items ( |
15 | item_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, |
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16 | name TEXT NOT NULL, |
17 | position INTEGER NOT NULL |
18 | ); |
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19 | |
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20 | Optionally, add one or more columns to specify groupings, allowing you |
21 | to maintain independent ordered lists within one table: |
22 | |
23 | CREATE TABLE items ( |
24 | item_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, |
25 | name TEXT NOT NULL, |
26 | position INTEGER NOT NULL, |
27 | group_id INTEGER NOT NULL |
28 | ); |
29 | |
30 | Or even |
31 | |
32 | CREATE TABLE items ( |
33 | item_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, |
34 | name TEXT NOT NULL, |
35 | position INTEGER NOT NULL, |
36 | group_id INTEGER NOT NULL, |
37 | other_group_id INTEGER NOT NULL |
38 | ); |
39 | |
a8492531 |
40 | In your Schema or DB class add "Ordered" to the top |
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41 | of the component list. |
42 | |
a733c37f |
43 | __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw( Ordered ... )); |
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44 | |
45 | Specify the column that stores the position number for |
46 | each row. |
47 | |
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48 | package My::Item; |
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49 | __PACKAGE__->position_column('position'); |
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50 | |
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51 | If you are using one grouping column, specify it as follows: |
52 | |
53 | __PACKAGE__->grouping_column('group_id'); |
54 | |
55 | Or if you have multiple grouping columns: |
56 | |
57 | __PACKAGE__->grouping_column(['group_id', 'other_group_id']); |
58 | |
a8492531 |
59 | That's it, now you can change the position of your objects. |
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60 | |
61 | #!/use/bin/perl |
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62 | use My::Item; |
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63 | |
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64 | my $item = My::Item->create({ name=>'Matt S. Trout' }); |
65 | # If using grouping_column: |
66 | my $item = My::Item->create({ name=>'Matt S. Trout', group_id=>1 }); |
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67 | |
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68 | my $rs = $item->siblings(); |
69 | my @siblings = $item->siblings(); |
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70 | |
71 | my $sibling; |
a733c37f |
72 | $sibling = $item->first_sibling(); |
73 | $sibling = $item->last_sibling(); |
74 | $sibling = $item->previous_sibling(); |
75 | $sibling = $item->next_sibling(); |
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76 | |
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77 | $item->move_previous(); |
78 | $item->move_next(); |
79 | $item->move_first(); |
80 | $item->move_last(); |
81 | $item->move_to( $position ); |
1d941d67 |
82 | $item->move_to_group( 'groupname' ); |
83 | $item->move_to_group( 'groupname', $position ); |
84 | $item->move_to_group( {group_id=>'groupname', 'other_group_id=>'othergroupname'} ); |
85 | $item->move_to_group( {group_id=>'groupname', 'other_group_id=>'othergroupname'}, $position ); |
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86 | |
87 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
88 | |
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89 | This module provides a simple interface for modifying the ordered |
90 | position of DBIx::Class objects. |
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91 | |
133dd22a |
92 | =head1 AUTO UPDATE |
93 | |
94 | All of the move_* methods automatically update the rows involved in |
95 | the query. This is not configurable and is due to the fact that if you |
96 | move a record it always causes other records in the list to be updated. |
97 | |
118e6b96 |
98 | =head1 METHODS |
99 | |
100 | =head2 position_column |
101 | |
102 | __PACKAGE__->position_column('position'); |
103 | |
104 | Sets and retrieves the name of the column that stores the |
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105 | positional value of each record. Defaults to "position". |
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106 | |
107 | =cut |
108 | |
109 | __PACKAGE__->mk_classdata( 'position_column' => 'position' ); |
110 | |
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111 | =head2 grouping_column |
133dd22a |
112 | |
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113 | __PACKAGE__->grouping_column('group_id'); |
133dd22a |
114 | |
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115 | This method specifies a column to limit all queries in |
133dd22a |
116 | this module by. This effectively allows you to have multiple |
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117 | ordered lists within the same table. |
133dd22a |
118 | |
119 | =cut |
120 | |
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121 | __PACKAGE__->mk_classdata( 'grouping_column' ); |
133dd22a |
122 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
123 | =head2 null_position_value |
124 | |
125 | __PACKAGE__->null_position_value(undef); |
126 | |
127 | This method specifies a value of L</position_column> which B<would |
128 | never be assigned to a row> during normal operation. When |
129 | a row is moved, its position is set to this value temporarily, so |
130 | that any unique constrainst can not be violated. This value defaults |
131 | to 0, which should work for all cases except when your positions do |
132 | indeed start from 0. |
133 | |
134 | =cut |
135 | |
136 | __PACKAGE__->mk_classdata( 'null_position_value' => 0 ); |
137 | |
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138 | =head2 siblings |
139 | |
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140 | my $rs = $item->siblings(); |
141 | my @siblings = $item->siblings(); |
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142 | |
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143 | Returns an B<ordered> resultset of all other objects in the same |
144 | group excluding the one you called it on. |
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145 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
146 | The ordering is a backwards-compatibility artifact - if you need |
147 | a resultset with no ordering applied use L</_siblings> |
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148 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
149 | =cut |
118e6b96 |
150 | sub siblings { |
bd7ca9e8 |
151 | my $self = shift; |
152 | return $self->_siblings->search ({}, { order_by => $self->position_column } ); |
118e6b96 |
153 | } |
154 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
155 | =head2 previous_siblings |
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156 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
157 | my $prev_rs = $item->previous_siblings(); |
158 | my @prev_siblings = $item->previous_siblings(); |
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159 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
160 | Returns a resultset of all objects in the same group |
161 | positioned before the object on which this method was called. |
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162 | |
163 | =cut |
bd7ca9e8 |
164 | sub previous_siblings { |
165 | my $self = shift; |
166 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
167 | my $position = $self->get_column ($position_column); |
168 | return ( defined $position |
169 | ? $self->_siblings->search ({ $position_column => { '<', $position } }) |
170 | : $self->_siblings |
171 | ); |
118e6b96 |
172 | } |
173 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
174 | =head2 next_siblings |
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175 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
176 | my $next_rs = $item->next_siblings(); |
177 | my @next_siblings = $item->next_siblings(); |
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178 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
179 | Returns a resultset of all objects in the same group |
180 | positioned after the object on which this method was called. |
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181 | |
182 | =cut |
bd7ca9e8 |
183 | sub next_siblings { |
184 | my $self = shift; |
185 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
186 | my $position = $self->get_column ($position_column); |
187 | return ( defined $position |
188 | ? $self->_siblings->search ({ $position_column => { '>', $position } }) |
189 | : $self->_siblings |
190 | ); |
118e6b96 |
191 | } |
192 | |
193 | =head2 previous_sibling |
194 | |
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195 | my $sibling = $item->previous_sibling(); |
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196 | |
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197 | Returns the sibling that resides one position back. Returns 0 |
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198 | if the current object is the first one. |
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199 | |
200 | =cut |
201 | |
202 | sub previous_sibling { |
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203 | my $self = shift; |
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204 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
bd7ca9e8 |
205 | |
206 | my $psib = $self->previous_siblings->search( |
207 | {}, |
208 | { rows => 1, order_by => { '-desc' => $position_column } }, |
209 | )->single; |
210 | |
211 | return defined $psib ? $psib : 0; |
212 | } |
213 | |
214 | =head2 first_sibling |
215 | |
216 | my $sibling = $item->first_sibling(); |
217 | |
218 | Returns the first sibling object, or 0 if the first sibling |
219 | is this sibling. |
220 | |
221 | =cut |
222 | |
223 | sub first_sibling { |
224 | my $self = shift; |
225 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
226 | |
227 | my $fsib = $self->previous_siblings->search( |
228 | {}, |
229 | { rows => 1, order_by => { '-asc' => $position_column } }, |
230 | )->single; |
231 | |
232 | return defined $fsib ? $fsib : 0; |
118e6b96 |
233 | } |
234 | |
235 | =head2 next_sibling |
236 | |
a733c37f |
237 | my $sibling = $item->next_sibling(); |
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238 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
239 | Returns the sibling that resides one position forward. Returns 0 |
a8492531 |
240 | if the current object is the last one. |
118e6b96 |
241 | |
242 | =cut |
243 | |
244 | sub next_sibling { |
bd7ca9e8 |
245 | my $self = shift; |
246 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
247 | my $nsib = $self->next_siblings->search( |
248 | {}, |
249 | { rows => 1, order_by => { '-asc' => $position_column } }, |
250 | )->single; |
251 | |
252 | return defined $nsib ? $nsib : 0; |
253 | } |
254 | |
255 | =head2 last_sibling |
256 | |
257 | my $sibling = $item->last_sibling(); |
258 | |
259 | Returns the last sibling, or 0 if the last sibling is this |
260 | sibling. |
261 | |
262 | =cut |
263 | |
264 | sub last_sibling { |
265 | my $self = shift; |
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266 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
bd7ca9e8 |
267 | my $lsib = $self->next_siblings->search( |
268 | {}, |
269 | { rows => 1, order_by => { '-desc' => $position_column } }, |
270 | )->single; |
271 | |
272 | return defined $lsib ? $lsib : 0; |
118e6b96 |
273 | } |
274 | |
82a8f76f |
275 | # an optimised method to get the last sibling position without inflating a row object |
276 | sub _last_sibling_pos { |
277 | my $self = shift; |
278 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
279 | |
280 | my $cursor = $self->next_siblings->search( |
281 | {}, |
282 | { rows => 1, order_by => { '-desc' => $position_column }, columns => $position_column }, |
283 | )->cursor; |
284 | |
285 | my ($pos) = $cursor->next; |
286 | return $pos; |
287 | } |
288 | |
80010e2b |
289 | =head2 move_previous |
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290 | |
a733c37f |
291 | $item->move_previous(); |
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292 | |
a8492531 |
293 | Swaps position with the sibling in the position previous in |
294 | the list. Returns 1 on success, and 0 if the object is |
295 | already the first one. |
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296 | |
297 | =cut |
298 | |
80010e2b |
299 | sub move_previous { |
bd7ca9e8 |
300 | my $self = shift; |
301 | return $self->move_to ($self->_position - 1); |
118e6b96 |
302 | } |
303 | |
80010e2b |
304 | =head2 move_next |
118e6b96 |
305 | |
a733c37f |
306 | $item->move_next(); |
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307 | |
a8492531 |
308 | Swaps position with the sibling in the next position in the |
309 | list. Returns 1 on success, and 0 if the object is already |
310 | the last in the list. |
118e6b96 |
311 | |
312 | =cut |
313 | |
80010e2b |
314 | sub move_next { |
bd7ca9e8 |
315 | my $self = shift; |
316 | return 0 unless $self->next_siblings->count; |
317 | return $self->move_to ($self->_position + 1); |
118e6b96 |
318 | } |
319 | |
320 | =head2 move_first |
321 | |
a733c37f |
322 | $item->move_first(); |
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323 | |
a8492531 |
324 | Moves the object to the first position in the list. Returns 1 |
325 | on success, and 0 if the object is already the first. |
118e6b96 |
326 | |
327 | =cut |
328 | |
329 | sub move_first { |
bd7ca9e8 |
330 | return shift->move_to( 1 ); |
118e6b96 |
331 | } |
332 | |
333 | =head2 move_last |
334 | |
a733c37f |
335 | $item->move_last(); |
118e6b96 |
336 | |
a8492531 |
337 | Moves the object to the last position in the list. Returns 1 |
338 | on success, and 0 if the object is already the last one. |
118e6b96 |
339 | |
340 | =cut |
341 | |
342 | sub move_last { |
bd7ca9e8 |
343 | my $self = shift; |
344 | return $self->move_to( $self->_group_rs->count ); |
118e6b96 |
345 | } |
346 | |
347 | =head2 move_to |
348 | |
a733c37f |
349 | $item->move_to( $position ); |
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350 | |
a8492531 |
351 | Moves the object to the specified position. Returns 1 on |
352 | success, and 0 if the object is already at the specified |
353 | position. |
118e6b96 |
354 | |
355 | =cut |
356 | |
357 | sub move_to { |
358 | my( $self, $to_position ) = @_; |
133dd22a |
359 | return 0 if ( $to_position < 1 ); |
118e6b96 |
360 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
361 | my $from_position = $self->_position; |
362 | return 0 if ( $from_position == $to_position ); |
363 | |
364 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
365 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
366 | { |
8f535707 |
367 | my $guard = $self->result_source->schema->txn_scope_guard; |
368 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
369 | my ($direction, @between); |
370 | if ( $from_position < $to_position ) { |
371 | $direction = -1; |
372 | @between = map { $self->_position_value ($_) } ( $from_position + 1, $to_position ); |
373 | } |
374 | else { |
375 | $direction = 1; |
376 | @between = map { $self->_position_value ($_) } ( $to_position, $from_position - 1 ); |
377 | } |
378 | |
379 | my $new_pos_val = $self->_position_value ($to_position); # record this before the shift |
b250066f |
380 | |
381 | # we need to null-position the moved row if the position column is part of a constraint |
382 | if (grep { $_ eq $position_column } ( map { @$_ } (values %{{ $self->result_source->unique_constraints }} ) ) ) { |
383 | $self->_ordered_internal_update({ $position_column => $self->null_position_value }); |
384 | } |
385 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
386 | $self->_shift_siblings ($direction, @between); |
387 | $self->_ordered_internal_update({ $position_column => $new_pos_val }); |
fa6b598f |
388 | |
8f535707 |
389 | $guard->commit; |
390 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
391 | return 1; |
392 | } |
393 | } |
fa6b598f |
394 | |
79dc353a |
395 | =head2 move_to_group |
396 | |
397 | $item->move_to_group( $group, $position ); |
398 | |
399 | Moves the object to the specified position of the specified |
400 | group, or to the end of the group if $position is undef. |
401 | 1 is returned on success, and 0 is returned if the object is |
402 | already at the specified position of the specified group. |
403 | |
1d941d67 |
404 | $group may be specified as a single scalar if only one |
405 | grouping column is in use, or as a hashref of column => value pairs |
406 | if multiple grouping columns are in use. |
fa6b598f |
407 | |
79dc353a |
408 | =cut |
409 | |
410 | sub move_to_group { |
411 | my( $self, $to_group, $to_position ) = @_; |
fa6b598f |
412 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
413 | $self->throw_exception ('move_to_group() expects a group specification') |
414 | unless defined $to_group; |
415 | |
fa6b598f |
416 | # if we're given a string, turn it into a hashref |
417 | unless (ref $to_group eq 'HASH') { |
bd7ca9e8 |
418 | my @gcols = $self->_grouping_columns; |
419 | |
420 | $self->throw_exception ('Single group supplied for a multi-column group identifier') if @gcols > 1; |
421 | $to_group = {$gcols[0] => $to_group}; |
fa6b598f |
422 | } |
423 | |
79dc353a |
424 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
79dc353a |
425 | |
79dc353a |
426 | return 0 if ( defined($to_position) and $to_position < 1 ); |
bd7ca9e8 |
427 | if ($self->_is_in_group ($to_group) ) { |
428 | return 0 if not defined $to_position; |
429 | return $self->move_to ($to_position); |
79dc353a |
430 | } |
431 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
432 | { |
8f535707 |
433 | my $guard = $self->result_source->schema->txn_scope_guard; |
434 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
435 | # Move to end of current group to adjust siblings |
436 | $self->move_last; |
437 | |
438 | $self->set_inflated_columns({ %$to_group, $position_column => undef }); |
439 | my $new_group_count = $self->_group_rs->count; |
440 | |
441 | if ( not defined($to_position) or $to_position > $new_group_count) { |
442 | $self->set_column( |
443 | $position_column => $new_group_count |
82a8f76f |
444 | ? $self->_next_position_value ( $self->_last_sibling_pos ) |
bd7ca9e8 |
445 | : $self->_initial_position_value |
446 | ); |
447 | } |
448 | else { |
449 | my $bumped_pos_val = $self->_position_value ($to_position); |
450 | my @between = ($to_position, $new_group_count); |
451 | $self->_shift_siblings (1, @between); #shift right |
452 | $self->set_column( $position_column => $bumped_pos_val ); |
453 | } |
454 | |
455 | $self->_ordered_internal_update; |
456 | |
8f535707 |
457 | $guard->commit; |
458 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
459 | return 1; |
460 | } |
79dc353a |
461 | } |
462 | |
118e6b96 |
463 | =head2 insert |
464 | |
465 | Overrides the DBIC insert() method by providing a default |
466 | position number. The default will be the number of rows in |
467 | the table +1, thus positioning the new record at the last position. |
468 | |
469 | =cut |
470 | |
471 | sub insert { |
472 | my $self = shift; |
473 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
bd7ca9e8 |
474 | |
475 | unless ($self->get_column($position_column)) { |
82a8f76f |
476 | my $lsib_pos = $self->_last_sibling_pos; |
bd7ca9e8 |
477 | $self->set_column( |
82a8f76f |
478 | $position_column => (defined $lsib_pos |
479 | ? $self->_next_position_value ( $lsib_pos ) |
bd7ca9e8 |
480 | : $self->_initial_position_value |
481 | ) |
482 | ); |
483 | } |
484 | |
0a298c73 |
485 | return $self->next::method( @_ ); |
118e6b96 |
486 | } |
487 | |
79dc353a |
488 | =head2 update |
489 | |
490 | Overrides the DBIC update() method by checking for a change |
491 | to the position and/or group columns. Movement within a |
492 | group or to another group is handled by repositioning |
493 | the appropriate siblings. Position defaults to the end |
494 | of a new group if it has been changed to undef. |
495 | |
496 | =cut |
497 | |
498 | sub update { |
499 | my $self = shift; |
500 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
501 | # this is set by _ordered_internal_update() |
502 | return $self->next::method(@_) if $self->{_ORDERED_INTERNAL_UPDATE}; |
79dc353a |
503 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
504 | my $upd = shift; |
505 | $self->set_inflated_columns($upd) if $upd; |
79dc353a |
506 | my %changes = $self->get_dirty_columns; |
507 | $self->discard_changes; |
508 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
509 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
fa6b598f |
510 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
511 | # if nothing group/position related changed - short circuit |
512 | if (not grep { exists $changes{$_} } ($self->_grouping_columns, $position_column) ) { |
513 | return $self->next::method( \%changes, @_ ); |
514 | } |
fa6b598f |
515 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
516 | { |
8f535707 |
517 | my $guard = $self->result_source->schema->txn_scope_guard; |
518 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
519 | # if any of our grouping columns have been changed |
520 | if (grep { exists $changes{$_} } ($self->_grouping_columns) ) { |
521 | |
522 | # create new_group by taking the current group and inserting changes |
523 | my $new_group = {$self->_grouping_clause}; |
524 | foreach my $col (keys %$new_group) { |
525 | if (exists $changes{$col}) { |
526 | $new_group->{$col} = delete $changes{$col}; # don't want to pass this on to next::method |
527 | } |
fa6b598f |
528 | } |
bd7ca9e8 |
529 | |
530 | $self->move_to_group( |
531 | $new_group, |
532 | (exists $changes{$position_column} |
533 | # The FIXME bit contradicts the documentation: when changing groups without supplying explicit |
534 | # positions in move_to_group(), we push the item to the end of the group. |
535 | # However when I was rewriting this, the position from the old group was clearly passed to the new one |
536 | # Probably needs to go away (by ribasushi) |
537 | ? delete $changes{$position_column} # means there was a position change supplied with the update too |
538 | : $self->_position # FIXME! |
539 | ), |
540 | ); |
541 | } |
542 | elsif (exists $changes{$position_column}) { |
543 | $self->move_to(delete $changes{$position_column}); |
fa6b598f |
544 | } |
545 | |
8f535707 |
546 | my @res; |
547 | my $want = wantarray(); |
548 | if (not defined $want) { |
549 | $self->next::method( \%changes, @_ ); |
550 | } |
551 | elsif ($want) { |
552 | @res = $self->next::method( \%changes, @_ ); |
553 | } |
554 | else { |
555 | $res[0] = $self->next::method( \%changes, @_ ); |
556 | } |
557 | |
558 | $guard->commit; |
559 | return $want ? @res : $res[0]; |
79dc353a |
560 | } |
79dc353a |
561 | } |
562 | |
118e6b96 |
563 | =head2 delete |
564 | |
565 | Overrides the DBIC delete() method by first moving the object |
bd7ca9e8 |
566 | to the last position, then deleting it, thus ensuring the |
118e6b96 |
567 | integrity of the positions. |
568 | |
569 | =cut |
570 | |
571 | sub delete { |
572 | my $self = shift; |
8f535707 |
573 | |
574 | my $guard = $self->result_source->schema->txn_scope_guard; |
575 | |
576 | $self->move_last; |
577 | |
578 | my @res; |
579 | my $want = wantarray(); |
580 | if (not defined $want) { |
581 | $self->next::method( @_ ); |
bd7ca9e8 |
582 | } |
8f535707 |
583 | elsif ($want) { |
584 | @res = $self->next::method( @_ ); |
585 | } |
586 | else { |
587 | $res[0] = $self->next::method( @_ ); |
588 | } |
589 | |
590 | $guard->commit; |
591 | return $want ? @res : $res[0]; |
bd7ca9e8 |
592 | } |
593 | |
b250066f |
594 | =head1 METHODS FOR EXTENDING ORDERED |
bd7ca9e8 |
595 | |
596 | You would want to override the methods below if you use sparse |
597 | (non-linear) or non-numeric position values. This can be useful |
598 | if you are working with preexisting non-normalised position data, |
599 | or if you need to work with materialized path columns. |
600 | |
601 | =head2 _position |
602 | |
603 | my $num_pos = $item->_position; |
604 | |
b250066f |
605 | Returns the B<absolute numeric position> of the current object, with the |
bd7ca9e8 |
606 | first object being at position 1, its sibling at position 2 and so on. |
607 | By default simply returns the value of L</position_column>. |
608 | |
609 | =cut |
610 | sub _position { |
611 | my $self = shift; |
612 | |
613 | # #the right way to do this |
614 | # return $self->previous_siblings->count + 1; |
615 | |
616 | return $self->get_column ($self->position_column); |
617 | } |
618 | |
619 | =head2 _position_value |
620 | |
621 | my $pos_value = $item->_position_value ( $pos ) |
622 | |
b250066f |
623 | Returns the B<value> of L</position_column> of the object at numeric |
bd7ca9e8 |
624 | position C<$pos>. By default simply returns C<$pos>. |
625 | |
626 | =cut |
627 | sub _position_value { |
628 | my ($self, $pos) = @_; |
629 | |
630 | # #the right way to do this (not optimized) |
631 | # my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
632 | # return $self -> _group_rs |
633 | # -> search({}, { order_by => $position_column }) |
634 | # -> slice ( $pos - 1) |
635 | # -> single |
636 | # -> get_column ($position_column); |
637 | |
638 | return $pos; |
639 | } |
640 | |
641 | =head2 _initial_position_value |
642 | |
643 | __PACKAGE__->_initial_position_value(0); |
644 | |
b250066f |
645 | This method specifies a B<value> of L</position_column> which is assigned |
bd7ca9e8 |
646 | to the first inserted element of a group, if no value was supplied at |
647 | insertion time. All subsequent values are derived from this one by |
648 | L</_next_position_value> below. Defaults to 1. |
649 | |
650 | =cut |
651 | |
652 | __PACKAGE__->mk_classdata( '_initial_position_value' => 1 ); |
653 | |
654 | =head2 _next_position_value |
655 | |
656 | my $new_value = $item->_next_position_value ( $position_value ) |
657 | |
b250066f |
658 | Returns a position B<value> that would be considered C<next> with |
bd7ca9e8 |
659 | regards to C<$position_value>. Can be pretty much anything, given |
660 | that C<< $position_value < $new_value >> where C<< < >> is the |
661 | SQL comparison operator (usually works fine on strings). The |
662 | default method expects C<$position_value> to be numeric, and |
663 | returns C<$position_value + 1> |
664 | |
665 | =cut |
666 | sub _next_position_value { |
667 | return $_[1] + 1; |
668 | } |
669 | |
670 | =head2 _shift_siblings |
671 | |
672 | $item->_shift_siblings ($direction, @between) |
673 | |
b250066f |
674 | Shifts all siblings with B<positions values> in the range @between |
675 | (inclusive) by one position as specified by $direction (left if < 0, |
676 | right if > 0). By default simply increments/decrements each |
677 | L<position_column> value by 1, doing so in a way as to not violate |
678 | any existing constraints. |
679 | |
680 | Note that if you override this method and have unique constraints |
681 | including the L<position_column> the shift is not a trivial task. |
682 | Refer to the implementation source of the default method for more |
683 | information. |
bd7ca9e8 |
684 | |
685 | =cut |
686 | sub _shift_siblings { |
687 | my ($self, $direction, @between) = @_; |
688 | return 0 unless $direction; |
689 | |
690 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
691 | |
692 | my ($op, $ord); |
693 | if ($direction < 0) { |
694 | $op = '-'; |
695 | $ord = 'asc'; |
696 | } |
697 | else { |
698 | $op = '+'; |
699 | $ord = 'desc'; |
700 | } |
701 | |
702 | my $shift_rs = $self->_group_rs-> search ({ $position_column => { -between => \@between } }); |
703 | |
704 | # some databases (sqlite) are dumb and can not do a blanket |
705 | # increment/decrement. So what we do here is check if the |
706 | # position column is part of a unique constraint, and do a |
707 | # one-by-one update if this is the case |
708 | |
82a8f76f |
709 | my $rsrc = $self->result_source; |
710 | |
711 | if (grep { $_ eq $position_column } ( map { @$_ } (values %{{ $rsrc->unique_constraints }} ) ) ) { |
712 | |
713 | my @pcols = $rsrc->primary_columns; |
714 | my $cursor = $shift_rs->search ({}, { order_by => { "-$ord", $position_column }, columns => \@pcols } )->cursor; |
715 | my $rs = $self->result_source->resultset; |
716 | |
717 | while (my @pks = $cursor->next ) { |
718 | |
719 | my $cond; |
720 | for my $i (0.. $#pcols) { |
721 | $cond->{$pcols[$i]} = $pks[$i]; |
722 | } |
bd7ca9e8 |
723 | |
82a8f76f |
724 | $rs->search($cond)->update ({ $position_column => \ "$position_column $op 1" } ); |
bd7ca9e8 |
725 | } |
726 | } |
727 | else { |
728 | $shift_rs->update ({ $position_column => \ "$position_column $op 1" } ); |
729 | } |
118e6b96 |
730 | } |
731 | |
7a76f44c |
732 | =head1 PRIVATE METHODS |
733 | |
734 | These methods are used internally. You should never have the |
735 | need to use them. |
736 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
737 | =head2 _group_rs |
738 | |
b250066f |
739 | This method returns a resultset containing all members of the row |
bd7ca9e8 |
740 | group (including the row itself). |
741 | |
742 | =cut |
743 | sub _group_rs { |
744 | my $self = shift; |
745 | return $self->result_source->resultset->search({$self->_grouping_clause()}); |
746 | } |
747 | |
748 | =head2 _siblings |
749 | |
750 | Returns an unordered resultset of all objects in the same group |
751 | excluding the object you called this method on. |
752 | |
753 | =cut |
754 | sub _siblings { |
755 | my $self = shift; |
756 | my $position_column = $self->position_column; |
757 | return $self->_group_rs->search( |
758 | { $position_column => { '!=' => $self->get_column($position_column) } }, |
759 | ); |
760 | } |
761 | |
a733c37f |
762 | =head2 _grouping_clause |
118e6b96 |
763 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
764 | This method returns one or more name=>value pairs for limiting a search |
765 | by the grouping column(s). If the grouping column is not |
133dd22a |
766 | defined then this will return an empty list. |
118e6b96 |
767 | |
7a76f44c |
768 | =cut |
a733c37f |
769 | sub _grouping_clause { |
169bb185 |
770 | my( $self ) = @_; |
fa6b598f |
771 | return map { $_ => $self->get_column($_) } $self->_grouping_columns(); |
772 | } |
773 | |
fa6b598f |
774 | =head2 _get_grouping_columns |
775 | |
776 | Returns a list of the column names used for grouping, regardless of whether |
1d941d67 |
777 | they were specified as an arrayref or a single string, and returns () |
778 | if there is no grouping. |
fa6b598f |
779 | |
780 | =cut |
781 | sub _grouping_columns { |
782 | my( $self ) = @_; |
a733c37f |
783 | my $col = $self->grouping_column(); |
fa6b598f |
784 | if (ref $col eq 'ARRAY') { |
785 | return @$col; |
786 | } elsif ($col) { |
787 | return ( $col ); |
788 | } else { |
789 | return (); |
133dd22a |
790 | } |
7a76f44c |
791 | } |
792 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
793 | =head2 _is_in_group |
fa6b598f |
794 | |
795 | $item->_is_in_group( {user => 'fred', list => 'work'} ) |
796 | |
797 | Returns true if the object is in the group represented by hashref $other |
bd7ca9e8 |
798 | |
fa6b598f |
799 | =cut |
800 | sub _is_in_group { |
801 | my ($self, $other) = @_; |
802 | my $current = {$self->_grouping_clause}; |
bd7ca9e8 |
803 | |
804 | no warnings qw/uninitialized/; |
805 | |
806 | return 0 if ( |
807 | join ("\x00", sort keys %$current) |
808 | ne |
809 | join ("\x00", sort keys %$other) |
810 | ); |
fa6b598f |
811 | for my $key (keys %$current) { |
fa6b598f |
812 | return 0 if $current->{$key} ne $other->{$key}; |
813 | } |
814 | return 1; |
815 | } |
816 | |
b250066f |
817 | =head2 _ordered_internal_update |
818 | |
819 | This is a short-circuited method, that is used internally by this |
820 | module to update positioning values in isolation (i.e. without |
821 | triggering any of the positioning integrity code). |
822 | |
f045efad |
823 | Some day you might get confronted by datasets that have ambiguous |
824 | positioning data (i.e. duplicate position values within the same group, |
b250066f |
825 | in a table without unique constraints). When manually fixing such data |
826 | keep in mind that you can not invoke L<DBIx::Class::Row/update> like |
f045efad |
827 | you normally would, as it will get confused by the wrong data before |
b250066f |
828 | having a chance to update the ill-defined row. If you really know what |
f045efad |
829 | you are doing use this method which bypasses any hooks introduced by |
b250066f |
830 | this module. |
831 | |
832 | =cut |
833 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
834 | sub _ordered_internal_update { |
835 | my $self = shift; |
836 | local $self->{_ORDERED_INTERNAL_UPDATE} = 1; |
837 | return $self->update (@_); |
838 | } |
fa6b598f |
839 | |
7a76f44c |
840 | 1; |
118e6b96 |
841 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
842 | __END__ |
dc66dea1 |
843 | |
bd7ca9e8 |
844 | =head1 CAVEATS |
dc66dea1 |
845 | |
133dd22a |
846 | =head2 Race Condition on Insert |
847 | |
118e6b96 |
848 | If a position is not specified for an insert than a position |
bd7ca9e8 |
849 | will be chosen based either on L</_initial_position_value> or |
850 | L</_next_position_value>, depending if there are already some |
851 | items in the current group. The space of time between the |
852 | necessary selects and insert introduces a race condition. |
853 | Having unique constraints on your position/group columns, |
854 | and using transactions (see L<DBIx::Class::Storage/txn_do>) |
855 | will prevent such race conditions going undetected. |
118e6b96 |
856 | |
133dd22a |
857 | =head2 Multiple Moves |
858 | |
859 | Be careful when issueing move_* methods to multiple objects. If |
860 | you've pre-loaded the objects then when you move one of the objects |
861 | the position of the other object will not reflect their new value |
bd7ca9e8 |
862 | until you reload them from the database - see |
863 | L<DBIx::Class::Row/discard_changes>. |
133dd22a |
864 | |
dc66dea1 |
865 | There are times when you will want to move objects as groups, such |
133dd22a |
866 | as changeing the parent of several objects at once - this directly |
867 | conflicts with this problem. One solution is for us to write a |
868 | ResultSet class that supports a parent() method, for example. Another |
869 | solution is to somehow automagically modify the objects that exist |
870 | in the current object's result set to have the new position value. |
871 | |
58755bba |
872 | =head2 Default Values |
873 | |
874 | Using a database defined default_value on one of your group columns |
875 | could result in the position not being assigned correctly. |
876 | |
118e6b96 |
877 | =head1 AUTHOR |
878 | |
8f535707 |
879 | Original code framework |
880 | Aran Deltac <bluefeet@cpan.org> |
881 | |
882 | Constraints support and code generalisation |
883 | Peter Rabbitson <ribasushi@cpan.org> |
118e6b96 |
884 | |
885 | =head1 LICENSE |
886 | |
887 | You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. |
888 | |