Rework Manual::Intro
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Relationship / Base.pm
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55e2d745 1package DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base;
2
3use strict;
4use warnings;
5
1edd1722 6use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
6298a324 7
8use Scalar::Util qw/weaken blessed/;
ed7ab0f4 9use Try::Tiny;
fd323bf1 10use namespace::clean;
55e2d745 11
75d07914 12=head1 NAME
55e2d745 13
8918977e 14DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base - Inter-table relationships
55e2d745 15
16=head1 SYNOPSIS
17
6c4f4d69 18 __PACKAGE__->add_relationship(
19 spiders => 'My::DB::Result::Creatures',
20 sub {
21 my $args = shift;
22 return {
23 "$args->{foreign_alias}.id" => { -ident => "$args->{self_alias}.id" },
24 "$args->{foreign_alias}.type" => 'arachnid'
25 };
26 },
27 );
13523f29 28
55e2d745 29=head1 DESCRIPTION
30
30236e47 31This class provides methods to describe the relationships between the
32tables in your database model. These are the "bare bones" relationships
75d07914 33methods, for predefined ones, look in L<DBIx::Class::Relationship>.
55e2d745 34
35=head1 METHODS
36
8091aa91 37=head2 add_relationship
503536d5 38
27f01d1f 39=over 4
40
13523f29 41=item Arguments: 'relname', 'Foreign::Class', $condition, $attrs
27f01d1f 42
43=back
30236e47 44
6c4f4d69 45 __PACKAGE__->add_relationship('relname',
46 'Foreign::Class',
13523f29 47 $condition, $attrs);
48
49Create a custom relationship between one result source and another
50source, indicated by its class name.
503536d5 51
406734bb 52=head3 condition
53
6c4f4d69 54The condition argument describes the C<ON> clause of the C<JOIN>
55expression used to connect the two sources when creating SQL queries.
30236e47 56
13523f29 57To create simple equality joins, supply a hashref containing the
58remote table column name as the key(s), and the local table column
6c4f4d69 59name as the value(s), for example given:
503536d5 60
6c4f4d69 61 My::Schema::Author->has_many(
62 books => 'My::Schema::Book',
63 { 'foreign.author_id' => 'self.id' }
64 );
503536d5 65
6c4f4d69 66A query like:
67
68 $author_rs->search_related('books')->next
503536d5 69
6c4f4d69 70will result in the following C<JOIN> clause:
71
72 ... FROM author me LEFT JOIN book books ON books.author_id = me.id ...
503536d5 73
13523f29 74This describes a relationship between the C<Author> table and the
75C<Book> table where the C<Book> table has a column C<author_id>
76containing the ID value of the C<Author>.
77
6c4f4d69 78C<foreign> and C<self> are pseudo aliases and must be entered
13523f29 79literally. They will be replaced with the actual correct table alias
80when the SQL is produced.
81
82Similarly:
5271499d 83
6c4f4d69 84 My::Schema::Book->has_many(
85 editions => 'My::Schema::Edition',
86 {
87 'foreign.publisher_id' => 'self.publisher_id',
88 'foreign.type_id' => 'self.type_id',
89 }
90 );
91
92 ...
93
94 $book_rs->search_related('editions')->next
5271499d 95
13523f29 96will result in the C<JOIN> clause:
5271499d 97
6c4f4d69 98 ... FROM book me
99 LEFT JOIN edition editions ON
100 editions.publisher_id = me.publisher_id
101 AND editions.type_id = me.type_id ...
5271499d 102
13523f29 103This describes the relationship from C<Book> to C<Edition>, where the
104C<Edition> table refers to a publisher and a type (e.g. "paperback"):
105
106As is the default in L<SQL::Abstract>, the key-value pairs will be
107C<AND>ed in the result. C<OR> can be achieved with an arrayref, for
6c4f4d69 108example a condition like:
13523f29 109
6c4f4d69 110 My::Schema::Item->has_many(
111 related_item_links => My::Schema::Item::Links,
112 [
113 { 'foreign.left_itemid' => 'self.id' },
114 { 'foreign.right_itemid' => 'self.id' },
115 ],
116 );
13523f29 117
6c4f4d69 118will translate to the following C<JOIN> clause:
13523f29 119
6c4f4d69 120 ... FROM item me JOIN item_relations related_item_links ON
121 related_item_links.left_itemid = me.id
122 OR related_item_links.right_itemid = me.id ...
13523f29 123
6c4f4d69 124This describes the relationship from C<Item> to C<Item::Links>, where
125C<Item::Links> is a many-to-many linking table, linking items back to
126themselves in a peer fashion (without a "parent-child" designation)
13523f29 127
7b35a32e 128=head4 Custom join conditions (via coderefs)
129
6c4f4d69 130To specify joins which describe more than a simple equality of column
131values, the custom join condition coderef syntax can be used. For
132example:
13523f29 133
6c4f4d69 134 My::Schema::Artist->has_many(
135 cds_80s => 'My::Schema::CD',
13523f29 136 sub {
6c4f4d69 137 my $args = shift;
13523f29 138
6c4f4d69 139 return {
140 "$args->{foreign_alias}.artist" => { -ident => "$args->{self_alias}.artistid" },
141 "$args->{foreign_alias}.year" => { '>', "1979", '<', "1990" },
142 };
143 }
144 );
13523f29 145
6c4f4d69 146 ...
13523f29 147
6c4f4d69 148 $artist_rs->search_related('cds_80s')->next;
13523f29 149
6c4f4d69 150will result in the C<JOIN> clause:
13523f29 151
6c4f4d69 152 ... FROM artist me LEFT JOIN cd cds_80s ON
153 cds_80s.artist = me.artistid
154 AND cds_80s.year < ?
155 AND cds_80s.year > ?
13523f29 156
6c4f4d69 157with the bind values:
13523f29 158
6c4f4d69 159 '1990', '1979'
13523f29 160
6c4f4d69 161C<< $args->{foreign_alias} >> and C<< $args->{self_alias} >> are supplied the
162same values that would be otherwise substituted for C<foreign> and C<self>
163in the simple hashref syntax case.
164
165The coderef is expected to return a valid L<SQL::Abstract> query-structure, just
166like what one would supply as the first argument to
167L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search>. The return value will be passed directly to
168L<SQL::Abstract> and the resulting SQL will be used verbatim as the C<ON>
169clause of the C<JOIN> statement associated with this relationship.
170
171While every coderef-based condition must return a valid C<ON> clause, it may
8273e845 172elect to additionally return a simplified join-free condition hashref when
dad42de6 173invoked as C<< $result->relationship >>, as opposed to
174C<< $rs->related_resultset('relationship') >>. In this case C<$result> is
6c4f4d69 175passed to the coderef as C<< $args->{self_rowobj} >>, so a user can do the
176following:
177
178 sub {
179 my $args = shift;
180
181 return (
182 {
183 "$args->{foreign_alias}.artist" => { -ident => "$args->{self_alias}.artistid" },
184 "$args->{foreign_alias}.year" => { '>', "1979", '<', "1990" },
185 },
186 $args->{self_rowobj} && {
187 "$args->{foreign_alias}.artist" => $args->{self_rowobj}->artistid,
188 "$args->{foreign_alias}.year" => { '>', "1979", '<', "1990" },
189 },
190 );
13523f29 191 }
192
193Now this code:
194
195 my $artist = $schema->resultset("Artist")->find({ id => 4 });
196 $artist->cds_80s->all;
197
6c4f4d69 198Can skip a C<JOIN> altogether and instead produce:
13523f29 199
6c4f4d69 200 SELECT cds_80s.cdid, cds_80s.artist, cds_80s.title, cds_80s.year, cds_80s.genreid, cds_80s.single_track
201 FROM cd cds_80s
202 WHERE cds_80s.artist = ?
203 AND cds_80s.year < ?
204 AND cds_80s.year > ?
13523f29 205
206With the bind values:
207
208 '4', '1990', '1979'
209
6c4f4d69 210Note that in order to be able to use
211L<< $row->create_related|DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base/create_related >>,
212the coderef must not only return as its second such a "simple" condition
213hashref which does not depend on joins being available, but the hashref must
214contain only plain values/deflatable objects, such that the result can be
215passed directly to L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base/set_from_related>. For
216instance the C<year> constraint in the above example prevents the relationship
217from being used to to create related objects (an exception will be thrown).
218
219In order to allow the user to go truly crazy when generating a custom C<ON>
220clause, the C<$args> hashref passed to the subroutine contains some extra
221metadata. Currently the supplied coderef is executed as:
222
223 $relationship_info->{cond}->({
dad42de6 224 self_alias => The alias of the invoking resultset ('me' in case of a result object),
6c4f4d69 225 foreign_alias => The alias of the to-be-joined resultset (often matches relname),
226 self_resultsource => The invocant's resultsource,
227 foreign_relname => The relationship name (does *not* always match foreign_alias),
dad42de6 228 self_rowobj => The invocant itself in case of a $result_object->$relationship call
6c4f4d69 229 });
8091aa91 230
406734bb 231=head3 attributes
232
233The L<standard ResultSet attributes|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> may
234be used as relationship attributes. In particular, the 'where' attribute is
235useful for filtering relationships:
236
237 __PACKAGE__->has_many( 'valid_users', 'MyApp::Schema::User',
238 { 'foreign.user_id' => 'self.user_id' },
239 { where => { valid => 1 } }
240 );
241
242The following attributes are also valid:
8091aa91 243
244=over 4
245
246=item join_type
247
248Explicitly specifies the type of join to use in the relationship. Any SQL
249join type is valid, e.g. C<LEFT> or C<RIGHT>. It will be placed in the SQL
250command immediately before C<JOIN>.
251
97c96475 252=item proxy =E<gt> $column | \@columns | \%column
253
9ab122aa 254The 'proxy' attribute can be used to retrieve values, and to perform
255updates if the relationship has 'cascade_update' set. The 'might_have'
256and 'has_one' relationships have this set by default; if you want a proxy
257to update across a 'belongs_to' relationship, you must set the attribute
258yourself.
259
97c96475 260=over 4
261
262=item \@columns
8091aa91 263
30236e47 264An arrayref containing a list of accessors in the foreign class to create in
8091aa91 265the main class. If, for example, you do the following:
d4daee7b 266
03460bef 267 MyApp::Schema::CD->might_have(liner_notes => 'MyApp::Schema::LinerNotes',
27f01d1f 268 undef, {
269 proxy => [ qw/notes/ ],
270 });
d4daee7b 271
03460bef 272Then, assuming MyApp::Schema::LinerNotes has an accessor named notes, you can do:
8091aa91 273
03460bef 274 my $cd = MyApp::Schema::CD->find(1);
30236e47 275 $cd->notes('Notes go here'); # set notes -- LinerNotes object is
276 # created if it doesn't exist
d4daee7b 277
9ab122aa 278For a 'belongs_to relationship, note the 'cascade_update':
279
280 MyApp::Schema::Track->belongs_to( cd => 'DBICTest::Schema::CD', 'cd,
281 { proxy => ['title'], cascade_update => 1 }
282 );
283 $track->title('New Title');
284 $track->update; # updates title in CD
285
97c96475 286=item \%column
287
288A hashref where each key is the accessor you want installed in the main class,
289and its value is the name of the original in the fireign class.
290
03460bef 291 MyApp::Schema::Track->belongs_to( cd => 'DBICTest::Schema::CD', 'cd', {
97c96475 292 proxy => { cd_title => 'title' },
293 });
294
dad42de6 295This will create an accessor named C<cd_title> on the C<$track> result object.
97c96475 296
297=back
298
299NOTE: you can pass a nested struct too, for example:
300
03460bef 301 MyApp::Schema::Track->belongs_to( cd => 'DBICTest::Schema::CD', 'cd', {
97c96475 302 proxy => [ 'year', { cd_title => 'title' } ],
303 });
304
8091aa91 305=item accessor
306
307Specifies the type of accessor that should be created for the relationship.
308Valid values are C<single> (for when there is only a single related object),
309C<multi> (when there can be many), and C<filter> (for when there is a single
310related object, but you also want the relationship accessor to double as
311a column accessor). For C<multi> accessors, an add_to_* method is also
312created, which calls C<create_related> for the relationship.
313
3d618782 314=item is_foreign_key_constraint
315
316If you are using L<SQL::Translator> to create SQL for you and you find that it
fd323bf1 317is creating constraints where it shouldn't, or not creating them where it
3d618782 318should, set this attribute to a true or false value to override the detection
319of when to create constraints.
320
5f7ac523 321=item cascade_copy
322
323If C<cascade_copy> is true on a C<has_many> relationship for an
324object, then when you copy the object all the related objects will
fd323bf1 325be copied too. To turn this behaviour off, pass C<< cascade_copy => 0 >>
326in the C<$attr> hashref.
b7bbc39f 327
328The behaviour defaults to C<< cascade_copy => 1 >> for C<has_many>
329relationships.
5f7ac523 330
331=item cascade_delete
332
b7bbc39f 333By default, DBIx::Class cascades deletes across C<has_many>,
334C<has_one> and C<might_have> relationships. You can disable this
fd323bf1 335behaviour on a per-relationship basis by supplying
b7bbc39f 336C<< cascade_delete => 0 >> in the relationship attributes.
5f7ac523 337
338The cascaded operations are performed after the requested delete,
339so if your database has a constraint on the relationship, it will
340have deleted/updated the related records or raised an exception
341before DBIx::Class gets to perform the cascaded operation.
342
343=item cascade_update
344
b7bbc39f 345By default, DBIx::Class cascades updates across C<has_one> and
5f7ac523 346C<might_have> relationships. You can disable this behaviour on a
b7bbc39f 347per-relationship basis by supplying C<< cascade_update => 0 >> in
348the relationship attributes.
5f7ac523 349
9ab122aa 350The C<belongs_to> relationship does not update across relationships
351by default, so if you have a 'proxy' attribute on a belongs_to and want to
352use 'update' on it, you muse set C<< cascade_update => 1 >>.
353
cee0c9b1 354This is not a RDMS style cascade update - it purely means that when
355an object has update called on it, all the related objects also
356have update called. It will not change foreign keys automatically -
357you must arrange to do this yourself.
5f7ac523 358
e377d723 359=item on_delete / on_update
360
361If you are using L<SQL::Translator> to create SQL for you, you can use these
fd323bf1 362attributes to explicitly set the desired C<ON DELETE> or C<ON UPDATE> constraint
363type. If not supplied the SQLT parser will attempt to infer the constraint type by
e377d723 364interrogating the attributes of the B<opposite> relationship. For any 'multi'
fd323bf1 365relationship with C<< cascade_delete => 1 >>, the corresponding belongs_to
366relationship will be created with an C<ON DELETE CASCADE> constraint. For any
e377d723 367relationship bearing C<< cascade_copy => 1 >> the resulting belongs_to constraint
368will be C<ON UPDATE CASCADE>. If you wish to disable this autodetection, and just
fd323bf1 369use the RDBMS' default constraint type, pass C<< on_delete => undef >> or
e377d723 370C<< on_delete => '' >>, and the same for C<on_update> respectively.
371
13de943d 372=item is_deferrable
373
374Tells L<SQL::Translator> that the foreign key constraint it creates should be
375deferrable. In other words, the user may request that the constraint be ignored
376until the end of the transaction. Currently, only the PostgreSQL producer
377actually supports this.
378
2581038c 379=item add_fk_index
380
381Tells L<SQL::Translator> to add an index for this constraint. Can also be
382specified globally in the args to L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy> or
383L<DBIx::Class::Schema/create_ddl_dir>. Default is on, set to 0 to disable.
384
8091aa91 385=back
386
87c4e602 387=head2 register_relationship
388
27f01d1f 389=over 4
390
dad42de6 391=item Arguments: $rel_name, $rel_info
27f01d1f 392
393=back
71e65b39 394
30236e47 395Registers a relationship on the class. This is called internally by
71f9df37 396DBIx::Class::ResultSourceProxy to set up Accessors and Proxies.
71e65b39 397
55e2d745 398=cut
399
71e65b39 400sub register_relationship { }
401
27f01d1f 402=head2 related_resultset
403
404=over 4
405
dad42de6 406=item Arguments: $rel_name
27f01d1f 407
dad42de6 408=item Return Value: L<$related_resultset|DBIx::Class::ResultSet>
27f01d1f 409
410=back
30236e47 411
27f01d1f 412 $rs = $cd->related_resultset('artist');
30236e47 413
27f01d1f 414Returns a L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> for the relationship named
dad42de6 415$rel_name.
30236e47 416
93711422 417=head2 $relationship_accessor
418
419=over 4
420
dad42de6 421=item Arguments: none
93711422 422
dad42de6 423=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass> | L<$related_resultset|DBIx::Class::ResultSet> | undef
93711422 424
425=back
426
427 # These pairs do the same thing
428 $row = $cd->related_resultset('artist')->single; # has_one relationship
429 $row = $cd->artist;
430 $rs = $cd->related_resultset('tracks'); # has_many relationship
431 $rs = $cd->tracks;
432
8ed69929 433This is the recommended way to traverse through relationships, based
93711422 434on the L</accessor> name given in the relationship definition.
435
dad42de6 436This will return either a L<Result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass> or a
93711422 437L<ResultSet|DBIx::Class::ResultSet>, depending on if the relationship is
438C<single> (returns only one row) or C<multi> (returns many rows). The
439method may also return C<undef> if the relationship doesn't exist for
440this instance (like in the case of C<might_have> relationships).
441
30236e47 442=cut
443
444sub related_resultset {
445 my $self = shift;
bc0c9800 446 $self->throw_exception("Can't call *_related as class methods")
447 unless ref $self;
30236e47 448 my $rel = shift;
164efde3 449 my $rel_info = $self->relationship_info($rel);
e705f529 450 $self->throw_exception( "No such relationship '$rel'" )
164efde3 451 unless $rel_info;
d4daee7b 452
30236e47 453 return $self->{related_resultsets}{$rel} ||= do {
454 my $attrs = (@_ > 1 && ref $_[$#_] eq 'HASH' ? pop(@_) : {});
164efde3 455 $attrs = { %{$rel_info->{attrs} || {}}, %$attrs };
30236e47 456
bc0c9800 457 $self->throw_exception( "Invalid query: @_" )
458 if (@_ > 1 && (@_ % 2 == 1));
30236e47 459 my $query = ((@_ > 1) ? {@_} : shift);
460
68f3b0dd 461 my $source = $self->result_source;
d419ded6 462
463 # condition resolution may fail if an incomplete master-object prefetch
34b6b86f 464 # is encountered - that is ok during prefetch construction (not yet in_storage)
aa56106b 465 my ($cond, $is_crosstable) = try {
16053767 466 $source->_resolve_condition( $rel_info->{cond}, $rel, $self, $rel )
52b420dd 467 }
ed7ab0f4 468 catch {
34b6b86f 469 if ($self->in_storage) {
ed7ab0f4 470 $self->throw_exception ($_);
34b6b86f 471 }
52b420dd 472
473 $DBIx::Class::ResultSource::UNRESOLVABLE_CONDITION; # RV
ed7ab0f4 474 };
d419ded6 475
aa56106b 476 # keep in mind that the following if() block is part of a do{} - no return()s!!!
477 if ($is_crosstable) {
478 $self->throw_exception (
e705f529 479 "A cross-table relationship condition returned for statically declared '$rel'"
480 ) unless ref $rel_info->{cond} eq 'CODE';
aa56106b 481
482 # A WHOREIFFIC hack to reinvoke the entire condition resolution
483 # with the correct alias. Another way of doing this involves a
484 # lot of state passing around, and the @_ positions are already
485 # mapped out, making this crap a less icky option.
486 #
487 # The point of this exercise is to retain the spirit of the original
488 # $obj->search_related($rel) where the resulting rset will have the
489 # root alias as 'me', instead of $rel (as opposed to invoking
490 # $rs->search_related)
491
aa56106b 492 local $source->{_relationships}{me} = $source->{_relationships}{$rel}; # make the fake 'me' rel
493 my $obj_table_alias = lc($source->source_name) . '__row';
93508f48 494 $obj_table_alias =~ s/\W+/_/g;
aa56106b 495
496 $source->resultset->search(
497 $self->ident_condition($obj_table_alias),
498 { alias => $obj_table_alias },
499 )->search_related('me', $query, $attrs)
68f3b0dd 500 }
aa56106b 501 else {
502 # FIXME - this conditional doesn't seem correct - got to figure out
503 # at some point what it does. Also the entire UNRESOLVABLE_CONDITION
504 # business seems shady - we could simply not query *at all*
505 if ($cond eq $DBIx::Class::ResultSource::UNRESOLVABLE_CONDITION) {
506 my $reverse = $source->reverse_relationship_info($rel);
507 foreach my $rev_rel (keys %$reverse) {
508 if ($reverse->{$rev_rel}{attrs}{accessor} && $reverse->{$rev_rel}{attrs}{accessor} eq 'multi') {
0a03206a 509 weaken($attrs->{related_objects}{$rev_rel}[0] = $self);
aa56106b 510 } else {
0a03206a 511 weaken($attrs->{related_objects}{$rev_rel} = $self);
aa56106b 512 }
513 }
9aae3566 514 }
aa56106b 515 elsif (ref $cond eq 'ARRAY') {
7689b9e5 516 $cond = [ map {
517 if (ref $_ eq 'HASH') {
518 my $hash;
519 foreach my $key (keys %$_) {
520 my $newkey = $key !~ /\./ ? "me.$key" : $key;
521 $hash->{$newkey} = $_->{$key};
522 }
523 $hash;
524 } else {
525 $_;
370f2ba2 526 }
7689b9e5 527 } @$cond ];
aa56106b 528 }
529 elsif (ref $cond eq 'HASH') {
530 foreach my $key (grep { ! /\./ } keys %$cond) {
7689b9e5 531 $cond->{"me.$key"} = delete $cond->{$key};
370f2ba2 532 }
30236e47 533 }
a126983e 534
7689b9e5 535 $query = ($query ? { '-and' => [ $cond, $query ] } : $cond);
536 $self->result_source->related_source($rel)->resultset->search(
aa56106b 537 $query, $attrs
538 );
7689b9e5 539 }
30236e47 540 };
541}
542
8091aa91 543=head2 search_related
503536d5 544
dad42de6 545=over 4
546
547=item Arguments: $rel_name, $cond?, L<\%attrs?|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES>
548
549=item Return Value: L<$resultset|DBIx::Class::ResultSet> (scalar context) | L<@result_objs|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass> (list context)
550
551=back
30236e47 552
553Run a search on a related resultset. The search will be restricted to the
dad42de6 554results represented by the L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> it was called
555upon.
556
557See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search_related> for more information.
503536d5 558
559=cut
560
55e2d745 561sub search_related {
ff7bb7a1 562 return shift->related_resultset(shift)->search(@_);
b52e9bf8 563}
564
5b89a768 565=head2 search_related_rs
566
fd323bf1 567This method works exactly the same as search_related, except that
48580715 568it guarantees a resultset, even in list context.
5b89a768 569
570=cut
571
572sub search_related_rs {
573 return shift->related_resultset(shift)->search_rs(@_);
574}
575
b52e9bf8 576=head2 count_related
577
dad42de6 578=over 4
579
580=item Arguments: $rel_name, $cond?, L<\%attrs?|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES>
581
582=item Return Value: $count
b52e9bf8 583
dad42de6 584=back
585
586Returns the count of all the rows in the related resultset, restricted by the
587current result or where conditions.
30236e47 588
b52e9bf8 589=cut
590
591sub count_related {
4b8a53ea 592 shift->search_related(@_)->count;
55e2d745 593}
594
30236e47 595=head2 new_related
596
dad42de6 597=over 4
598
599=item Arguments: $rel_name, \%col_data
600
601=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
30236e47 602
dad42de6 603=back
604
605Create a new result object of the related foreign class. It will magically set
606any foreign key columns of the new object to the related primary key columns
607of the source object for you. The newly created result will not be saved into
608your storage until you call L<DBIx::Class::Row/insert> on it.
30236e47 609
610=cut
611
612sub new_related {
81e4dc3d 613 my ($self, $rel, $values) = @_;
78b948c3 614
615 # FIXME - this is a bad position for this (also an identical copy in
616 # set_from_related), but I have no saner way to hook, and I absolutely
617 # want this to throw at least for coderefs, instead of the "insert a NULL
618 # when it gets hard" insanity --ribasushi
619 #
620 # sanity check - currently throw when a complex coderef rel is encountered
621 # FIXME - should THROW MOAR!
622
623 if (ref $self) { # cdbi calls this as a class method, /me vomits
624
625 my $rsrc = $self->result_source;
626 my (undef, $crosstable, $relcols) = $rsrc->_resolve_condition (
627 $rsrc->relationship_info($rel)->{cond}, $rel, $self, $rel
628 );
629
630 $self->throw_exception("Custom relationship '$rel' does not resolve to a join-free condition fragment")
631 if $crosstable;
632
633 if (@{$relcols || []} and @$relcols = grep { ! exists $values->{$_} } @$relcols) {
634 $self->throw_exception(sprintf (
635 "Custom relationship '%s' not definitive - returns conditions instead of values for column(s): %s",
636 $rel,
637 map { "'$_'" } @$relcols
638 ));
639 }
640 }
641
81e4dc3d 642 return $self->search_related($rel)->new_result($values);
30236e47 643}
644
8091aa91 645=head2 create_related
503536d5 646
dad42de6 647=over 4
30236e47 648
dad42de6 649=item Arguments: $rel_name, \%col_data
650
651=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
652
653=back
654
655 my $result = $obj->create_related($rel_name, \%col_data);
656
657Creates a new result object, similarly to new_related, and also inserts the
658result's data into your storage medium. See the distinction between C<create>
659and C<new> in L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> for details.
503536d5 660
661=cut
662
55e2d745 663sub create_related {
3842b955 664 my $self = shift;
fea3d045 665 my $rel = shift;
78b948c3 666 my $obj = $self->new_related($rel, @_)->insert;
64acc2bc 667 delete $self->{related_resultsets}->{$rel};
668 return $obj;
55e2d745 669}
670
8091aa91 671=head2 find_related
503536d5 672
dad42de6 673=over 4
674
675=item Arguments: $rel_name, \%col_data | @pk_values, { key => $unique_constraint, L<%attrs|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> }?
676
677=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass> | undef
678
679=back
680
681 my $result = $obj->find_related($rel_name, \%col_data);
30236e47 682
683Attempt to find a related object using its primary key or unique constraints.
27f01d1f 684See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/find> for details.
503536d5 685
686=cut
687
1a14aa3f 688sub find_related {
4b8a53ea 689 #my ($self, $rel, @args) = @_;
690 return shift->search_related(shift)->find(@_);
1a14aa3f 691}
692
b3e1f1f5 693=head2 find_or_new_related
694
dad42de6 695=over 4
b3e1f1f5 696
dad42de6 697=item Arguments: $rel_name, \%col_data, { key => $unique_constraint, L<%attrs|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> }?
698
699=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
700
701=back
702
703Find a result object of a related class. See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/find_or_new>
704for details.
b3e1f1f5 705
706=cut
707
708sub find_or_new_related {
709 my $self = shift;
e60dc79f 710 my $obj = $self->find_related(@_);
711 return defined $obj ? $obj : $self->new_related(@_);
b3e1f1f5 712}
713
8091aa91 714=head2 find_or_create_related
503536d5 715
dad42de6 716=over 4
717
718=item Arguments: $rel_name, \%col_data, { key => $unique_constraint, L<%attrs|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> }?
719
720=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
721
722=back
30236e47 723
dad42de6 724Find or create a result object of a related class. See
b3e1f1f5 725L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/find_or_create> for details.
503536d5 726
727=cut
728
55e2d745 729sub find_or_create_related {
730 my $self = shift;
9c2c91ea 731 my $obj = $self->find_related(@_);
732 return (defined($obj) ? $obj : $self->create_related(@_));
55e2d745 733}
734
045120e6 735=head2 update_or_create_related
736
dad42de6 737=over 4
738
739=item Arguments: $rel_name, \%col_data, { key => $unique_constraint, L<%attrs|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> }?
740
741=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
742
743=back
045120e6 744
dad42de6 745Update or create a result object of a related class. See
f7e1846f 746L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/update_or_create> for details.
045120e6 747
748=cut
749
750sub update_or_create_related {
4b8a53ea 751 #my ($self, $rel, @args) = @_;
752 shift->related_resultset(shift)->update_or_create(@_);
045120e6 753}
754
8091aa91 755=head2 set_from_related
503536d5 756
dad42de6 757=over 4
758
759=item Arguments: $rel_name, L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
760
761=item Return Value: not defined
762
763=back
764
30236e47 765 $book->set_from_related('author', $author_obj);
ac8e89d7 766 $book->author($author_obj); ## same thing
30236e47 767
768Set column values on the current object, using related values from the given
769related object. This is used to associate previously separate objects, for
770example, to set the correct author for a book, find the Author object, then
771call set_from_related on the book.
772
ac8e89d7 773This is called internally when you pass existing objects as values to
48580715 774L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/create>, or pass an object to a belongs_to accessor.
ac8e89d7 775
27f01d1f 776The columns are only set in the local copy of the object, call L</update> to
777set them in the storage.
503536d5 778
779=cut
780
55e2d745 781sub set_from_related {
782 my ($self, $rel, $f_obj) = @_;
aa56106b 783
78b948c3 784 my $rsrc = $self->result_source;
785 my $rel_info = $rsrc->relationship_info($rel)
e705f529 786 or $self->throw_exception( "No such relationship '$rel'" );
aa56106b 787
2c037e6b 788 if (defined $f_obj) {
164efde3 789 my $f_class = $rel_info->{class};
e705f529 790 $self->throw_exception( "Object '$f_obj' isn't a ".$f_class )
6298a324 791 unless blessed $f_obj and $f_obj->isa($f_class);
2c037e6b 792 }
a126983e 793
a126983e 794
78b948c3 795 # FIXME - this is a bad position for this (also an identical copy in
796 # new_related), but I have no saner way to hook, and I absolutely
797 # want this to throw at least for coderefs, instead of the "insert a NULL
798 # when it gets hard" insanity --ribasushi
799 #
800 # sanity check - currently throw when a complex coderef rel is encountered
801 # FIXME - should THROW MOAR!
802 my ($cond, $crosstable, $relcols) = $rsrc->_resolve_condition (
803 $rel_info->{cond}, $f_obj, $rel, $rel
804 );
805 $self->throw_exception("Custom relationship '$rel' does not resolve to a join-free condition fragment")
806 if $crosstable;
807 $self->throw_exception(sprintf (
808 "Custom relationship '%s' not definitive - returns conditions instead of values for column(s): %s",
809 $rel,
810 map { "'$_'" } @$relcols
811 )) if @{$relcols || []};
aa56106b 812
813 $self->set_columns($cond);
a126983e 814
55e2d745 815 return 1;
816}
817
8091aa91 818=head2 update_from_related
503536d5 819
dad42de6 820=over 4
821
822=item Arguments: $rel_name, L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
823
824=item Return Value: not defined
825
826=back
827
30236e47 828 $book->update_from_related('author', $author_obj);
829
27f01d1f 830The same as L</"set_from_related">, but the changes are immediately updated
831in storage.
503536d5 832
833=cut
834
55e2d745 835sub update_from_related {
836 my $self = shift;
837 $self->set_from_related(@_);
838 $self->update;
839}
840
8091aa91 841=head2 delete_related
503536d5 842
dad42de6 843=over 4
30236e47 844
dad42de6 845=item Arguments: $rel_name, $cond?, L<\%attrs?|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES>
846
69bc5f2b 847=item Return Value: $underlying_storage_rv
dad42de6 848
849=back
850
851Delete any related row, subject to the given conditions. Internally, this
852calls:
853
854 $self->search_related(@_)->delete
855
856And returns the result of that.
503536d5 857
858=cut
859
55e2d745 860sub delete_related {
861 my $self = shift;
64acc2bc 862 my $obj = $self->search_related(@_)->delete;
863 delete $self->{related_resultsets}->{$_[0]};
864 return $obj;
55e2d745 865}
866
ec353f53 867=head2 add_to_$rel
868
dad42de6 869B<Currently only available for C<has_many>, C<many_to_many> and 'multi' type
ec353f53 870relationships.>
871
dad42de6 872=head3 has_many / multi
873
ec353f53 874=over 4
875
dad42de6 876=item Arguments: \%col_data
877
878=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
879
880=back
881
882Creates/inserts a new result object. Internally, this calls:
883
884 $self->create_related($rel, @_)
885
886And returns the result of that.
887
888=head3 many_to_many
889
890=over 4
891
892=item Arguments: (\%col_data | L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>), \%link_col_data?
893
894=item Return Value: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
ec353f53 895
896=back
897
898 my $role = $schema->resultset('Role')->find(1);
899 $actor->add_to_roles($role);
dad42de6 900 # creates a My::DBIC::Schema::ActorRoles linking table result object
ec353f53 901
902 $actor->add_to_roles({ name => 'lead' }, { salary => 15_000_000 });
dad42de6 903 # creates a new My::DBIC::Schema::Role result object and the linking table
ec353f53 904 # object with an extra column in the link
905
dad42de6 906Adds a linking table object. If the first argument is a hash reference, the
907related object is created first with the column values in the hash. If an object
908reference is given, just the linking table object is created. In either case,
909any additional column values for the linking table object can be specified in
910C<\%link_col_data>.
911
912See L<DBIx::Class::Relationship/many_to_many> for additional details.
ec353f53 913
914=head2 set_$rel
915
dad42de6 916B<Currently only available for C<many_to_many> relationships.>
ec353f53 917
918=over 4
919
dad42de6 920=item Arguments: (\@hashrefs_of_col_data | L<\@result_objs|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>), $link_vals?
921
922=item Return Value: not defined
ec353f53 923
924=back
925
926 my $actor = $schema->resultset('Actor')->find(1);
fd323bf1 927 my @roles = $schema->resultset('Role')->search({ role =>
debccec3 928 { '-in' => ['Fred', 'Barney'] } } );
ec353f53 929
4d3a827d 930 $actor->set_roles(\@roles);
931 # Replaces all of $actor's previous roles with the two named
ec353f53 932
ac36a402 933 $actor->set_roles(\@roles, { salary => 15_000_000 });
934 # Sets a column in the link table for all roles
935
936
4d3a827d 937Replace all the related objects with the given reference to a list of
938objects. This does a C<delete> B<on the link table resultset> to remove the
939association between the current object and all related objects, then calls
940C<add_to_$rel> repeatedly to link all the new objects.
bba68c67 941
942Note that this means that this method will B<not> delete any objects in the
943table on the right side of the relation, merely that it will delete the link
944between them.
ec353f53 945
4d3a827d 946Due to a mistake in the original implementation of this method, it will also
947accept a list of objects or hash references. This is B<deprecated> and will be
948removed in a future version.
949
ec353f53 950=head2 remove_from_$rel
951
dad42de6 952B<Currently only available for C<many_to_many> relationships.>
ec353f53 953
954=over 4
955
dad42de6 956=item Arguments: L<$result|DBIx::Class::Manual::ResultClass>
957
958=item Return Value: not defined
ec353f53 959
960=back
961
962 my $role = $schema->resultset('Role')->find(1);
963 $actor->remove_from_roles($role);
dad42de6 964 # removes $role's My::DBIC::Schema::ActorRoles linking table result object
ec353f53 965
966Removes the link between the current object and the related object. Note that
967the related object itself won't be deleted unless you call ->delete() on
968it. This method just removes the link between the two objects.
969
0c11ad0e 970=head1 AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS
55e2d745 971
0c11ad0e 972See L<AUTHOR|DBIx::Class/AUTHOR> and L<CONTRIBUTORS|DBIx::Class/CONTRIBUTORS> in DBIx::Class
55e2d745 973
974=head1 LICENSE
975
976You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself.
977
978=cut
979
4d87db01 9801;