Commit | Line | Data |
9c992ba1 |
1 | package DBIx::Class::ResultSource; |
2 | |
3 | use strict; |
4 | use warnings; |
5 | |
6 | use DBIx::Class::ResultSet; |
aec3eff1 |
7 | use DBIx::Class::ResultSourceHandle; |
701da8c4 |
8 | use Carp::Clan qw/^DBIx::Class/; |
6da5894c |
9 | use Storable; |
10 | |
9c992ba1 |
11 | use base qw/DBIx::Class/; |
9c992ba1 |
12 | |
aa1088bf |
13 | __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('simple' => qw/_ordered_columns |
14 | _columns _primaries _unique_constraints name resultset_attributes |
93405cf0 |
15 | schema from _relationships column_info_from_storage source_info/); |
aa1088bf |
16 | |
fac560c2 |
17 | __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('component_class' => qw/resultset_class |
b0dd0e03 |
18 | result_class/); |
9c992ba1 |
19 | |
93405cf0 |
20 | __PACKAGE__->mk_group_ro_accessors('simple' => qw/source_name/); |
21 | |
75d07914 |
22 | =head1 NAME |
9c992ba1 |
23 | |
24 | DBIx::Class::ResultSource - Result source object |
25 | |
26 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
27 | |
28 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
29 | |
30 | A ResultSource is a component of a schema from which results can be directly |
31 | retrieved, most usually a table (see L<DBIx::Class::ResultSource::Table>) |
32 | |
33 | =head1 METHODS |
34 | |
7eb4ecc8 |
35 | =pod |
36 | |
37 | =head2 new |
38 | |
39 | $class->new(); |
40 | |
41 | $class->new({attribute_name => value}); |
42 | |
43 | Creates a new ResultSource object. Not normally called directly by end users. |
44 | |
9c992ba1 |
45 | =cut |
46 | |
47 | sub new { |
48 | my ($class, $attrs) = @_; |
49 | $class = ref $class if ref $class; |
04786a4c |
50 | |
6b051e14 |
51 | my $new = bless { %{$attrs || {}} }, $class; |
9c992ba1 |
52 | $new->{resultset_class} ||= 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet'; |
5ac6a044 |
53 | $new->{resultset_attributes} = { %{$new->{resultset_attributes} || {}} }; |
6da5894c |
54 | $new->{_ordered_columns} = [ @{$new->{_ordered_columns}||[]}]; |
55 | $new->{_columns} = { %{$new->{_columns}||{}} }; |
56 | $new->{_relationships} = { %{$new->{_relationships}||{}} }; |
9c992ba1 |
57 | $new->{name} ||= "!!NAME NOT SET!!"; |
5afa2a15 |
58 | $new->{_columns_info_loaded} ||= 0; |
9c992ba1 |
59 | return $new; |
60 | } |
61 | |
988bf309 |
62 | =pod |
63 | |
a48e92d7 |
64 | =head2 source_info |
65 | |
66 | Stores a hashref of per-source metadata. No specific key names |
67 | have yet been standardized, the examples below are purely hypothetical |
68 | and don't actually accomplish anything on their own: |
69 | |
70 | __PACKAGE__->source_info({ |
71 | "_tablespace" => 'fast_disk_array_3', |
72 | "_engine" => 'InnoDB', |
73 | }); |
74 | |
5ac6a044 |
75 | =head2 add_columns |
76 | |
77 | $table->add_columns(qw/col1 col2 col3/); |
78 | |
79 | $table->add_columns('col1' => \%col1_info, 'col2' => \%col2_info, ...); |
80 | |
2053ab2a |
81 | Adds columns to the result source. If supplied key => hashref pairs, uses |
82 | the hashref as the column_info for that column. Repeated calls of this |
83 | method will add more columns, not replace them. |
5ac6a044 |
84 | |
2053ab2a |
85 | The contents of the column_info are not set in stone. The following |
86 | keys are currently recognised/used by DBIx::Class: |
988bf309 |
87 | |
88 | =over 4 |
89 | |
75d07914 |
90 | =item accessor |
988bf309 |
91 | |
92 | Use this to set the name of the accessor for this column. If unset, |
93 | the name of the column will be used. |
94 | |
95 | =item data_type |
96 | |
2053ab2a |
97 | This contains the column type. It is automatically filled by the |
988bf309 |
98 | L<SQL::Translator::Producer::DBIx::Class::File> producer, and the |
2053ab2a |
99 | L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> module. If you do not enter a |
988bf309 |
100 | data_type, DBIx::Class will attempt to retrieve it from the |
2053ab2a |
101 | database for you, using L<DBI>'s column_info method. The values of this |
988bf309 |
102 | key are typically upper-cased. |
103 | |
2053ab2a |
104 | Currently there is no standard set of values for the data_type. Use |
105 | whatever your database supports. |
988bf309 |
106 | |
107 | =item size |
108 | |
109 | The length of your column, if it is a column type that can have a size |
d7be2784 |
110 | restriction. This is currently only used by L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>. |
988bf309 |
111 | |
112 | =item is_nullable |
113 | |
2053ab2a |
114 | Set this to a true value for a columns that is allowed to contain |
d7be2784 |
115 | NULL values. This is currently only used by L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>. |
988bf309 |
116 | |
117 | =item is_auto_increment |
118 | |
2053ab2a |
119 | Set this to a true value for a column whose value is somehow |
120 | automatically set. This is used to determine which columns to empty |
d7be2784 |
121 | when cloning objects using C<copy>. It is also used by |
122 | L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>. |
988bf309 |
123 | |
124 | =item is_foreign_key |
125 | |
2053ab2a |
126 | Set this to a true value for a column that contains a key from a |
d7be2784 |
127 | foreign table. This is currently only used by |
128 | L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>. |
988bf309 |
129 | |
130 | =item default_value |
131 | |
2053ab2a |
132 | Set this to the default value which will be inserted into a column |
133 | by the database. Can contain either a value or a function. This is |
d7be2784 |
134 | currently only used by L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>. |
988bf309 |
135 | |
136 | =item sequence |
137 | |
2053ab2a |
138 | Set this on a primary key column to the name of the sequence used to |
139 | generate a new key value. If not specified, L<DBIx::Class::PK::Auto> |
140 | will attempt to retrieve the name of the sequence from the database |
141 | automatically. |
988bf309 |
142 | |
d7be2784 |
143 | =item extras |
144 | |
145 | This is used by L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy> and L<SQL::Translator> |
146 | to add extra non-generic data to the column. For example: C<< extras |
147 | => { unsigned => 1} >> is used by the MySQL producer to set an integer |
148 | column to unsigned. For more details, see |
149 | L<SQL::Translator::Producer::MySQL>. |
150 | |
988bf309 |
151 | =back |
152 | |
5ac6a044 |
153 | =head2 add_column |
154 | |
155 | $table->add_column('col' => \%info?); |
156 | |
2053ab2a |
157 | Convenience alias to add_columns. |
5ac6a044 |
158 | |
159 | =cut |
160 | |
9c992ba1 |
161 | sub add_columns { |
162 | my ($self, @cols) = @_; |
8e04bf91 |
163 | $self->_ordered_columns(\@cols) unless $self->_ordered_columns; |
002a359a |
164 | |
20518cb4 |
165 | my @added; |
166 | my $columns = $self->_columns; |
9c992ba1 |
167 | while (my $col = shift @cols) { |
8e04bf91 |
168 | # If next entry is { ... } use that for the column info, if not |
169 | # use an empty hashref |
30126ac7 |
170 | my $column_info = ref $cols[0] ? shift(@cols) : {}; |
20518cb4 |
171 | push(@added, $col) unless exists $columns->{$col}; |
20518cb4 |
172 | $columns->{$col} = $column_info; |
9c992ba1 |
173 | } |
20518cb4 |
174 | push @{ $self->_ordered_columns }, @added; |
30126ac7 |
175 | return $self; |
9c992ba1 |
176 | } |
177 | |
178 | *add_column = \&add_columns; |
179 | |
3842b955 |
180 | =head2 has_column |
181 | |
988bf309 |
182 | if ($obj->has_column($col)) { ... } |
183 | |
2053ab2a |
184 | Returns true if the source has a column of this name, false otherwise. |
988bf309 |
185 | |
186 | =cut |
9c992ba1 |
187 | |
188 | sub has_column { |
189 | my ($self, $column) = @_; |
190 | return exists $self->_columns->{$column}; |
191 | } |
192 | |
87c4e602 |
193 | =head2 column_info |
9c992ba1 |
194 | |
988bf309 |
195 | my $info = $obj->column_info($col); |
9c992ba1 |
196 | |
988bf309 |
197 | Returns the column metadata hashref for a column. See the description |
198 | of add_column for information on the contents of the hashref. |
9c992ba1 |
199 | |
988bf309 |
200 | =cut |
9c992ba1 |
201 | |
202 | sub column_info { |
203 | my ($self, $column) = @_; |
75d07914 |
204 | $self->throw_exception("No such column $column") |
701da8c4 |
205 | unless exists $self->_columns->{$column}; |
5afa2a15 |
206 | #warn $self->{_columns_info_loaded}, "\n"; |
75d07914 |
207 | if ( ! $self->_columns->{$column}{data_type} |
6eda9bcf |
208 | and $self->column_info_from_storage |
75d07914 |
209 | and ! $self->{_columns_info_loaded} |
8e04bf91 |
210 | and $self->schema and $self->storage ) |
211 | { |
212 | $self->{_columns_info_loaded}++; |
d51f93c8 |
213 | my $info = {}; |
214 | my $lc_info = {}; |
75d07914 |
215 | # eval for the case of storage without table |
955f1590 |
216 | eval { $info = $self->storage->columns_info_for( $self->from ) }; |
8e04bf91 |
217 | unless ($@) { |
0b88a5bb |
218 | for my $realcol ( keys %{$info} ) { |
219 | $lc_info->{lc $realcol} = $info->{$realcol}; |
220 | } |
8e04bf91 |
221 | foreach my $col ( keys %{$self->_columns} ) { |
d51f93c8 |
222 | $self->_columns->{$col} = { |
223 | %{ $self->_columns->{$col} }, |
224 | %{ $info->{$col} || $lc_info->{lc $col} || {} } |
225 | }; |
a953d8d9 |
226 | } |
8e04bf91 |
227 | } |
a953d8d9 |
228 | } |
9c992ba1 |
229 | return $self->_columns->{$column}; |
230 | } |
231 | |
d9916234 |
232 | =head2 column_info_from_storage |
6eda9bcf |
233 | |
234 | Enables the on-demand automatic loading of the above column |
c22c7625 |
235 | metadata from storage as neccesary. This is *deprecated*, and |
236 | should not be used. It will be removed before 1.0. |
6eda9bcf |
237 | |
d9916234 |
238 | __PACKAGE__->column_info_from_storage(1); |
6eda9bcf |
239 | |
9c992ba1 |
240 | =head2 columns |
241 | |
20518cb4 |
242 | my @column_names = $obj->columns; |
243 | |
2053ab2a |
244 | Returns all column names in the order they were declared to add_columns. |
87f0da6a |
245 | |
246 | =cut |
9c992ba1 |
247 | |
248 | sub columns { |
8e04bf91 |
249 | my $self = shift; |
aa1088bf |
250 | $self->throw_exception( |
251 | "columns() is a read-only accessor, did you mean add_columns()?" |
252 | ) if (@_ > 1); |
701da8c4 |
253 | return @{$self->{_ordered_columns}||[]}; |
571dced3 |
254 | } |
255 | |
002a359a |
256 | =head2 remove_columns |
257 | |
258 | $table->remove_columns(qw/col1 col2 col3/); |
259 | |
260 | Removes columns from the result source. |
261 | |
262 | =head2 remove_column |
263 | |
264 | $table->remove_column('col'); |
265 | |
266 | Convenience alias to remove_columns. |
267 | |
268 | =cut |
269 | |
270 | sub remove_columns { |
271 | my ($self, @cols) = @_; |
272 | |
273 | return unless $self->_ordered_columns; |
274 | |
275 | my $columns = $self->_columns; |
276 | my @remaining; |
277 | |
278 | foreach my $col (@{$self->_ordered_columns}) { |
279 | push @remaining, $col unless grep(/$col/, @cols); |
280 | } |
281 | |
282 | foreach (@cols) { |
a918d901 |
283 | delete $columns->{$_}; |
002a359a |
284 | }; |
285 | |
286 | $self->_ordered_columns(\@remaining); |
287 | } |
288 | |
289 | *remove_column = \&remove_columns; |
290 | |
87c4e602 |
291 | =head2 set_primary_key |
292 | |
27f01d1f |
293 | =over 4 |
294 | |
ebc77b53 |
295 | =item Arguments: @cols |
27f01d1f |
296 | |
297 | =back |
87f0da6a |
298 | |
9c992ba1 |
299 | Defines one or more columns as primary key for this source. Should be |
300 | called after C<add_columns>. |
87f0da6a |
301 | |
302 | Additionally, defines a unique constraint named C<primary>. |
303 | |
988bf309 |
304 | The primary key columns are used by L<DBIx::Class::PK::Auto> to |
75d07914 |
305 | retrieve automatically created values from the database. |
988bf309 |
306 | |
87f0da6a |
307 | =cut |
9c992ba1 |
308 | |
309 | sub set_primary_key { |
310 | my ($self, @cols) = @_; |
311 | # check if primary key columns are valid columns |
8e04bf91 |
312 | foreach my $col (@cols) { |
313 | $self->throw_exception("No such column $col on table " . $self->name) |
314 | unless $self->has_column($col); |
9c992ba1 |
315 | } |
316 | $self->_primaries(\@cols); |
87f0da6a |
317 | |
318 | $self->add_unique_constraint(primary => \@cols); |
9c992ba1 |
319 | } |
320 | |
87f0da6a |
321 | =head2 primary_columns |
322 | |
9c992ba1 |
323 | Read-only accessor which returns the list of primary keys. |
30126ac7 |
324 | |
87f0da6a |
325 | =cut |
9c992ba1 |
326 | |
327 | sub primary_columns { |
328 | return @{shift->_primaries||[]}; |
329 | } |
330 | |
87f0da6a |
331 | =head2 add_unique_constraint |
332 | |
333 | Declare a unique constraint on this source. Call once for each unique |
58b5bb8c |
334 | constraint. |
27f01d1f |
335 | |
336 | # For UNIQUE (column1, column2) |
337 | __PACKAGE__->add_unique_constraint( |
338 | constraint_name => [ qw/column1 column2/ ], |
339 | ); |
87f0da6a |
340 | |
368a5228 |
341 | Alternatively, you can specify only the columns: |
342 | |
343 | __PACKAGE__->add_unique_constraint([ qw/column1 column2/ ]); |
344 | |
345 | This will result in a unique constraint named C<table_column1_column2>, where |
346 | C<table> is replaced with the table name. |
347 | |
58b5bb8c |
348 | Unique constraints are used, for example, when you call |
349 | L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/find>. Only columns in the constraint are searched. |
350 | |
87f0da6a |
351 | =cut |
352 | |
353 | sub add_unique_constraint { |
368a5228 |
354 | my $self = shift; |
355 | my $cols = pop @_; |
356 | my $name = shift; |
357 | |
358 | $name ||= $self->name_unique_constraint($cols); |
87f0da6a |
359 | |
8e04bf91 |
360 | foreach my $col (@$cols) { |
361 | $self->throw_exception("No such column $col on table " . $self->name) |
362 | unless $self->has_column($col); |
87f0da6a |
363 | } |
364 | |
365 | my %unique_constraints = $self->unique_constraints; |
366 | $unique_constraints{$name} = $cols; |
367 | $self->_unique_constraints(\%unique_constraints); |
368 | } |
369 | |
d9c74322 |
370 | =head2 name_unique_constraint |
368a5228 |
371 | |
372 | Return a name for a unique constraint containing the specified columns. These |
373 | names consist of the table name and each column name, separated by underscores. |
374 | |
375 | For example, a constraint on a table named C<cd> containing the columns |
376 | C<artist> and C<title> would result in a constraint name of C<cd_artist_title>. |
377 | |
378 | =cut |
379 | |
380 | sub name_unique_constraint { |
381 | my ($self, $cols) = @_; |
382 | |
383 | return join '_', $self->name, @$cols; |
384 | } |
385 | |
87f0da6a |
386 | =head2 unique_constraints |
387 | |
388 | Read-only accessor which returns the list of unique constraints on this source. |
389 | |
390 | =cut |
391 | |
392 | sub unique_constraints { |
393 | return %{shift->_unique_constraints||{}}; |
394 | } |
395 | |
e6a0e17c |
396 | =head2 unique_constraint_names |
397 | |
398 | Returns the list of unique constraint names defined on this source. |
399 | |
400 | =cut |
401 | |
402 | sub unique_constraint_names { |
403 | my ($self) = @_; |
404 | |
405 | my %unique_constraints = $self->unique_constraints; |
406 | |
407 | return keys %unique_constraints; |
408 | } |
409 | |
410 | =head2 unique_constraint_columns |
411 | |
412 | Returns the list of columns that make up the specified unique constraint. |
413 | |
414 | =cut |
415 | |
416 | sub unique_constraint_columns { |
417 | my ($self, $constraint_name) = @_; |
418 | |
419 | my %unique_constraints = $self->unique_constraints; |
420 | |
421 | $self->throw_exception( |
422 | "Unknown unique constraint $constraint_name on '" . $self->name . "'" |
423 | ) unless exists $unique_constraints{$constraint_name}; |
424 | |
425 | return @{ $unique_constraints{$constraint_name} }; |
426 | } |
427 | |
9c992ba1 |
428 | =head2 from |
429 | |
430 | Returns an expression of the source to be supplied to storage to specify |
2053ab2a |
431 | retrieval from this source. In the case of a database, the required FROM |
432 | clause contents. |
9c992ba1 |
433 | |
f9b7bd6e |
434 | =head2 schema |
435 | |
436 | Returns the L<DBIx::Class::Schema> object that this result source |
437 | belongs too. |
9c992ba1 |
438 | |
439 | =head2 storage |
440 | |
75d07914 |
441 | Returns the storage handle for the current schema. |
988bf309 |
442 | |
443 | See also: L<DBIx::Class::Storage> |
9c992ba1 |
444 | |
445 | =cut |
446 | |
447 | sub storage { shift->schema->storage; } |
448 | |
8452e496 |
449 | =head2 add_relationship |
450 | |
451 | $source->add_relationship('relname', 'related_source', $cond, $attrs); |
452 | |
24d67825 |
453 | The relationship name can be arbitrary, but must be unique for each |
454 | relationship attached to this result source. 'related_source' should |
455 | be the name with which the related result source was registered with |
456 | the current schema. For example: |
8452e496 |
457 | |
24d67825 |
458 | $schema->source('Book')->add_relationship('reviews', 'Review', { |
459 | 'foreign.book_id' => 'self.id', |
460 | }); |
461 | |
2053ab2a |
462 | The condition C<$cond> needs to be an L<SQL::Abstract>-style |
24d67825 |
463 | representation of the join between the tables. For example, if you're |
464 | creating a rel from Author to Book, |
988bf309 |
465 | |
466 | { 'foreign.author_id' => 'self.id' } |
467 | |
468 | will result in the JOIN clause |
469 | |
470 | author me JOIN book foreign ON foreign.author_id = me.id |
471 | |
8452e496 |
472 | You can specify as many foreign => self mappings as necessary. |
473 | |
988bf309 |
474 | Valid attributes are as follows: |
475 | |
476 | =over 4 |
477 | |
478 | =item join_type |
479 | |
480 | Explicitly specifies the type of join to use in the relationship. Any |
481 | SQL join type is valid, e.g. C<LEFT> or C<RIGHT>. It will be placed in |
482 | the SQL command immediately before C<JOIN>. |
483 | |
484 | =item proxy |
485 | |
24d67825 |
486 | An arrayref containing a list of accessors in the foreign class to proxy in |
487 | the main class. If, for example, you do the following: |
002a359a |
488 | |
24d67825 |
489 | CD->might_have(liner_notes => 'LinerNotes', undef, { |
490 | proxy => [ qw/notes/ ], |
491 | }); |
002a359a |
492 | |
24d67825 |
493 | Then, assuming LinerNotes has an accessor named notes, you can do: |
988bf309 |
494 | |
24d67825 |
495 | my $cd = CD->find(1); |
2053ab2a |
496 | # set notes -- LinerNotes object is created if it doesn't exist |
497 | $cd->notes('Notes go here'); |
988bf309 |
498 | |
499 | =item accessor |
500 | |
501 | Specifies the type of accessor that should be created for the |
75d07914 |
502 | relationship. Valid values are C<single> (for when there is only a single |
503 | related object), C<multi> (when there can be many), and C<filter> (for |
504 | when there is a single related object, but you also want the relationship |
505 | accessor to double as a column accessor). For C<multi> accessors, an |
506 | add_to_* method is also created, which calls C<create_related> for the |
988bf309 |
507 | relationship. |
508 | |
8452e496 |
509 | =back |
510 | |
511 | =cut |
512 | |
513 | sub add_relationship { |
514 | my ($self, $rel, $f_source_name, $cond, $attrs) = @_; |
27f01d1f |
515 | $self->throw_exception("Can't create relationship without join condition") |
516 | unless $cond; |
8452e496 |
517 | $attrs ||= {}; |
87772e46 |
518 | |
8452e496 |
519 | my %rels = %{ $self->_relationships }; |
520 | $rels{$rel} = { class => $f_source_name, |
87772e46 |
521 | source => $f_source_name, |
8452e496 |
522 | cond => $cond, |
523 | attrs => $attrs }; |
524 | $self->_relationships(\%rels); |
525 | |
30126ac7 |
526 | return $self; |
87772e46 |
527 | |
953a18ef |
528 | # XXX disabled. doesn't work properly currently. skip in tests. |
529 | |
8452e496 |
530 | my $f_source = $self->schema->source($f_source_name); |
531 | unless ($f_source) { |
c037c03a |
532 | $self->ensure_class_loaded($f_source_name); |
8452e496 |
533 | $f_source = $f_source_name->result_source; |
87772e46 |
534 | #my $s_class = ref($self->schema); |
535 | #$f_source_name =~ m/^${s_class}::(.*)$/; |
536 | #$self->schema->register_class(($1 || $f_source_name), $f_source_name); |
537 | #$f_source = $self->schema->source($f_source_name); |
8452e496 |
538 | } |
539 | return unless $f_source; # Can't test rel without f_source |
540 | |
541 | eval { $self->resolve_join($rel, 'me') }; |
542 | |
543 | if ($@) { # If the resolve failed, back out and re-throw the error |
75d07914 |
544 | delete $rels{$rel}; # |
8452e496 |
545 | $self->_relationships(\%rels); |
701da8c4 |
546 | $self->throw_exception("Error creating relationship $rel: $@"); |
8452e496 |
547 | } |
548 | 1; |
549 | } |
550 | |
87c4e602 |
551 | =head2 relationships |
8452e496 |
552 | |
2053ab2a |
553 | Returns all relationship names for this source. |
8452e496 |
554 | |
555 | =cut |
556 | |
557 | sub relationships { |
558 | return keys %{shift->_relationships}; |
559 | } |
560 | |
87c4e602 |
561 | =head2 relationship_info |
562 | |
27f01d1f |
563 | =over 4 |
564 | |
ebc77b53 |
565 | =item Arguments: $relname |
27f01d1f |
566 | |
567 | =back |
8452e496 |
568 | |
2053ab2a |
569 | Returns a hash of relationship information for the specified relationship |
570 | name. |
8452e496 |
571 | |
572 | =cut |
573 | |
574 | sub relationship_info { |
575 | my ($self, $rel) = @_; |
576 | return $self->_relationships->{$rel}; |
75d07914 |
577 | } |
8452e496 |
578 | |
87c4e602 |
579 | =head2 has_relationship |
580 | |
27f01d1f |
581 | =over 4 |
582 | |
ebc77b53 |
583 | =item Arguments: $rel |
27f01d1f |
584 | |
585 | =back |
953a18ef |
586 | |
2053ab2a |
587 | Returns true if the source has a relationship of this name, false otherwise. |
988bf309 |
588 | |
589 | =cut |
953a18ef |
590 | |
591 | sub has_relationship { |
592 | my ($self, $rel) = @_; |
593 | return exists $self->_relationships->{$rel}; |
594 | } |
595 | |
de60a93d |
596 | =head2 reverse_relationship_info |
597 | |
598 | =over 4 |
599 | |
600 | =item Arguments: $relname |
601 | |
602 | =back |
603 | |
bab77431 |
604 | Returns an array of hash references of relationship information for |
de60a93d |
605 | the other side of the specified relationship name. |
606 | |
607 | =cut |
608 | |
609 | sub reverse_relationship_info { |
610 | my ($self, $rel) = @_; |
611 | my $rel_info = $self->relationship_info($rel); |
612 | my $ret = {}; |
613 | |
614 | return $ret unless ((ref $rel_info->{cond}) eq 'HASH'); |
615 | |
616 | my @cond = keys(%{$rel_info->{cond}}); |
617 | my @refkeys = map {/^\w+\.(\w+)$/} @cond; |
618 | my @keys = map {$rel_info->{cond}->{$_} =~ /^\w+\.(\w+)$/} @cond; |
bab77431 |
619 | |
de60a93d |
620 | # Get the related result source for this relationship |
621 | my $othertable = $self->related_source($rel); |
622 | |
623 | # Get all the relationships for that source that related to this source |
624 | # whose foreign column set are our self columns on $rel and whose self |
bab77431 |
625 | # columns are our foreign columns on $rel. |
de60a93d |
626 | my @otherrels = $othertable->relationships(); |
627 | my $otherrelationship; |
628 | foreach my $otherrel (@otherrels) { |
629 | my $otherrel_info = $othertable->relationship_info($otherrel); |
630 | |
631 | my $back = $othertable->related_source($otherrel); |
632 | next unless $back->name eq $self->name; |
633 | |
634 | my @othertestconds; |
635 | |
636 | if (ref $otherrel_info->{cond} eq 'HASH') { |
637 | @othertestconds = ($otherrel_info->{cond}); |
638 | } |
639 | elsif (ref $otherrel_info->{cond} eq 'ARRAY') { |
640 | @othertestconds = @{$otherrel_info->{cond}}; |
641 | } |
642 | else { |
643 | next; |
644 | } |
645 | |
646 | foreach my $othercond (@othertestconds) { |
647 | my @other_cond = keys(%$othercond); |
648 | my @other_refkeys = map {/^\w+\.(\w+)$/} @other_cond; |
649 | my @other_keys = map {$othercond->{$_} =~ /^\w+\.(\w+)$/} @other_cond; |
bab77431 |
650 | next if (!$self->compare_relationship_keys(\@refkeys, \@other_keys) || |
de60a93d |
651 | !$self->compare_relationship_keys(\@other_refkeys, \@keys)); |
652 | $ret->{$otherrel} = $otherrel_info; |
653 | } |
654 | } |
655 | return $ret; |
656 | } |
657 | |
658 | =head2 compare_relationship_keys |
659 | |
660 | =over 4 |
661 | |
662 | =item Arguments: $keys1, $keys2 |
663 | |
664 | =back |
665 | |
666 | Returns true if both sets of keynames are the same, false otherwise. |
667 | |
668 | =cut |
669 | |
670 | sub compare_relationship_keys { |
671 | my ($self, $keys1, $keys2) = @_; |
672 | |
673 | # Make sure every keys1 is in keys2 |
674 | my $found; |
675 | foreach my $key (@$keys1) { |
676 | $found = 0; |
677 | foreach my $prim (@$keys2) { |
678 | if ($prim eq $key) { |
679 | $found = 1; |
680 | last; |
681 | } |
682 | } |
683 | last unless $found; |
684 | } |
685 | |
686 | # Make sure every key2 is in key1 |
687 | if ($found) { |
688 | foreach my $prim (@$keys2) { |
689 | $found = 0; |
690 | foreach my $key (@$keys1) { |
691 | if ($prim eq $key) { |
692 | $found = 1; |
693 | last; |
694 | } |
695 | } |
696 | last unless $found; |
697 | } |
698 | } |
699 | |
700 | return $found; |
701 | } |
702 | |
87c4e602 |
703 | =head2 resolve_join |
704 | |
27f01d1f |
705 | =over 4 |
706 | |
ebc77b53 |
707 | =item Arguments: $relation |
27f01d1f |
708 | |
709 | =back |
8452e496 |
710 | |
2053ab2a |
711 | Returns the join structure required for the related result source. |
8452e496 |
712 | |
713 | =cut |
714 | |
715 | sub resolve_join { |
489709af |
716 | my ($self, $join, $alias, $seen) = @_; |
717 | $seen ||= {}; |
87772e46 |
718 | if (ref $join eq 'ARRAY') { |
489709af |
719 | return map { $self->resolve_join($_, $alias, $seen) } @$join; |
87772e46 |
720 | } elsif (ref $join eq 'HASH') { |
489709af |
721 | return |
887ce227 |
722 | map { |
723 | my $as = ($seen->{$_} ? $_.'_'.($seen->{$_}+1) : $_); |
724 | ($self->resolve_join($_, $alias, $seen), |
725 | $self->related_source($_)->resolve_join($join->{$_}, $as, $seen)); |
726 | } keys %$join; |
87772e46 |
727 | } elsif (ref $join) { |
701da8c4 |
728 | $self->throw_exception("No idea how to resolve join reftype ".ref $join); |
87772e46 |
729 | } else { |
489709af |
730 | my $count = ++$seen->{$join}; |
731 | #use Data::Dumper; warn Dumper($seen); |
732 | my $as = ($count > 1 ? "${join}_${count}" : $join); |
3842b955 |
733 | my $rel_info = $self->relationship_info($join); |
701da8c4 |
734 | $self->throw_exception("No such relationship ${join}") unless $rel_info; |
3842b955 |
735 | my $type = $rel_info->{attrs}{join_type} || ''; |
489709af |
736 | return [ { $as => $self->related_source($join)->from, |
953a18ef |
737 | -join_type => $type }, |
489709af |
738 | $self->resolve_condition($rel_info->{cond}, $as, $alias) ]; |
953a18ef |
739 | } |
740 | } |
741 | |
87c4e602 |
742 | =head2 resolve_condition |
743 | |
27f01d1f |
744 | =over 4 |
745 | |
ebc77b53 |
746 | =item Arguments: $cond, $as, $alias|$object |
27f01d1f |
747 | |
748 | =back |
953a18ef |
749 | |
3842b955 |
750 | Resolves the passed condition to a concrete query fragment. If given an alias, |
953a18ef |
751 | returns a join condition; if given an object, inverts that object to produce |
752 | a related conditional from that object. |
753 | |
754 | =cut |
755 | |
756 | sub resolve_condition { |
489709af |
757 | my ($self, $cond, $as, $for) = @_; |
953a18ef |
758 | #warn %$cond; |
759 | if (ref $cond eq 'HASH') { |
760 | my %ret; |
bd054cb4 |
761 | foreach my $k (keys %{$cond}) { |
762 | my $v = $cond->{$k}; |
953a18ef |
763 | # XXX should probably check these are valid columns |
27f01d1f |
764 | $k =~ s/^foreign\.// || |
75d07914 |
765 | $self->throw_exception("Invalid rel cond key ${k}"); |
27f01d1f |
766 | $v =~ s/^self\.// || |
75d07914 |
767 | $self->throw_exception("Invalid rel cond val ${v}"); |
953a18ef |
768 | if (ref $for) { # Object |
3842b955 |
769 | #warn "$self $k $for $v"; |
770 | $ret{$k} = $for->get_column($v); |
771 | #warn %ret; |
2c037e6b |
772 | } elsif (!defined $for) { # undef, i.e. "no object" |
773 | $ret{$k} = undef; |
fde6e28e |
774 | } elsif (ref $as) { # reverse object |
775 | $ret{$v} = $as->get_column($k); |
2c037e6b |
776 | } elsif (!defined $as) { # undef, i.e. "no reverse object" |
777 | $ret{$v} = undef; |
953a18ef |
778 | } else { |
489709af |
779 | $ret{"${as}.${k}"} = "${for}.${v}"; |
953a18ef |
780 | } |
953a18ef |
781 | } |
782 | return \%ret; |
5efe4c79 |
783 | } elsif (ref $cond eq 'ARRAY') { |
489709af |
784 | return [ map { $self->resolve_condition($_, $as, $for) } @$cond ]; |
953a18ef |
785 | } else { |
786 | die("Can't handle this yet :("); |
87772e46 |
787 | } |
788 | } |
789 | |
87c4e602 |
790 | =head2 resolve_prefetch |
791 | |
27f01d1f |
792 | =over 4 |
793 | |
ebc77b53 |
794 | =item Arguments: hashref/arrayref/scalar |
27f01d1f |
795 | |
796 | =back |
988bf309 |
797 | |
b3e8ac9b |
798 | Accepts one or more relationships for the current source and returns an |
799 | array of column names for each of those relationships. Column names are |
800 | prefixed relative to the current source, in accordance with where they appear |
801 | in the supplied relationships. Examples: |
802 | |
5ac6a044 |
803 | my $source = $schema->resultset('Tag')->source; |
b3e8ac9b |
804 | @columns = $source->resolve_prefetch( { cd => 'artist' } ); |
805 | |
806 | # @columns = |
807 | #( |
808 | # 'cd.cdid', |
809 | # 'cd.artist', |
810 | # 'cd.title', |
811 | # 'cd.year', |
812 | # 'cd.artist.artistid', |
813 | # 'cd.artist.name' |
814 | #) |
815 | |
816 | @columns = $source->resolve_prefetch( qw[/ cd /] ); |
817 | |
818 | # @columns = |
819 | #( |
820 | # 'cd.cdid', |
821 | # 'cd.artist', |
822 | # 'cd.title', |
823 | # 'cd.year' |
824 | #) |
825 | |
826 | $source = $schema->resultset('CD')->source; |
827 | @columns = $source->resolve_prefetch( qw[/ artist producer /] ); |
828 | |
829 | # @columns = |
830 | #( |
831 | # 'artist.artistid', |
832 | # 'artist.name', |
833 | # 'producer.producerid', |
834 | # 'producer.name' |
75d07914 |
835 | #) |
988bf309 |
836 | |
b3e8ac9b |
837 | =cut |
838 | |
839 | sub resolve_prefetch { |
0f66a01b |
840 | my ($self, $pre, $alias, $seen, $order, $collapse) = @_; |
489709af |
841 | $seen ||= {}; |
b3e8ac9b |
842 | #$alias ||= $self->name; |
843 | #warn $alias, Dumper $pre; |
844 | if( ref $pre eq 'ARRAY' ) { |
0f66a01b |
845 | return |
846 | map { $self->resolve_prefetch( $_, $alias, $seen, $order, $collapse ) } |
847 | @$pre; |
b3e8ac9b |
848 | } |
849 | elsif( ref $pre eq 'HASH' ) { |
850 | my @ret = |
851 | map { |
0f66a01b |
852 | $self->resolve_prefetch($_, $alias, $seen, $order, $collapse), |
489709af |
853 | $self->related_source($_)->resolve_prefetch( |
0f66a01b |
854 | $pre->{$_}, "${alias}.$_", $seen, $order, $collapse) |
855 | } keys %$pre; |
b3e8ac9b |
856 | #die Dumper \@ret; |
857 | return @ret; |
858 | } |
859 | elsif( ref $pre ) { |
a86b1efe |
860 | $self->throw_exception( |
861 | "don't know how to resolve prefetch reftype ".ref($pre)); |
b3e8ac9b |
862 | } |
863 | else { |
489709af |
864 | my $count = ++$seen->{$pre}; |
865 | my $as = ($count > 1 ? "${pre}_${count}" : $pre); |
b3e8ac9b |
866 | my $rel_info = $self->relationship_info( $pre ); |
a86b1efe |
867 | $self->throw_exception( $self->name . " has no such relationship '$pre'" ) |
868 | unless $rel_info; |
37f23589 |
869 | my $as_prefix = ($alias =~ /^.*?\.(.+)$/ ? $1.'.' : ''); |
a86b1efe |
870 | my $rel_source = $self->related_source($pre); |
0f66a01b |
871 | |
872 | if (exists $rel_info->{attrs}{accessor} |
873 | && $rel_info->{attrs}{accessor} eq 'multi') { |
874 | $self->throw_exception( |
875 | "Can't prefetch has_many ${pre} (join cond too complex)") |
876 | unless ref($rel_info->{cond}) eq 'HASH'; |
37f23589 |
877 | my @key = map { (/^foreign\.(.+)$/ ? ($1) : ()); } |
0f66a01b |
878 | keys %{$rel_info->{cond}}; |
879 | $collapse->{"${as_prefix}${pre}"} = \@key; |
5a5bec6c |
880 | my @ord = (ref($rel_info->{attrs}{order_by}) eq 'ARRAY' |
881 | ? @{$rel_info->{attrs}{order_by}} |
882 | : (defined $rel_info->{attrs}{order_by} |
883 | ? ($rel_info->{attrs}{order_by}) |
884 | : ())); |
885 | push(@$order, map { "${as}.$_" } (@key, @ord)); |
0f66a01b |
886 | } |
887 | |
489709af |
888 | return map { [ "${as}.$_", "${as_prefix}${pre}.$_", ] } |
a86b1efe |
889 | $rel_source->columns; |
b3e8ac9b |
890 | #warn $alias, Dumper (\@ret); |
489709af |
891 | #return @ret; |
b3e8ac9b |
892 | } |
893 | } |
953a18ef |
894 | |
87c4e602 |
895 | =head2 related_source |
896 | |
27f01d1f |
897 | =over 4 |
898 | |
ebc77b53 |
899 | =item Arguments: $relname |
27f01d1f |
900 | |
901 | =back |
87772e46 |
902 | |
2053ab2a |
903 | Returns the result source object for the given relationship. |
87772e46 |
904 | |
905 | =cut |
906 | |
907 | sub related_source { |
908 | my ($self, $rel) = @_; |
aea52c85 |
909 | if( !$self->has_relationship( $rel ) ) { |
701da8c4 |
910 | $self->throw_exception("No such relationship '$rel'"); |
aea52c85 |
911 | } |
87772e46 |
912 | return $self->schema->source($self->relationship_info($rel)->{source}); |
8452e496 |
913 | } |
914 | |
77254782 |
915 | =head2 related_class |
916 | |
27f01d1f |
917 | =over 4 |
918 | |
ebc77b53 |
919 | =item Arguments: $relname |
27f01d1f |
920 | |
921 | =back |
77254782 |
922 | |
2053ab2a |
923 | Returns the class name for objects in the given relationship. |
77254782 |
924 | |
925 | =cut |
926 | |
927 | sub related_class { |
928 | my ($self, $rel) = @_; |
929 | if( !$self->has_relationship( $rel ) ) { |
930 | $self->throw_exception("No such relationship '$rel'"); |
931 | } |
932 | return $self->schema->class($self->relationship_info($rel)->{source}); |
933 | } |
934 | |
5ac6a044 |
935 | =head2 resultset |
936 | |
bcc5a210 |
937 | Returns a resultset for the given source. This will initially be created |
938 | on demand by calling |
5ac6a044 |
939 | |
988bf309 |
940 | $self->resultset_class->new($self, $self->resultset_attributes) |
5ac6a044 |
941 | |
bcc5a210 |
942 | but is cached from then on unless resultset_class changes. |
943 | |
5ac6a044 |
944 | =head2 resultset_class |
945 | |
d7be2784 |
946 | ` package My::ResultSetClass; |
947 | use base 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet'; |
948 | ... |
949 | |
950 | $source->resultset_class('My::ResultSet::Class'); |
951 | |
988bf309 |
952 | Set the class of the resultset, this is useful if you want to create your |
953 | own resultset methods. Create your own class derived from |
d7be2784 |
954 | L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet>, and set it here. |
5ac6a044 |
955 | |
956 | =head2 resultset_attributes |
957 | |
d7be2784 |
958 | $source->resultset_attributes({ order_by => [ 'id' ] }); |
959 | |
d84c7d78 |
960 | Specify here any attributes you wish to pass to your specialised |
961 | resultset. For a full list of these, please see |
962 | L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES>. |
5ac6a044 |
963 | |
964 | =cut |
965 | |
966 | sub resultset { |
967 | my $self = shift; |
27f01d1f |
968 | $self->throw_exception( |
969 | 'resultset does not take any arguments. If you want another resultset, '. |
970 | 'call it on the schema instead.' |
971 | ) if scalar @_; |
428c2b82 |
972 | |
428c2b82 |
973 | return $self->resultset_class->new( |
27f01d1f |
974 | $self, $self->{resultset_attributes} |
975 | ); |
5ac6a044 |
976 | } |
977 | |
bab77431 |
978 | =head2 source_name |
979 | |
980 | =over 4 |
981 | |
982 | =item Arguments: $source_name |
983 | |
984 | =back |
985 | |
986 | Set the name of the result source when it is loaded into a schema. |
987 | This is usefull if you want to refer to a result source by a name other than |
988 | its class name. |
989 | |
990 | package ArchivedBooks; |
991 | use base qw/DBIx::Class/; |
992 | __PACKAGE__->table('books_archive'); |
993 | __PACKAGE__->source_name('Books'); |
994 | |
995 | # from your schema... |
996 | $schema->resultset('Books')->find(1); |
997 | |
aec3eff1 |
998 | =head2 handle |
999 | |
1000 | Obtain a new handle to this source. Returns an instance of a |
1001 | L<DBIx::Class::ResultSourceHandle>. |
1002 | |
1003 | =cut |
1004 | |
1005 | sub handle { |
1006 | return new DBIx::Class::ResultSourceHandle({ |
1007 | schema => $_[0]->schema, |
3441fd57 |
1008 | source_moniker => $_[0]->source_name |
aec3eff1 |
1009 | }); |
1010 | } |
1011 | |
701da8c4 |
1012 | =head2 throw_exception |
1013 | |
2053ab2a |
1014 | See L<DBIx::Class::Schema/"throw_exception">. |
701da8c4 |
1015 | |
1016 | =cut |
1017 | |
1018 | sub throw_exception { |
1019 | my $self = shift; |
75d07914 |
1020 | if (defined $self->schema) { |
701da8c4 |
1021 | $self->schema->throw_exception(@_); |
1022 | } else { |
1023 | croak(@_); |
1024 | } |
1025 | } |
1026 | |
9c992ba1 |
1027 | =head1 AUTHORS |
1028 | |
1029 | Matt S. Trout <mst@shadowcatsystems.co.uk> |
1030 | |
1031 | =head1 LICENSE |
1032 | |
1033 | You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. |
1034 | |
1035 | =cut |
1036 | |