Fixed useclass/requireclass bug in Test::Deep
[dbsrgits/DBM-Deep.git] / lib / DBM / Deep.pm
CommitLineData
ffed8b01 1package DBM::Deep;
2
3##
4# DBM::Deep
5#
6# Description:
d0b74c17 7# Multi-level database module for storing hash trees, arrays and simple
8# key/value pairs into FTP-able, cross-platform binary database files.
ffed8b01 9#
d0b74c17 10# Type `perldoc DBM::Deep` for complete documentation.
ffed8b01 11#
12# Usage Examples:
d0b74c17 13# my %db;
14# tie %db, 'DBM::Deep', 'my_database.db'; # standard tie() method
ffed8b01 15#
d0b74c17 16# my $db = new DBM::Deep( 'my_database.db' ); # preferred OO method
17#
18# $db->{my_scalar} = 'hello world';
19# $db->{my_hash} = { larry => 'genius', hashes => 'fast' };
20# $db->{my_array} = [ 1, 2, 3, time() ];
21# $db->{my_complex} = [ 'hello', { perl => 'rules' }, 42, 99 ];
22# push @{$db->{my_array}}, 'another value';
23# my @key_list = keys %{$db->{my_hash}};
24# print "This module " . $db->{my_complex}->[1]->{perl} . "!\n";
ffed8b01 25#
26# Copyright:
d0b74c17 27# (c) 2002-2006 Joseph Huckaby. All Rights Reserved.
28# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
29# modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
ffed8b01 30##
31
460b1067 32use 5.6.0;
33
ffed8b01 34use strict;
460b1067 35use warnings;
8b957036 36
596e9574 37use Fcntl qw( :DEFAULT :flock :seek );
ffed8b01 38use Digest::MD5 ();
39use Scalar::Util ();
ffed8b01 40
95967a5e 41use DBM::Deep::Engine;
460b1067 42use DBM::Deep::File;
95967a5e 43
596e9574 44use vars qw( $VERSION );
3a7a0dce 45$VERSION = q(0.99_01);
ffed8b01 46
ffed8b01 47##
48# Setup constants for users to pass to new()
49##
e06824f8 50sub TYPE_HASH () { DBM::Deep::Engine->SIG_HASH }
51sub TYPE_ARRAY () { DBM::Deep::Engine->SIG_ARRAY }
ffed8b01 52
0ca7ea98 53sub _get_args {
54 my $proto = shift;
55
56 my $args;
57 if (scalar(@_) > 1) {
58 if ( @_ % 2 ) {
59 $proto->_throw_error( "Odd number of parameters to " . (caller(1))[2] );
60 }
61 $args = {@_};
62 }
d0b74c17 63 elsif ( ref $_[0] ) {
4d35d856 64 unless ( eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; %{$_[0]} || 1 } ) {
0ca7ea98 65 $proto->_throw_error( "Not a hashref in args to " . (caller(1))[2] );
66 }
67 $args = $_[0];
68 }
d0b74c17 69 else {
0ca7ea98 70 $args = { file => shift };
71 }
72
73 return $args;
74}
75
ffed8b01 76sub new {
d0b74c17 77 ##
78 # Class constructor method for Perl OO interface.
79 # Calls tie() and returns blessed reference to tied hash or array,
80 # providing a hybrid OO/tie interface.
81 ##
82 my $class = shift;
83 my $args = $class->_get_args( @_ );
84
85 ##
86 # Check if we want a tied hash or array.
87 ##
88 my $self;
89 if (defined($args->{type}) && $args->{type} eq TYPE_ARRAY) {
6fe26b29 90 $class = 'DBM::Deep::Array';
91 require DBM::Deep::Array;
d0b74c17 92 tie @$self, $class, %$args;
93 }
94 else {
6fe26b29 95 $class = 'DBM::Deep::Hash';
96 require DBM::Deep::Hash;
d0b74c17 97 tie %$self, $class, %$args;
98 }
ffed8b01 99
d0b74c17 100 return bless $self, $class;
ffed8b01 101}
102
96041a25 103# This initializer is called from the various TIE* methods. new() calls tie(),
104# which allows for a single point of entry.
0795f290 105sub _init {
0795f290 106 my $class = shift;
994ccd8e 107 my ($args) = @_;
0795f290 108
460b1067 109 $args->{fileobj} = DBM::Deep::File->new( $args )
110 unless exists $args->{fileobj};
111
112 # locking implicitly enables autoflush
113 if ($args->{locking}) { $args->{autoflush} = 1; }
114
0795f290 115 # These are the defaults to be optionally overridden below
116 my $self = bless {
95967a5e 117 type => TYPE_HASH,
e06824f8 118 base_offset => undef,
359a01ac 119
120 parent => undef,
121 parent_key => undef,
122
460b1067 123 fileobj => undef,
0795f290 124 }, $class;
359a01ac 125 $self->{engine} = DBM::Deep::Engine->new( { %{$args}, obj => $self } );
8db25060 126
fde3db1a 127 # Grab the parameters we want to use
0795f290 128 foreach my $param ( keys %$self ) {
129 next unless exists $args->{$param};
3e9498a1 130 $self->{$param} = $args->{$param};
ffed8b01 131 }
d0b74c17 132
70b55428 133 $self->{engine}->setup_fh( $self );
0795f290 134
359a01ac 135 $self->{fileobj}->set_db( $self );
136
0795f290 137 return $self;
ffed8b01 138}
139
ffed8b01 140sub TIEHASH {
6fe26b29 141 shift;
142 require DBM::Deep::Hash;
143 return DBM::Deep::Hash->TIEHASH( @_ );
ffed8b01 144}
145
146sub TIEARRAY {
6fe26b29 147 shift;
148 require DBM::Deep::Array;
149 return DBM::Deep::Array->TIEARRAY( @_ );
ffed8b01 150}
151
ffed8b01 152sub lock {
994ccd8e 153 my $self = shift->_get_self;
15ba72cc 154 return $self->_fileobj->lock( $self, @_ );
ffed8b01 155}
156
157sub unlock {
994ccd8e 158 my $self = shift->_get_self;
15ba72cc 159 return $self->_fileobj->unlock( $self, @_ );
ffed8b01 160}
161
906c8e01 162sub _copy_value {
163 my $self = shift->_get_self;
164 my ($spot, $value) = @_;
165
166 if ( !ref $value ) {
167 ${$spot} = $value;
168 }
169 elsif ( eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; $value->isa( 'DBM::Deep' ) } ) {
f9c33187 170 ${$spot} = $value->_repr;
906c8e01 171 $value->_copy_node( ${$spot} );
172 }
173 else {
174 my $r = Scalar::Util::reftype( $value );
175 my $c = Scalar::Util::blessed( $value );
176 if ( $r eq 'ARRAY' ) {
177 ${$spot} = [ @{$value} ];
178 }
179 else {
180 ${$spot} = { %{$value} };
181 }
95bbd935 182 ${$spot} = bless ${$spot}, $c
906c8e01 183 if defined $c;
184 }
185
186 return 1;
187}
188
261d1296 189sub _copy_node {
f9c33187 190 die "Must be implemented in a child class\n";
191}
906c8e01 192
f9c33187 193sub _repr {
194 die "Must be implemented in a child class\n";
ffed8b01 195}
196
197sub export {
d0b74c17 198 ##
199 # Recursively export into standard Perl hashes and arrays.
200 ##
994ccd8e 201 my $self = shift->_get_self;
d0b74c17 202
f9c33187 203 my $temp = $self->_repr;
d0b74c17 204
205 $self->lock();
206 $self->_copy_node( $temp );
207 $self->unlock();
208
209 return $temp;
ffed8b01 210}
211
212sub import {
d0b74c17 213 ##
214 # Recursively import Perl hash/array structure
215 ##
d0b74c17 216 if (!ref($_[0])) { return; } # Perl calls import() on use -- ignore
217
994ccd8e 218 my $self = shift->_get_self;
219 my ($struct) = @_;
d0b74c17 220
c9cec40e 221 # struct is not a reference, so just import based on our type
d0b74c17 222 if (!ref($struct)) {
f9c33187 223 $struct = $self->_repr( @_ );
d0b74c17 224 }
225
f9c33187 226 return $self->_import( $struct );
ffed8b01 227}
228
229sub optimize {
d0b74c17 230 ##
231 # Rebuild entire database into new file, then move
232 # it back on top of original.
233 ##
994ccd8e 234 my $self = shift->_get_self;
cc4bef86 235
236#XXX Need to create a new test for this
460b1067 237# if ($self->_fileobj->{links} > 1) {
1400a48e 238# $self->_throw_error("Cannot optimize: reference count is greater than 1");
d0b74c17 239# }
240
241 my $db_temp = DBM::Deep->new(
460b1067 242 file => $self->_fileobj->{file} . '.tmp',
d0b74c17 243 type => $self->_type
244 );
d0b74c17 245
246 $self->lock();
247 $self->_copy_node( $db_temp );
248 undef $db_temp;
249
250 ##
251 # Attempt to copy user, group and permissions over to new file
252 ##
253 my @stats = stat($self->_fh);
254 my $perms = $stats[2] & 07777;
255 my $uid = $stats[4];
256 my $gid = $stats[5];
460b1067 257 chown( $uid, $gid, $self->_fileobj->{file} . '.tmp' );
258 chmod( $perms, $self->_fileobj->{file} . '.tmp' );
d0b74c17 259
ffed8b01 260 # q.v. perlport for more information on this variable
90f93b43 261 if ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' || $^O eq 'cygwin' ) {
d0b74c17 262 ##
263 # Potential race condition when optmizing on Win32 with locking.
264 # The Windows filesystem requires that the filehandle be closed
265 # before it is overwritten with rename(). This could be redone
266 # with a soft copy.
267 ##
268 $self->unlock();
460b1067 269 $self->_fileobj->close;
d0b74c17 270 }
271
460b1067 272 if (!rename $self->_fileobj->{file} . '.tmp', $self->_fileobj->{file}) {
273 unlink $self->_fileobj->{file} . '.tmp';
d0b74c17 274 $self->unlock();
1400a48e 275 $self->_throw_error("Optimize failed: Cannot copy temp file over original: $!");
d0b74c17 276 }
277
278 $self->unlock();
460b1067 279 $self->_fileobj->close;
280 $self->_fileobj->open;
70b55428 281 $self->{engine}->setup_fh( $self );
282
d0b74c17 283 return 1;
ffed8b01 284}
285
286sub clone {
d0b74c17 287 ##
288 # Make copy of object and return
289 ##
994ccd8e 290 my $self = shift->_get_self;
d0b74c17 291
292 return DBM::Deep->new(
293 type => $self->_type,
294 base_offset => $self->_base_offset,
460b1067 295 fileobj => $self->_fileobj,
d0b74c17 296 );
ffed8b01 297}
298
299{
300 my %is_legal_filter = map {
301 $_ => ~~1,
302 } qw(
303 store_key store_value
304 fetch_key fetch_value
305 );
306
307 sub set_filter {
308 ##
309 # Setup filter function for storing or fetching the key or value
310 ##
994ccd8e 311 my $self = shift->_get_self;
312 my $type = lc shift;
313 my $func = shift;
d0b74c17 314
ffed8b01 315 if ( $is_legal_filter{$type} ) {
460b1067 316 $self->_fileobj->{"filter_$type"} = $func;
ffed8b01 317 return 1;
318 }
319
320 return;
321 }
322}
323
fee0243f 324sub begin_work {
325 my $self = shift->_get_self;
28394a1a 326 $self->_fileobj->begin_transaction;
327 return 1;
fee0243f 328}
329
330sub rollback {
331 my $self = shift->_get_self;
28394a1a 332 $self->_fileobj->end_transaction;
333 return 1;
fee0243f 334}
335
359a01ac 336sub commit {
337 my $self = shift->_get_self;
25c7c8d6 338 $self->_fileobj->commit_transaction;
359a01ac 339 return 1;
340}
fee0243f 341
ffed8b01 342##
343# Accessor methods
344##
345
460b1067 346sub _fileobj {
2ac02042 347 my $self = $_[0]->_get_self;
460b1067 348 return $self->{fileobj};
ffed8b01 349}
350
4d35d856 351sub _type {
2ac02042 352 my $self = $_[0]->_get_self;
d0b74c17 353 return $self->{type};
ffed8b01 354}
355
4d35d856 356sub _base_offset {
2ac02042 357 my $self = $_[0]->_get_self;
d0b74c17 358 return $self->{base_offset};
ffed8b01 359}
360
994ccd8e 361sub _fh {
994ccd8e 362 my $self = $_[0]->_get_self;
460b1067 363 return $self->_fileobj->{fh};
994ccd8e 364}
365
ffed8b01 366##
367# Utility methods
368##
369
261d1296 370sub _throw_error {
95967a5e 371 die "DBM::Deep: $_[1]\n";
ffed8b01 372}
373
acd4faf2 374sub _is_writable {
375 my $fh = shift;
376 (O_WRONLY | O_RDWR) & fcntl( $fh, F_GETFL, my $slush = 0);
377}
378
9be51a89 379#sub _is_readable {
380# my $fh = shift;
381# (O_RDONLY | O_RDWR) & fcntl( $fh, F_GETFL, my $slush = 0);
382#}
acd4faf2 383
359a01ac 384sub _find_parent {
385 my $self = shift;
cfd97a7f 386
387 my $base = '';
388 if ( my $parent = $self->{parent} ) {
389 my $child = $self;
25c7c8d6 390 while ( $parent->{parent} ) {
cfd97a7f 391 $base = (
392 $parent->_type eq TYPE_HASH
393 ? "\{$child->{parent_key}\}"
394 : "\[$child->{parent_key}\]"
25c7c8d6 395# "->get('$child->{parent_key}')"
cfd97a7f 396 ) . $base;
397
398 $child = $parent;
399 $parent = $parent->{parent};
25c7c8d6 400# last unless $parent;
401 }
402 if ( $base ) {
403 $base = "\$db->get( '$child->{parent_key}' )->" . $base;
404 }
405 else {
406 $base = "\$db->get( '$child->{parent_key}' )";
359a01ac 407 }
359a01ac 408 }
25c7c8d6 409# return '$db->' . $base;
410# return '$db' . $base;
411 return $base;
359a01ac 412}
413
ffed8b01 414sub STORE {
d0b74c17 415 ##
416 # Store single hash key/value or array element in database.
417 ##
418 my $self = shift->_get_self;
359a01ac 419 my ($key, $value, $orig_key) = @_;
81d3d316 420
aa83bc1e 421
9e4f83a0 422 if ( $^O ne 'MSWin32' && !_is_writable( $self->_fh ) ) {
acd4faf2 423 $self->_throw_error( 'Cannot write to a readonly filehandle' );
424 }
d0b74c17 425
4768a580 426 if ( defined $orig_key ) {
4768a580 427 my $rhs;
428
429 my $r = Scalar::Util::reftype( $value ) || '';
430 if ( $r eq 'HASH' ) {
431 $rhs = '{}';
432 }
433 elsif ( $r eq 'ARRAY' ) {
434 $rhs = '[]';
435 }
436 elsif ( defined $value ) {
437 $rhs = "'$value'";
438 }
439 else {
440 $rhs = "undef";
441 }
442
443 if ( my $c = Scalar::Util::blessed( $value ) ) {
444 $rhs = "bless $rhs, '$c'";
445 }
446
25c7c8d6 447 my $lhs = $self->_find_parent;
448 if ( $lhs ) {
449 if ( $self->_type eq TYPE_HASH ) {
450 $lhs .= "->\{$orig_key\}";
451 }
452 else {
453 $lhs .= "->\[$orig_key\]";
454 }
455
456 $lhs .= "=$rhs;";
457 }
458 else {
459 $lhs = "\$db->put('$orig_key',$rhs);";
460 }
461
462# $self->_fileobj->audit( "$lhs = $rhs;" );
463# $self->_fileobj->audit( "$lhs $rhs);" );
464 $self->_fileobj->audit($lhs);
4768a580 465 }
359a01ac 466
d0b74c17 467 ##
468 # Request exclusive lock for writing
469 ##
470 $self->lock( LOCK_EX );
471
472 my $md5 = $self->{engine}{digest}->($key);
473
e96daec8 474 my $tag = $self->{engine}->find_bucket_list( $self->_base_offset, $md5, { create => 1 } );
d0b74c17 475
476 # User may be storing a hash, in which case we do not want it run
477 # through the filtering system
460b1067 478 if ( !ref($value) && $self->_fileobj->{filter_store_value} ) {
479 $value = $self->_fileobj->{filter_store_value}->( $value );
d0b74c17 480 }
481
482 ##
483 # Add key/value to bucket list
484 ##
359a01ac 485 my $result = $self->{engine}->add_bucket( $tag, $md5, $key, $value, undef, $orig_key );
d0b74c17 486
487 $self->unlock();
488
489 return $result;
ffed8b01 490}
491
492sub FETCH {
d0b74c17 493 ##
494 # Fetch single value or element given plain key or array index
495 ##
cb79ec85 496 my $self = shift->_get_self;
a97c8f67 497 my ($key, $orig_key) = @_;
ffed8b01 498
d0b74c17 499 my $md5 = $self->{engine}{digest}->($key);
500
501 ##
502 # Request shared lock for reading
503 ##
504 $self->lock( LOCK_SH );
505
e96daec8 506 my $tag = $self->{engine}->find_bucket_list( $self->_base_offset, $md5 );
d0b74c17 507 if (!$tag) {
508 $self->unlock();
509 return;
510 }
511
512 ##
513 # Get value from bucket list
514 ##
a97c8f67 515 my $result = $self->{engine}->get_bucket_value( $tag, $md5, $orig_key );
d0b74c17 516
517 $self->unlock();
518
a86430bd 519 # Filters only apply to scalar values, so the ref check is making
520 # sure the fetched bucket is a scalar, not a child hash or array.
460b1067 521 return ($result && !ref($result) && $self->_fileobj->{filter_fetch_value})
522 ? $self->_fileobj->{filter_fetch_value}->($result)
cb79ec85 523 : $result;
ffed8b01 524}
525
526sub DELETE {
d0b74c17 527 ##
528 # Delete single key/value pair or element given plain key or array index
529 ##
a97c8f67 530 my $self = shift->_get_self;
531 my ($key, $orig_key) = @_;
d0b74c17 532
9e4f83a0 533 if ( $^O ne 'MSWin32' && !_is_writable( $self->_fh ) ) {
a86430bd 534 $self->_throw_error( 'Cannot write to a readonly filehandle' );
535 }
d0b74c17 536
4768a580 537 if ( defined $orig_key ) {
538 my $lhs = $self->_find_parent;
25c7c8d6 539# if ( $self->_type eq TYPE_HASH ) {
540# $lhs .= "\{$orig_key\}";
541# }
542# else {
543# $lhs .= "\[$orig_key]\]";
544# }
545
546# $self->_fileobj->audit( "delete $lhs;" );
547# $self->_fileobj->audit( "$lhs->delete('$orig_key');" );
548 if ( $lhs ) {
549 $self->_fileobj->audit( "delete $lhs;" );
a97c8f67 550 }
4768a580 551 else {
25c7c8d6 552 $self->_fileobj->audit( "\$db->delete('$orig_key');" );
4768a580 553 }
a97c8f67 554 }
555
d0b74c17 556 ##
557 # Request exclusive lock for writing
558 ##
559 $self->lock( LOCK_EX );
560
a86430bd 561 my $md5 = $self->{engine}{digest}->($key);
562
e96daec8 563 my $tag = $self->{engine}->find_bucket_list( $self->_base_offset, $md5 );
d0b74c17 564 if (!$tag) {
565 $self->unlock();
566 return;
567 }
568
569 ##
570 # Delete bucket
571 ##
e96daec8 572 my $value = $self->{engine}->get_bucket_value( $tag, $md5 );
a86430bd 573
460b1067 574 if (defined $value && !ref($value) && $self->_fileobj->{filter_fetch_value}) {
575 $value = $self->_fileobj->{filter_fetch_value}->($value);
3b6a5056 576 }
577
a97c8f67 578 my $result = $self->{engine}->delete_bucket( $tag, $md5, $orig_key );
d0b74c17 579
580 ##
581 # If this object is an array and the key deleted was on the end of the stack,
582 # decrement the length variable.
583 ##
584
585 $self->unlock();
586
587 return $value;
ffed8b01 588}
589
590sub EXISTS {
d0b74c17 591 ##
592 # Check if a single key or element exists given plain key or array index
593 ##
a97c8f67 594 my $self = shift->_get_self;
595 my ($key) = @_;
d0b74c17 596
597 my $md5 = $self->{engine}{digest}->($key);
598
599 ##
600 # Request shared lock for reading
601 ##
602 $self->lock( LOCK_SH );
603
e96daec8 604 my $tag = $self->{engine}->find_bucket_list( $self->_base_offset, $md5 );
d0b74c17 605 if (!$tag) {
606 $self->unlock();
607
608 ##
609 # For some reason, the built-in exists() function returns '' for false
610 ##
611 return '';
612 }
613
614 ##
615 # Check if bucket exists and return 1 or ''
616 ##
e96daec8 617 my $result = $self->{engine}->bucket_exists( $tag, $md5 ) || '';
d0b74c17 618
619 $self->unlock();
620
621 return $result;
ffed8b01 622}
623
624sub CLEAR {
d0b74c17 625 ##
626 # Clear all keys from hash, or all elements from array.
627 ##
a97c8f67 628 my $self = shift->_get_self;
ffed8b01 629
9e4f83a0 630 if ( $^O ne 'MSWin32' && !_is_writable( $self->_fh ) ) {
a86430bd 631 $self->_throw_error( 'Cannot write to a readonly filehandle' );
632 }
633
4768a580 634 {
a97c8f67 635 my $lhs = $self->_find_parent;
636
a97c8f67 637 if ( $self->_type eq TYPE_HASH ) {
e82621dd 638 $lhs = '%{' . $lhs . '}';
a97c8f67 639 }
640 else {
e82621dd 641 $lhs = '@{' . $lhs . '}';
a97c8f67 642 }
643
71a941fd 644 $self->_fileobj->audit( "$lhs = ();" );
a97c8f67 645 }
646
d0b74c17 647 ##
648 # Request exclusive lock for writing
649 ##
650 $self->lock( LOCK_EX );
651
f9c33187 652#XXX This needs updating to use _release_space
9e4f83a0 653 $self->{engine}->write_tag(
e96daec8 654 $self->_base_offset, $self->_type,
f37c15ab 655 chr(0)x$self->{engine}{index_size},
2603d86e 656 );
d0b74c17 657
658 $self->unlock();
659
660 return 1;
ffed8b01 661}
662
ffed8b01 663##
664# Public method aliases
665##
7f441181 666sub put { (shift)->STORE( @_ ) }
667sub store { (shift)->STORE( @_ ) }
668sub get { (shift)->FETCH( @_ ) }
669sub fetch { (shift)->FETCH( @_ ) }
baa27ab6 670sub delete { (shift)->DELETE( @_ ) }
671sub exists { (shift)->EXISTS( @_ ) }
672sub clear { (shift)->CLEAR( @_ ) }
ffed8b01 673
6741;
ffed8b01 675__END__
676
677=head1 NAME
678
679DBM::Deep - A pure perl multi-level hash/array DBM
680
681=head1 SYNOPSIS
682
683 use DBM::Deep;
684 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
d0b74c17 685
ffed8b01 686 $db->{key} = 'value'; # tie() style
687 print $db->{key};
d0b74c17 688
cbaa107d 689 $db->put('key' => 'value'); # OO style
ffed8b01 690 print $db->get('key');
d0b74c17 691
ffed8b01 692 # true multi-level support
693 $db->{my_complex} = [
d0b74c17 694 'hello', { perl => 'rules' },
695 42, 99,
90f93b43 696 ];
ffed8b01 697
698=head1 DESCRIPTION
699
d0b74c17 700A unique flat-file database module, written in pure perl. True
701multi-level hash/array support (unlike MLDBM, which is faked), hybrid
702OO / tie() interface, cross-platform FTPable files, and quite fast. Can
703handle millions of keys and unlimited hash levels without significant
704slow-down. Written from the ground-up in pure perl -- this is NOT a
705wrapper around a C-based DBM. Out-of-the-box compatibility with Unix,
ffed8b01 706Mac OS X and Windows.
707
8db25060 708=head1 VERSION DIFFERENCES
709
710B<NOTE>: 0.99_01 and above have significant file format differences from 0.98 and
711before. While attempts have been made to be backwards compatible, no guarantees.
712
ffed8b01 713=head1 INSTALLATION
714
90f93b43 715Hopefully you are using Perl's excellent CPAN module, which will download
d0b74c17 716and install the module for you. If not, get the tarball, and run these
ffed8b01 717commands:
718
d0b74c17 719 tar zxf DBM-Deep-*
720 cd DBM-Deep-*
721 perl Makefile.PL
722 make
723 make test
724 make install
ffed8b01 725
726=head1 SETUP
727
d0b74c17 728Construction can be done OO-style (which is the recommended way), or using
ffed8b01 729Perl's tie() function. Both are examined here.
730
731=head2 OO CONSTRUCTION
732
733The recommended way to construct a DBM::Deep object is to use the new()
734method, which gets you a blessed, tied hash or array reference.
735
d0b74c17 736 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
ffed8b01 737
738This opens a new database handle, mapped to the file "foo.db". If this
d0b74c17 739file does not exist, it will automatically be created. DB files are
ffed8b01 740opened in "r+" (read/write) mode, and the type of object returned is a
741hash, unless otherwise specified (see L<OPTIONS> below).
742
ffed8b01 743You can pass a number of options to the constructor to specify things like
744locking, autoflush, etc. This is done by passing an inline hash:
745
d0b74c17 746 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
747 file => "foo.db",
748 locking => 1,
749 autoflush => 1
750 );
ffed8b01 751
752Notice that the filename is now specified I<inside> the hash with
d0b74c17 753the "file" parameter, as opposed to being the sole argument to the
ffed8b01 754constructor. This is required if any options are specified.
755See L<OPTIONS> below for the complete list.
756
757
758
759You can also start with an array instead of a hash. For this, you must
760specify the C<type> parameter:
761
d0b74c17 762 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
763 file => "foo.db",
764 type => DBM::Deep->TYPE_ARRAY
765 );
ffed8b01 766
767B<Note:> Specifing the C<type> parameter only takes effect when beginning
768a new DB file. If you create a DBM::Deep object with an existing file, the
90f93b43 769C<type> will be loaded from the file header, and an error will be thrown if
770the wrong type is passed in.
ffed8b01 771
772=head2 TIE CONSTRUCTION
773
90f93b43 774Alternately, you can create a DBM::Deep handle by using Perl's built-in
775tie() function. The object returned from tie() can be used to call methods,
776such as lock() and unlock(), but cannot be used to assign to the DBM::Deep
777file (as expected with most tie'd objects).
ffed8b01 778
d0b74c17 779 my %hash;
780 my $db = tie %hash, "DBM::Deep", "foo.db";
781
782 my @array;
783 my $db = tie @array, "DBM::Deep", "bar.db";
ffed8b01 784
785As with the OO constructor, you can replace the DB filename parameter with
786a hash containing one or more options (see L<OPTIONS> just below for the
787complete list).
788
d0b74c17 789 tie %hash, "DBM::Deep", {
790 file => "foo.db",
791 locking => 1,
792 autoflush => 1
793 };
ffed8b01 794
795=head2 OPTIONS
796
797There are a number of options that can be passed in when constructing your
798DBM::Deep objects. These apply to both the OO- and tie- based approaches.
799
800=over
801
802=item * file
803
804Filename of the DB file to link the handle to. You can pass a full absolute
d0b74c17 805filesystem path, partial path, or a plain filename if the file is in the
714618f0 806current working directory. This is a required parameter (though q.v. fh).
807
808=item * fh
809
810If you want, you can pass in the fh instead of the file. This is most useful for doing
811something like:
812
813 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( { fh => \*DATA } );
814
815You are responsible for making sure that the fh has been opened appropriately for your
816needs. If you open it read-only and attempt to write, an exception will be thrown. If you
817open it write-only or append-only, an exception will be thrown immediately as DBM::Deep
818needs to read from the fh.
819
820=item * file_offset
821
822This is the offset within the file that the DBM::Deep db starts. Most of the time, you will
823not need to set this. However, it's there if you want it.
824
825If you pass in fh and do not set this, it will be set appropriately.
ffed8b01 826
ffed8b01 827=item * type
828
829This parameter specifies what type of object to create, a hash or array. Use
359a01ac 830one of these two constants:
831
832=over 4
833
834=item * C<DBM::Deep-E<gt>TYPE_HASH>
835
836=item * C<DBM::Deep-E<gt>TYPE_ARRAY>.
837
838=back
839
d0b74c17 840This only takes effect when beginning a new file. This is an optional
ffed8b01 841parameter, and defaults to C<DBM::Deep-E<gt>TYPE_HASH>.
842
843=item * locking
844
845Specifies whether locking is to be enabled. DBM::Deep uses Perl's Fnctl flock()
846function to lock the database in exclusive mode for writes, and shared mode for
d0b74c17 847reads. Pass any true value to enable. This affects the base DB handle I<and
848any child hashes or arrays> that use the same DB file. This is an optional
ffed8b01 849parameter, and defaults to 0 (disabled). See L<LOCKING> below for more.
850
851=item * autoflush
852
d0b74c17 853Specifies whether autoflush is to be enabled on the underlying filehandle.
854This obviously slows down write operations, but is required if you may have
855multiple processes accessing the same DB file (also consider enable I<locking>).
856Pass any true value to enable. This is an optional parameter, and defaults to 0
ffed8b01 857(disabled).
858
859=item * autobless
860
359a01ac 861If I<autobless> mode is enabled, DBM::Deep will preserve the class something
862is blessed into, and restores it when fetched. This is an optional parameter, and defaults to 1 (enabled).
863
864B<Note:> If you use the OO-interface, you will not be able to call any methods
865of DBM::Deep on the blessed item. This is considered to be a feature.
ffed8b01 866
867=item * filter_*
868
359a01ac 869See L</FILTERS> below.
ffed8b01 870
ffed8b01 871=back
872
873=head1 TIE INTERFACE
874
875With DBM::Deep you can access your databases using Perl's standard hash/array
90f93b43 876syntax. Because all DBM::Deep objects are I<tied> to hashes or arrays, you can
877treat them as such. DBM::Deep will intercept all reads/writes and direct them
878to the right place -- the DB file. This has nothing to do with the
879L<TIE CONSTRUCTION> section above. This simply tells you how to use DBM::Deep
880using regular hashes and arrays, rather than calling functions like C<get()>
881and C<put()> (although those work too). It is entirely up to you how to want
882to access your databases.
ffed8b01 883
884=head2 HASHES
885
886You can treat any DBM::Deep object like a normal Perl hash reference. Add keys,
887or even nested hashes (or arrays) using standard Perl syntax:
888
d0b74c17 889 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
890
891 $db->{mykey} = "myvalue";
892 $db->{myhash} = {};
893 $db->{myhash}->{subkey} = "subvalue";
ffed8b01 894
d0b74c17 895 print $db->{myhash}->{subkey} . "\n";
ffed8b01 896
897You can even step through hash keys using the normal Perl C<keys()> function:
898
d0b74c17 899 foreach my $key (keys %$db) {
900 print "$key: " . $db->{$key} . "\n";
901 }
ffed8b01 902
903Remember that Perl's C<keys()> function extracts I<every> key from the hash and
d0b74c17 904pushes them onto an array, all before the loop even begins. If you have an
905extra large hash, this may exhaust Perl's memory. Instead, consider using
906Perl's C<each()> function, which pulls keys/values one at a time, using very
ffed8b01 907little memory:
908
d0b74c17 909 while (my ($key, $value) = each %$db) {
910 print "$key: $value\n";
911 }
ffed8b01 912
913Please note that when using C<each()>, you should always pass a direct
914hash reference, not a lookup. Meaning, you should B<never> do this:
915
d0b74c17 916 # NEVER DO THIS
917 while (my ($key, $value) = each %{$db->{foo}}) { # BAD
ffed8b01 918
919This causes an infinite loop, because for each iteration, Perl is calling
920FETCH() on the $db handle, resulting in a "new" hash for foo every time, so
d0b74c17 921it effectively keeps returning the first key over and over again. Instead,
ffed8b01 922assign a temporary variable to C<$db->{foo}>, then pass that to each().
923
924=head2 ARRAYS
925
926As with hashes, you can treat any DBM::Deep object like a normal Perl array
d0b74c17 927reference. This includes inserting, removing and manipulating elements,
ffed8b01 928and the C<push()>, C<pop()>, C<shift()>, C<unshift()> and C<splice()> functions.
d0b74c17 929The object must have first been created using type C<DBM::Deep-E<gt>TYPE_ARRAY>,
ffed8b01 930or simply be a nested array reference inside a hash. Example:
931
d0b74c17 932 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
933 file => "foo-array.db",
934 type => DBM::Deep->TYPE_ARRAY
935 );
936
937 $db->[0] = "foo";
938 push @$db, "bar", "baz";
939 unshift @$db, "bah";
940
941 my $last_elem = pop @$db; # baz
942 my $first_elem = shift @$db; # bah
943 my $second_elem = $db->[1]; # bar
944
945 my $num_elements = scalar @$db;
ffed8b01 946
947=head1 OO INTERFACE
948
949In addition to the I<tie()> interface, you can also use a standard OO interface
950to manipulate all aspects of DBM::Deep databases. Each type of object (hash or
d0b74c17 951array) has its own methods, but both types share the following common methods:
ffed8b01 952C<put()>, C<get()>, C<exists()>, C<delete()> and C<clear()>.
953
954=over
955
4d35d856 956=item * new() / clone()
957
958These are the constructor and copy-functions.
959
90f93b43 960=item * put() / store()
ffed8b01 961
962Stores a new hash key/value pair, or sets an array element value. Takes two
963arguments, the hash key or array index, and the new value. The value can be
964a scalar, hash ref or array ref. Returns true on success, false on failure.
965
d0b74c17 966 $db->put("foo", "bar"); # for hashes
967 $db->put(1, "bar"); # for arrays
ffed8b01 968
90f93b43 969=item * get() / fetch()
ffed8b01 970
971Fetches the value of a hash key or array element. Takes one argument: the hash
d0b74c17 972key or array index. Returns a scalar, hash ref or array ref, depending on the
ffed8b01 973data type stored.
974
d0b74c17 975 my $value = $db->get("foo"); # for hashes
976 my $value = $db->get(1); # for arrays
ffed8b01 977
978=item * exists()
979
d0b74c17 980Checks if a hash key or array index exists. Takes one argument: the hash key
ffed8b01 981or array index. Returns true if it exists, false if not.
982
d0b74c17 983 if ($db->exists("foo")) { print "yay!\n"; } # for hashes
984 if ($db->exists(1)) { print "yay!\n"; } # for arrays
ffed8b01 985
986=item * delete()
987
988Deletes one hash key/value pair or array element. Takes one argument: the hash
989key or array index. Returns true on success, false if not found. For arrays,
990the remaining elements located after the deleted element are NOT moved over.
991The deleted element is essentially just undefined, which is exactly how Perl's
d0b74c17 992internal arrays work. Please note that the space occupied by the deleted
993key/value or element is B<not> reused again -- see L<UNUSED SPACE RECOVERY>
ffed8b01 994below for details and workarounds.
995
d0b74c17 996 $db->delete("foo"); # for hashes
997 $db->delete(1); # for arrays
ffed8b01 998
999=item * clear()
1000
d0b74c17 1001Deletes B<all> hash keys or array elements. Takes no arguments. No return
1002value. Please note that the space occupied by the deleted keys/values or
1003elements is B<not> reused again -- see L<UNUSED SPACE RECOVERY> below for
ffed8b01 1004details and workarounds.
1005
d0b74c17 1006 $db->clear(); # hashes or arrays
ffed8b01 1007
4d35d856 1008=item * lock() / unlock()
1009
1010q.v. Locking.
1011
1012=item * optimize()
1013
1014Recover lost disk space.
1015
1016=item * import() / export()
1017
1018Data going in and out.
1019
ffed8b01 1020=back
1021
1022=head2 HASHES
1023
d0b74c17 1024For hashes, DBM::Deep supports all the common methods described above, and the
ffed8b01 1025following additional methods: C<first_key()> and C<next_key()>.
1026
1027=over
1028
1029=item * first_key()
1030
d0b74c17 1031Returns the "first" key in the hash. As with built-in Perl hashes, keys are
1032fetched in an undefined order (which appears random). Takes no arguments,
ffed8b01 1033returns the key as a scalar value.
1034
d0b74c17 1035 my $key = $db->first_key();
ffed8b01 1036
1037=item * next_key()
1038
1039Returns the "next" key in the hash, given the previous one as the sole argument.
1040Returns undef if there are no more keys to be fetched.
1041
d0b74c17 1042 $key = $db->next_key($key);
ffed8b01 1043
1044=back
1045
1046Here are some examples of using hashes:
1047
d0b74c17 1048 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
1049
1050 $db->put("foo", "bar");
1051 print "foo: " . $db->get("foo") . "\n";
1052
1053 $db->put("baz", {}); # new child hash ref
1054 $db->get("baz")->put("buz", "biz");
1055 print "buz: " . $db->get("baz")->get("buz") . "\n";
1056
1057 my $key = $db->first_key();
1058 while ($key) {
1059 print "$key: " . $db->get($key) . "\n";
1060 $key = $db->next_key($key);
1061 }
1062
1063 if ($db->exists("foo")) { $db->delete("foo"); }
ffed8b01 1064
1065=head2 ARRAYS
1066
d0b74c17 1067For arrays, DBM::Deep supports all the common methods described above, and the
1068following additional methods: C<length()>, C<push()>, C<pop()>, C<shift()>,
ffed8b01 1069C<unshift()> and C<splice()>.
1070
1071=over
1072
1073=item * length()
1074
1075Returns the number of elements in the array. Takes no arguments.
1076
d0b74c17 1077 my $len = $db->length();
ffed8b01 1078
1079=item * push()
1080
d0b74c17 1081Adds one or more elements onto the end of the array. Accepts scalars, hash
ffed8b01 1082refs or array refs. No return value.
1083
d0b74c17 1084 $db->push("foo", "bar", {});
ffed8b01 1085
1086=item * pop()
1087
1088Fetches the last element in the array, and deletes it. Takes no arguments.
1089Returns undef if array is empty. Returns the element value.
1090
d0b74c17 1091 my $elem = $db->pop();
ffed8b01 1092
1093=item * shift()
1094
d0b74c17 1095Fetches the first element in the array, deletes it, then shifts all the
1096remaining elements over to take up the space. Returns the element value. This
1097method is not recommended with large arrays -- see L<LARGE ARRAYS> below for
ffed8b01 1098details.
1099
d0b74c17 1100 my $elem = $db->shift();
ffed8b01 1101
1102=item * unshift()
1103
d0b74c17 1104Inserts one or more elements onto the beginning of the array, shifting all
1105existing elements over to make room. Accepts scalars, hash refs or array refs.
1106No return value. This method is not recommended with large arrays -- see
ffed8b01 1107<LARGE ARRAYS> below for details.
1108
d0b74c17 1109 $db->unshift("foo", "bar", {});
ffed8b01 1110
1111=item * splice()
1112
d0b74c17 1113Performs exactly like Perl's built-in function of the same name. See L<perldoc
ffed8b01 1114-f splice> for usage -- it is too complicated to document here. This method is
1115not recommended with large arrays -- see L<LARGE ARRAYS> below for details.
1116
1117=back
1118
1119Here are some examples of using arrays:
1120
d0b74c17 1121 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
1122 file => "foo.db",
1123 type => DBM::Deep->TYPE_ARRAY
1124 );
1125
1126 $db->push("bar", "baz");
1127 $db->unshift("foo");
1128 $db->put(3, "buz");
1129
1130 my $len = $db->length();
1131 print "length: $len\n"; # 4
1132
1133 for (my $k=0; $k<$len; $k++) {
1134 print "$k: " . $db->get($k) . "\n";
1135 }
1136
1137 $db->splice(1, 2, "biz", "baf");
1138
1139 while (my $elem = shift @$db) {
1140 print "shifted: $elem\n";
1141 }
ffed8b01 1142
1143=head1 LOCKING
1144
d0b74c17 1145Enable automatic file locking by passing a true value to the C<locking>
ffed8b01 1146parameter when constructing your DBM::Deep object (see L<SETUP> above).
1147
d0b74c17 1148 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
1149 file => "foo.db",
1150 locking => 1
1151 );
ffed8b01 1152
d0b74c17 1153This causes DBM::Deep to C<flock()> the underlying filehandle with exclusive
1154mode for writes, and shared mode for reads. This is required if you have
1155multiple processes accessing the same database file, to avoid file corruption.
1156Please note that C<flock()> does NOT work for files over NFS. See L<DB OVER
ffed8b01 1157NFS> below for more.
1158
1159=head2 EXPLICIT LOCKING
1160
d0b74c17 1161You can explicitly lock a database, so it remains locked for multiple
1162transactions. This is done by calling the C<lock()> method, and passing an
90f93b43 1163optional lock mode argument (defaults to exclusive mode). This is particularly
d0b74c17 1164useful for things like counters, where the current value needs to be fetched,
ffed8b01 1165then incremented, then stored again.
1166
d0b74c17 1167 $db->lock();
1168 my $counter = $db->get("counter");
1169 $counter++;
1170 $db->put("counter", $counter);
1171 $db->unlock();
1172
1173 # or...
ffed8b01 1174
d0b74c17 1175 $db->lock();
1176 $db->{counter}++;
1177 $db->unlock();
ffed8b01 1178
1179You can pass C<lock()> an optional argument, which specifies which mode to use
d0b74c17 1180(exclusive or shared). Use one of these two constants: C<DBM::Deep-E<gt>LOCK_EX>
1181or C<DBM::Deep-E<gt>LOCK_SH>. These are passed directly to C<flock()>, and are the
ffed8b01 1182same as the constants defined in Perl's C<Fcntl> module.
1183
d0b74c17 1184 $db->lock( DBM::Deep->LOCK_SH );
1185 # something here
1186 $db->unlock();
ffed8b01 1187
ffed8b01 1188=head1 IMPORTING/EXPORTING
1189
1190You can import existing complex structures by calling the C<import()> method,
1191and export an entire database into an in-memory structure using the C<export()>
1192method. Both are examined here.
1193
1194=head2 IMPORTING
1195
1196Say you have an existing hash with nested hashes/arrays inside it. Instead of
d0b74c17 1197walking the structure and adding keys/elements to the database as you go,
1198simply pass a reference to the C<import()> method. This recursively adds
ffed8b01 1199everything to an existing DBM::Deep object for you. Here is an example:
1200
d0b74c17 1201 my $struct = {
1202 key1 => "value1",
1203 key2 => "value2",
1204 array1 => [ "elem0", "elem1", "elem2" ],
1205 hash1 => {
1206 subkey1 => "subvalue1",
1207 subkey2 => "subvalue2"
1208 }
1209 };
1210
1211 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
1212 $db->import( $struct );
1213
1214 print $db->{key1} . "\n"; # prints "value1"
1215
1216This recursively imports the entire C<$struct> object into C<$db>, including
ffed8b01 1217all nested hashes and arrays. If the DBM::Deep object contains exsiting data,
d0b74c17 1218keys are merged with the existing ones, replacing if they already exist.
1219The C<import()> method can be called on any database level (not just the base
ffed8b01 1220level), and works with both hash and array DB types.
1221
ffed8b01 1222B<Note:> Make sure your existing structure has no circular references in it.
1223These will cause an infinite loop when importing.
1224
1225=head2 EXPORTING
1226
d0b74c17 1227Calling the C<export()> method on an existing DBM::Deep object will return
1228a reference to a new in-memory copy of the database. The export is done
ffed8b01 1229recursively, so all nested hashes/arrays are all exported to standard Perl
1230objects. Here is an example:
1231
d0b74c17 1232 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
1233
1234 $db->{key1} = "value1";
1235 $db->{key2} = "value2";
1236 $db->{hash1} = {};
1237 $db->{hash1}->{subkey1} = "subvalue1";
1238 $db->{hash1}->{subkey2} = "subvalue2";
1239
1240 my $struct = $db->export();
1241
1242 print $struct->{key1} . "\n"; # prints "value1"
ffed8b01 1243
1244This makes a complete copy of the database in memory, and returns a reference
d0b74c17 1245to it. The C<export()> method can be called on any database level (not just
1246the base level), and works with both hash and array DB types. Be careful of
1247large databases -- you can store a lot more data in a DBM::Deep object than an
ffed8b01 1248in-memory Perl structure.
1249
ffed8b01 1250B<Note:> Make sure your database has no circular references in it.
1251These will cause an infinite loop when exporting.
1252
1253=head1 FILTERS
1254
1255DBM::Deep has a number of hooks where you can specify your own Perl function
1256to perform filtering on incoming or outgoing data. This is a perfect
1257way to extend the engine, and implement things like real-time compression or
d0b74c17 1258encryption. Filtering applies to the base DB level, and all child hashes /
1259arrays. Filter hooks can be specified when your DBM::Deep object is first
1260constructed, or by calling the C<set_filter()> method at any time. There are
ffed8b01 1261four available filter hooks, described below:
1262
1263=over
1264
1265=item * filter_store_key
1266
d0b74c17 1267This filter is called whenever a hash key is stored. It
ffed8b01 1268is passed the incoming key, and expected to return a transformed key.
1269
1270=item * filter_store_value
1271
d0b74c17 1272This filter is called whenever a hash key or array element is stored. It
ffed8b01 1273is passed the incoming value, and expected to return a transformed value.
1274
1275=item * filter_fetch_key
1276
d0b74c17 1277This filter is called whenever a hash key is fetched (i.e. via
ffed8b01 1278C<first_key()> or C<next_key()>). It is passed the transformed key,
1279and expected to return the plain key.
1280
1281=item * filter_fetch_value
1282
d0b74c17 1283This filter is called whenever a hash key or array element is fetched.
ffed8b01 1284It is passed the transformed value, and expected to return the plain value.
1285
1286=back
1287
1288Here are the two ways to setup a filter hook:
1289
d0b74c17 1290 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
1291 file => "foo.db",
1292 filter_store_value => \&my_filter_store,
1293 filter_fetch_value => \&my_filter_fetch
1294 );
1295
1296 # or...
1297
1298 $db->set_filter( "filter_store_value", \&my_filter_store );
1299 $db->set_filter( "filter_fetch_value", \&my_filter_fetch );
ffed8b01 1300
1301Your filter function will be called only when dealing with SCALAR keys or
1302values. When nested hashes and arrays are being stored/fetched, filtering
d0b74c17 1303is bypassed. Filters are called as static functions, passed a single SCALAR
ffed8b01 1304argument, and expected to return a single SCALAR value. If you want to
1305remove a filter, set the function reference to C<undef>:
1306
d0b74c17 1307 $db->set_filter( "filter_store_value", undef );
ffed8b01 1308
1309=head2 REAL-TIME ENCRYPTION EXAMPLE
1310
d0b74c17 1311Here is a working example that uses the I<Crypt::Blowfish> module to
ffed8b01 1312do real-time encryption / decryption of keys & values with DBM::Deep Filters.
d0b74c17 1313Please visit L<http://search.cpan.org/search?module=Crypt::Blowfish> for more
ffed8b01 1314on I<Crypt::Blowfish>. You'll also need the I<Crypt::CBC> module.
1315
d0b74c17 1316 use DBM::Deep;
1317 use Crypt::Blowfish;
1318 use Crypt::CBC;
1319
1320 my $cipher = Crypt::CBC->new({
1321 'key' => 'my secret key',
1322 'cipher' => 'Blowfish',
1323 'iv' => '$KJh#(}q',
1324 'regenerate_key' => 0,
1325 'padding' => 'space',
1326 'prepend_iv' => 0
1327 });
1328
1329 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
1330 file => "foo-encrypt.db",
1331 filter_store_key => \&my_encrypt,
1332 filter_store_value => \&my_encrypt,
1333 filter_fetch_key => \&my_decrypt,
1334 filter_fetch_value => \&my_decrypt,
1335 );
1336
1337 $db->{key1} = "value1";
1338 $db->{key2} = "value2";
1339 print "key1: " . $db->{key1} . "\n";
1340 print "key2: " . $db->{key2} . "\n";
1341
1342 undef $db;
1343 exit;
1344
1345 sub my_encrypt {
1346 return $cipher->encrypt( $_[0] );
1347 }
1348 sub my_decrypt {
1349 return $cipher->decrypt( $_[0] );
1350 }
ffed8b01 1351
1352=head2 REAL-TIME COMPRESSION EXAMPLE
1353
1354Here is a working example that uses the I<Compress::Zlib> module to do real-time
1355compression / decompression of keys & values with DBM::Deep Filters.
d0b74c17 1356Please visit L<http://search.cpan.org/search?module=Compress::Zlib> for
ffed8b01 1357more on I<Compress::Zlib>.
1358
d0b74c17 1359 use DBM::Deep;
1360 use Compress::Zlib;
1361
1362 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
1363 file => "foo-compress.db",
1364 filter_store_key => \&my_compress,
1365 filter_store_value => \&my_compress,
1366 filter_fetch_key => \&my_decompress,
1367 filter_fetch_value => \&my_decompress,
1368 );
1369
1370 $db->{key1} = "value1";
1371 $db->{key2} = "value2";
1372 print "key1: " . $db->{key1} . "\n";
1373 print "key2: " . $db->{key2} . "\n";
1374
1375 undef $db;
1376 exit;
1377
1378 sub my_compress {
1379 return Compress::Zlib::memGzip( $_[0] ) ;
1380 }
1381 sub my_decompress {
1382 return Compress::Zlib::memGunzip( $_[0] ) ;
1383 }
ffed8b01 1384
1385B<Note:> Filtering of keys only applies to hashes. Array "keys" are
1386actually numerical index numbers, and are not filtered.
1387
1388=head1 ERROR HANDLING
1389
1390Most DBM::Deep methods return a true value for success, and call die() on
95967a5e 1391failure. You can wrap calls in an eval block to catch the die.
ffed8b01 1392
d0b74c17 1393 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" ); # create hash
1394 eval { $db->push("foo"); }; # ILLEGAL -- push is array-only call
1395
90f93b43 1396 print $@; # prints error message
429e4192 1397
ffed8b01 1398=head1 LARGEFILE SUPPORT
1399
1400If you have a 64-bit system, and your Perl is compiled with both LARGEFILE
1401and 64-bit support, you I<may> be able to create databases larger than 2 GB.
1402DBM::Deep by default uses 32-bit file offset tags, but these can be changed
044e6288 1403by specifying the 'pack_size' parameter when constructing the file.
ffed8b01 1404
044e6288 1405 DBM::Deep->new(
1406 filename => $filename,
1407 pack_size => 'large',
1408 );
ffed8b01 1409
d0b74c17 1410This tells DBM::Deep to pack all file offsets with 8-byte (64-bit) quad words
1411instead of 32-bit longs. After setting these values your DB files have a
ffed8b01 1412theoretical maximum size of 16 XB (exabytes).
1413
044e6288 1414You can also use C<pack_size =E<gt> 'small'> in order to use 16-bit file
1415offsets.
1416
ffed8b01 1417B<Note:> Changing these values will B<NOT> work for existing database files.
044e6288 1418Only change this for new files. Once the value has been set, it is stored in
1419the file's header and cannot be changed for the life of the file. These
1420parameters are per-file, meaning you can access 32-bit and 64-bit files, as
1421you chose.
ffed8b01 1422
044e6288 1423B<Note:> We have not personally tested files larger than 2 GB -- all my
1424systems have only a 32-bit Perl. However, I have received user reports that
1425this does indeed work!
ffed8b01 1426
1427=head1 LOW-LEVEL ACCESS
1428
90f93b43 1429If you require low-level access to the underlying filehandle that DBM::Deep uses,
4d35d856 1430you can call the C<_fh()> method, which returns the handle:
ffed8b01 1431
d0b74c17 1432 my $fh = $db->_fh();
ffed8b01 1433
1434This method can be called on the root level of the datbase, or any child
1435hashes or arrays. All levels share a I<root> structure, which contains things
90f93b43 1436like the filehandle, a reference counter, and all the options specified
460b1067 1437when you created the object. You can get access to this file object by
1438calling the C<_fileobj()> method.
ffed8b01 1439
460b1067 1440 my $file_obj = $db->_fileobj();
ffed8b01 1441
1442This is useful for changing options after the object has already been created,
f5be9b03 1443such as enabling/disabling locking. You can also store your own temporary user
1444data in this structure (be wary of name collision), which is then accessible from
1445any child hash or array.
ffed8b01 1446
1447=head1 CUSTOM DIGEST ALGORITHM
1448
1449DBM::Deep by default uses the I<Message Digest 5> (MD5) algorithm for hashing
1450keys. However you can override this, and use another algorithm (such as SHA-256)
d0b74c17 1451or even write your own. But please note that DBM::Deep currently expects zero
044e6288 1452collisions, so your algorithm has to be I<perfect>, so to speak. Collision
1453detection may be introduced in a later version.
ffed8b01 1454
044e6288 1455You can specify a custom digest algorithm by passing it into the parameter
1456list for new(), passing a reference to a subroutine as the 'digest' parameter,
1457and the length of the algorithm's hashes (in bytes) as the 'hash_size'
1458parameter. Here is a working example that uses a 256-bit hash from the
d0b74c17 1459I<Digest::SHA256> module. Please see
044e6288 1460L<http://search.cpan.org/search?module=Digest::SHA256> for more information.
ffed8b01 1461
d0b74c17 1462 use DBM::Deep;
1463 use Digest::SHA256;
1464
1465 my $context = Digest::SHA256::new(256);
1466
044e6288 1467 my $db = DBM::Deep->new(
1468 filename => "foo-sha.db",
1469 digest => \&my_digest,
1470 hash_size => 32,
1471 );
d0b74c17 1472
1473 $db->{key1} = "value1";
1474 $db->{key2} = "value2";
1475 print "key1: " . $db->{key1} . "\n";
1476 print "key2: " . $db->{key2} . "\n";
1477
1478 undef $db;
1479 exit;
1480
1481 sub my_digest {
1482 return substr( $context->hash($_[0]), 0, 32 );
1483 }
ffed8b01 1484
1485B<Note:> Your returned digest strings must be B<EXACTLY> the number
044e6288 1486of bytes you specify in the hash_size parameter (in this case 32).
ffed8b01 1487
260a80b4 1488B<Note:> If you do choose to use a custom digest algorithm, you must set it
1489every time you access this file. Otherwise, the default (MD5) will be used.
1490
ffed8b01 1491=head1 CIRCULAR REFERENCES
1492
1493DBM::Deep has B<experimental> support for circular references. Meaning you
1494can have a nested hash key or array element that points to a parent object.
1495This relationship is stored in the DB file, and is preserved between sessions.
1496Here is an example:
1497
d0b74c17 1498 my $db = DBM::Deep->new( "foo.db" );
1499
1500 $db->{foo} = "bar";
1501 $db->{circle} = $db; # ref to self
1502
4b93c86a 1503 print $db->{foo} . "\n"; # prints "bar"
1504 print $db->{circle}->{foo} . "\n"; # prints "bar" again
ffed8b01 1505
69c94980 1506B<Note>: Passing the object to a function that recursively walks the
ffed8b01 1507object tree (such as I<Data::Dumper> or even the built-in C<optimize()> or
69c94980 1508C<export()> methods) will result in an infinite loop. This will be fixed in
1509a future release.
ffed8b01 1510
1511=head1 CAVEATS / ISSUES / BUGS
1512
1513This section describes all the known issues with DBM::Deep. It you have found
1514something that is not listed here, please send e-mail to L<jhuckaby@cpan.org>.
1515
1516=head2 UNUSED SPACE RECOVERY
1517
14a3acb6 1518One major caveat with DBM::Deep is that space occupied by existing keys and
ffed8b01 1519values is not recovered when they are deleted. Meaning if you keep deleting
1520and adding new keys, your file will continuously grow. I am working on this,
d0b74c17 1521but in the meantime you can call the built-in C<optimize()> method from time to
ffed8b01 1522time (perhaps in a crontab or something) to recover all your unused space.
1523
d0b74c17 1524 $db->optimize(); # returns true on success
ffed8b01 1525
1526This rebuilds the ENTIRE database into a new file, then moves it on top of
1527the original. The new file will have no unused space, thus it will take up as
d0b74c17 1528little disk space as possible. Please note that this operation can take
1529a long time for large files, and you need enough disk space to temporarily hold
15302 copies of your DB file. The temporary file is created in the same directory
1531as the original, named with a ".tmp" extension, and is deleted when the
1532operation completes. Oh, and if locking is enabled, the DB is automatically
ffed8b01 1533locked for the entire duration of the copy.
1534
d0b74c17 1535B<WARNING:> Only call optimize() on the top-level node of the database, and
1536make sure there are no child references lying around. DBM::Deep keeps a reference
ffed8b01 1537counter, and if it is greater than 1, optimize() will abort and return undef.
1538
eea0d863 1539=head2 REFERENCES
1540
1541(The reasons given assume a high level of Perl understanding, specifically of
1542references. You can safely skip this section.)
1543
1544Currently, the only references supported are HASH and ARRAY. The other reference
1545types (SCALAR, CODE, GLOB, and REF) cannot be supported for various reasons.
1546
1547=over 4
1548
1549=item * GLOB
1550
1551These are things like filehandles and other sockets. They can't be supported
1552because it's completely unclear how DBM::Deep should serialize them.
1553
1554=item * SCALAR / REF
1555
1556The discussion here refers to the following type of example:
1557
1558 my $x = 25;
1559 $db->{key1} = \$x;
1560
1561 $x = 50;
1562
1563 # In some other process ...
1564
1565 my $val = ${ $db->{key1} };
1566
1567 is( $val, 50, "What actually gets stored in the DB file?" );
1568
1569The problem is one of synchronization. When the variable being referred to
1570changes value, the reference isn't notified. This means that the new value won't
1571be stored in the datafile for other processes to read. There is no TIEREF.
1572
1573It is theoretically possible to store references to values already within a
1574DBM::Deep object because everything already is synchronized, but the change to
1575the internals would be quite large. Specifically, DBM::Deep would have to tie
1576every single value that is stored. This would bloat the RAM footprint of
1577DBM::Deep at least twofold (if not more) and be a significant performance drain,
1578all to support a feature that has never been requested.
1579
1580=item * CODE
1581
1582L<http://search.cpan.org/search?module=Data::Dump::Streamer> provides a
1583mechanism for serializing coderefs, including saving off all closure state.
1584However, just as for SCALAR and REF, that closure state may change without
1585notifying the DBM::Deep object storing the reference.
1586
1587=back
1588
ffed8b01 1589=head2 FILE CORRUPTION
1590
14a3acb6 1591The current level of error handling in DBM::Deep is minimal. Files I<are> checked
1592for a 32-bit signature when opened, but other corruption in files can cause
1593segmentation faults. DBM::Deep may try to seek() past the end of a file, or get
ffed8b01 1594stuck in an infinite loop depending on the level of corruption. File write
1595operations are not checked for failure (for speed), so if you happen to run
d0b74c17 1596out of disk space, DBM::Deep will probably fail in a bad way. These things will
ffed8b01 1597be addressed in a later version of DBM::Deep.
1598
1599=head2 DB OVER NFS
1600
14a3acb6 1601Beware of using DB files over NFS. DBM::Deep uses flock(), which works well on local
d0b74c17 1602filesystems, but will NOT protect you from file corruption over NFS. I've heard
1603about setting up your NFS server with a locking daemon, then using lockf() to
1604lock your files, but your mileage may vary there as well. From what I
1605understand, there is no real way to do it. However, if you need access to the
1606underlying filehandle in DBM::Deep for using some other kind of locking scheme like
ffed8b01 1607lockf(), see the L<LOW-LEVEL ACCESS> section above.
1608
1609=head2 COPYING OBJECTS
1610
d0b74c17 1611Beware of copying tied objects in Perl. Very strange things can happen.
1612Instead, use DBM::Deep's C<clone()> method which safely copies the object and
ffed8b01 1613returns a new, blessed, tied hash or array to the same level in the DB.
1614
d0b74c17 1615 my $copy = $db->clone();
ffed8b01 1616
90f93b43 1617B<Note>: Since clone() here is cloning the object, not the database location, any
1618modifications to either $db or $copy will be visible in both.
1619
ffed8b01 1620=head2 LARGE ARRAYS
1621
1622Beware of using C<shift()>, C<unshift()> or C<splice()> with large arrays.
1623These functions cause every element in the array to move, which can be murder
1624on DBM::Deep, as every element has to be fetched from disk, then stored again in
90f93b43 1625a different location. This will be addressed in the forthcoming version 1.00.
ffed8b01 1626
9be51a89 1627=head2 WRITEONLY FILES
1628
1629If you pass in a filehandle to new(), you may have opened it in either a readonly or
1630writeonly mode. STORE will verify that the filehandle is writable. However, there
1631doesn't seem to be a good way to determine if a filehandle is readable. And, if the
1632filehandle isn't readable, it's not clear what will happen. So, don't do that.
1633
ffed8b01 1634=head1 PERFORMANCE
1635
1636This section discusses DBM::Deep's speed and memory usage.
1637
1638=head2 SPEED
1639
d0b74c17 1640Obviously, DBM::Deep isn't going to be as fast as some C-based DBMs, such as
ffed8b01 1641the almighty I<BerkeleyDB>. But it makes up for it in features like true
1642multi-level hash/array support, and cross-platform FTPable files. Even so,
1643DBM::Deep is still pretty fast, and the speed stays fairly consistent, even
1644with huge databases. Here is some test data:
d0b74c17 1645
1646 Adding 1,000,000 keys to new DB file...
1647
1648 At 100 keys, avg. speed is 2,703 keys/sec
1649 At 200 keys, avg. speed is 2,642 keys/sec
1650 At 300 keys, avg. speed is 2,598 keys/sec
1651 At 400 keys, avg. speed is 2,578 keys/sec
1652 At 500 keys, avg. speed is 2,722 keys/sec
1653 At 600 keys, avg. speed is 2,628 keys/sec
1654 At 700 keys, avg. speed is 2,700 keys/sec
1655 At 800 keys, avg. speed is 2,607 keys/sec
1656 At 900 keys, avg. speed is 2,190 keys/sec
1657 At 1,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,570 keys/sec
1658 At 2,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,417 keys/sec
1659 At 3,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,982 keys/sec
1660 At 4,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,568 keys/sec
1661 At 5,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,533 keys/sec
1662 At 6,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,787 keys/sec
1663 At 7,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,977 keys/sec
1664 At 8,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,028 keys/sec
1665 At 9,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,077 keys/sec
1666 At 10,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,031 keys/sec
1667 At 20,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,970 keys/sec
1668 At 30,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,050 keys/sec
1669 At 40,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,073 keys/sec
1670 At 50,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,973 keys/sec
1671 At 60,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,914 keys/sec
1672 At 70,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,091 keys/sec
1673 At 80,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,103 keys/sec
1674 At 90,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,886 keys/sec
1675 At 100,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,970 keys/sec
1676 At 200,000 keys, avg. speed is 2,053 keys/sec
1677 At 300,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,697 keys/sec
1678 At 400,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,838 keys/sec
1679 At 500,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,941 keys/sec
1680 At 600,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,930 keys/sec
1681 At 700,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,735 keys/sec
1682 At 800,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,795 keys/sec
1683 At 900,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,221 keys/sec
1684 At 1,000,000 keys, avg. speed is 1,077 keys/sec
1685
1686This test was performed on a PowerMac G4 1gHz running Mac OS X 10.3.2 & Perl
16875.8.1, with an 80GB Ultra ATA/100 HD spinning at 7200RPM. The hash keys and
1688values were between 6 - 12 chars in length. The DB file ended up at 210MB.
ffed8b01 1689Run time was 12 min 3 sec.
1690
1691=head2 MEMORY USAGE
1692
1693One of the great things about DBM::Deep is that it uses very little memory.
1694Even with huge databases (1,000,000+ keys) you will not see much increased
14a3acb6 1695memory on your process. DBM::Deep relies solely on the filesystem for storing
ffed8b01 1696and fetching data. Here is output from I</usr/bin/top> before even opening a
1697database handle:
1698
d0b74c17 1699 PID USER PRI NI SIZE RSS SHARE STAT %CPU %MEM TIME COMMAND
1700 22831 root 11 0 2716 2716 1296 R 0.0 0.2 0:07 perl
ffed8b01 1701
d0b74c17 1702Basically the process is taking 2,716K of memory. And here is the same
ffed8b01 1703process after storing and fetching 1,000,000 keys:
1704
d0b74c17 1705 PID USER PRI NI SIZE RSS SHARE STAT %CPU %MEM TIME COMMAND
1706 22831 root 14 0 2772 2772 1328 R 0.0 0.2 13:32 perl
ffed8b01 1707
d0b74c17 1708Notice the memory usage increased by only 56K. Test was performed on a 700mHz
ffed8b01 1709x86 box running Linux RedHat 7.2 & Perl 5.6.1.
1710
1711=head1 DB FILE FORMAT
1712
1713In case you were interested in the underlying DB file format, it is documented
d0b74c17 1714here in this section. You don't need to know this to use the module, it's just
ffed8b01 1715included for reference.
1716
1717=head2 SIGNATURE
1718
1719DBM::Deep files always start with a 32-bit signature to identify the file type.
1720This is at offset 0. The signature is "DPDB" in network byte order. This is
90f93b43 1721checked for when the file is opened and an error will be thrown if it's not found.
ffed8b01 1722
1723=head2 TAG
1724
1725The DBM::Deep file is in a I<tagged format>, meaning each section of the file
d0b74c17 1726has a standard header containing the type of data, the length of data, and then
1727the data itself. The type is a single character (1 byte), the length is a
ffed8b01 172832-bit unsigned long in network byte order, and the data is, well, the data.
1729Here is how it unfolds:
1730
1731=head2 MASTER INDEX
1732
d0b74c17 1733Immediately after the 32-bit file signature is the I<Master Index> record.
1734This is a standard tag header followed by 1024 bytes (in 32-bit mode) or 2048
1735bytes (in 64-bit mode) of data. The type is I<H> for hash or I<A> for array,
ffed8b01 1736depending on how the DBM::Deep object was constructed.
1737
d0b74c17 1738The index works by looking at a I<MD5 Hash> of the hash key (or array index
1739number). The first 8-bit char of the MD5 signature is the offset into the
1740index, multipled by 4 in 32-bit mode, or 8 in 64-bit mode. The value of the
ffed8b01 1741index element is a file offset of the next tag for the key/element in question,
1742which is usually a I<Bucket List> tag (see below).
1743
ffed8b01 1744The next tag I<could> be another index, depending on how many keys/elements
1745exist. See L<RE-INDEXING> below for details.
1746
1747=head2 BUCKET LIST
1748
d0b74c17 1749A I<Bucket List> is a collection of 16 MD5 hashes for keys/elements, plus
1750file offsets to where the actual data is stored. It starts with a standard
1751tag header, with type I<B>, and a data size of 320 bytes in 32-bit mode, or
ffed8b01 1752384 bytes in 64-bit mode. Each MD5 hash is stored in full (16 bytes), plus
1753the 32-bit or 64-bit file offset for the I<Bucket> containing the actual data.
d0b74c17 1754When the list fills up, a I<Re-Index> operation is performed (See
ffed8b01 1755L<RE-INDEXING> below).
1756
1757=head2 BUCKET
1758
1759A I<Bucket> is a tag containing a key/value pair (in hash mode), or a
1760index/value pair (in array mode). It starts with a standard tag header with
1761type I<D> for scalar data (string, binary, etc.), or it could be a nested
1762hash (type I<H>) or array (type I<A>). The value comes just after the tag
1763header. The size reported in the tag header is only for the value, but then,
d0b74c17 1764just after the value is another size (32-bit unsigned long) and then the plain
1765key itself. Since the value is likely to be fetched more often than the plain
ffed8b01 1766key, I figured it would be I<slightly> faster to store the value first.
1767
ffed8b01 1768If the type is I<H> (hash) or I<A> (array), the value is another I<Master Index>
1769record for the nested structure, where the process begins all over again.
1770
1771=head2 RE-INDEXING
1772
1773After a I<Bucket List> grows to 16 records, its allocated space in the file is
d0b74c17 1774exhausted. Then, when another key/element comes in, the list is converted to a
1775new index record. However, this index will look at the next char in the MD5
1776hash, and arrange new Bucket List pointers accordingly. This process is called
1777I<Re-Indexing>. Basically, a new index tag is created at the file EOF, and all
177817 (16 + new one) keys/elements are removed from the old Bucket List and
1779inserted into the new index. Several new Bucket Lists are created in the
1780process, as a new MD5 char from the key is being examined (it is unlikely that
ffed8b01 1781the keys will all share the same next char of their MD5s).
1782
ffed8b01 1783Because of the way the I<MD5> algorithm works, it is impossible to tell exactly
d0b74c17 1784when the Bucket Lists will turn into indexes, but the first round tends to
1785happen right around 4,000 keys. You will see a I<slight> decrease in
1786performance here, but it picks back up pretty quick (see L<SPEED> above). Then
1787it takes B<a lot> more keys to exhaust the next level of Bucket Lists. It's
1788right around 900,000 keys. This process can continue nearly indefinitely --
1789right up until the point the I<MD5> signatures start colliding with each other,
1790and this is B<EXTREMELY> rare -- like winning the lottery 5 times in a row AND
1791getting struck by lightning while you are walking to cash in your tickets.
1792Theoretically, since I<MD5> hashes are 128-bit values, you I<could> have up to
1793340,282,366,921,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 keys/elements (I believe
ffed8b01 1794this is 340 unodecillion, but don't quote me).
1795
1796=head2 STORING
1797
d0b74c17 1798When a new key/element is stored, the key (or index number) is first run through
1799I<Digest::MD5> to get a 128-bit signature (example, in hex:
ffed8b01 1800b05783b0773d894396d475ced9d2f4f6). Then, the I<Master Index> record is checked
37c5bcf0 1801for the first char of the signature (in this case I<b0>). If it does not exist,
d0b74c17 1802a new I<Bucket List> is created for our key (and the next 15 future keys that
1803happen to also have I<b> as their first MD5 char). The entire MD5 is written
ffed8b01 1804to the I<Bucket List> along with the offset of the new I<Bucket> record (EOF at
d0b74c17 1805this point, unless we are replacing an existing I<Bucket>), where the actual
ffed8b01 1806data will be stored.
1807
1808=head2 FETCHING
1809
d0b74c17 1810Fetching an existing key/element involves getting a I<Digest::MD5> of the key
1811(or index number), then walking along the indexes. If there are enough
1812keys/elements in this DB level, there might be nested indexes, each linked to
1813a particular char of the MD5. Finally, a I<Bucket List> is pointed to, which
1814contains up to 16 full MD5 hashes. Each is checked for equality to the key in
1815question. If we found a match, the I<Bucket> tag is loaded, where the value and
ffed8b01 1816plain key are stored.
1817
ffed8b01 1818Fetching the plain key occurs when calling the I<first_key()> and I<next_key()>
1819methods. In this process the indexes are walked systematically, and each key
1820fetched in increasing MD5 order (which is why it appears random). Once the
d0b74c17 1821I<Bucket> is found, the value is skipped and the plain key returned instead.
1822B<Note:> Do not count on keys being fetched as if the MD5 hashes were
1823alphabetically sorted. This only happens on an index-level -- as soon as the
1824I<Bucket Lists> are hit, the keys will come out in the order they went in --
1825so it's pretty much undefined how the keys will come out -- just like Perl's
ffed8b01 1826built-in hashes.
1827
261d1296 1828=head1 CODE COVERAGE
1829
37c5bcf0 1830We use B<Devel::Cover> to test the code coverage of our tests, below is the
90f93b43 1831B<Devel::Cover> report on this module's test suite.
7910cf68 1832
386bab6c 1833 ----------------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
1834 File stmt bran cond sub time total
1835 ----------------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
1836 blib/lib/DBM/Deep.pm 94.9 80.6 73.0 100.0 37.9 90.4
1837 blib/lib/DBM/Deep/Array.pm 100.0 91.1 100.0 100.0 18.2 98.1
1838 blib/lib/DBM/Deep/Engine.pm 98.9 87.3 80.0 100.0 34.2 95.2
1839 blib/lib/DBM/Deep/Hash.pm 100.0 87.5 100.0 100.0 9.7 97.3
1840 Total 97.9 85.9 79.7 100.0 100.0 94.3
1841 ----------------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
37c5bcf0 1842
1843=head1 MORE INFORMATION
1844
1845Check out the DBM::Deep Google Group at L<http://groups.google.com/group/DBM-Deep>
1846or send email to L<DBM-Deep@googlegroups.com>.
261d1296 1847
aeeb5497 1848=head1 AUTHORS
ffed8b01 1849
1850Joseph Huckaby, L<jhuckaby@cpan.org>
37c5bcf0 1851
aeeb5497 1852Rob Kinyon, L<rkinyon@cpan.org>
ffed8b01 1853
1854Special thanks to Adam Sah and Rich Gaushell! You know why :-)
1855
1856=head1 SEE ALSO
1857
1858perltie(1), Tie::Hash(3), Digest::MD5(3), Fcntl(3), flock(2), lockf(3), nfs(5),
1859Digest::SHA256(3), Crypt::Blowfish(3), Compress::Zlib(3)
1860
1861=head1 LICENSE
1862
aeeb5497 1863Copyright (c) 2002-2006 Joseph Huckaby. All Rights Reserved.
ffed8b01 1864This is free software, you may use it and distribute it under the
1865same terms as Perl itself.
1866
1867=cut