switch Abstract.pm renderers to using join_query_parts
[scpubgit/Q-Branch.git] / lib / SQL / Abstract.pm
CommitLineData
96449e8e 1package SQL::Abstract; # see doc at end of file
2
96449e8e 3use strict;
4use warnings;
9d9d5bd6 5use Carp ();
312d830b 6use List::Util ();
7use Scalar::Util ();
96449e8e 8
0da0fe34 9use Exporter 'import';
10our @EXPORT_OK = qw(is_plain_value is_literal_value);
11
12BEGIN {
13 if ($] < 5.009_005) {
14 require MRO::Compat;
15 }
16 else {
17 require mro;
18 }
843a94b5 19
20 *SQL::Abstract::_ENV_::DETECT_AUTOGENERATED_STRINGIFICATION = $ENV{SQLA_ISVALUE_IGNORE_AUTOGENERATED_STRINGIFICATION}
21 ? sub () { 0 }
22 : sub () { 1 }
23 ;
0da0fe34 24}
25
96449e8e 26#======================================================================
27# GLOBALS
28#======================================================================
29
dc6afcf8 30our $VERSION = '1.86';
7479e27e 31
22f1a437 32# This would confuse some packagers
c520207b 33$VERSION = eval $VERSION if $VERSION =~ /_/; # numify for warning-free dev releases
96449e8e 34
35our $AUTOLOAD;
36
37# special operators (-in, -between). May be extended/overridden by user.
38# See section WHERE: BUILTIN SPECIAL OPERATORS below for implementation
39my @BUILTIN_SPECIAL_OPS = (
f663e672 40 {regex => qr/^ (?: not \s )? between $/ix, handler => sub { die "NOPE" }},
87c8e45b 41 {regex => qr/^ is (?: \s+ not )? $/ix, handler => sub { die "NOPE" }},
909ec5ec 42 {regex => qr/^ (?: not \s )? in $/ix, handler => sub { die "NOPE" }},
b798961f 43 {regex => qr/^ ident $/ix, handler => sub { die "NOPE" }},
44 {regex => qr/^ value $/ix, handler => sub { die "NOPE" }},
96449e8e 45);
46
47#======================================================================
48# DEBUGGING AND ERROR REPORTING
49#======================================================================
50
51sub _debug {
52 return unless $_[0]->{debug}; shift; # a little faster
53 my $func = (caller(1))[3];
54 warn "[$func] ", @_, "\n";
55}
56
57sub belch (@) {
58 my($func) = (caller(1))[3];
9d9d5bd6 59 Carp::carp "[$func] Warning: ", @_;
96449e8e 60}
61
62sub puke (@) {
63 my($func) = (caller(1))[3];
9d9d5bd6 64 Carp::croak "[$func] Fatal: ", @_;
96449e8e 65}
66
0da0fe34 67sub is_literal_value ($) {
68 ref $_[0] eq 'SCALAR' ? [ ${$_[0]} ]
69 : ( ref $_[0] eq 'REF' and ref ${$_[0]} eq 'ARRAY' ) ? [ @${ $_[0] } ]
0da0fe34 70 : undef;
71}
72
6d7a39b3 73sub is_undef_value ($) {
74 !defined($_[0])
75 or (
76 ref($_[0]) eq 'HASH'
77 and exists $_[0]->{-value}
78 and not defined $_[0]->{-value}
79 );
80}
81
0da0fe34 82# FIXME XSify - this can be done so much more efficiently
83sub is_plain_value ($) {
84 no strict 'refs';
966200cc 85 ! length ref $_[0] ? \($_[0])
0da0fe34 86 : (
87 ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' and keys %{$_[0]} == 1
88 and
89 exists $_[0]->{-value}
966200cc 90 ) ? \($_[0]->{-value})
0da0fe34 91 : (
a1c9e0ff 92 # reuse @_ for even moar speedz
93 defined ( $_[1] = Scalar::Util::blessed $_[0] )
0da0fe34 94 and
95 # deliberately not using Devel::OverloadInfo - the checks we are
96 # intersted in are much more limited than the fullblown thing, and
97 # this is a very hot piece of code
98 (
e8d729d4 99 # simply using ->can('(""') can leave behind stub methods that
100 # break actually using the overload later (see L<perldiag/Stub
101 # found while resolving method "%s" overloading "%s" in package
102 # "%s"> and the source of overload::mycan())
44e54b41 103 #
0da0fe34 104 # either has stringification which DBI SHOULD prefer out of the box
a1c9e0ff 105 grep { *{ (qq[${_}::(""]) }{CODE} } @{ $_[2] = mro::get_linear_isa( $_[1] ) }
0da0fe34 106 or
20e178a8 107 # has nummification or boolification, AND fallback is *not* disabled
0da0fe34 108 (
843a94b5 109 SQL::Abstract::_ENV_::DETECT_AUTOGENERATED_STRINGIFICATION
110 and
20e178a8 111 (
112 grep { *{"${_}::(0+"}{CODE} } @{$_[2]}
113 or
114 grep { *{"${_}::(bool"}{CODE} } @{$_[2]}
115 )
0da0fe34 116 and
117 (
118 # no fallback specified at all
a1c9e0ff 119 ! ( ($_[3]) = grep { *{"${_}::()"}{CODE} } @{$_[2]} )
0da0fe34 120 or
121 # fallback explicitly undef
a1c9e0ff 122 ! defined ${"$_[3]::()"}
0da0fe34 123 or
124 # explicitly true
a1c9e0ff 125 !! ${"$_[3]::()"}
0da0fe34 126 )
127 )
128 )
966200cc 129 ) ? \($_[0])
0da0fe34 130 : undef;
131}
132
133
96449e8e 134
135#======================================================================
136# NEW
137#======================================================================
138
139sub new {
140 my $self = shift;
141 my $class = ref($self) || $self;
142 my %opt = (ref $_[0] eq 'HASH') ? %{$_[0]} : @_;
143
144 # choose our case by keeping an option around
145 delete $opt{case} if $opt{case} && $opt{case} ne 'lower';
146
147 # default logic for interpreting arrayrefs
ef559da3 148 $opt{logic} = $opt{logic} ? uc $opt{logic} : 'OR';
96449e8e 149
150 # how to return bind vars
96449e8e 151 $opt{bindtype} ||= 'normal';
152
153 # default comparison is "=", but can be overridden
154 $opt{cmp} ||= '=';
155
3af02ccb 156 # try to recognize which are the 'equality' and 'inequality' ops
3cdadcbe 157 # (temporary quickfix (in 2007), should go through a more seasoned API)
158 $opt{equality_op} = qr/^( \Q$opt{cmp}\E | \= )$/ix;
159 $opt{inequality_op} = qr/^( != | <> )$/ix;
160
2809a2ff 161 $opt{like_op} = qr/^ (is_)?r?like $/xi;
162 $opt{not_like_op} = qr/^ (is_)?not_r?like $/xi;
96449e8e 163
164 # SQL booleans
165 $opt{sqltrue} ||= '1=1';
166 $opt{sqlfalse} ||= '0=1';
167
9d48860e 168 # special operators
30af97c5 169 $opt{special_ops} ||= [];
170
cf06e9dc 171 if ($class->isa('DBIx::Class::SQLMaker')) {
97c9af32 172 $opt{warn_once_on_nest} = 1;
b798961f 173 $opt{disable_old_special_ops} = 1;
dd1d0dbf 174 }
175
9d48860e 176 # unary operators
59f23b3d 177 $opt{unary_ops} ||= [];
59f23b3d 178
3af02ccb 179 # rudimentary sanity-check for user supplied bits treated as functions/operators
b6251592 180 # If a purported function matches this regular expression, an exception is thrown.
181 # Literal SQL is *NOT* subject to this check, only functions (and column names
182 # when quoting is not in effect)
96449e8e 183
b6251592 184 # FIXME
185 # need to guard against ()'s in column names too, but this will break tons of
186 # hacks... ideas anyone?
187 $opt{injection_guard} ||= qr/
188 \;
189 |
190 ^ \s* go \s
191 /xmi;
96449e8e 192
ec19b759 193 $opt{expand_unary} = {};
194
767b62e4 195 $opt{expand} = {
def45151 196 not => '_expand_not',
197 bool => '_expand_bool',
198 and => '_expand_op_andor',
199 or => '_expand_op_andor',
200 nest => '_expand_nest',
201 bind => '_expand_bind',
202 in => '_expand_in',
203 not_in => '_expand_in',
204 row => '_expand_row',
205 between => '_expand_between',
206 not_between => '_expand_between',
207 op => '_expand_op',
208 (map +($_ => '_expand_op_is'), ('is', 'is_not')),
209 ident => '_expand_ident',
210 value => '_expand_value',
a5536efa 211 func => '_expand_func',
767b62e4 212 };
213
143f50df 214 $opt{expand_op} = {
215 'between' => '_expand_between',
2809a2ff 216 'not_between' => '_expand_between',
416026a9 217 'in' => '_expand_in',
2809a2ff 218 'not_in' => '_expand_in',
5c633220 219 'nest' => '_expand_nest',
f49b02a0 220 (map +($_ => '_expand_op_andor'), ('and', 'or')),
2809a2ff 221 (map +($_ => '_expand_op_is'), ('is', 'is_not')),
bef0b297 222 'ident' => '_expand_ident',
7e461775 223 'value' => '_expand_value',
143f50df 224 };
ca158918 225
226 $opt{render} = {
01222ad2 227 (map +($_, "_render_$_"), qw(op func bind ident literal row)),
ca158918 228 %{$opt{render}||{}}
229 };
230
9159df95 231 $opt{render_op} = {
2809a2ff 232 (map +($_ => '_render_op_between'), 'between', 'not_between'),
233 (map +($_ => '_render_op_in'), 'in', 'not_in'),
9159df95 234 (map +($_ => '_render_unop_postfix'),
2809a2ff 235 'is_null', 'is_not_null', 'asc', 'desc',
9159df95 236 ),
82048a14 237 (not => '_render_unop_paren'),
9159df95 238 (map +($_ => '_render_op_andor'), qw(and or)),
df7bba54 239 ',' => '_render_op_multop',
9159df95 240 };
143f50df 241
b6251592 242 return bless \%opt, $class;
243}
96449e8e 244
e175845b 245sub sqltrue { +{ -literal => [ $_[0]->{sqltrue} ] } }
246sub sqlfalse { +{ -literal => [ $_[0]->{sqlfalse} ] } }
170e6c33 247
248sub _assert_pass_injection_guard {
249 if ($_[1] =~ $_[0]->{injection_guard}) {
250 my $class = ref $_[0];
251 puke "Possible SQL injection attempt '$_[1]'. If this is indeed a part of the "
252 . "desired SQL use literal SQL ( \'...' or \[ '...' ] ) or supply your own "
253 . "{injection_guard} attribute to ${class}->new()"
254 }
255}
256
257
96449e8e 258#======================================================================
259# INSERT methods
260#======================================================================
261
262sub insert {
02288357 263 my $self = shift;
264 my $table = $self->_table(shift);
265 my $data = shift || return;
266 my $options = shift;
96449e8e 267
35ecefe7 268 my $fields;
269
70b505ab 270 my ($f_aqt, $v_aqt) = $self->_expand_insert_values($data);
ede0de38 271
35ecefe7 272 my @parts = ([ $self->_sqlcase('insert into').' '.$table ]);
273 push @parts, [ $self->render_aqt($f_aqt) ] if $f_aqt;
01222ad2 274 push @parts, [ $self->_sqlcase('values') ], [ $self->render_aqt($v_aqt) ];
02288357 275
e82e648a 276 if ($options->{returning}) {
35ecefe7 277 push @parts, [ $self->_insert_returning($options) ];
02288357 278 }
279
0236f122 280 return $self->join_query_parts(' ', @parts);
96449e8e 281}
282
70b505ab 283sub _expand_insert_values {
284 my ($self, $data) = @_;
285 if (is_literal_value($data)) {
286 (undef, $self->expand_expr($data));
287 } else {
288 my ($fields, $values) = (
289 ref($data) eq 'HASH' ?
290 ([ sort keys %$data ], [ @{$data}{sort keys %$data} ])
291 : ([], $data)
292 );
293
294 # no names (arrayref) means can't generate bindtype
295 !($fields) && $self->{bindtype} eq 'columns'
296 && belch "can't do 'columns' bindtype when called with arrayref";
297
298 +(
299 (@$fields
300 ? $self->expand_expr({ -row => $fields }, -ident)
301 : undef
302 ),
303 +{ -row => [
304 map {
305 local our $Cur_Col_Meta = $fields->[$_];
306 $self->_expand_insert_value($values->[$_])
307 } 0..$#$values
308 ] },
309 );
310 }
311}
312
60f3fd3f 313# So that subclasses can override INSERT ... RETURNING separately from
314# UPDATE and DELETE (e.g. DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::Oracle does this)
b17a3ece 315sub _insert_returning { shift->_returning(@_) }
316
95904db5 317sub _returning {
e82e648a 318 my ($self, $options) = @_;
6b1fe79d 319
e82e648a 320 my $f = $options->{returning};
321
79d310f2 322 my ($sql, @bind) = $self->render_aqt(
dbc10abd 323 $self->_expand_maybe_list_expr($f, -ident)
ff96fdd4 324 );
325 return wantarray
326 ? $self->_sqlcase(' returning ') . $sql
327 : ($self->_sqlcase(' returning ').$sql, @bind);
6b1fe79d 328}
329
720ca4f7 330sub _expand_insert_value {
ede0de38 331 my ($self, $v) = @_;
332
333 my $k = our $Cur_Col_Meta;
96449e8e 334
720ca4f7 335 if (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY') {
336 if ($self->{array_datatypes}) {
ede0de38 337 return +{ -bind => [ $k, $v ] };
720ca4f7 338 }
339 my ($sql, @bind) = @$v;
340 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype(@bind);
341 return +{ -literal => $v };
342 }
343 if (ref($v) eq 'HASH') {
344 if (grep !/^-/, keys %$v) {
345 belch "HASH ref as bind value in insert is not supported";
ede0de38 346 return +{ -bind => [ $k, $v ] };
720ca4f7 347 }
348 }
349 if (!defined($v)) {
ede0de38 350 return +{ -bind => [ $k, undef ] };
720ca4f7 351 }
79d310f2 352 return $self->expand_expr($v);
96449e8e 353}
354
355
96449e8e 356
357#======================================================================
358# UPDATE methods
359#======================================================================
360
361
362sub update {
95904db5 363 my $self = shift;
364 my $table = $self->_table(shift);
365 my $data = shift || return;
366 my $where = shift;
367 my $options = shift;
96449e8e 368
369 # first build the 'SET' part of the sql statement
96449e8e 370 puke "Unsupported data type specified to \$sql->update"
371 unless ref $data eq 'HASH';
372
9ade906e 373 my ($sql, @all_bind) = $self->_update_set_values($data);
a9e94508 374 $sql = $self->_sqlcase('update ') . $table . $self->_sqlcase(' set ')
9ade906e 375 . $sql;
376
377 if ($where) {
378 my($where_sql, @where_bind) = $self->where($where);
379 $sql .= $where_sql;
380 push @all_bind, @where_bind;
381 }
382
383 if ($options->{returning}) {
384 my ($returning_sql, @returning_bind) = $self->_update_returning($options);
385 $sql .= $returning_sql;
386 push @all_bind, @returning_bind;
387 }
388
389 return wantarray ? ($sql, @all_bind) : $sql;
390}
391
392sub _update_set_values {
393 my ($self, $data) = @_;
394
79d310f2 395 return $self->render_aqt(
fe8b493f 396 $self->_expand_update_set_values(undef, $data),
89690da2 397 );
398}
96449e8e 399
89690da2 400sub _expand_update_set_values {
fe8b493f 401 my ($self, undef, $data) = @_;
89690da2 402 $self->_expand_maybe_list_expr( [
403 map {
404 my ($k, $set) = @$_;
c4ed66f4 405 $set = { -bind => $_ } unless defined $set;
9103bd14 406 +{ -op => [ '=', $self->_expand_ident(-ident => $k), $set ] };
89690da2 407 }
408 map {
409 my $k = $_;
410 my $v = $data->{$k};
411 (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY'
412 ? ($self->{array_datatypes}
413 ? [ $k, +{ -bind => [ $k, $v ] } ]
414 : [ $k, +{ -literal => $v } ])
415 : do {
416 local our $Cur_Col_Meta = $k;
417 [ $k, $self->_expand_expr($v) ]
418 }
419 );
420 } sort keys %$data
421 ] );
96449e8e 422}
423
60f3fd3f 424# So that subclasses can override UPDATE ... RETURNING separately from
425# INSERT and DELETE
20bb2ad5 426sub _update_returning { shift->_returning(@_) }
96449e8e 427
428
429
430#======================================================================
431# SELECT
432#======================================================================
433
434
435sub select {
436 my $self = shift;
437 my $table = $self->_table(shift);
438 my $fields = shift || '*';
439 my $where = shift;
440 my $order = shift;
441
daa4ccdd 442 my ($fields_sql, @bind) = $self->_select_fields($fields);
96449e8e 443
daa4ccdd 444 my ($where_sql, @where_bind) = $self->where($where, $order);
445 push @bind, @where_bind;
446
447 my $sql = join(' ', $self->_sqlcase('select'), $fields_sql,
96449e8e 448 $self->_sqlcase('from'), $table)
449 . $where_sql;
450
9d48860e 451 return wantarray ? ($sql, @bind) : $sql;
96449e8e 452}
453
daa4ccdd 454sub _select_fields {
455 my ($self, $fields) = @_;
de63ce57 456 return $fields unless ref($fields);
79d310f2 457 return $self->render_aqt(
dbc10abd 458 $self->_expand_maybe_list_expr($fields, '-ident')
27592e2b 459 );
daa4ccdd 460}
461
96449e8e 462#======================================================================
463# DELETE
464#======================================================================
465
466
467sub delete {
85327cd5 468 my $self = shift;
469 my $table = $self->_table(shift);
470 my $where = shift;
471 my $options = shift;
96449e8e 472
473 my($where_sql, @bind) = $self->where($where);
a9e94508 474 my $sql = $self->_sqlcase('delete from ') . $table . $where_sql;
96449e8e 475
85327cd5 476 if ($options->{returning}) {
ca4f826a 477 my ($returning_sql, @returning_bind) = $self->_delete_returning($options);
85327cd5 478 $sql .= $returning_sql;
479 push @bind, @returning_bind;
480 }
481
9d48860e 482 return wantarray ? ($sql, @bind) : $sql;
96449e8e 483}
484
60f3fd3f 485# So that subclasses can override DELETE ... RETURNING separately from
486# INSERT and UPDATE
85327cd5 487sub _delete_returning { shift->_returning(@_) }
488
489
96449e8e 490
491#======================================================================
492# WHERE: entry point
493#======================================================================
494
495
496
497# Finally, a separate routine just to handle WHERE clauses
498sub where {
499 my ($self, $where, $order) = @_;
500
7ad12721 501 local $self->{convert_where} = $self->{convert};
502
96449e8e 503 # where ?
e175845b 504 my ($sql, @bind) = defined($where)
505 ? $self->_recurse_where($where)
506 : (undef);
417dd15e 507 $sql = (defined $sql and length $sql) ? $self->_sqlcase(' where ') . "( $sql )" : '';
96449e8e 508
509 # order by?
510 if ($order) {
26fe4d30 511 my ($order_sql, @order_bind) = $self->_order_by($order);
512 $sql .= $order_sql;
513 push @bind, @order_bind;
96449e8e 514 }
515
9d48860e 516 return wantarray ? ($sql, @bind) : $sql;
96449e8e 517}
518
c349b750 519{ our $Default_Scalar_To = -value }
520
79d310f2 521sub expand_expr {
54d3140f 522 my ($self, $expr, $default_scalar_to) = @_;
523 local our $Default_Scalar_To = $default_scalar_to if $default_scalar_to;
7d93797d 524 $self->_expand_expr($expr);
79d310f2 525}
526
527sub render_aqt {
528 my ($self, $aqt) = @_;
529 my ($k, $v, @rest) = %$aqt;
530 die "No" if @rest;
5be20cbb 531 die "Not a node type: $k" unless $k =~ s/^-//;
21225d32 532 if (my $meth = $self->{render}{$k}) {
a01911a2 533 return $self->$meth($k, $v);
79d310f2 534 }
535 die "notreached: $k";
536}
537
6082a464 538sub render_expr {
ede0de38 539 my ($self, $expr, $default_scalar_to) = @_;
7958f5c6 540 my ($sql, @bind) = $self->render_aqt(
541 $self->expand_expr($expr, $default_scalar_to)
542 );
543 return (wantarray ? ($sql, @bind) : $sql);
6082a464 544}
545
24cd9525 546sub _normalize_op {
547 my ($self, $raw) = @_;
2809a2ff 548 s/^-(?=.)//, s/\s+/_/g for my $op = lc $raw;
24cd9525 549 $op;
550}
551
a2cd381d 552sub _expand_expr {
3a10d914 553 my ($self, $expr) = @_;
3ae10d16 554 our $Expand_Depth ||= 0; local $Expand_Depth = $Expand_Depth + 1;
252518da 555 return undef unless defined($expr);
59588695 556 if (ref($expr) eq 'HASH') {
767b62e4 557 return undef unless my $kc = keys %$expr;
558 if ($kc > 1) {
5be20cbb 559 return $self->_expand_op_andor(and => $expr);
59588695 560 }
767b62e4 561 my ($key, $value) = %$expr;
70f98e4b 562 if ($key =~ /^-/ and $key =~ s/ [_\s]? \d+ $//x ) {
563 belch 'Use of [and|or|nest]_N modifiers is deprecated and will be removed in SQLA v2.0. '
564 . "You probably wanted ...-and => [ $key => COND1, $key => COND2 ... ]";
565 }
e9d74ce7 566 return $self->_expand_hashpair($key, $value);
a2cd381d 567 }
08264f40 568 if (ref($expr) eq 'ARRAY') {
5be20cbb 569 return $self->_expand_op_andor(lc($self->{logic}), $expr);
08264f40 570 }
ca3da680 571 if (my $literal = is_literal_value($expr)) {
572 return +{ -literal => $literal };
573 }
99a65fa8 574 if (!ref($expr) or Scalar::Util::blessed($expr)) {
e9d74ce7 575 return $self->_expand_scalar($expr);
252518da 576 }
252518da 577 die "notreached";
a2cd381d 578}
96449e8e 579
e9d74ce7 580sub _expand_hashpair {
124b41ca 581 my ($self, $k, $v) = @_;
d13725da 582 unless (defined($k) and length($k)) {
2d64004f 583 if (defined($k) and my $literal = is_literal_value($v)) {
d13725da 584 belch 'Hash-pairs consisting of an empty string with a literal are deprecated, and will be removed in 2.0: use -and => [ $literal ] instead';
2d64004f 585 return { -literal => $literal };
d13725da 586 }
587 puke "Supplying an empty left hand side argument is not supported";
588 }
ef071fad 589 if ($k =~ /^-/) {
e9d74ce7 590 return $self->_expand_hashpair_op($k, $v);
33ac0d7b 591 } elsif ($k =~ /^[^\w]/i) {
7741b7ad 592 my ($lhs, @rhs) = @$v;
593 return $self->_expand_op(
594 -op, [ $k, $self->expand_expr($lhs, -ident), @rhs ]
595 );
99a65fa8 596 }
e9d74ce7 597 return $self->_expand_hashpair_ident($k, $v);
1cc1e937 598}
599
e9d74ce7 600sub _expand_hashpair_ident {
1cc1e937 601 my ($self, $k, $v) = @_;
710cdeed 602
cd90d4f0 603 local our $Cur_Col_Meta = $k;
604
2e670469 605 # hash with multiple or no elements is andor
606
607 if (ref($v) eq 'HASH' and keys %$v != 1) {
5be20cbb 608 return $self->_expand_op_andor(and => $v, $k);
2e670469 609 }
610
710cdeed 611 # undef needs to be re-sent with cmp to achieve IS/IS NOT NULL
612
6d7a39b3 613 if (is_undef_value($v)) {
e9d74ce7 614 return $self->_expand_hashpair_cmp($k => undef);
99a65fa8 615 }
710cdeed 616
710cdeed 617 # scalars and objects get expanded as whatever requested or values
618
99a65fa8 619 if (!ref($v) or Scalar::Util::blessed($v)) {
e9d74ce7 620 return $self->_expand_hashpair_scalar($k, $v);
99a65fa8 621 }
0cdafc4b 622
623 # single key hashref is a hashtriple
624
99a65fa8 625 if (ref($v) eq 'HASH') {
e9d74ce7 626 return $self->_expand_hashtriple($k, %$v);
99a65fa8 627 }
0cdafc4b 628
629 # arrayref needs re-engineering over the elements
630
99a65fa8 631 if (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY') {
e175845b 632 return $self->sqlfalse unless @$v;
99a65fa8 633 $self->_debug("ARRAY($k) means distribute over elements");
124b41ca 634 my $logic = lc(
70f98e4b 635 $v->[0] =~ /^-(and|or)$/i
5be20cbb 636 ? (shift(@{$v = [ @$v ]}), $1)
637 : lc($self->{logic} || 'OR')
99a65fa8 638 );
d6ac0cfb 639 return $self->_expand_op_andor(
6393fa8e 640 $logic => $v, $k
66e362e4 641 );
99a65fa8 642 }
0cdafc4b 643
99a65fa8 644 if (my $literal = is_literal_value($v)) {
645 unless (length $k) {
646 belch 'Hash-pairs consisting of an empty string with a literal are deprecated, and will be removed in 2.0: use -and => [ $literal ] instead';
647 return \$literal;
648 }
649 my ($sql, @bind) = @$literal;
650 if ($self->{bindtype} eq 'columns') {
651 for (@bind) {
6fb2bd90 652 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype($_);
aa8d7bdb 653 }
331e2209 654 }
99a65fa8 655 return +{ -literal => [ $self->_quote($k).' '.$sql, @bind ] };
331e2209 656 }
99a65fa8 657 die "notreached";
59588695 658}
659
e9d74ce7 660sub _expand_scalar {
cd90d4f0 661 my ($self, $expr) = @_;
662
c349b750 663 return $self->_expand_expr({ (our $Default_Scalar_To) => $expr });
cd90d4f0 664}
665
e9d74ce7 666sub _expand_hashpair_scalar {
cd90d4f0 667 my ($self, $k, $v) = @_;
668
e9d74ce7 669 return $self->_expand_hashpair_cmp(
670 $k, $self->_expand_scalar($v),
cd90d4f0 671 );
672}
673
e9d74ce7 674sub _expand_hashpair_op {
d0ae57ad 675 my ($self, $k, $v) = @_;
710cdeed 676
2809a2ff 677 $self->_assert_pass_injection_guard($k =~ /\A-(.*)\Z/s);
24cd9525 678
2809a2ff 679 my $op = $self->_normalize_op($k);
710cdeed 680
def45151 681 if (my $exp = $self->{expand}{$op}) {
5be20cbb 682 return $self->$exp($op, $v);
def45151 683 }
684
710cdeed 685 # Ops prefixed with -not_ get converted
686
e57d8650 687 if (my ($rest) = $op =~/^not_(.*)$/) {
d0ae57ad 688 return +{ -op => [
689 'not',
690 $self->_expand_expr({ "-${rest}", $v })
2809a2ff 691 ] };
d0ae57ad 692 }
710cdeed 693
8e73de4b 694 { # Old SQLA compat
695
e57d8650 696 my $op = join(' ', split '_', $op);
697
8e73de4b 698 # the old special op system requires illegality for top-level use
699
700 if (
701 (our $Expand_Depth) == 1
fbb885c0 702 and (
703 List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{special_ops}}
704 or (
705 $self->{disable_old_special_ops}
706 and List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @BUILTIN_SPECIAL_OPS
707 )
708 )
8e73de4b 709 ) {
710 puke "Illegal use of top-level '-$op'"
711 }
710cdeed 712
8e73de4b 713 # the old unary op system means we should touch nothing and let it work
710cdeed 714
8e73de4b 715 if (my $us = List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{unary_ops}}) {
716 return { -op => [ $op, $v ] };
717 }
d0ae57ad 718 }
710cdeed 719
720 # an explicit node type is currently assumed to be expanded (this is almost
721 # certainly wrong and there should be expansion anyway)
722
7256c844 723 if ($self->{render}{$op}) {
d0ae57ad 724 return { $k => $v };
725 }
710cdeed 726
7250aa13 727 my $type = $self->{unknown_unop_always_func} ? -func : -op;
710cdeed 728
7250aa13 729 { # Old SQLA compat
710cdeed 730
7250aa13 731 if (
732 ref($v) eq 'HASH'
733 and keys %$v == 1
734 and (keys %$v)[0] =~ /^-/
735 ) {
736 $type = (
737 (List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{special_ops}})
738 ? -op
739 : -func
740 )
741 }
d0ae57ad 742 }
710cdeed 743
7250aa13 744 return +{ $type => [
745 $op,
746 ($type eq -func and ref($v) eq 'ARRAY')
747 ? map $self->_expand_expr($_), @$v
748 : $self->_expand_expr($v)
749 ] };
d0ae57ad 750}
751
e9d74ce7 752sub _expand_hashpair_cmp {
efcd97c3 753 my ($self, $k, $v) = @_;
e9d74ce7 754 $self->_expand_hashtriple($k, $self->{cmp}, $v);
efcd97c3 755}
756
e9d74ce7 757sub _expand_hashtriple {
0b2789b3 758 my ($self, $k, $vk, $vv) = @_;
759
760 my $ik = $self->_expand_ident(-ident => $k);
761
24cd9525 762 my $op = $self->_normalize_op($vk);
0b2789b3 763 $self->_assert_pass_injection_guard($op);
24cd9525 764
765 if ($op =~ s/ _? \d+ $//x ) {
0b2789b3 766 return $self->_expand_expr($k, { $vk, $vv });
767 }
768 if (my $x = $self->{expand_op}{$op}) {
769 local our $Cur_Col_Meta = $k;
770 return $self->$x($op, $vv, $k);
771 }
8e73de4b 772 { # Old SQLA compat
24cd9525 773
774 my $op = join(' ', split '_', $op);
775
8e73de4b 776 if (my $us = List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{special_ops}}) {
777 return { -op => [ $op, $ik, $vv ] };
778 }
779 if (my $us = List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{unary_ops}}) {
780 return { -op => [
781 $self->{cmp},
782 $ik,
783 { -op => [ $op, $vv ] }
784 ] };
785 }
0b2789b3 786 }
787 if (ref($vv) eq 'ARRAY') {
788 my @raw = @$vv;
789 my $logic = (defined($raw[0]) and $raw[0] =~ /^-(and|or)$/i)
5be20cbb 790 ? (shift(@raw), $1) : 'or';
0b2789b3 791 my @values = map +{ $vk => $_ }, @raw;
792 if (
793 $op =~ $self->{inequality_op}
794 or $op =~ $self->{not_like_op}
795 ) {
5be20cbb 796 if (lc($logic) eq 'or' and @values > 1) {
2809a2ff 797 belch "A multi-element arrayref as an argument to the inequality op '${\uc(join ' ', split '_', $op)}' "
0b2789b3 798 . 'is technically equivalent to an always-true 1=1 (you probably wanted '
799 . "to say ...{ \$inequality_op => [ -and => \@values ] }... instead)"
800 ;
801 }
802 }
803 unless (@values) {
804 # try to DWIM on equality operators
a4009a84 805 return ($self->_dwim_op_to_is($op,
806 "Supplying an empty arrayref to '%s' is deprecated",
807 "operator '%s' applied on an empty array (field '$k')"
808 ) ? $self->sqlfalse : $self->sqltrue);
0b2789b3 809 }
810 return $self->_expand_op_andor($logic => \@values, $k);
811 }
6d7a39b3 812 if (is_undef_value($vv)) {
a4009a84 813 my $is = ($self->_dwim_op_to_is($op,
5f2c2f1e 814 "Supplying an undefined argument to '%s' is deprecated",
815 "unexpected operator '%s' with undef operand",
a4009a84 816 ) ? 'is' : 'is not');
0b2789b3 817
e9d74ce7 818 return $self->_expand_hashpair($k => { $is, undef });
0b2789b3 819 }
820 local our $Cur_Col_Meta = $k;
821 return +{ -op => [
822 $op,
823 $ik,
824 $self->_expand_expr($vv)
825 ] };
826}
827
5f2c2f1e 828sub _dwim_op_to_is {
24cd9525 829 my ($self, $raw, $empty, $fail) = @_;
830
831 my $op = $self->_normalize_op($raw);
832
5f2c2f1e 833 if ($op =~ /^not$/i) {
a4009a84 834 return 0;
5f2c2f1e 835 }
836 if ($op =~ $self->{equality_op}) {
a4009a84 837 return 1;
5f2c2f1e 838 }
839 if ($op =~ $self->{like_op}) {
2809a2ff 840 belch(sprintf $empty, uc(join ' ', split '_', $op));
a4009a84 841 return 1;
5f2c2f1e 842 }
843 if ($op =~ $self->{inequality_op}) {
a4009a84 844 return 0;
5f2c2f1e 845 }
846 if ($op =~ $self->{not_like_op}) {
2809a2ff 847 belch(sprintf $empty, uc(join ' ', split '_', $op));
a4009a84 848 return 0;
5f2c2f1e 849 }
850 puke(sprintf $fail, $op);
851}
852
a5536efa 853sub _expand_func {
854 my ($self, undef, $args) = @_;
855 my ($func, @args) = @$args;
856 return { -func => [ $func, map $self->expand_expr($_), @args ] };
857}
858
9103bd14 859sub _expand_ident {
5be20cbb 860 my ($self, undef, $body, $k) = @_;
e9d74ce7 861 return $self->_expand_hashpair_cmp(
bef0b297 862 $k, { -ident => $body }
863 ) if defined($k);
83de255f 864 unless (defined($body) or (ref($body) and ref($body) eq 'ARRAY')) {
5be20cbb 865 puke "-ident requires a single plain scalar argument (a quotable identifier) or an arrayref of identifier parts";
83de255f 866 }
9103bd14 867 my @parts = map split(/\Q${\($self->{name_sep}||'.')}\E/, $_),
868 ref($body) ? @$body : $body;
944f2c7b 869 return { -ident => $parts[-1] } if $self->{_dequalify_idents};
870 unless ($self->{quote_char}) {
871 $self->_assert_pass_injection_guard($_) for @parts;
872 }
9103bd14 873 return +{ -ident => \@parts };
874}
875
71f1364b 876sub _expand_value {
e9d74ce7 877 return $_[0]->_expand_hashpair_cmp(
bef0b297 878 $_[3], { -value => $_[2] },
879 ) if defined($_[3]);
71f1364b 880 +{ -bind => [ our $Cur_Col_Meta, $_[2] ] };
881}
882
2a238661 883sub _expand_not {
884 +{ -op => [ 'not', $_[0]->_expand_expr($_[2]) ] };
885}
886
ec595dd8 887sub _expand_row {
057fab7b 888 my ($self, undef, $args) = @_;
889 +{ -row => [ map $self->expand_expr($_), @$args ] };
ec595dd8 890}
891
892sub _expand_op {
057fab7b 893 my ($self, undef, $args) = @_;
ec595dd8 894 my ($op, @opargs) = @$args;
4d865061 895 if (my $exp = $self->{expand_op}{$op}) {
896 return $self->$exp($op, \@opargs);
897 }
057fab7b 898 +{ -op => [ $op, map $self->expand_expr($_), @opargs ] };
ec595dd8 899}
900
05d37f9c 901sub _expand_bool {
902 my ($self, undef, $v) = @_;
903 if (ref($v)) {
904 return $self->_expand_expr($v);
905 }
906 puke "-bool => undef not supported" unless defined($v);
907 return $self->_expand_ident(-ident => $v);
908}
909
d6ac0cfb 910sub _expand_op_andor {
5be20cbb 911 my ($self, $logop, $v, $k) = @_;
9194eb8f 912 if (defined $k) {
5ce9d71b 913 $v = [ map +{ $k, $_ },
914 (ref($v) eq 'HASH')
915 ? (map +{ $_ => $v->{$_} }, sort keys %$v)
916 : @$v,
917 ];
9194eb8f 918 }
70f98e4b 919 if (ref($v) eq 'HASH') {
2e670469 920 return undef unless keys %$v;
70f98e4b 921 return +{ -op => [
124b41ca 922 $logop,
0a8de350 923 map $self->_expand_expr({ $_ => $v->{$_} }),
70f98e4b 924 sort keys %$v
925 ] };
926 }
927 if (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY') {
124b41ca 928 $logop eq 'and' or $logop eq 'or' or puke "unknown logic: $logop";
70f98e4b 929
930 my @expr = grep {
931 (ref($_) eq 'ARRAY' and @$_)
932 or (ref($_) eq 'HASH' and %$_)
933 or 1
934 } @$v;
935
936 my @res;
937
938 while (my ($el) = splice @expr, 0, 1) {
939 puke "Supplying an empty left hand side argument is not supported in array-pairs"
940 unless defined($el) and length($el);
941 my $elref = ref($el);
942 if (!$elref) {
943 local our $Expand_Depth = 0;
944 push(@res, grep defined, $self->_expand_expr({ $el, shift(@expr) }));
945 } elsif ($elref eq 'ARRAY') {
946 push(@res, grep defined, $self->_expand_expr($el)) if @$el;
947 } elsif (my $l = is_literal_value($el)) {
948 push @res, { -literal => $l };
949 } elsif ($elref eq 'HASH') {
950 local our $Expand_Depth = 0;
951 push @res, grep defined, $self->_expand_expr($el) if %$el;
952 } else {
953 die "notreached";
954 }
955 }
956 # ???
957 # return $res[0] if @res == 1;
124b41ca 958 return { -op => [ $logop, @res ] };
70f98e4b 959 }
960 die "notreached";
961}
962
f49b02a0 963sub _expand_op_is {
964 my ($self, $op, $vv, $k) = @_;
1279622f 965 ($k, $vv) = @$vv unless defined $k;
f49b02a0 966 puke "$op can only take undef as argument"
967 if defined($vv)
968 and not (
969 ref($vv) eq 'HASH'
970 and exists($vv->{-value})
971 and !defined($vv->{-value})
972 );
1279622f 973 return +{ -op => [ $op.'_null', $self->expand_expr($k, -ident) ] };
f49b02a0 974}
975
143f50df 976sub _expand_between {
977 my ($self, $op, $vv, $k) = @_;
b798961f 978 $k = shift @{$vv = [ @$vv ]} unless defined $k;
143f50df 979 my @rhs = map $self->_expand_expr($_),
980 ref($vv) eq 'ARRAY' ? @$vv : $vv;
981 unless (
982 (@rhs == 1 and ref($rhs[0]) eq 'HASH' and $rhs[0]->{-literal})
983 or
984 (@rhs == 2 and defined($rhs[0]) and defined($rhs[1]))
985 ) {
986 puke "Operator '${\uc($op)}' requires either an arrayref with two defined values or expressions, or a single literal scalarref/arrayref-ref";
987 }
988 return +{ -op => [
989 $op,
8d8f6cc8 990 $self->expand_expr(ref($k) ? $k : { -ident => $k }),
143f50df 991 @rhs
992 ] }
993}
994
416026a9 995sub _expand_in {
1da718c4 996 my ($self, $op, $vv, $k) = @_;
3445a1e7 997 $k = shift @{$vv = [ @$vv ]} unless defined $k;
416026a9 998 if (my $literal = is_literal_value($vv)) {
999 my ($sql, @bind) = @$literal;
1000 my $opened_sql = $self->_open_outer_paren($sql);
1001 return +{ -op => [
2c99e31e 1002 $op, $self->expand_expr($k, -ident),
4d865061 1003 { -literal => [ $opened_sql, @bind ] }
416026a9 1004 ] };
1005 }
1006 my $undef_err =
1007 'SQL::Abstract before v1.75 used to generate incorrect SQL when the '
1008 . "-${\uc($op)} operator was given an undef-containing list: !!!AUDIT YOUR CODE "
1009 . 'AND DATA!!! (the upcoming Data::Query-based version of SQL::Abstract '
1010 . 'will emit the logically correct SQL instead of raising this exception)'
1011 ;
1012 puke("Argument passed to the '${\uc($op)}' operator can not be undefined")
1013 if !defined($vv);
2282f2b7 1014 my @rhs = map $self->expand_expr($_, -value),
416026a9 1015 map { defined($_) ? $_: puke($undef_err) }
1016 (ref($vv) eq 'ARRAY' ? @$vv : $vv);
1017 return $self->${\($op =~ /^not/ ? 'sqltrue' : 'sqlfalse')} unless @rhs;
1018
1019 return +{ -op => [
1020 $op,
2c99e31e 1021 $self->expand_expr($k, -ident),
4d865061 1022 @rhs
416026a9 1023 ] };
1024}
1025
5c633220 1026sub _expand_nest {
057fab7b 1027 my ($self, undef, $v) = @_;
5c633220 1028 # DBIx::Class requires a nest warning to be emitted once but the private
1029 # method it overrode to do so no longer exists
97c9af32 1030 if ($self->{warn_once_on_nest}) {
5c633220 1031 unless (our $Nest_Warned) {
1032 belch(
1033 "-nest in search conditions is deprecated, you most probably wanted:\n"
1034 .q|{..., -and => [ \%cond0, \@cond1, \'cond2', \[ 'cond3', [ col => bind ] ], etc. ], ... }|
1035 );
1036 $Nest_Warned = 1;
1037 }
1038 }
1039 return $self->_expand_expr($v);
1040}
1041
59756d50 1042sub _expand_bind {
057fab7b 1043 my ($self, undef, $bind) = @_;
1044 return { -bind => $bind };
59756d50 1045}
1046
96449e8e 1047sub _recurse_where {
1048 my ($self, $where, $logic) = @_;
1049
5492d4c2 1050 # Special case: top level simple string treated as literal
1051
1052 my $where_exp = (ref($where)
ae56a156 1053 ? $self->_expand_expr($where, $logic)
5492d4c2 1054 : { -literal => [ $where ] });
e175845b 1055
e3e27543 1056 # dispatch expanded expression
311b2151 1057
79d310f2 1058 my ($sql, @bind) = defined($where_exp) ? $self->render_aqt($where_exp) : (undef);
abe1a491 1059 # DBIx::Class used to call _recurse_where in scalar context
1060 # something else might too...
1061 if (wantarray) {
1062 return ($sql, @bind);
1063 }
1064 else {
1065 belch "Calling _recurse_where in scalar context is deprecated and will go away before 2.0";
1066 return $sql;
1067 }
96449e8e 1068}
1069
181dcebf 1070sub _render_ident {
a01911a2 1071 my ($self, undef, $ident) = @_;
cc422895 1072
9cf28dfb 1073 return $self->_convert($self->_quote($ident));
cc422895 1074}
1075
c2065120 1076sub _render_row {
a01911a2 1077 my ($self, undef, $values) = @_;
1078 my ($sql, @bind) = $self->_render_op(undef, [ ',', @$values ]);
904e4989 1079 return $self->join_query_parts('', [ '(' ], [ $sql, @bind ], [ ')' ]);
ca158918 1080}
1081
1082sub _render_func {
a01911a2 1083 my ($self, undef, $rest) = @_;
ca158918 1084 my ($func, @args) = @$rest;
778ee98b 1085 return $self->join_query_parts('',
1086 [ $self->_sqlcase($func) ],
1087 [ '(' ],
1088 [ $self->join_query_parts(', ', @args) ],
1089 [ ')' ]
1090 );
ca158918 1091}
d13725da 1092
ca158918 1093sub _render_bind {
a01911a2 1094 my ($self, undef, $bind) = @_;
ca158918 1095 return ($self->_convert('?'), $self->_bindtype(@$bind));
1096}
1097
1098sub _render_literal {
a01911a2 1099 my ($self, undef, $literal) = @_;
ca158918 1100 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype(@{$literal}[1..$#$literal]);
1101 return @$literal;
1102}
1103
5305e436 1104sub _render_op {
a01911a2 1105 my ($self, undef, $v) = @_;
5305e436 1106 my ($op, @args) = @$v;
1107 if (my $r = $self->{render_op}{$op}) {
1108 return $self->$r($op, \@args);
1109 }
1110
1111 { # Old SQLA compat
1112
24cd9525 1113 my $op = join(' ', split '_', $op);
1114
82048a14 1115 my $ss = List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{special_ops}};
1116 if ($ss and @args > 1) {
5305e436 1117 puke "Special op '${op}' requires first value to be identifier"
1118 unless my ($ident) = map $_->{-ident}, grep ref($_) eq 'HASH', $args[0];
1119 my $k = join(($self->{name_sep}||'.'), @$ident);
1120 local our $Expand_Depth = 1;
82048a14 1121 return $self->${\($ss->{handler})}($k, $op, $args[1]);
5305e436 1122 }
1123 if (my $us = List::Util::first { $op =~ $_->{regex} } @{$self->{unary_ops}}) {
1124 return $self->${\($us->{handler})}($op, $args[0]);
1125 }
82048a14 1126 if ($ss) {
1127 return $self->_render_unop_paren($op, \@args);
1128 }
5305e436 1129 }
1130 if (@args == 1) {
1131 return $self->_render_unop_prefix($op, \@args);
1132 } else {
1133 return $self->_render_op_multop($op, \@args);
1134 }
1135 die "notreached";
1136}
1137
1138
e748969f 1139sub _render_op_between {
1140 my ($self, $op, $args) = @_;
1141 my ($left, $low, $high) = @$args;
904e4989 1142 my @rh = do {
e748969f 1143 if (@$args == 2) {
1144 puke "Single arg to between must be a literal"
1145 unless $low->{-literal};
904e4989 1146 $low;
e748969f 1147 } else {
943e8554 1148 +($low, $self->format_keyword('and'), $high);
e748969f 1149 }
1150 };
904e4989 1151 return $self->join_query_parts(' ',
943e8554 1152 '(', $left, $self->format_keyword($op), @rh, ')',
e748969f 1153 );
1154}
1155
7dda9b27 1156sub _render_op_in {
1157 my ($self, $op, $args) = @_;
4d865061 1158 my ($lhs, @rhs) = @$args;
943e8554 1159
1160 return $self->join_query_parts(' ',
1161 $lhs,
1162 $self->format_keyword($op),
1163 '(',
1164 [ $self->join_query_parts(', ', @rhs) ],
1165 ')'
7dda9b27 1166 );
1167}
1168
5edafff8 1169sub _render_op_andor {
1170 my ($self, $op, $args) = @_;
31cab4ad 1171 return '' unless @$args;
1172 return $self->join_query_parts('', $args->[0]) if @$args == 1;
1173 return $self->join_query_parts(
1174 ' ' => '(',[ $self->_render_op_multop($op, $args) ], ')'
1175 );
3f51d831 1176}
1177
1178sub _render_op_multop {
df7bba54 1179 my ($self, $op, $args) = @_;
bdcc1903 1180 my @parts = map [ $self->render_aqt($_) ], @$args;
3f51d831 1181 return '' unless @parts;
1182 return @{$parts[0]} if @parts == 1;
fd6f6be6 1183 my $join = ($op eq ','
1184 ? ', '
7a33f5fd 1185 : ' '.$self->format_keyword($op).' '
fd6f6be6 1186 );
0236f122 1187 return $self->join_query_parts($join, @parts);
fd6f6be6 1188}
1189
0236f122 1190sub join_query_parts {
fd6f6be6 1191 my ($self, $join, @parts) = @_;
8a61ebbc 1192 my @final = map +(
1193 ref($_) eq 'HASH'
1194 ? [ $self->render_aqt($_) ]
1195 : ref($_) eq 'ARRAY' ? $_ : [ $_ ]),
1196 @parts;
5edafff8 1197 return (
5e4aaea3 1198 join($join, map $_->[0], @final),
1199 (wantarray ? (map @{$_}[1..$#$_], @final) : ()),
5edafff8 1200 );
1201}
fd6f6be6 1202
82048a14 1203sub _render_unop_paren {
2ddaa002 1204 my ($self, $op, $v) = @_;
7a33f5fd 1205 return $self->join_query_parts('',
1206 '(', [ $self->_render_unop_prefix($op, $v) ], ')'
1207 );
2ddaa002 1208}
1209
1210sub _render_unop_prefix {
1211 my ($self, $op, $v) = @_;
7a33f5fd 1212 return $self->join_query_parts(' ',
1213 $self->_sqlcase($op), $v->[0]
1214 );
2ddaa002 1215}
1216
b23fd5ff 1217sub _render_unop_postfix {
1218 my ($self, $op, $v) = @_;
7a33f5fd 1219 return $self->join_query_parts(' ',
1220 $v->[0], $self->format_keyword($op),
1221 );
b23fd5ff 1222}
1223
4a1f01a3 1224# Some databases (SQLite) treat col IN (1, 2) different from
1225# col IN ( (1, 2) ). Use this to strip all outer parens while
1226# adding them back in the corresponding method
1227sub _open_outer_paren {
1228 my ($self, $sql) = @_;
a5f91feb 1229
ca4f826a 1230 while (my ($inner) = $sql =~ /^ \s* \( (.*) \) \s* $/xs) {
a5f91feb 1231
1232 # there are closing parens inside, need the heavy duty machinery
1233 # to reevaluate the extraction starting from $sql (full reevaluation)
ca4f826a 1234 if ($inner =~ /\)/) {
a5f91feb 1235 require Text::Balanced;
1236
1237 my (undef, $remainder) = do {
1238 # idiotic design - writes to $@ but *DOES NOT* throw exceptions
1239 local $@;
ca4f826a 1240 Text::Balanced::extract_bracketed($sql, '()', qr/\s*/);
a5f91feb 1241 };
1242
1243 # the entire expression needs to be a balanced bracketed thing
1244 # (after an extract no remainder sans trailing space)
1245 last if defined $remainder and $remainder =~ /\S/;
1246 }
1247
1248 $sql = $inner;
1249 }
1250
1251 $sql;
4a1f01a3 1252}
1253
96449e8e 1254
96449e8e 1255#======================================================================
1256# ORDER BY
1257#======================================================================
1258
33177570 1259sub _expand_order_by {
96449e8e 1260 my ($self, $arg) = @_;
1261
33177570 1262 return unless defined($arg) and not (ref($arg) eq 'ARRAY' and !@$arg);
2b6158af 1263
bd00b85c 1264 return $self->_expand_maybe_list_expr($arg)
1265 if ref($arg) eq 'HASH' and ($arg->{-op}||[''])->[0] eq ',';
e5feec9f 1266
4325df6a 1267 my $expander = sub {
1268 my ($self, $dir, $expr) = @_;
52ca537e 1269 my @to_expand = ref($expr) eq 'ARRAY' ? @$expr : $expr;
1270 foreach my $arg (@to_expand) {
1271 if (
1272 ref($arg) eq 'HASH'
1273 and keys %$arg > 1
1274 and grep /^-(asc|desc)$/, keys %$arg
1275 ) {
1276 puke "ordering direction hash passed to order by must have exactly one key (-asc or -desc)";
1277 }
1278 }
7384c311 1279 my @exp = map +(
1280 defined($dir) ? { -op => [ $dir =~ /^-?(.*)$/ ,=> $_ ] } : $_
1281 ),
79d310f2 1282 map $self->expand_expr($_, -ident),
74156ee9 1283 map ref($_) eq 'ARRAY' ? @$_ : $_, @to_expand;
4e78f98d 1284 return undef unless @exp;
1285 return undef if @exp == 1 and not defined($exp[0]);
1286 return +{ -op => [ ',', @exp ] };
4325df6a 1287 };
18c743c8 1288
def45151 1289 local @{$self->{expand}}{qw(asc desc)} = (($expander) x 2);
f267b646 1290
33177570 1291 return $self->$expander(undef, $arg);
1292}
1293
1294sub _order_by {
1295 my ($self, $arg) = @_;
1296
1297 return '' unless defined(my $expanded = $self->_expand_order_by($arg));
4325df6a 1298
79d310f2 1299 my ($sql, @bind) = $self->render_aqt($expanded);
4325df6a 1300
13cd9220 1301 return '' unless length($sql);
1302
4325df6a 1303 my $final_sql = $self->_sqlcase(' order by ').$sql;
1304
1305 return wantarray ? ($final_sql, @bind) : $final_sql;
f267b646 1306}
1307
2e3cc357 1308# _order_by no longer needs to call this so doesn't but DBIC uses it.
1309
33177570 1310sub _order_by_chunks {
1311 my ($self, $arg) = @_;
1312
1313 return () unless defined(my $expanded = $self->_expand_order_by($arg));
1314
2e3cc357 1315 return $self->_chunkify_order_by($expanded);
1316}
1317
1318sub _chunkify_order_by {
1319 my ($self, $expanded) = @_;
1b630cfe 1320
79d310f2 1321 return grep length, $self->render_aqt($expanded)
1b630cfe 1322 if $expanded->{-ident} or @{$expanded->{-literal}||[]} == 1;
1323
33177570 1324 for ($expanded) {
4a27fded 1325 if (ref() eq 'HASH' and $_->{-op} and $_->{-op}[0] eq ',') {
1326 my ($comma, @list) = @{$_->{-op}};
1327 return map $self->_chunkify_order_by($_), @list;
33177570 1328 }
79d310f2 1329 return [ $self->render_aqt($_) ];
33177570 1330 }
1331}
1332
96449e8e 1333#======================================================================
1334# DATASOURCE (FOR NOW, JUST PLAIN TABLE OR LIST OF TABLES)
1335#======================================================================
1336
1337sub _table {
1338 my $self = shift;
1339 my $from = shift;
79d310f2 1340 ($self->render_aqt(
dbc10abd 1341 $self->_expand_maybe_list_expr($from, -ident)
7ad12721 1342 ))[0];
96449e8e 1343}
1344
1345
1346#======================================================================
1347# UTILITY FUNCTIONS
1348#======================================================================
1349
8476c6a3 1350sub _expand_maybe_list_expr {
dbc10abd 1351 my ($self, $expr, $default) = @_;
bd00b85c 1352 return { -op => [
1353 ',', map $self->expand_expr($_, $default),
1354 @{$expr->{-op}}[1..$#{$expr->{-op}}]
1355 ] } if ref($expr) eq 'HASH' and ($expr->{-op}||[''])->[0] eq ',';
2c99e31e 1356 return +{ -op => [ ',',
1357 map $self->expand_expr($_, $default),
1358 ref($expr) eq 'ARRAY' ? @$expr : $expr
1359 ] };
8476c6a3 1360}
1361
955e77ca 1362# highly optimized, as it's called way too often
96449e8e 1363sub _quote {
955e77ca 1364 # my ($self, $label) = @_;
96449e8e 1365
955e77ca 1366 return '' unless defined $_[1];
955e77ca 1367 return ${$_[1]} if ref($_[1]) eq 'SCALAR';
d3162b5c 1368 puke 'Identifier cannot be hashref' if ref($_[1]) eq 'HASH';
96449e8e 1369
d3162b5c 1370 unless ($_[0]->{quote_char}) {
1371 if (ref($_[1]) eq 'ARRAY') {
1372 return join($_[0]->{name_sep}||'.', @{$_[1]});
1373 } else {
1374 $_[0]->_assert_pass_injection_guard($_[1]);
1375 return $_[1];
1376 }
1377 }
96449e8e 1378
07d7c35c 1379 my $qref = ref $_[0]->{quote_char};
439834d3 1380 my ($l, $r) =
1381 !$qref ? ($_[0]->{quote_char}, $_[0]->{quote_char})
1382 : ($qref eq 'ARRAY') ? @{$_[0]->{quote_char}}
1383 : puke "Unsupported quote_char format: $_[0]->{quote_char}";
1384
46be4313 1385 my $esc = $_[0]->{escape_char} || $r;
96449e8e 1386
07d7c35c 1387 # parts containing * are naturally unquoted
d3162b5c 1388 return join(
1389 $_[0]->{name_sep}||'',
1390 map +(
1391 $_ eq '*'
1392 ? $_
1393 : do { (my $n = $_) =~ s/(\Q$esc\E|\Q$r\E)/$esc$1/g; $l . $n . $r }
1394 ),
1395 (ref($_[1]) eq 'ARRAY'
1396 ? @{$_[1]}
1397 : (
1398 $_[0]->{name_sep}
1399 ? split (/\Q$_[0]->{name_sep}\E/, $_[1] )
1400 : $_[1]
1401 )
1402 )
955e77ca 1403 );
96449e8e 1404}
1405
1406
1407# Conversion, if applicable
d7c862e0 1408sub _convert {
07d7c35c 1409 #my ($self, $arg) = @_;
7ad12721 1410 if ($_[0]->{convert_where}) {
1411 return $_[0]->_sqlcase($_[0]->{convert_where}) .'(' . $_[1] . ')';
96449e8e 1412 }
07d7c35c 1413 return $_[1];
96449e8e 1414}
1415
1416# And bindtype
d7c862e0 1417sub _bindtype {
07d7c35c 1418 #my ($self, $col, @vals) = @_;
07d7c35c 1419 # called often - tighten code
1420 return $_[0]->{bindtype} eq 'columns'
1421 ? map {[$_[1], $_]} @_[2 .. $#_]
1422 : @_[2 .. $#_]
1423 ;
96449e8e 1424}
1425
fe3ae272 1426# Dies if any element of @bind is not in [colname => value] format
1427# if bindtype is 'columns'.
1428sub _assert_bindval_matches_bindtype {
c94a6c93 1429# my ($self, @bind) = @_;
1430 my $self = shift;
fe3ae272 1431 if ($self->{bindtype} eq 'columns') {
c94a6c93 1432 for (@_) {
1433 if (!defined $_ || ref($_) ne 'ARRAY' || @$_ != 2) {
3a06278c 1434 puke "bindtype 'columns' selected, you need to pass: [column_name => bind_value]"
fe3ae272 1435 }
1436 }
1437 }
1438}
1439
96449e8e 1440sub _join_sql_clauses {
1441 my ($self, $logic, $clauses_aref, $bind_aref) = @_;
1442
1443 if (@$clauses_aref > 1) {
1444 my $join = " " . $self->_sqlcase($logic) . " ";
1445 my $sql = '( ' . join($join, @$clauses_aref) . ' )';
1446 return ($sql, @$bind_aref);
1447 }
1448 elsif (@$clauses_aref) {
1449 return ($clauses_aref->[0], @$bind_aref); # no parentheses
1450 }
1451 else {
1452 return (); # if no SQL, ignore @$bind_aref
1453 }
1454}
1455
1456
1457# Fix SQL case, if so requested
1458sub _sqlcase {
96449e8e 1459 # LDNOTE: if $self->{case} is true, then it contains 'lower', so we
1460 # don't touch the argument ... crooked logic, but let's not change it!
07d7c35c 1461 return $_[0]->{case} ? $_[1] : uc($_[1]);
96449e8e 1462}
1463
eaba09fc 1464sub format_keyword { $_[0]->_sqlcase(join ' ', split '_', $_[1]) }
96449e8e 1465
1466#======================================================================
1467# DISPATCHING FROM REFKIND
1468#======================================================================
1469
1470sub _refkind {
1471 my ($self, $data) = @_;
96449e8e 1472
955e77ca 1473 return 'UNDEF' unless defined $data;
1474
1475 # blessed objects are treated like scalars
1476 my $ref = (Scalar::Util::blessed $data) ? '' : ref $data;
1477
1478 return 'SCALAR' unless $ref;
1479
1480 my $n_steps = 1;
1481 while ($ref eq 'REF') {
96449e8e 1482 $data = $$data;
955e77ca 1483 $ref = (Scalar::Util::blessed $data) ? '' : ref $data;
1484 $n_steps++ if $ref;
96449e8e 1485 }
1486
848556bc 1487 return ($ref||'SCALAR') . ('REF' x $n_steps);
96449e8e 1488}
1489
1490sub _try_refkind {
1491 my ($self, $data) = @_;
1492 my @try = ($self->_refkind($data));
1493 push @try, 'SCALAR_or_UNDEF' if $try[0] eq 'SCALAR' || $try[0] eq 'UNDEF';
1494 push @try, 'FALLBACK';
955e77ca 1495 return \@try;
96449e8e 1496}
1497
1498sub _METHOD_FOR_refkind {
1499 my ($self, $meth_prefix, $data) = @_;
f39eaa60 1500
1501 my $method;
955e77ca 1502 for (@{$self->_try_refkind($data)}) {
f39eaa60 1503 $method = $self->can($meth_prefix."_".$_)
1504 and last;
1505 }
1506
1507 return $method || puke "cannot dispatch on '$meth_prefix' for ".$self->_refkind($data);
96449e8e 1508}
1509
1510
1511sub _SWITCH_refkind {
1512 my ($self, $data, $dispatch_table) = @_;
1513
f39eaa60 1514 my $coderef;
955e77ca 1515 for (@{$self->_try_refkind($data)}) {
f39eaa60 1516 $coderef = $dispatch_table->{$_}
1517 and last;
1518 }
1519
1520 puke "no dispatch entry for ".$self->_refkind($data)
1521 unless $coderef;
1522
96449e8e 1523 $coderef->();
1524}
1525
1526
1527
1528
1529#======================================================================
1530# VALUES, GENERATE, AUTOLOAD
1531#======================================================================
1532
1533# LDNOTE: original code from nwiger, didn't touch code in that section
1534# I feel the AUTOLOAD stuff should not be the default, it should
1535# only be activated on explicit demand by user.
1536
1537sub values {
1538 my $self = shift;
1539 my $data = shift || return;
1540 puke "Argument to ", __PACKAGE__, "->values must be a \\%hash"
1541 unless ref $data eq 'HASH';
bab725ce 1542
1543 my @all_bind;
ca4f826a 1544 foreach my $k (sort keys %$data) {
bab725ce 1545 my $v = $data->{$k};
1546 $self->_SWITCH_refkind($v, {
9d48860e 1547 ARRAYREF => sub {
bab725ce 1548 if ($self->{array_datatypes}) { # array datatype
1549 push @all_bind, $self->_bindtype($k, $v);
1550 }
1551 else { # literal SQL with bind
1552 my ($sql, @bind) = @$v;
1553 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype(@bind);
1554 push @all_bind, @bind;
1555 }
1556 },
1557 ARRAYREFREF => sub { # literal SQL with bind
1558 my ($sql, @bind) = @${$v};
1559 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype(@bind);
1560 push @all_bind, @bind;
1561 },
1562 SCALARREF => sub { # literal SQL without bind
1563 },
1564 SCALAR_or_UNDEF => sub {
1565 push @all_bind, $self->_bindtype($k, $v);
1566 },
1567 });
1568 }
1569
1570 return @all_bind;
96449e8e 1571}
1572
1573sub generate {
1574 my $self = shift;
1575
1576 my(@sql, @sqlq, @sqlv);
1577
1578 for (@_) {
1579 my $ref = ref $_;
1580 if ($ref eq 'HASH') {
1581 for my $k (sort keys %$_) {
1582 my $v = $_->{$k};
1583 my $r = ref $v;
1584 my $label = $self->_quote($k);
1585 if ($r eq 'ARRAY') {
fe3ae272 1586 # literal SQL with bind
1587 my ($sql, @bind) = @$v;
1588 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype(@bind);
96449e8e 1589 push @sqlq, "$label = $sql";
fe3ae272 1590 push @sqlv, @bind;
96449e8e 1591 } elsif ($r eq 'SCALAR') {
fe3ae272 1592 # literal SQL without bind
96449e8e 1593 push @sqlq, "$label = $$v";
9d48860e 1594 } else {
96449e8e 1595 push @sqlq, "$label = ?";
1596 push @sqlv, $self->_bindtype($k, $v);
1597 }
1598 }
1599 push @sql, $self->_sqlcase('set'), join ', ', @sqlq;
1600 } elsif ($ref eq 'ARRAY') {
1601 # unlike insert(), assume these are ONLY the column names, i.e. for SQL
1602 for my $v (@$_) {
1603 my $r = ref $v;
fe3ae272 1604 if ($r eq 'ARRAY') { # literal SQL with bind
1605 my ($sql, @bind) = @$v;
1606 $self->_assert_bindval_matches_bindtype(@bind);
1607 push @sqlq, $sql;
1608 push @sqlv, @bind;
1609 } elsif ($r eq 'SCALAR') { # literal SQL without bind
96449e8e 1610 # embedded literal SQL
1611 push @sqlq, $$v;
9d48860e 1612 } else {
96449e8e 1613 push @sqlq, '?';
1614 push @sqlv, $v;
1615 }
1616 }
1617 push @sql, '(' . join(', ', @sqlq) . ')';
1618 } elsif ($ref eq 'SCALAR') {
1619 # literal SQL
1620 push @sql, $$_;
1621 } else {
1622 # strings get case twiddled
1623 push @sql, $self->_sqlcase($_);
1624 }
1625 }
1626
1627 my $sql = join ' ', @sql;
1628
1629 # this is pretty tricky
1630 # if ask for an array, return ($stmt, @bind)
1631 # otherwise, s/?/shift @sqlv/ to put it inline
1632 if (wantarray) {
1633 return ($sql, @sqlv);
1634 } else {
1635 1 while $sql =~ s/\?/my $d = shift(@sqlv);
1636 ref $d ? $d->[1] : $d/e;
1637 return $sql;
1638 }
1639}
1640
1641
1642sub DESTROY { 1 }
1643
1644sub AUTOLOAD {
1645 # This allows us to check for a local, then _form, attr
1646 my $self = shift;
1647 my($name) = $AUTOLOAD =~ /.*::(.+)/;
1648 return $self->generate($name, @_);
1649}
1650
16511;
1652
1653
1654
1655__END__
32eab2da 1656
1657=head1 NAME
1658
1659SQL::Abstract - Generate SQL from Perl data structures
1660
1661=head1 SYNOPSIS
1662
1663 use SQL::Abstract;
1664
1665 my $sql = SQL::Abstract->new;
1666
85783f3c 1667 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->select($source, \@fields, \%where, $order);
32eab2da 1668
1669 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->insert($table, \%fieldvals || \@values);
1670
1671 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->update($table, \%fieldvals, \%where);
1672
1673 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->delete($table, \%where);
1674
1675 # Then, use these in your DBI statements
1676 my $sth = $dbh->prepare($stmt);
1677 $sth->execute(@bind);
1678
1679 # Just generate the WHERE clause
85783f3c 1680 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->where(\%where, $order);
32eab2da 1681
1682 # Return values in the same order, for hashed queries
1683 # See PERFORMANCE section for more details
1684 my @bind = $sql->values(\%fieldvals);
1685
1686=head1 DESCRIPTION
1687
1688This module was inspired by the excellent L<DBIx::Abstract>.
1689However, in using that module I found that what I really wanted
1690to do was generate SQL, but still retain complete control over my
1691statement handles and use the DBI interface. So, I set out to
1692create an abstract SQL generation module.
1693
1694While based on the concepts used by L<DBIx::Abstract>, there are
1695several important differences, especially when it comes to WHERE
1696clauses. I have modified the concepts used to make the SQL easier
1697to generate from Perl data structures and, IMO, more intuitive.
1698The underlying idea is for this module to do what you mean, based
1699on the data structures you provide it. The big advantage is that
1700you don't have to modify your code every time your data changes,
1701as this module figures it out.
1702
1703To begin with, an SQL INSERT is as easy as just specifying a hash
1704of C<key=value> pairs:
1705
1706 my %data = (
1707 name => 'Jimbo Bobson',
1708 phone => '123-456-7890',
1709 address => '42 Sister Lane',
1710 city => 'St. Louis',
1711 state => 'Louisiana',
1712 );
1713
1714The SQL can then be generated with this:
1715
1716 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->insert('people', \%data);
1717
1718Which would give you something like this:
1719
1720 $stmt = "INSERT INTO people
1721 (address, city, name, phone, state)
1722 VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?)";
1723 @bind = ('42 Sister Lane', 'St. Louis', 'Jimbo Bobson',
1724 '123-456-7890', 'Louisiana');
1725
1726These are then used directly in your DBI code:
1727
1728 my $sth = $dbh->prepare($stmt);
1729 $sth->execute(@bind);
1730
96449e8e 1731=head2 Inserting and Updating Arrays
1732
1733If your database has array types (like for example Postgres),
1734activate the special option C<< array_datatypes => 1 >>
9d48860e 1735when creating the C<SQL::Abstract> object.
96449e8e 1736Then you may use an arrayref to insert and update database array types:
1737
1738 my $sql = SQL::Abstract->new(array_datatypes => 1);
1739 my %data = (
1740 planets => [qw/Mercury Venus Earth Mars/]
1741 );
9d48860e 1742
96449e8e 1743 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->insert('solar_system', \%data);
1744
1745This results in:
1746
1747 $stmt = "INSERT INTO solar_system (planets) VALUES (?)"
1748
1749 @bind = (['Mercury', 'Venus', 'Earth', 'Mars']);
1750
1751
1752=head2 Inserting and Updating SQL
1753
1754In order to apply SQL functions to elements of your C<%data> you may
1755specify a reference to an arrayref for the given hash value. For example,
1756if you need to execute the Oracle C<to_date> function on a value, you can
1757say something like this:
32eab2da 1758
1759 my %data = (
1760 name => 'Bill',
3ae1c5e2 1761 date_entered => \[ "to_date(?,'MM/DD/YYYY')", "03/02/2003" ],
9d48860e 1762 );
32eab2da 1763
1764The first value in the array is the actual SQL. Any other values are
1765optional and would be included in the bind values array. This gives
1766you:
1767
1768 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->insert('people', \%data);
1769
9d48860e 1770 $stmt = "INSERT INTO people (name, date_entered)
32eab2da 1771 VALUES (?, to_date(?,'MM/DD/YYYY'))";
1772 @bind = ('Bill', '03/02/2003');
1773
1774An UPDATE is just as easy, all you change is the name of the function:
1775
1776 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->update('people', \%data);
1777
1778Notice that your C<%data> isn't touched; the module will generate
1779the appropriately quirky SQL for you automatically. Usually you'll
1780want to specify a WHERE clause for your UPDATE, though, which is
1781where handling C<%where> hashes comes in handy...
1782
96449e8e 1783=head2 Complex where statements
1784
32eab2da 1785This module can generate pretty complicated WHERE statements
1786easily. For example, simple C<key=value> pairs are taken to mean
1787equality, and if you want to see if a field is within a set
1788of values, you can use an arrayref. Let's say we wanted to
1789SELECT some data based on this criteria:
1790
1791 my %where = (
1792 requestor => 'inna',
1793 worker => ['nwiger', 'rcwe', 'sfz'],
1794 status => { '!=', 'completed' }
1795 );
1796
1797 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->select('tickets', '*', \%where);
1798
1799The above would give you something like this:
1800
1801 $stmt = "SELECT * FROM tickets WHERE
1802 ( requestor = ? ) AND ( status != ? )
1803 AND ( worker = ? OR worker = ? OR worker = ? )";
1804 @bind = ('inna', 'completed', 'nwiger', 'rcwe', 'sfz');
1805
1806Which you could then use in DBI code like so:
1807
1808 my $sth = $dbh->prepare($stmt);
1809 $sth->execute(@bind);
1810
1811Easy, eh?
1812
0da0fe34 1813=head1 METHODS
32eab2da 1814
13cc86af 1815The methods are simple. There's one for every major SQL operation,
32eab2da 1816and a constructor you use first. The arguments are specified in a
13cc86af 1817similar order for each method (table, then fields, then a where
32eab2da 1818clause) to try and simplify things.
1819
32eab2da 1820=head2 new(option => 'value')
1821
1822The C<new()> function takes a list of options and values, and returns
1823a new B<SQL::Abstract> object which can then be used to generate SQL
1824through the methods below. The options accepted are:
1825
1826=over
1827
1828=item case
1829
1830If set to 'lower', then SQL will be generated in all lowercase. By
1831default SQL is generated in "textbook" case meaning something like:
1832
1833 SELECT a_field FROM a_table WHERE some_field LIKE '%someval%'
1834
96449e8e 1835Any setting other than 'lower' is ignored.
1836
32eab2da 1837=item cmp
1838
1839This determines what the default comparison operator is. By default
1840it is C<=>, meaning that a hash like this:
1841
1842 %where = (name => 'nwiger', email => 'nate@wiger.org');
1843
1844Will generate SQL like this:
1845
1846 WHERE name = 'nwiger' AND email = 'nate@wiger.org'
1847
1848However, you may want loose comparisons by default, so if you set
1849C<cmp> to C<like> you would get SQL such as:
1850
1851 WHERE name like 'nwiger' AND email like 'nate@wiger.org'
1852
3af02ccb 1853You can also override the comparison on an individual basis - see
32eab2da 1854the huge section on L</"WHERE CLAUSES"> at the bottom.
1855
96449e8e 1856=item sqltrue, sqlfalse
1857
1858Expressions for inserting boolean values within SQL statements.
6e0c6552 1859By default these are C<1=1> and C<1=0>. They are used
1860by the special operators C<-in> and C<-not_in> for generating
1861correct SQL even when the argument is an empty array (see below).
96449e8e 1862
32eab2da 1863=item logic
1864
1865This determines the default logical operator for multiple WHERE
7cac25e6 1866statements in arrays or hashes. If absent, the default logic is "or"
1867for arrays, and "and" for hashes. This means that a WHERE
32eab2da 1868array of the form:
1869
1870 @where = (
9d48860e 1871 event_date => {'>=', '2/13/99'},
1872 event_date => {'<=', '4/24/03'},
32eab2da 1873 );
1874
7cac25e6 1875will generate SQL like this:
32eab2da 1876
1877 WHERE event_date >= '2/13/99' OR event_date <= '4/24/03'
1878
1879This is probably not what you want given this query, though (look
1880at the dates). To change the "OR" to an "AND", simply specify:
1881
1882 my $sql = SQL::Abstract->new(logic => 'and');
1883
1884Which will change the above C<WHERE> to:
1885
1886 WHERE event_date >= '2/13/99' AND event_date <= '4/24/03'
1887
96449e8e 1888The logic can also be changed locally by inserting
be21dde3 1889a modifier in front of an arrayref:
96449e8e 1890
9d48860e 1891 @where = (-and => [event_date => {'>=', '2/13/99'},
7cac25e6 1892 event_date => {'<=', '4/24/03'} ]);
96449e8e 1893
1894See the L</"WHERE CLAUSES"> section for explanations.
1895
32eab2da 1896=item convert
1897
1898This will automatically convert comparisons using the specified SQL
1899function for both column and value. This is mostly used with an argument
1900of C<upper> or C<lower>, so that the SQL will have the effect of
1901case-insensitive "searches". For example, this:
1902
1903 $sql = SQL::Abstract->new(convert => 'upper');
1904 %where = (keywords => 'MaKe iT CAse inSeNSItive');
1905
1906Will turn out the following SQL:
1907
1908 WHERE upper(keywords) like upper('MaKe iT CAse inSeNSItive')
1909
1910The conversion can be C<upper()>, C<lower()>, or any other SQL function
1911that can be applied symmetrically to fields (actually B<SQL::Abstract> does
1912not validate this option; it will just pass through what you specify verbatim).
1913
1914=item bindtype
1915
1916This is a kludge because many databases suck. For example, you can't
1917just bind values using DBI's C<execute()> for Oracle C<CLOB> or C<BLOB> fields.
1918Instead, you have to use C<bind_param()>:
1919
1920 $sth->bind_param(1, 'reg data');
1921 $sth->bind_param(2, $lots, {ora_type => ORA_CLOB});
1922
1923The problem is, B<SQL::Abstract> will normally just return a C<@bind> array,
1924which loses track of which field each slot refers to. Fear not.
1925
1926If you specify C<bindtype> in new, you can determine how C<@bind> is returned.
1927Currently, you can specify either C<normal> (default) or C<columns>. If you
1928specify C<columns>, you will get an array that looks like this:
1929
1930 my $sql = SQL::Abstract->new(bindtype => 'columns');
1931 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->insert(...);
1932
1933 @bind = (
1934 [ 'column1', 'value1' ],
1935 [ 'column2', 'value2' ],
1936 [ 'column3', 'value3' ],
1937 );
1938
1939You can then iterate through this manually, using DBI's C<bind_param()>.
e3f9dff4 1940
32eab2da 1941 $sth->prepare($stmt);
1942 my $i = 1;
1943 for (@bind) {
1944 my($col, $data) = @$_;
1945 if ($col eq 'details' || $col eq 'comments') {
1946 $sth->bind_param($i, $data, {ora_type => ORA_CLOB});
1947 } elsif ($col eq 'image') {
1948 $sth->bind_param($i, $data, {ora_type => ORA_BLOB});
1949 } else {
1950 $sth->bind_param($i, $data);
1951 }
1952 $i++;
1953 }
1954 $sth->execute; # execute without @bind now
1955
1956Now, why would you still use B<SQL::Abstract> if you have to do this crap?
1957Basically, the advantage is still that you don't have to care which fields
1958are or are not included. You could wrap that above C<for> loop in a simple
1959sub called C<bind_fields()> or something and reuse it repeatedly. You still
1960get a layer of abstraction over manual SQL specification.
1961
3ae1c5e2 1962Note that if you set L</bindtype> to C<columns>, the C<\[ $sql, @bind ]>
deb148a2 1963construct (see L</Literal SQL with placeholders and bind values (subqueries)>)
1964will expect the bind values in this format.
1965
32eab2da 1966=item quote_char
1967
1968This is the character that a table or column name will be quoted
9d48860e 1969with. By default this is an empty string, but you could set it to
32eab2da 1970the character C<`>, to generate SQL like this:
1971
1972 SELECT `a_field` FROM `a_table` WHERE `some_field` LIKE '%someval%'
1973
96449e8e 1974Alternatively, you can supply an array ref of two items, the first being the left
1975hand quote character, and the second the right hand quote character. For
1976example, you could supply C<['[',']']> for SQL Server 2000 compliant quotes
1977that generates SQL like this:
1978
1979 SELECT [a_field] FROM [a_table] WHERE [some_field] LIKE '%someval%'
1980
9d48860e 1981Quoting is useful if you have tables or columns names that are reserved
96449e8e 1982words in your database's SQL dialect.
32eab2da 1983
46be4313 1984=item escape_char
1985
1986This is the character that will be used to escape L</quote_char>s appearing
1987in an identifier before it has been quoted.
1988
80790166 1989The parameter default in case of a single L</quote_char> character is the quote
46be4313 1990character itself.
1991
1992When opening-closing-style quoting is used (L</quote_char> is an arrayref)
9de2bd86 1993this parameter defaults to the B<closing (right)> L</quote_char>. Occurrences
46be4313 1994of the B<opening (left)> L</quote_char> within the identifier are currently left
1995untouched. The default for opening-closing-style quotes may change in future
1996versions, thus you are B<strongly encouraged> to specify the escape character
1997explicitly.
1998
32eab2da 1999=item name_sep
2000
2001This is the character that separates a table and column name. It is
2002necessary to specify this when the C<quote_char> option is selected,
2003so that tables and column names can be individually quoted like this:
2004
2005 SELECT `table`.`one_field` FROM `table` WHERE `table`.`other_field` = 1
2006
b6251592 2007=item injection_guard
2008
2009A regular expression C<qr/.../> that is applied to any C<-function> and unquoted
2010column name specified in a query structure. This is a safety mechanism to avoid
2011injection attacks when mishandling user input e.g.:
2012
2013 my %condition_as_column_value_pairs = get_values_from_user();
2014 $sqla->select( ... , \%condition_as_column_value_pairs );
2015
2016If the expression matches an exception is thrown. Note that literal SQL
2017supplied via C<\'...'> or C<\['...']> is B<not> checked in any way.
2018
2019Defaults to checking for C<;> and the C<GO> keyword (TransactSQL)
2020
96449e8e 2021=item array_datatypes
32eab2da 2022
9d48860e 2023When this option is true, arrayrefs in INSERT or UPDATE are
2024interpreted as array datatypes and are passed directly
96449e8e 2025to the DBI layer.
2026When this option is false, arrayrefs are interpreted
2027as literal SQL, just like refs to arrayrefs
2028(but this behavior is for backwards compatibility; when writing
2029new queries, use the "reference to arrayref" syntax
2030for literal SQL).
32eab2da 2031
32eab2da 2032
96449e8e 2033=item special_ops
32eab2da 2034
9d48860e 2035Takes a reference to a list of "special operators"
96449e8e 2036to extend the syntax understood by L<SQL::Abstract>.
2037See section L</"SPECIAL OPERATORS"> for details.
32eab2da 2038
59f23b3d 2039=item unary_ops
2040
9d48860e 2041Takes a reference to a list of "unary operators"
59f23b3d 2042to extend the syntax understood by L<SQL::Abstract>.
2043See section L</"UNARY OPERATORS"> for details.
2044
32eab2da 2045
32eab2da 2046
96449e8e 2047=back
32eab2da 2048
02288357 2049=head2 insert($table, \@values || \%fieldvals, \%options)
32eab2da 2050
2051This is the simplest function. You simply give it a table name
2052and either an arrayref of values or hashref of field/value pairs.
2053It returns an SQL INSERT statement and a list of bind values.
96449e8e 2054See the sections on L</"Inserting and Updating Arrays"> and
2055L</"Inserting and Updating SQL"> for information on how to insert
2056with those data types.
32eab2da 2057
02288357 2058The optional C<\%options> hash reference may contain additional
2059options to generate the insert SQL. Currently supported options
2060are:
2061
2062=over 4
2063
2064=item returning
2065
2066Takes either a scalar of raw SQL fields, or an array reference of
2067field names, and adds on an SQL C<RETURNING> statement at the end.
2068This allows you to return data generated by the insert statement
2069(such as row IDs) without performing another C<SELECT> statement.
2070Note, however, this is not part of the SQL standard and may not
2071be supported by all database engines.
2072
2073=back
2074
95904db5 2075=head2 update($table, \%fieldvals, \%where, \%options)
32eab2da 2076
2077This takes a table, hashref of field/value pairs, and an optional
86298391 2078hashref L<WHERE clause|/WHERE CLAUSES>. It returns an SQL UPDATE function and a list
32eab2da 2079of bind values.
96449e8e 2080See the sections on L</"Inserting and Updating Arrays"> and
2081L</"Inserting and Updating SQL"> for information on how to insert
2082with those data types.
32eab2da 2083
95904db5 2084The optional C<\%options> hash reference may contain additional
2085options to generate the update SQL. Currently supported options
2086are:
2087
2088=over 4
2089
2090=item returning
2091
2092See the C<returning> option to
2093L<insert|/insert($table, \@values || \%fieldvals, \%options)>.
2094
2095=back
2096
96449e8e 2097=head2 select($source, $fields, $where, $order)
32eab2da 2098
9d48860e 2099This returns a SQL SELECT statement and associated list of bind values, as
be21dde3 2100specified by the arguments:
32eab2da 2101
96449e8e 2102=over
32eab2da 2103
96449e8e 2104=item $source
32eab2da 2105
9d48860e 2106Specification of the 'FROM' part of the statement.
96449e8e 2107The argument can be either a plain scalar (interpreted as a table
2108name, will be quoted), or an arrayref (interpreted as a list
2109of table names, joined by commas, quoted), or a scalarref
063097a3 2110(literal SQL, not quoted).
32eab2da 2111
96449e8e 2112=item $fields
32eab2da 2113
9d48860e 2114Specification of the list of fields to retrieve from
96449e8e 2115the source.
2116The argument can be either an arrayref (interpreted as a list
9d48860e 2117of field names, will be joined by commas and quoted), or a
96449e8e 2118plain scalar (literal SQL, not quoted).
521647e7 2119Please observe that this API is not as flexible as that of
2120the first argument C<$source>, for backwards compatibility reasons.
32eab2da 2121
96449e8e 2122=item $where
32eab2da 2123
96449e8e 2124Optional argument to specify the WHERE part of the query.
2125The argument is most often a hashref, but can also be
9d48860e 2126an arrayref or plain scalar --
96449e8e 2127see section L<WHERE clause|/"WHERE CLAUSES"> for details.
32eab2da 2128
96449e8e 2129=item $order
32eab2da 2130
96449e8e 2131Optional argument to specify the ORDER BY part of the query.
9d48860e 2132The argument can be a scalar, a hashref or an arrayref
96449e8e 2133-- see section L<ORDER BY clause|/"ORDER BY CLAUSES">
2134for details.
32eab2da 2135
96449e8e 2136=back
32eab2da 2137
32eab2da 2138
85327cd5 2139=head2 delete($table, \%where, \%options)
32eab2da 2140
86298391 2141This takes a table name and optional hashref L<WHERE clause|/WHERE CLAUSES>.
32eab2da 2142It returns an SQL DELETE statement and list of bind values.
2143
85327cd5 2144The optional C<\%options> hash reference may contain additional
2145options to generate the delete SQL. Currently supported options
2146are:
2147
2148=over 4
2149
2150=item returning
2151
2152See the C<returning> option to
2153L<insert|/insert($table, \@values || \%fieldvals, \%options)>.
2154
2155=back
2156
85783f3c 2157=head2 where(\%where, $order)
32eab2da 2158
2159This is used to generate just the WHERE clause. For example,
2160if you have an arbitrary data structure and know what the
2161rest of your SQL is going to look like, but want an easy way
2162to produce a WHERE clause, use this. It returns an SQL WHERE
2163clause and list of bind values.
2164
32eab2da 2165
2166=head2 values(\%data)
2167
2168This just returns the values from the hash C<%data>, in the same
2169order that would be returned from any of the other above queries.
2170Using this allows you to markedly speed up your queries if you
2171are affecting lots of rows. See below under the L</"PERFORMANCE"> section.
2172
32eab2da 2173=head2 generate($any, 'number', $of, \@data, $struct, \%types)
2174
2175Warning: This is an experimental method and subject to change.
2176
2177This returns arbitrarily generated SQL. It's a really basic shortcut.
2178It will return two different things, depending on return context:
2179
2180 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->generate('create table', \$table, \@fields);
2181 my $stmt_and_val = $sql->generate('create table', \$table, \@fields);
2182
2183These would return the following:
2184
2185 # First calling form
2186 $stmt = "CREATE TABLE test (?, ?)";
2187 @bind = (field1, field2);
2188
2189 # Second calling form
2190 $stmt_and_val = "CREATE TABLE test (field1, field2)";
2191
2192Depending on what you're trying to do, it's up to you to choose the correct
2193format. In this example, the second form is what you would want.
2194
2195By the same token:
2196
2197 $sql->generate('alter session', { nls_date_format => 'MM/YY' });
2198
2199Might give you:
2200
2201 ALTER SESSION SET nls_date_format = 'MM/YY'
2202
2203You get the idea. Strings get their case twiddled, but everything
2204else remains verbatim.
2205
0da0fe34 2206=head1 EXPORTABLE FUNCTIONS
2207
2208=head2 is_plain_value
2209
2210Determines if the supplied argument is a plain value as understood by this
2211module:
2212
2213=over
2214
2215=item * The value is C<undef>
2216
2217=item * The value is a non-reference
2218
2219=item * The value is an object with stringification overloading
2220
2221=item * The value is of the form C<< { -value => $anything } >>
2222
2223=back
2224
9de2bd86 2225On failure returns C<undef>, on success returns a B<scalar> reference
966200cc 2226to the original supplied argument.
0da0fe34 2227
843a94b5 2228=over
2229
2230=item * Note
2231
2232The stringification overloading detection is rather advanced: it takes
2233into consideration not only the presence of a C<""> overload, but if that
2234fails also checks for enabled
2235L<autogenerated versions of C<"">|overload/Magic Autogeneration>, based
2236on either C<0+> or C<bool>.
2237
2238Unfortunately testing in the field indicates that this
2239detection B<< may tickle a latent bug in perl versions before 5.018 >>,
2240but only when very large numbers of stringifying objects are involved.
2241At the time of writing ( Sep 2014 ) there is no clear explanation of
2242the direct cause, nor is there a manageably small test case that reliably
2243reproduces the problem.
2244
2245If you encounter any of the following exceptions in B<random places within
2246your application stack> - this module may be to blame:
2247
2248 Operation "ne": no method found,
2249 left argument in overloaded package <something>,
2250 right argument in overloaded package <something>
2251
2252or perhaps even
2253
2254 Stub found while resolving method "???" overloading """" in package <something>
2255
2256If you fall victim to the above - please attempt to reduce the problem
2257to something that could be sent to the L<SQL::Abstract developers
1f490ae4 2258|DBIx::Class/GETTING HELP/SUPPORT>
843a94b5 2259(either publicly or privately). As a workaround in the meantime you can
2260set C<$ENV{SQLA_ISVALUE_IGNORE_AUTOGENERATED_STRINGIFICATION}> to a true
2261value, which will most likely eliminate your problem (at the expense of
2262not being able to properly detect exotic forms of stringification).
2263
2264This notice and environment variable will be removed in a future version,
2265as soon as the underlying problem is found and a reliable workaround is
2266devised.
2267
2268=back
2269
0da0fe34 2270=head2 is_literal_value
2271
2272Determines if the supplied argument is a literal value as understood by this
2273module:
2274
2275=over
2276
2277=item * C<\$sql_string>
2278
2279=item * C<\[ $sql_string, @bind_values ]>
2280
0da0fe34 2281=back
2282
9de2bd86 2283On failure returns C<undef>, on success returns an B<array> reference
966200cc 2284containing the unpacked version of the supplied literal SQL and bind values.
0da0fe34 2285
32eab2da 2286=head1 WHERE CLAUSES
2287
96449e8e 2288=head2 Introduction
2289
32eab2da 2290This module uses a variation on the idea from L<DBIx::Abstract>. It
2291is B<NOT>, repeat I<not> 100% compatible. B<The main logic of this
2292module is that things in arrays are OR'ed, and things in hashes
2293are AND'ed.>
2294
2295The easiest way to explain is to show lots of examples. After
2296each C<%where> hash shown, it is assumed you used:
2297
2298 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->where(\%where);
2299
2300However, note that the C<%where> hash can be used directly in any
2301of the other functions as well, as described above.
2302
96449e8e 2303=head2 Key-value pairs
2304
32eab2da 2305So, let's get started. To begin, a simple hash:
2306
2307 my %where = (
2308 user => 'nwiger',
2309 status => 'completed'
2310 );
2311
2312Is converted to SQL C<key = val> statements:
2313
2314 $stmt = "WHERE user = ? AND status = ?";
2315 @bind = ('nwiger', 'completed');
2316
2317One common thing I end up doing is having a list of values that
2318a field can be in. To do this, simply specify a list inside of
2319an arrayref:
2320
2321 my %where = (
2322 user => 'nwiger',
2323 status => ['assigned', 'in-progress', 'pending'];
2324 );
2325
2326This simple code will create the following:
9d48860e 2327
32eab2da 2328 $stmt = "WHERE user = ? AND ( status = ? OR status = ? OR status = ? )";
2329 @bind = ('nwiger', 'assigned', 'in-progress', 'pending');
2330
9d48860e 2331A field associated to an empty arrayref will be considered a
7cac25e6 2332logical false and will generate 0=1.
8a68b5be 2333
b864ba9b 2334=head2 Tests for NULL values
2335
2336If the value part is C<undef> then this is converted to SQL <IS NULL>
2337
2338 my %where = (
2339 user => 'nwiger',
2340 status => undef,
2341 );
2342
2343becomes:
2344
2345 $stmt = "WHERE user = ? AND status IS NULL";
2346 @bind = ('nwiger');
2347
e9614080 2348To test if a column IS NOT NULL:
2349
2350 my %where = (
2351 user => 'nwiger',
2352 status => { '!=', undef },
2353 );
cc422895 2354
6e0c6552 2355=head2 Specific comparison operators
96449e8e 2356
32eab2da 2357If you want to specify a different type of operator for your comparison,
2358you can use a hashref for a given column:
2359
2360 my %where = (
2361 user => 'nwiger',
2362 status => { '!=', 'completed' }
2363 );
2364
2365Which would generate:
2366
2367 $stmt = "WHERE user = ? AND status != ?";
2368 @bind = ('nwiger', 'completed');
2369
2370To test against multiple values, just enclose the values in an arrayref:
2371
96449e8e 2372 status => { '=', ['assigned', 'in-progress', 'pending'] };
2373
f2d5020d 2374Which would give you:
96449e8e 2375
2376 "WHERE status = ? OR status = ? OR status = ?"
2377
2378
2379The hashref can also contain multiple pairs, in which case it is expanded
32eab2da 2380into an C<AND> of its elements:
2381
2382 my %where = (
2383 user => 'nwiger',
2384 status => { '!=', 'completed', -not_like => 'pending%' }
2385 );
2386
2387 # Or more dynamically, like from a form
2388 $where{user} = 'nwiger';
2389 $where{status}{'!='} = 'completed';
2390 $where{status}{'-not_like'} = 'pending%';
2391
2392 # Both generate this
2393 $stmt = "WHERE user = ? AND status != ? AND status NOT LIKE ?";
2394 @bind = ('nwiger', 'completed', 'pending%');
2395
96449e8e 2396
32eab2da 2397To get an OR instead, you can combine it with the arrayref idea:
2398
2399 my %where => (
2400 user => 'nwiger',
1a6f2a03 2401 priority => [ { '=', 2 }, { '>', 5 } ]
32eab2da 2402 );
2403
2404Which would generate:
2405
1a6f2a03 2406 $stmt = "WHERE ( priority = ? OR priority > ? ) AND user = ?";
2407 @bind = ('2', '5', 'nwiger');
32eab2da 2408
44b9e502 2409If you want to include literal SQL (with or without bind values), just use a
13cc86af 2410scalar reference or reference to an arrayref as the value:
44b9e502 2411
2412 my %where = (
2413 date_entered => { '>' => \["to_date(?, 'MM/DD/YYYY')", "11/26/2008"] },
2414 date_expires => { '<' => \"now()" }
2415 );
2416
2417Which would generate:
2418
13cc86af 2419 $stmt = "WHERE date_entered > to_date(?, 'MM/DD/YYYY') AND date_expires < now()";
44b9e502 2420 @bind = ('11/26/2008');
2421
96449e8e 2422
2423=head2 Logic and nesting operators
2424
2425In the example above,
2426there is a subtle trap if you want to say something like
32eab2da 2427this (notice the C<AND>):
2428
2429 WHERE priority != ? AND priority != ?
2430
2431Because, in Perl you I<can't> do this:
2432
13cc86af 2433 priority => { '!=' => 2, '!=' => 1 }
32eab2da 2434
2435As the second C<!=> key will obliterate the first. The solution
2436is to use the special C<-modifier> form inside an arrayref:
2437
9d48860e 2438 priority => [ -and => {'!=', 2},
96449e8e 2439 {'!=', 1} ]
2440
32eab2da 2441
2442Normally, these would be joined by C<OR>, but the modifier tells it
2443to use C<AND> instead. (Hint: You can use this in conjunction with the
2444C<logic> option to C<new()> in order to change the way your queries
2445work by default.) B<Important:> Note that the C<-modifier> goes
2446B<INSIDE> the arrayref, as an extra first element. This will
2447B<NOT> do what you think it might:
2448
2449 priority => -and => [{'!=', 2}, {'!=', 1}] # WRONG!
2450
2451Here is a quick list of equivalencies, since there is some overlap:
2452
2453 # Same
2454 status => {'!=', 'completed', 'not like', 'pending%' }
2455 status => [ -and => {'!=', 'completed'}, {'not like', 'pending%'}]
2456
2457 # Same
2458 status => {'=', ['assigned', 'in-progress']}
2459 status => [ -or => {'=', 'assigned'}, {'=', 'in-progress'}]
2460 status => [ {'=', 'assigned'}, {'=', 'in-progress'} ]
2461
e3f9dff4 2462
2463
be21dde3 2464=head2 Special operators: IN, BETWEEN, etc.
96449e8e 2465
32eab2da 2466You can also use the hashref format to compare a list of fields using the
2467C<IN> comparison operator, by specifying the list as an arrayref:
2468
2469 my %where = (
2470 status => 'completed',
2471 reportid => { -in => [567, 2335, 2] }
2472 );
2473
2474Which would generate:
2475
2476 $stmt = "WHERE status = ? AND reportid IN (?,?,?)";
2477 @bind = ('completed', '567', '2335', '2');
2478
9d48860e 2479The reverse operator C<-not_in> generates SQL C<NOT IN> and is used in
96449e8e 2480the same way.
2481
6e0c6552 2482If the argument to C<-in> is an empty array, 'sqlfalse' is generated
be21dde3 2483(by default: C<1=0>). Similarly, C<< -not_in => [] >> generates
2484'sqltrue' (by default: C<1=1>).
6e0c6552 2485
e41c3bdd 2486In addition to the array you can supply a chunk of literal sql or
2487literal sql with bind:
6e0c6552 2488
e41c3bdd 2489 my %where = {
2490 customer => { -in => \[
2491 'SELECT cust_id FROM cust WHERE balance > ?',
2492 2000,
2493 ],
2494 status => { -in => \'SELECT status_codes FROM states' },
2495 };
6e0c6552 2496
e41c3bdd 2497would generate:
2498
2499 $stmt = "WHERE (
2500 customer IN ( SELECT cust_id FROM cust WHERE balance > ? )
2501 AND status IN ( SELECT status_codes FROM states )
2502 )";
2503 @bind = ('2000');
2504
0dfd2442 2505Finally, if the argument to C<-in> is not a reference, it will be
2506treated as a single-element array.
e41c3bdd 2507
2508Another pair of operators is C<-between> and C<-not_between>,
96449e8e 2509used with an arrayref of two values:
32eab2da 2510
2511 my %where = (
2512 user => 'nwiger',
2513 completion_date => {
2514 -not_between => ['2002-10-01', '2003-02-06']
2515 }
2516 );
2517
2518Would give you:
2519
2520 WHERE user = ? AND completion_date NOT BETWEEN ( ? AND ? )
2521
e41c3bdd 2522Just like with C<-in> all plausible combinations of literal SQL
2523are possible:
2524
2525 my %where = {
2526 start0 => { -between => [ 1, 2 ] },
2527 start1 => { -between => \["? AND ?", 1, 2] },
2528 start2 => { -between => \"lower(x) AND upper(y)" },
9d48860e 2529 start3 => { -between => [
e41c3bdd 2530 \"lower(x)",
2531 \["upper(?)", 'stuff' ],
2532 ] },
2533 };
2534
2535Would give you:
2536
2537 $stmt = "WHERE (
2538 ( start0 BETWEEN ? AND ? )
2539 AND ( start1 BETWEEN ? AND ? )
2540 AND ( start2 BETWEEN lower(x) AND upper(y) )
2541 AND ( start3 BETWEEN lower(x) AND upper(?) )
2542 )";
2543 @bind = (1, 2, 1, 2, 'stuff');
2544
2545
9d48860e 2546These are the two builtin "special operators"; but the
be21dde3 2547list can be expanded: see section L</"SPECIAL OPERATORS"> below.
96449e8e 2548
59f23b3d 2549=head2 Unary operators: bool
97a920ef 2550
2551If you wish to test against boolean columns or functions within your
2552database you can use the C<-bool> and C<-not_bool> operators. For
2553example to test the column C<is_user> being true and the column
827bb0eb 2554C<is_enabled> being false you would use:-
97a920ef 2555
2556 my %where = (
2557 -bool => 'is_user',
2558 -not_bool => 'is_enabled',
2559 );
2560
2561Would give you:
2562
277b5d3f 2563 WHERE is_user AND NOT is_enabled
97a920ef 2564
0b604e9d 2565If a more complex combination is required, testing more conditions,
2566then you should use the and/or operators:-
2567
2568 my %where = (
2569 -and => [
2570 -bool => 'one',
23401b81 2571 -not_bool => { two=> { -rlike => 'bar' } },
2572 -not_bool => { three => [ { '=', 2 }, { '>', 5 } ] },
0b604e9d 2573 ],
2574 );
2575
2576Would give you:
2577
23401b81 2578 WHERE
2579 one
2580 AND
2581 (NOT two RLIKE ?)
2582 AND
2583 (NOT ( three = ? OR three > ? ))
97a920ef 2584
2585
107b72f1 2586=head2 Nested conditions, -and/-or prefixes
96449e8e 2587
32eab2da 2588So far, we've seen how multiple conditions are joined with a top-level
2589C<AND>. We can change this by putting the different conditions we want in
2590hashes and then putting those hashes in an array. For example:
2591
2592 my @where = (
2593 {
2594 user => 'nwiger',
2595 status => { -like => ['pending%', 'dispatched'] },
2596 },
2597 {
2598 user => 'robot',
2599 status => 'unassigned',
2600 }
2601 );
2602
2603This data structure would create the following:
2604
2605 $stmt = "WHERE ( user = ? AND ( status LIKE ? OR status LIKE ? ) )
2606 OR ( user = ? AND status = ? ) )";
2607 @bind = ('nwiger', 'pending', 'dispatched', 'robot', 'unassigned');
2608
107b72f1 2609
48d9f5f8 2610Clauses in hashrefs or arrayrefs can be prefixed with an C<-and> or C<-or>
be21dde3 2611to change the logic inside:
32eab2da 2612
2613 my @where = (
2614 -and => [
2615 user => 'nwiger',
48d9f5f8 2616 [
2617 -and => [ workhrs => {'>', 20}, geo => 'ASIA' ],
2618 -or => { workhrs => {'<', 50}, geo => 'EURO' },
32eab2da 2619 ],
2620 ],
2621 );
2622
2623That would yield:
2624
13cc86af 2625 $stmt = "WHERE ( user = ?
2626 AND ( ( workhrs > ? AND geo = ? )
2627 OR ( workhrs < ? OR geo = ? ) ) )";
2628 @bind = ('nwiger', '20', 'ASIA', '50', 'EURO');
107b72f1 2629
cc422895 2630=head3 Algebraic inconsistency, for historical reasons
107b72f1 2631
7cac25e6 2632C<Important note>: when connecting several conditions, the C<-and->|C<-or>
2633operator goes C<outside> of the nested structure; whereas when connecting
2634several constraints on one column, the C<-and> operator goes
be21dde3 2635C<inside> the arrayref. Here is an example combining both features:
7cac25e6 2636
2637 my @where = (
2638 -and => [a => 1, b => 2],
2639 -or => [c => 3, d => 4],
2640 e => [-and => {-like => 'foo%'}, {-like => '%bar'} ]
2641 )
2642
2643yielding
2644
9d48860e 2645 WHERE ( ( ( a = ? AND b = ? )
2646 OR ( c = ? OR d = ? )
7cac25e6 2647 OR ( e LIKE ? AND e LIKE ? ) ) )
2648
107b72f1 2649This difference in syntax is unfortunate but must be preserved for
be21dde3 2650historical reasons. So be careful: the two examples below would
107b72f1 2651seem algebraically equivalent, but they are not
2652
a948b1fe 2653 { col => [ -and =>
2654 { -like => 'foo%' },
2655 { -like => '%bar' },
2656 ] }
be21dde3 2657 # yields: WHERE ( ( col LIKE ? AND col LIKE ? ) )
107b72f1 2658
a948b1fe 2659 [ -and =>
2660 { col => { -like => 'foo%' } },
2661 { col => { -like => '%bar' } },
2662 ]
be21dde3 2663 # yields: WHERE ( ( col LIKE ? OR col LIKE ? ) )
107b72f1 2664
7cac25e6 2665
cc422895 2666=head2 Literal SQL and value type operators
96449e8e 2667
cc422895 2668The basic premise of SQL::Abstract is that in WHERE specifications the "left
2669side" is a column name and the "right side" is a value (normally rendered as
2670a placeholder). This holds true for both hashrefs and arrayref pairs as you
2671see in the L</WHERE CLAUSES> examples above. Sometimes it is necessary to
2672alter this behavior. There are several ways of doing so.
e9614080 2673
cc422895 2674=head3 -ident
2675
2676This is a virtual operator that signals the string to its right side is an
2677identifier (a column name) and not a value. For example to compare two
2678columns you would write:
32eab2da 2679
e9614080 2680 my %where = (
2681 priority => { '<', 2 },
cc422895 2682 requestor => { -ident => 'submitter' },
e9614080 2683 );
2684
2685which creates:
2686
2687 $stmt = "WHERE priority < ? AND requestor = submitter";
2688 @bind = ('2');
2689
cc422895 2690If you are maintaining legacy code you may see a different construct as
2691described in L</Deprecated usage of Literal SQL>, please use C<-ident> in new
2692code.
2693
2694=head3 -value
e9614080 2695
cc422895 2696This is a virtual operator that signals that the construct to its right side
2697is a value to be passed to DBI. This is for example necessary when you want
2698to write a where clause against an array (for RDBMS that support such
2699datatypes). For example:
e9614080 2700
32eab2da 2701 my %where = (
cc422895 2702 array => { -value => [1, 2, 3] }
32eab2da 2703 );
2704
cc422895 2705will result in:
32eab2da 2706
cc422895 2707 $stmt = 'WHERE array = ?';
2708 @bind = ([1, 2, 3]);
32eab2da 2709
cc422895 2710Note that if you were to simply say:
32eab2da 2711
2712 my %where = (
cc422895 2713 array => [1, 2, 3]
32eab2da 2714 );
2715
3af02ccb 2716the result would probably not be what you wanted:
cc422895 2717
2718 $stmt = 'WHERE array = ? OR array = ? OR array = ?';
2719 @bind = (1, 2, 3);
2720
2721=head3 Literal SQL
96449e8e 2722
cc422895 2723Finally, sometimes only literal SQL will do. To include a random snippet
2724of SQL verbatim, you specify it as a scalar reference. Consider this only
2725as a last resort. Usually there is a better way. For example:
96449e8e 2726
2727 my %where = (
cc422895 2728 priority => { '<', 2 },
2729 requestor => { -in => \'(SELECT name FROM hitmen)' },
96449e8e 2730 );
2731
cc422895 2732Would create:
96449e8e 2733
cc422895 2734 $stmt = "WHERE priority < ? AND requestor IN (SELECT name FROM hitmen)"
2735 @bind = (2);
2736
2737Note that in this example, you only get one bind parameter back, since
2738the verbatim SQL is passed as part of the statement.
2739
2740=head4 CAVEAT
2741
2742 Never use untrusted input as a literal SQL argument - this is a massive
2743 security risk (there is no way to check literal snippets for SQL
2744 injections and other nastyness). If you need to deal with untrusted input
2745 use literal SQL with placeholders as described next.
96449e8e 2746
cc422895 2747=head3 Literal SQL with placeholders and bind values (subqueries)
96449e8e 2748
2749If the literal SQL to be inserted has placeholders and bind values,
2750use a reference to an arrayref (yes this is a double reference --
2751not so common, but perfectly legal Perl). For example, to find a date
2752in Postgres you can use something like this:
2753
2754 my %where = (
3ae1c5e2 2755 date_column => \[ "= date '2008-09-30' - ?::integer", 10 ]
96449e8e 2756 )
2757
2758This would create:
2759
d2a8fe1a 2760 $stmt = "WHERE ( date_column = date '2008-09-30' - ?::integer )"
96449e8e 2761 @bind = ('10');
2762
deb148a2 2763Note that you must pass the bind values in the same format as they are returned
85783f3c 2764by L<where|/where(\%where, $order)>. This means that if you set L</bindtype>
1f490ae4 2765to C<columns>, you must provide the bind values in the
2766C<< [ column_meta => value ] >> format, where C<column_meta> is an opaque
2767scalar value; most commonly the column name, but you can use any scalar value
2768(including references and blessed references), L<SQL::Abstract> will simply
2769pass it through intact. So if C<bindtype> is set to C<columns> the above
2770example will look like:
deb148a2 2771
2772 my %where = (
3ae1c5e2 2773 date_column => \[ "= date '2008-09-30' - ?::integer", [ {} => 10 ] ]
deb148a2 2774 )
96449e8e 2775
2776Literal SQL is especially useful for nesting parenthesized clauses in the
be21dde3 2777main SQL query. Here is a first example:
96449e8e 2778
2779 my ($sub_stmt, @sub_bind) = ("SELECT c1 FROM t1 WHERE c2 < ? AND c3 LIKE ?",
2780 100, "foo%");
2781 my %where = (
2782 foo => 1234,
2783 bar => \["IN ($sub_stmt)" => @sub_bind],
2784 );
2785
be21dde3 2786This yields:
96449e8e 2787
9d48860e 2788 $stmt = "WHERE (foo = ? AND bar IN (SELECT c1 FROM t1
96449e8e 2789 WHERE c2 < ? AND c3 LIKE ?))";
2790 @bind = (1234, 100, "foo%");
2791
9d48860e 2792Other subquery operators, like for example C<"E<gt> ALL"> or C<"NOT IN">,
96449e8e 2793are expressed in the same way. Of course the C<$sub_stmt> and
9d48860e 2794its associated bind values can be generated through a former call
96449e8e 2795to C<select()> :
2796
2797 my ($sub_stmt, @sub_bind)
9d48860e 2798 = $sql->select("t1", "c1", {c2 => {"<" => 100},
96449e8e 2799 c3 => {-like => "foo%"}});
2800 my %where = (
2801 foo => 1234,
2802 bar => \["> ALL ($sub_stmt)" => @sub_bind],
2803 );
2804
2805In the examples above, the subquery was used as an operator on a column;
9d48860e 2806but the same principle also applies for a clause within the main C<%where>
be21dde3 2807hash, like an EXISTS subquery:
96449e8e 2808
9d48860e 2809 my ($sub_stmt, @sub_bind)
96449e8e 2810 = $sql->select("t1", "*", {c1 => 1, c2 => \"> t0.c0"});
48d9f5f8 2811 my %where = ( -and => [
96449e8e 2812 foo => 1234,
48d9f5f8 2813 \["EXISTS ($sub_stmt)" => @sub_bind],
2814 ]);
96449e8e 2815
2816which yields
2817
9d48860e 2818 $stmt = "WHERE (foo = ? AND EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t1
96449e8e 2819 WHERE c1 = ? AND c2 > t0.c0))";
2820 @bind = (1234, 1);
2821
2822
9d48860e 2823Observe that the condition on C<c2> in the subquery refers to
be21dde3 2824column C<t0.c0> of the main query: this is I<not> a bind
9d48860e 2825value, so we have to express it through a scalar ref.
96449e8e 2826Writing C<< c2 => {">" => "t0.c0"} >> would have generated
2827C<< c2 > ? >> with bind value C<"t0.c0"> ... not exactly
2828what we wanted here.
2829
96449e8e 2830Finally, here is an example where a subquery is used
2831for expressing unary negation:
2832
9d48860e 2833 my ($sub_stmt, @sub_bind)
96449e8e 2834 = $sql->where({age => [{"<" => 10}, {">" => 20}]});
2835 $sub_stmt =~ s/^ where //i; # don't want "WHERE" in the subclause
2836 my %where = (
2837 lname => {like => '%son%'},
48d9f5f8 2838 \["NOT ($sub_stmt)" => @sub_bind],
96449e8e 2839 );
2840
2841This yields
2842
2843 $stmt = "lname LIKE ? AND NOT ( age < ? OR age > ? )"
2844 @bind = ('%son%', 10, 20)
2845
cc422895 2846=head3 Deprecated usage of Literal SQL
2847
2848Below are some examples of archaic use of literal SQL. It is shown only as
2849reference for those who deal with legacy code. Each example has a much
2850better, cleaner and safer alternative that users should opt for in new code.
2851
2852=over
2853
2854=item *
2855
2856 my %where = ( requestor => \'IS NOT NULL' )
2857
2858 $stmt = "WHERE requestor IS NOT NULL"
2859
2860This used to be the way of generating NULL comparisons, before the handling
2861of C<undef> got formalized. For new code please use the superior syntax as
2862described in L</Tests for NULL values>.
96449e8e 2863
cc422895 2864=item *
2865
2866 my %where = ( requestor => \'= submitter' )
2867
2868 $stmt = "WHERE requestor = submitter"
2869
2870This used to be the only way to compare columns. Use the superior L</-ident>
2871method for all new code. For example an identifier declared in such a way
2872will be properly quoted if L</quote_char> is properly set, while the legacy
2873form will remain as supplied.
2874
2875=item *
2876
2877 my %where = ( is_ready => \"", completed => { '>', '2012-12-21' } )
2878
2879 $stmt = "WHERE completed > ? AND is_ready"
2880 @bind = ('2012-12-21')
2881
2882Using an empty string literal used to be the only way to express a boolean.
2883For all new code please use the much more readable
2884L<-bool|/Unary operators: bool> operator.
2885
2886=back
96449e8e 2887
2888=head2 Conclusion
2889
32eab2da 2890These pages could go on for a while, since the nesting of the data
2891structures this module can handle are pretty much unlimited (the
2892module implements the C<WHERE> expansion as a recursive function
2893internally). Your best bet is to "play around" with the module a
2894little to see how the data structures behave, and choose the best
2895format for your data based on that.
2896
2897And of course, all the values above will probably be replaced with
2898variables gotten from forms or the command line. After all, if you
2899knew everything ahead of time, you wouldn't have to worry about
2900dynamically-generating SQL and could just hardwire it into your
2901script.
2902
86298391 2903=head1 ORDER BY CLAUSES
2904
9d48860e 2905Some functions take an order by clause. This can either be a scalar (just a
18710f60 2906column name), a hashref of C<< { -desc => 'col' } >> or C<< { -asc => 'col' }
2907>>, a scalarref, an arrayref-ref, or an arrayref of any of the previous
2908forms. Examples:
1cfa1db3 2909
8c15b421 2910 Given | Will Generate
18710f60 2911 ---------------------------------------------------------------
8c15b421 2912 |
2913 'colA' | ORDER BY colA
2914 |
2915 [qw/colA colB/] | ORDER BY colA, colB
2916 |
2917 {-asc => 'colA'} | ORDER BY colA ASC
2918 |
2919 {-desc => 'colB'} | ORDER BY colB DESC
2920 |
2921 ['colA', {-asc => 'colB'}] | ORDER BY colA, colB ASC
2922 |
2923 { -asc => [qw/colA colB/] } | ORDER BY colA ASC, colB ASC
2924 |
2925 \'colA DESC' | ORDER BY colA DESC
2926 |
2927 \[ 'FUNC(colA, ?)', $x ] | ORDER BY FUNC(colA, ?)
2928 | /* ...with $x bound to ? */
2929 |
bd805d85 2930 [ | ORDER BY
2931 { -asc => 'colA' }, | colA ASC,
2932 { -desc => [qw/colB/] }, | colB DESC,
2933 { -asc => [qw/colC colD/] },| colC ASC, colD ASC,
2934 \'colE DESC', | colE DESC,
2935 \[ 'FUNC(colF, ?)', $x ], | FUNC(colF, ?)
2936 ] | /* ...with $x bound to ? */
18710f60 2937 ===============================================================
86298391 2938
96449e8e 2939
2940
2941=head1 SPECIAL OPERATORS
2942
e3f9dff4 2943 my $sqlmaker = SQL::Abstract->new(special_ops => [
3a2e1a5e 2944 {
2945 regex => qr/.../,
e3f9dff4 2946 handler => sub {
2947 my ($self, $field, $op, $arg) = @_;
2948 ...
3a2e1a5e 2949 },
2950 },
2951 {
2952 regex => qr/.../,
2953 handler => 'method_name',
e3f9dff4 2954 },
2955 ]);
2956
9d48860e 2957A "special operator" is a SQL syntactic clause that can be
e3f9dff4 2958applied to a field, instead of a usual binary operator.
be21dde3 2959For example:
e3f9dff4 2960
2961 WHERE field IN (?, ?, ?)
2962 WHERE field BETWEEN ? AND ?
2963 WHERE MATCH(field) AGAINST (?, ?)
96449e8e 2964
e3f9dff4 2965Special operators IN and BETWEEN are fairly standard and therefore
3a2e1a5e 2966are builtin within C<SQL::Abstract> (as the overridable methods
2967C<_where_field_IN> and C<_where_field_BETWEEN>). For other operators,
2968like the MATCH .. AGAINST example above which is specific to MySQL,
2969you can write your own operator handlers - supply a C<special_ops>
2970argument to the C<new> method. That argument takes an arrayref of
2971operator definitions; each operator definition is a hashref with two
2972entries:
96449e8e 2973
e3f9dff4 2974=over
2975
2976=item regex
2977
2978the regular expression to match the operator
96449e8e 2979
e3f9dff4 2980=item handler
2981
3a2e1a5e 2982Either a coderef or a plain scalar method name. In both cases
2983the expected return is C<< ($sql, @bind) >>.
2984
2985When supplied with a method name, it is simply called on the
13cc86af 2986L<SQL::Abstract> object as:
3a2e1a5e 2987
ca4f826a 2988 $self->$method_name($field, $op, $arg)
3a2e1a5e 2989
2990 Where:
2991
3a2e1a5e 2992 $field is the LHS of the operator
13cc86af 2993 $op is the part that matched the handler regex
3a2e1a5e 2994 $arg is the RHS
2995
2996When supplied with a coderef, it is called as:
2997
2998 $coderef->($self, $field, $op, $arg)
2999
e3f9dff4 3000
3001=back
3002
9d48860e 3003For example, here is an implementation
e3f9dff4 3004of the MATCH .. AGAINST syntax for MySQL
3005
3006 my $sqlmaker = SQL::Abstract->new(special_ops => [
9d48860e 3007
e3f9dff4 3008 # special op for MySql MATCH (field) AGAINST(word1, word2, ...)
9d48860e 3009 {regex => qr/^match$/i,
e3f9dff4 3010 handler => sub {
3011 my ($self, $field, $op, $arg) = @_;
3012 $arg = [$arg] if not ref $arg;
3013 my $label = $self->_quote($field);
3014 my ($placeholder) = $self->_convert('?');
3015 my $placeholders = join ", ", (($placeholder) x @$arg);
3016 my $sql = $self->_sqlcase('match') . " ($label) "
3017 . $self->_sqlcase('against') . " ($placeholders) ";
3018 my @bind = $self->_bindtype($field, @$arg);
3019 return ($sql, @bind);
3020 }
3021 },
9d48860e 3022
e3f9dff4 3023 ]);
96449e8e 3024
3025
59f23b3d 3026=head1 UNARY OPERATORS
3027
112b5232 3028 my $sqlmaker = SQL::Abstract->new(unary_ops => [
59f23b3d 3029 {
3030 regex => qr/.../,
3031 handler => sub {
3032 my ($self, $op, $arg) = @_;
3033 ...
3034 },
3035 },
3036 {
3037 regex => qr/.../,
3038 handler => 'method_name',
3039 },
3040 ]);
3041
9d48860e 3042A "unary operator" is a SQL syntactic clause that can be
59f23b3d 3043applied to a field - the operator goes before the field
3044
3045You can write your own operator handlers - supply a C<unary_ops>
3046argument to the C<new> method. That argument takes an arrayref of
3047operator definitions; each operator definition is a hashref with two
3048entries:
3049
3050=over
3051
3052=item regex
3053
3054the regular expression to match the operator
3055
3056=item handler
3057
3058Either a coderef or a plain scalar method name. In both cases
3059the expected return is C<< $sql >>.
3060
3061When supplied with a method name, it is simply called on the
13cc86af 3062L<SQL::Abstract> object as:
59f23b3d 3063
ca4f826a 3064 $self->$method_name($op, $arg)
59f23b3d 3065
3066 Where:
3067
3068 $op is the part that matched the handler regex
3069 $arg is the RHS or argument of the operator
3070
3071When supplied with a coderef, it is called as:
3072
3073 $coderef->($self, $op, $arg)
3074
3075
3076=back
3077
3078
32eab2da 3079=head1 PERFORMANCE
3080
3081Thanks to some benchmarking by Mark Stosberg, it turns out that
3082this module is many orders of magnitude faster than using C<DBIx::Abstract>.
3083I must admit this wasn't an intentional design issue, but it's a
3084byproduct of the fact that you get to control your C<DBI> handles
3085yourself.
3086
3087To maximize performance, use a code snippet like the following:
3088
3089 # prepare a statement handle using the first row
3090 # and then reuse it for the rest of the rows
3091 my($sth, $stmt);
3092 for my $href (@array_of_hashrefs) {
3093 $stmt ||= $sql->insert('table', $href);
3094 $sth ||= $dbh->prepare($stmt);
3095 $sth->execute($sql->values($href));
3096 }
3097
3098The reason this works is because the keys in your C<$href> are sorted
3099internally by B<SQL::Abstract>. Thus, as long as your data retains
3100the same structure, you only have to generate the SQL the first time
3101around. On subsequent queries, simply use the C<values> function provided
3102by this module to return your values in the correct order.
3103
b864ba9b 3104However this depends on the values having the same type - if, for
3105example, the values of a where clause may either have values
3106(resulting in sql of the form C<column = ?> with a single bind
3107value), or alternatively the values might be C<undef> (resulting in
3108sql of the form C<column IS NULL> with no bind value) then the
3109caching technique suggested will not work.
96449e8e 3110
32eab2da 3111=head1 FORMBUILDER
3112
3113If you use my C<CGI::FormBuilder> module at all, you'll hopefully
3114really like this part (I do, at least). Building up a complex query
3115can be as simple as the following:
3116
3117 #!/usr/bin/perl
3118
46dc2f3e 3119 use warnings;
3120 use strict;
3121
32eab2da 3122 use CGI::FormBuilder;
3123 use SQL::Abstract;
3124
3125 my $form = CGI::FormBuilder->new(...);
3126 my $sql = SQL::Abstract->new;
3127
3128 if ($form->submitted) {
3129 my $field = $form->field;
3130 my $id = delete $field->{id};
3131 my($stmt, @bind) = $sql->update('table', $field, {id => $id});
3132 }
3133
3134Of course, you would still have to connect using C<DBI> to run the
3135query, but the point is that if you make your form look like your
3136table, the actual query script can be extremely simplistic.
3137
3138If you're B<REALLY> lazy (I am), check out C<HTML::QuickTable> for
9d48860e 3139a fast interface to returning and formatting data. I frequently
32eab2da 3140use these three modules together to write complex database query
3141apps in under 50 lines.
3142
af733667 3143=head1 HOW TO CONTRIBUTE
3144
3145Contributions are always welcome, in all usable forms (we especially
3146welcome documentation improvements). The delivery methods include git-
3147or unified-diff formatted patches, GitHub pull requests, or plain bug
3148reports either via RT or the Mailing list. Contributors are generally
3149granted full access to the official repository after their first several
3150patches pass successful review.
3151
3152This project is maintained in a git repository. The code and related tools are
3153accessible at the following locations:
d8cc1792 3154
3155=over
3156
af733667 3157=item * Official repo: L<git://git.shadowcat.co.uk/dbsrgits/SQL-Abstract.git>
3158
3159=item * Official gitweb: L<http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?p=dbsrgits/SQL-Abstract.git>
3160
3161=item * GitHub mirror: L<https://github.com/dbsrgits/sql-abstract>
d8cc1792 3162
af733667 3163=item * Authorized committers: L<ssh://dbsrgits@git.shadowcat.co.uk/SQL-Abstract.git>
d8cc1792 3164
3165=back
32eab2da 3166
96449e8e 3167=head1 CHANGES
3168
3169Version 1.50 was a major internal refactoring of C<SQL::Abstract>.
3170Great care has been taken to preserve the I<published> behavior
3171documented in previous versions in the 1.* family; however,
9d48860e 3172some features that were previously undocumented, or behaved
96449e8e 3173differently from the documentation, had to be changed in order
3174to clarify the semantics. Hence, client code that was relying
9d48860e 3175on some dark areas of C<SQL::Abstract> v1.*
96449e8e 3176B<might behave differently> in v1.50.
32eab2da 3177
be21dde3 3178The main changes are:
d2a8fe1a 3179
96449e8e 3180=over
32eab2da 3181
9d48860e 3182=item *
32eab2da 3183
3ae1c5e2 3184support for literal SQL through the C<< \ [ $sql, @bind ] >> syntax.
96449e8e 3185
3186=item *
3187
145fbfc8 3188support for the { operator => \"..." } construct (to embed literal SQL)
3189
3190=item *
3191
9c37b9c0 3192support for the { operator => \["...", @bind] } construct (to embed literal SQL with bind values)
3193
3194=item *
3195
96449e8e 3196optional support for L<array datatypes|/"Inserting and Updating Arrays">
3197
9d48860e 3198=item *
96449e8e 3199
be21dde3 3200defensive programming: check arguments
96449e8e 3201
3202=item *
3203
3204fixed bug with global logic, which was previously implemented
7cac25e6 3205through global variables yielding side-effects. Prior versions would
96449e8e 3206interpret C<< [ {cond1, cond2}, [cond3, cond4] ] >>
3207as C<< "(cond1 AND cond2) OR (cond3 AND cond4)" >>.
3208Now this is interpreted
3209as C<< "(cond1 AND cond2) OR (cond3 OR cond4)" >>.
3210
96449e8e 3211
3212=item *
3213
3214fixed semantics of _bindtype on array args
3215
9d48860e 3216=item *
96449e8e 3217
3218dropped the C<_anoncopy> of the %where tree. No longer necessary,
3219we just avoid shifting arrays within that tree.
3220
3221=item *
3222
3223dropped the C<_modlogic> function
3224
3225=back
32eab2da 3226
32eab2da 3227=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
3228
3229There are a number of individuals that have really helped out with
3230this module. Unfortunately, most of them submitted bugs via CPAN
3231so I have no idea who they are! But the people I do know are:
3232
9d48860e 3233 Ash Berlin (order_by hash term support)
b643abe1 3234 Matt Trout (DBIx::Class support)
32eab2da 3235 Mark Stosberg (benchmarking)
3236 Chas Owens (initial "IN" operator support)
3237 Philip Collins (per-field SQL functions)
3238 Eric Kolve (hashref "AND" support)
3239 Mike Fragassi (enhancements to "BETWEEN" and "LIKE")
3240 Dan Kubb (support for "quote_char" and "name_sep")
f5aab26e 3241 Guillermo Roditi (patch to cleanup "IN" and "BETWEEN", fix and tests for _order_by)
48d9f5f8 3242 Laurent Dami (internal refactoring, extensible list of special operators, literal SQL)
dbdf7648 3243 Norbert Buchmuller (support for literal SQL in hashpair, misc. fixes & tests)
e96c510a 3244 Peter Rabbitson (rewrite of SQLA::Test, misc. fixes & tests)
02288357 3245 Oliver Charles (support for "RETURNING" after "INSERT")
32eab2da 3246
3247Thanks!
3248
32eab2da 3249=head1 SEE ALSO
3250
86298391 3251L<DBIx::Class>, L<DBIx::Abstract>, L<CGI::FormBuilder>, L<HTML::QuickTable>.
32eab2da 3252
32eab2da 3253=head1 AUTHOR
3254
b643abe1 3255Copyright (c) 2001-2007 Nathan Wiger <nwiger@cpan.org>. All Rights Reserved.
3256
3257This module is actively maintained by Matt Trout <mst@shadowcatsystems.co.uk>
32eab2da 3258
abe72f94 3259For support, your best bet is to try the C<DBIx::Class> users mailing list.
3260While not an official support venue, C<DBIx::Class> makes heavy use of
3261C<SQL::Abstract>, and as such list members there are very familiar with
3262how to create queries.
3263
0d067ded 3264=head1 LICENSE
3265
d988ab87 3266This module is free software; you may copy this under the same
3267terms as perl itself (either the GNU General Public License or
3268the Artistic License)
32eab2da 3269
3270=cut