1 * The regular Sybase parser is only just functional. If you are
2 interested in using Sybase, I would suggest serializing the schema
3 (via YAML or Storable) using the DBI-Sybase parser and then
4 manipulating that as you see fit.
6 * Add more DBI parsers! These have the potential to be very
7 thorough and far faster than parsing text files with
10 * At least allow more pass-through of INSERT, DELETE, and UPDATE
13 * Add INSERT statements for xSV, Excel parsers to automatically
14 create INSERTs for each row of data in the source file
16 * Somehow merge ClassDBI producer with CGI::FormBuilder or Template
17 Toolkit and some sort of automated CGI builder to create
18 view/create/edit/delete forms for objects based on schema defs
20 * Embetter the Diagram producer to use some real graphing algorithms
21 to distribute the tables so that the lines don't overlap so badly
23 * Integrate more with some standard XML schema representations,
24 maybe like Torque DB (http://db.apache.org/torque/). We've
25 started messing around with XMI, too, but it isn't quite usable.
27 * Possibly write a basic ANSI-92 SQL parser which could be extended
28 when writing other new parsers.
30 * Make as many "required" modules as possible optional. This will
31 require support in the Makefile, the tests, and the modules
32 themselves (they'll need to die gracefully if prerequisites are
35 * Support for precompiled Parse::RecDescent grammars.
37 * More code generation producers, such as Java, PHP, and Python.
39 * Integrate Module::Pluggable as a replacement for the _list method.