=head1 NAME DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook - Misc recipes =head1 DESCRIPTION Things that could be handy =head1 RECIPES =head2 Disconnecting cleanly If you find yourself quitting an app with Control-C a lot during development, you might like to put the following signal handler in your main database class to make sure it disconnects cleanly: $SIG{INT} = sub { __PACKAGE__->storage->dbh->disconnect; }; =head2 Using joins and prefetch See L. =head2 Transactions As of version 0.04001, there is improved transaction support in L. Here is an example of the recommended way to use it: my $obj = Genus->find(12); eval { MyDB->txn_begin; $obj->add_to_species({ name => 'troglodyte' }); $obj->wings(2); $obj->update; cromulate($obj); # can have a nested transation MyDB->txn_commit; }; if ($@) { eval { MyDB->txn_rollback } } # rollback might fail, too Currently, a nested commit will do nothing and a nested rollback will die. The code at each level must be sure to call rollback in the case of an error, to ensure that the rollback will propagate to the top level and be issued. Support for savepoints and for true nested transactions (for databases that support them) will hopefully be added in the future. =head2 Many-to-many relationships This is not as easy as it could be, but it's possible. Here's an example to illustrate: # Set up inherited connection information package MyApp::DBIC; use base qw/DBIx::Class/; __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/PK::Auto::SQLite Core DB/); __PACKAGE__->connection(...); # Set up a class for the 'authors' table package MyApp::DBIC::Author; use base qw/MyApp::DBIC/; __PACKAGE__->table('authors'); __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/authID first_name last_name/); __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key(qw/authID/); # Define relationship to the link table __PACKAGE__->has_many('b2a' => 'MyApp::DBIC::Book2Author', 'authID'); # Create the accessor for books from the ::Author class sub books { my ($self) = @_; return MyApp::DBIC::Book->search( { 'b2a.authID' => $self->authID }, # WHERE clause { join => 'b2a' } # join condition (part of search attrs) # 'b2a' refers to the relationship named earlier in the Author class. # 'b2a.authID' refers to the authID column of the b2a relationship, # which becomes accessible in the search by being joined. ); } # define the link table class package MyApp::DBIC::Book2Author; use base qw/MyApp::DBIC/; __PACKAGE__->table('book2author'); __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/bookID authID/); __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key(qw/bookID authID/); __PACKAGE__->belongs_to('authID' => 'MyApp::DBIC::Author'); __PACKAGE__->belongs_to('bookID' => 'MyApp::DBIC::Book'); package MyApp::DBIC::Book; use base qw/MyApp::DBIC/; __PACKAGE__->table('books'); __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/bookID title edition isbn publisher year/); __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key(qw/bookID/); __PACKAGE__->has_many('b2a' => 'MyApp::DBIC::Book2Author', 'bookID'); sub authors { my ($self) = @_; return MyApp::DBIC::Author->search( { 'b2a.bookID' => $self->bookID }, # WHERE clause { join => 'b2a' }); # join condition (part of search attrs) } # So the above search returns an author record where the bookID field of the # book2author table equals the bookID of the books (using the bookID # relationship table =back