#!/usr/bin/perl =head1 NAME dbicdump - Dump a schema using DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader =head1 SYNOPSIS dbicdump [-o = ] Examples: $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ MyApp::Schema dbi:SQLite:./foo.db '{ quote_char => "\"" }' $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ -o preserve_case=1 \ MyApp::Schema dbi:mysql:database=foo user pass '{ quote_char => "`" }' $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ MyApp::Schema 'dbi:mysql:database=foo;host=domain.tld;port=3306' user pass On Windows that would be: $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=.\lib ^ -o components="[q{InflateColumn::DateTime}]" ^ -o preserve_case=1 ^ MyApp::Schema dbi:mysql:database=foo user pass "{ quote_char => q{`} }" =head1 DESCRIPTION Dbicdump generates a L schema using L and dumps it to disk. You can pass any L constructor option using C<< -o