This class is used internally by L<DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Replicated>. You
shouldn't need to create instances of this class.
-
+
=head1 DESCRIPTION
In a replicated storage type, there is at least one replicant to handle the
This is a number which defines the maximum allowed lag returned by the
L<DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI/lag_behind_master> method. The default is 0. In
general, this should return a larger number when the replicant is lagging
-behind it's master, however the implementation of this is database specific, so
+behind its master, however the implementation of this is database specific, so
don't count on this number having a fixed meaning. For example, MySQL will
return a number of seconds that the replicating database is lagging.
=head2 last_validated
This is an integer representing a time since the last time the replicants were
-validated. It's nothing fancy, just an integer provided via the perl time
+validated. It's nothing fancy, just an integer provided via the perl L<time|perlfunc/time>
builtin.
=cut
actual replicant storage. For example if the $dsn element is something like:
"dbi:SQLite:dbname=dbfile"
-
+
You could access the specific replicant via:
$schema->storage->replicants->{'dbname=dbfile'}
-
+
This attributes also supports the following helper methods:
=over 4
default=>sub {{}},
provides => {
'set' => 'set_replicant',
- 'get' => 'get_replicant',
+ 'get' => 'get_replicant',
'empty' => 'has_replicants',
'count' => 'num_replicants',
'delete' => 'delete_replicant',
- 'values' => 'all_replicant_storages',
+ 'values' => 'all_replicant_storages',
},
);
sub connect_replicants {
my $self = shift @_;
my $schema = shift @_;
-
+
my @newly_created = ();
foreach my $connect_info (@_) {
$connect_info = [ $connect_info ]
$self->set_replicant( $key => $replicant);
push @newly_created, $replicant;
}
-
+
return @newly_created;
}