package SQL::Translator::Producer::TTSchema;
-# -------------------------------------------------------------------
-# $Id: TTSchema.pm,v 1.7 2004-11-16 09:15:36 boconnor Exp $
-# -------------------------------------------------------------------
-# Copyright (C) 2002-4 SQLFairy Authors
-#
-# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
-# published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2.
-#
-# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
-# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
-# General Public License for more details.
-#
-# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
-# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA
-# 02111-1307 USA
-# -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-=pod
+=pod
=head1 NAME
-SQL::Translator::Producer::TTSchema -
+SQL::Translator::Producer::TTSchema -
Produces output using the Template Toolkit from a SQL schema
=head1 SYNOPSIS
filename => 'foo_schema.sql',
to => 'TTSchema',
producer_args => {
- ttargs => {},
- ttfile => 'foo_template.tt',
+ ttfile => 'foo_template.tt', # Template file to use
+
+ # Extra template variables
+ tt_vars => {
+ author => "Mr Foo",
+ },
+
+ # Template config options
+ tt_conf => {
+ INCLUDE_PATH => '/foo/templates',
+ },
},
);
print $translator->translate;
Produces schema output using a given Template Tookit template.
-It needs one additional producer_arg of C<ttfile> which is the file
-name of the template to use. This template will be passed a single
-argument called C<schema>, which is the
-C<SQL::Translator::Producer::Schema> object, which you can then use to
-walk the schema via the methods documented in that module.
+It needs one additional producer arg of C<ttfile> which is the file
+name of the template to use. This template will be passed a variable
+called C<schema>, which is the C<SQL::Translator::Producer::Schema> object
+created by the parser. You can then use it to walk the schema via the
+methods documented in that module.
Here's a brief example of what the template could look like:
See F<t/data/template/basic.tt> for a more complete example.
-You can also set any of the options used to initiallize the Template object by
-adding them to your producer_args. See Template Toolkit docs for details of
+The template will also get the set of extra variables given as a
+hashref via the C<tt_vars> producer arg. (Note that the old style of
+passing this config in the C<ttargs> producer arg has been
+deprecated).
+
+You can set any of the options used to initialize the Template object by
+adding a C<tt_conf> producer arg. See Template Toolkit docs for details of
the options.
+(Note that the old style of passing this config directly in the C<ttargs> producer args
+has been deprecated).
+
$translator = SQL::Translator->new(
to => 'TT',
producer_args => {
ttfile => 'foo_template.tt',
- ttargs => {},
- INCLUDE_PATH => '/foo/templates/tt',
- INTERPOLATE => 1,
+ tt_vars => {},
+ tt_conf => {
+ INCLUDE_PATH => '/foo/templates/tt',
+ INTERPOLATE => 1,
+ }
},
);
Class::DBI classes (or some other code) -- the opportunities are
limitless!
-=cut
+=head2 Producer Args
+
+=over 4
+
+=item ttfile
+
+The template file to generate the output with.
+
+=item tt_vars
-# -------------------------------------------------------------------
+A hash ref of extra variables you want to add to the template.
+
+=item tt_conf
+
+A hash ref of configuration options to pass to the L<Template> object's
+constructor.
+
+=back
+
+=cut
use strict;
+use warnings;
-use vars qw[ $DEBUG $VERSION @EXPORT_OK ];
-$VERSION = sprintf "%d.%02d", q$Revision: 1.7 $ =~ /(\d+)\.(\d+)/;
+our ( $DEBUG, @EXPORT_OK );
+our $VERSION = '1.59';
$DEBUG = 0 unless defined $DEBUG;
use Template;
my $scma = $translator->schema;
my $args = $translator->producer_args;
my $file = delete $args->{'ttfile'} or die "No template file!";
-
+
+ my $tt_vars = delete $args->{'tt_vars'} || {};
+ if ( exists $args->{ttargs} ) {
+ warn "Use of 'ttargs' producer arg is deprecated."
+ ." Please use 'tt_vars' instead.\n";
+ %$tt_vars = { %{$args->{ttargs}}, %$tt_vars };
+ }
+
+ my %tt_conf = exists $args->{tt_conf} ? %{$args->{tt_conf}} : ();
+ # sqlt passes the producer args for _all_ producers in, so we use this
+ # grep hack to test for the old usage.
+ debug(Dumper(\%tt_conf));
+ if ( grep /^[A-Z_]+$/, keys %$args ) {
+ warn "Template config directly in the producer args is deprecated."
+ ." Please use 'tt_conf' instead.\n";
+ %tt_conf = ( %tt_conf, %$args );
+ }
+
debug "Processing template $file\n";
my $out;
my $tt = Template->new(
DEBUG => $DEBUG,
ABSOLUTE => 1, # Set so we can use from the command line sensibly
RELATIVE => 1, # Maybe the cmd line code should set it! Security!
- %$args, # Allow any TT opts to be passed in the producer_args
- ) || die "Failed to initialize Template object: ".Template->error;
-
- $tt->process(
- $file,
- { schema => $scma , %{ $args || {} } },
- \$out
- ) or die "Error processing template '$file': ".$tt->error;
+ %tt_conf,
+ );
+ debug("Template ERROR: " . Template->error. "\n") if(!$tt);
+ $tt || die "Failed to initialize Template object: ".Template->error;
+
+ my $ttproc = $tt->process(
+ $file,
+ { schema => $scma , %$tt_vars },
+ \$out
+ );
+ debug("ERROR: ". $tt->error. "\n") if(!$ttproc);
+ $ttproc or die "Error processing template '$file': ".$tt->error;
return $out;
};
1;
-# -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
=pod
=head1 AUTHOR