X-Git-Url: http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib%2FDBIx%2FClass%2FSchema%2FLoader.pm;h=8d8d181592ffd7091cca1b1f2ad5b643355ece36;hb=b327622ba07a243c4b5e10b0b7dbd17c20d75b34;hp=5dfde5c6043f811367b0366c4554cad488167079;hpb=fbd834649351808228912ceb798f0832af58a30c;p=dbsrgits%2FDBIx-Class-Schema-Loader.git diff --git a/lib/DBIx/Class/Schema/Loader.pm b/lib/DBIx/Class/Schema/Loader.pm index 5dfde5c..8d8d181 100644 --- a/lib/DBIx/Class/Schema/Loader.pm +++ b/lib/DBIx/Class/Schema/Loader.pm @@ -2,15 +2,19 @@ package DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader; use strict; use warnings; - -use vars qw($VERSION @ISA); +use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema Class::Data::Accessor/; +use Carp::Clan qw/^DBIx::Class/; use UNIVERSAL::require; +use Class::C3; +use Scalar::Util qw/ weaken /; # Always remember to do all digits for the version even if they're 0 # i.e. first release of 0.XX *must* be 0.XX000. This avoids fBSD ports # brain damage and presumably various other packaging systems too +our $VERSION = '0.04999_05'; -$VERSION = '0.01000'; +__PACKAGE__->mk_classaccessor('_loader_args' => {}); +__PACKAGE__->mk_classaccessors(qw/dump_to_dir _loader_invoked _loader loader_class/); =head1 NAME @@ -21,19 +25,9 @@ DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader - Dynamic definition of a DBIx::Class::Schema package My::Schema; use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/; - __PACKAGE__->load_from_connection( - dsn => "dbi:mysql:dbname", - user => "root", - password => "", - namespace => "My", - additional_classes => [qw/DBIx::Class::Foo/], - additional_base_classes => [qw/My::Stuff/], - left_base_classes => [qw/DBIx::Class::Bar/], - constraint => '^foo.*', - relationships => 1, - options => { AutoCommit => 1 }, - inflect => { child => 'children' }, - debug => 1, + __PACKAGE__->loader_options( + constraint => '^foo.*', + # debug => 1, ); # in seperate application code ... @@ -42,68 +36,331 @@ DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader - Dynamic definition of a DBIx::Class::Schema my $schema1 = My::Schema->connect( $dsn, $user, $password, $attrs); # -or- - my $schema1 = "My::Schema"; - # ^^ defaults to dsn/user/pass from load_from_connection() + my $schema1 = "My::Schema"; $schema1->connection(as above); -=head1 DESCRIPTION +=head1 DESCRIPTION DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader automates the definition of a -DBIx::Class::Schema by scanning table schemas and setting up -columns and primary keys. +L by scanning database table definitions and +setting up the columns, primary keys, and relationships. -DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader supports MySQL, Postgres, SQLite and DB2. See -L for more, and -L for notes on writing your own -db-specific subclass for an unsupported db. +DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader currently supports only the DBI storage type. +It has explicit support for L, L, L, +L, and L. Other DBI drivers may function to +a greater or lesser degree with this loader, depending on how much of the +DBI spec they implement, and how standard their implementation is. -This module obsoletes L for L version 0.5 -and later. +Patches to make other DBDs work correctly welcome. -=cut +See L for notes on writing +your own vendor-specific subclass for an unsupported DBD driver. + +This module requires L 0.07006 or later, and obsoletes +the older L. + +This module is designed more to get you up and running quickly against +an existing database, or to be effective for simple situations, rather +than to be what you use in the long term for a complex database/project. + +That being said, transitioning your code from a Schema generated by this +module to one that doesn't use this module should be straightforward and +painless, so don't shy away from it just for fears of the transition down +the road. =head1 METHODS -=head2 load_from_connection +=head2 loader_class -Example in Synopsis above demonstrates the available arguments. For -detailed information on the arguments, see the -L documentation. +Set the loader class to be instantiated when L is called. +If the classname starts with "::", "DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader" is +prepended. Defaults to L (which must +start with "::" when using L). + +This is mostly useful for subclassing existing loaders or in conjunction +with L. + +=head2 loader_options + +Example in Synopsis above demonstrates a few common arguments. For +detailed information on all of the arguments, most of which are +only useful in fairly complex scenarios, see the +L documentation. + +If you intend to use C, you must call +C before any connection is made, or embed the +C in the connection information itself as shown +below. Setting C after the connection has +already been made is useless. =cut -sub load_from_connection { - my ( $class, %args ) = @_; +sub loader_options { + my $self = shift; + + my %args = (ref $_[0] eq 'HASH') ? %{$_[0]} : @_; + $self->_loader_args(\%args); - die qq/dsn argument is required/ if ! $args{dsn}; + $self; +} - $args{namespace} ||= $class; - $args{namespace} =~ s/(.*)::$/$1/; +sub _invoke_loader { + my $self = shift; + my $class = ref $self || $self; - my $dsn = $args{dsn}; - my ($driver) = $dsn =~ m/^dbi:(\w*?)(?:\((.*?)\))?:/i; - $driver = 'SQLite' if $driver eq 'SQLite2'; - my $impl = "DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader::" . $driver; + my $args = $self->_loader_args; + # set up the schema/schema_class arguments + $args->{schema} = $self; + $args->{schema_class} = $class; + weaken($args->{schema}) if ref $self; + $args->{dump_directory} ||= $self->dump_to_dir; + + # XXX this only works for relative storage_type, like ::DBI ... + my $impl = $self->loader_class + || "DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader" . $self->storage_type; + $impl = "DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader${impl}" if $impl =~ /^::/; $impl->require or - die qq/Couldn't require loader class "$impl",/ . - qq/"$UNIVERSAL::require::ERROR"/; + croak qq/Could not load storage_type loader "$impl": / . + qq/"$UNIVERSAL::require::ERROR"/; + + $self->_loader($impl->new(%$args)); + $self->_loader->load; + $self->_loader_invoked(1); + + $self; +} + +=head2 connection + +See L for basic usage. + +If the final argument is a hashref, and it contains the keys C +or C, those keys will be deleted, and their values value will be +used for the loader options or class, respectively, just as if set via the +L or L methods above. + +The actual auto-loading operation (the heart of this module) will be invoked +as soon as the connection information is defined. + +=cut + +sub connection { + my $self = shift; + + if($_[-1] && ref $_[-1] eq 'HASH') { + for my $option (qw/ loader_class loader_options /) { + if(my $value = delete $_[-1]->{$option}) { + $self->$option($value); + } + } + pop @_ if !keys %{$_[-1]}; + } + + $self = $self->next::method(@_); + + my $class = ref $self || $self; + if(!$class->_loader_invoked) { + $self->_invoke_loader + } - push(@ISA, $impl); - $class->_load_from_connection(%args); + return $self; } +=head2 clone + +See L. + +=cut + +sub clone { + my $self = shift; + + my $clone = $self->next::method(@_); + + if($clone->_loader_args) { + $clone->_loader_args->{schema} = $clone; + weaken($clone->_loader_args->{schema}); + } + + $clone; +} + +=head2 dump_to_dir + +Argument: directory name. + +Calling this as a class method on either L +or any derived schema class will cause all affected schemas to dump +manual versions of themselves to the named directory when they are +loaded. In order to be effective, this must be set before defining a +connection on this schema class or any derived object (as the loading +happens as soon as both a connection and loader_options are set, and +only once per class). + +See L for more +details on the dumping mechanism. + +This can also be set at module import time via the import option +C to L, where +C is the target directory. + +Examples: + + # My::Schema isa DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader, and has connection info + # hardcoded in the class itself: + perl -MDBIx::Class::Schema::Loader=dump_to_dir:/foo/bar -MMy::Schema -e1 + + # Same, but no hard-coded connection, so we must provide one: + perl -MDBIx::Class::Schema::Loader=dump_to_dir:/foo/bar -MMy::Schema -e 'My::Schema->connection("dbi:Pg:dbname=foo", ...)' + + # Or as a class method, as long as you get it done *before* defining a + # connection on this schema class or any derived object: + use My::Schema; + My::Schema->dump_to_dir('/foo/bar'); + My::Schema->connection(........); + + # Or as a class method on the DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader itself, which affects all + # derived schemas + use My::Schema; + use My::OtherSchema; + DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader->dump_to_dir('/foo/bar'); + My::Schema->connection(.......); + My::OtherSchema->connection(.......); + + # Another alternative to the above: + use DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader qw| dump_to_dir:/foo/bar |; + use My::Schema; + use My::OtherSchema; + My::Schema->connection(.......); + My::OtherSchema->connection(.......); + +=cut + +sub import { + my $self = shift; + return if !@_; + foreach my $opt (@_) { + if($opt =~ m{^dump_to_dir:(.*)$}) { + $self->dump_to_dir($1) + } + elsif($opt eq 'make_schema_at') { + no strict 'refs'; + my $cpkg = (caller)[0]; + *{"${cpkg}::make_schema_at"} = \&make_schema_at; + } + } +} + +=head2 make_schema_at + +This simple function allows one to create a Loader-based schema +in-memory on the fly without any on-disk class files of any +kind. When used with the C option, you can +use this to generate a rough draft manual schema from a dsn +without the intermediate step of creating a physical Loader-based +schema class. + +The return value is the input class name. + +This function can be exported/imported by the normal means, as +illustrated in these Examples: + + # Simple example, creates as a new class 'New::Schema::Name' in + # memory in the running perl interpreter. + use DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader qw/ make_schema_at /; + make_schema_at( + 'New::Schema::Name', + { debug => 1 }, + [ 'dbi:Pg:dbname="foo"','postgres' ], + ); + + # Complex: dump loaded schema to disk, all from the commandline: + perl -MDBIx::Class::Schema::Loader=make_schema_at,dump_to_dir:./lib -e 'make_schema_at("New::Schema::Name", { debug => 1 }, [ "dbi:Pg:dbname=foo","postgres" ])' + + # Same, but inside a script, and using a different way to specify the + # dump directory: + use DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader qw/ make_schema_at /; + make_schema_at( + 'New::Schema::Name', + { debug => 1, dump_directory => './lib' }, + [ 'dbi:Pg:dbname="foo"','postgres' ], + ); + +=cut + +sub make_schema_at { + my ($target, $opts, $connect_info) = @_; + + { + no strict 'refs'; + @{$target . '::ISA'} = qw/DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/; + } + + $target->loader_options($opts); + $target->connection(@$connect_info); +} + +=head2 rescan + +Re-scans the database for newly added tables since the initial +load, and adds them to the schema at runtime, including relationships, +etc. Does not process drops or changes. + +Returns a list of the new monikers added. + +=cut + +sub rescan { my $self = shift; $self->_loader->rescan($self) } + +=head1 EXAMPLE + +Using the example in L as a basis +replace the DB::Main with the following code: + + package DB::Main; + + use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/; + + __PACKAGE__->loader_options( + debug => 1, + ); + __PACKAGE__->connection('dbi:SQLite:example.db'); + + 1; + +and remove the Main directory tree (optional). Every thing else +should work the same + +=head1 KNOWN ISSUES + +=head2 Multiple Database Schemas + +Currently the loader is limited to working within a single schema +(using the database vendors' definition of "schema"). If you +have a multi-schema database with inter-schema relationships (which +is easy to do in PostgreSQL or DB2 for instance), you only get to +automatically load the tables of one schema, and any relationships +to tables in other schemas will be silently ignored. + +At some point in the future, an intelligent way around this might be +devised, probably by allowing the C option to be an +arrayref of schemas to load. + +In "normal" L usage, manually-defined +source classes and relationships have no problems crossing vendor schemas. + =head1 AUTHOR -Brandon Black, C +Brandon Black, C -Sebastian Riedel, C (DBIx::Class::Loader, which this module is branched from) +Based on L by Sebastian Riedel Based upon the work of IKEBE Tomohiro =head1 THANK YOU -Adam Anderson, Andy Grundman, Autrijus Tang, Dan Kubb, David Naughton, -Randal Schwartz, Simon Flack and all the others who've helped. +Matt S Trout, all of the #dbix-class folks, and everyone who's ever sent +in a bug report or suggestion. =head1 LICENSE @@ -112,7 +369,7 @@ the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO -L +L, L =cut