Release v0.082810
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class.pm
CommitLineData
ea2e61bf 1package DBIx::Class;
2
5d283305 3use strict;
4use warnings;
5
f9cc85ce 6our $VERSION;
7# Always remember to do all digits for the version even if they're 0
8# i.e. first release of 0.XX *must* be 0.XX000. This avoids fBSD ports
9# brain damage and presumably various other packaging systems too
10
11# $VERSION declaration must stay up here, ahead of any other package
12# declarations, as to not confuse various modules attempting to determine
13# this ones version, whether that be s.c.o. or Module::Metadata, etc
79346e56 14$VERSION = '0.082810';
f9cc85ce 15
16$VERSION = eval $VERSION if $VERSION =~ /_/; # numify for warning-free dev releases
17
37873f78 18use DBIx::Class::_Util;
d38cd95c 19use mro 'c3';
329d7385 20
2527233b 21use DBIx::Class::Optional::Dependencies;
22
db29433c 23use base qw/DBIx::Class::Componentised DBIx::Class::AccessorGroup/;
11736b4c 24use DBIx::Class::StartupCheck;
f9080e45 25use DBIx::Class::Exception;
3e110410 26
70c28808 27__PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors(inherited => '_skip_namespace_frames');
9345b14c 28__PACKAGE__->_skip_namespace_frames('^DBIx::Class|^SQL::Abstract|^Try::Tiny|^Class::Accessor::Grouped|^Context::Preserve');
70c28808 29
ade0fe3b 30sub mk_classdata {
77d518d1 31 shift->mk_classaccessor(@_);
32}
33
34sub mk_classaccessor {
35 my $self = shift;
ade0fe3b 36 $self->mk_group_accessors('inherited', $_[0]);
77d518d1 37 $self->set_inherited(@_) if @_ > 1;
3e110410 38}
3c0068c1 39
7411204b 40sub component_base_class { 'DBIx::Class' }
227d4dee 41
f0750722 42sub MODIFY_CODE_ATTRIBUTES {
b5d2c57f 43 my ($class,$code,@attrs) = @_;
44 $class->mk_classdata('__attr_cache' => {})
45 unless $class->can('__attr_cache');
46 $class->__attr_cache->{$code} = [@attrs];
47 return ();
f0750722 48}
49
da95b45f 50sub _attr_cache {
b5d2c57f 51 my $self = shift;
52 my $cache = $self->can('__attr_cache') ? $self->__attr_cache : {};
9780718f 53
54 return {
55 %$cache,
56 %{ $self->maybe::next::method || {} },
20674fcd 57 };
da95b45f 58}
59
d095c62d 60# *DO NOT* change this URL nor the identically named =head1 below
61# it is linked throughout the ecosystem
62sub DBIx::Class::_ENV_::HELP_URL () {
63 'http://p3rl.org/DBIx::Class#GETTING_HELP/SUPPORT'
64}
65
ea2e61bf 661;
34d52be2 67
d095c62d 68__END__
69
75d07914 70=head1 NAME
34d52be2 71
7e4b2f59 72DBIx::Class - Extensible and flexible object <-> relational mapper.
34d52be2 73
06752a03 74=head1 WHERE TO START READING
3b1c2bbd 75
06752a03 76See L<DBIx::Class::Manual::DocMap> for an overview of the exhaustive documentation.
77To get the most out of DBIx::Class with the least confusion it is strongly
78recommended to read (at the very least) the
79L<Manuals|DBIx::Class::Manual::DocMap/Manuals> in the order presented there.
80
32250d01 81=cut
82
32250d01 83=head1 GETTING HELP/SUPPORT
06752a03 84
32250d01 85Due to the sheer size of its problem domain, DBIx::Class is a relatively
06752a03 86complex framework. After you start using DBIx::Class questions will inevitably
87arise. If you are stuck with a problem or have doubts about a particular
32250d01 88approach do not hesitate to contact us via any of the following options (the
89list is sorted by "fastest response time"):
3b1c2bbd 90
a06e1181 91=over
3b1c2bbd 92
c6fdaf2a 93=item * IRC: irc.perl.org#dbix-class
94
95=for html
e1ddfc8a 96<a href="https://chat.mibbit.com/#dbix-class@irc.perl.org">(click for instant chatroom login)</a>
3b1c2bbd 97
a06e1181 98=item * Mailing list: L<http://lists.scsys.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/dbix-class>
3b1c2bbd 99
e1ddfc8a 100=item * RT Bug Tracker: L<https://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=DBIx-Class>
86a23587 101
e1ddfc8a 102=item * Twitter: L<https://www.twitter.com/dbix_class>
86a23587 103
86a23587 104=item * Web Site: L<http://www.dbix-class.org/>
a06e1181 105
86a23587 106=back
107
34d52be2 108=head1 SYNOPSIS
109
113e8d16 110For the very impatient: L<DBIx::Class::Manual::QuickStart>
111
112This code in the next step can be generated automatically from an existing
113database, see L<dbicdump> from the distribution C<DBIx-Class-Schema-Loader>.
114
5b56d1ac 115=head2 Schema classes preparation
116
53aa53f3 117Create a schema class called F<MyApp/Schema.pm>:
34d52be2 118
03460bef 119 package MyApp::Schema;
a0638a7b 120 use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema/;
34d52be2 121
f0bb26f3 122 __PACKAGE__->load_namespaces();
daec44b8 123
a0638a7b 124 1;
daec44b8 125
30e1753a 126Create a result class to represent artists, who have many CDs, in
53aa53f3 127F<MyApp/Schema/Result/Artist.pm>:
daec44b8 128
30e1753a 129See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSource> for docs on defining result classes.
130
03460bef 131 package MyApp::Schema::Result::Artist;
d88ecca6 132 use base qw/DBIx::Class::Core/;
daec44b8 133
a0638a7b 134 __PACKAGE__->table('artist');
135 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ artistid name /);
136 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('artistid');
326dacbf 137 __PACKAGE__->has_many(cds => 'MyApp::Schema::Result::CD', 'artistid');
daec44b8 138
a0638a7b 139 1;
daec44b8 140
30e1753a 141A result class to represent a CD, which belongs to an artist, in
53aa53f3 142F<MyApp/Schema/Result/CD.pm>:
39fe0e65 143
03460bef 144 package MyApp::Schema::Result::CD;
d88ecca6 145 use base qw/DBIx::Class::Core/;
39fe0e65 146
d88ecca6 147 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/InflateColumn::DateTime/);
a0638a7b 148 __PACKAGE__->table('cd');
bd077b47 149 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ cdid artistid title year /);
a0638a7b 150 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('cdid');
03460bef 151 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(artist => 'MyApp::Schema::Result::Artist', 'artistid');
39fe0e65 152
a0638a7b 153 1;
39fe0e65 154
5b56d1ac 155=head2 API usage
156
a0638a7b 157Then you can use these classes in your application's code:
39fe0e65 158
a0638a7b 159 # Connect to your database.
03460bef 160 use MyApp::Schema;
161 my $schema = MyApp::Schema->connect($dbi_dsn, $user, $pass, \%dbi_params);
a0638a7b 162
163 # Query for all artists and put them in an array,
164 # or retrieve them as a result set object.
30e1753a 165 # $schema->resultset returns a DBIx::Class::ResultSet
2053ab2a 166 my @all_artists = $schema->resultset('Artist')->all;
167 my $all_artists_rs = $schema->resultset('Artist');
126042ee 168
30e1753a 169 # Output all artists names
4e8ffded 170 # $artist here is a DBIx::Class::Row, which has accessors
16ccb4fe 171 # for all its columns. Rows are also subclasses of your Result class.
85067746 172 foreach $artist (@all_artists) {
30e1753a 173 print $artist->name, "\n";
174 }
175
a0638a7b 176 # Create a result set to search for artists.
86beca1d 177 # This does not query the DB.
2053ab2a 178 my $johns_rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
6576ef54 179 # Build your WHERE using an SQL::Abstract structure:
2053ab2a 180 { name => { like => 'John%' } }
a0638a7b 181 );
39fe0e65 182
2053ab2a 183 # Execute a joined query to get the cds.
a0638a7b 184 my @all_john_cds = $johns_rs->search_related('cds')->all;
448c8424 185
f0bb26f3 186 # Fetch the next available row.
a0638a7b 187 my $first_john = $johns_rs->next;
448c8424 188
2053ab2a 189 # Specify ORDER BY on the query.
a0638a7b 190 my $first_john_cds_by_title_rs = $first_john->cds(
191 undef,
192 { order_by => 'title' }
193 );
448c8424 194
bd077b47 195 # Create a result set that will fetch the artist data
2053ab2a 196 # at the same time as it fetches CDs, using only one query.
884559b1 197 my $millennium_cds_rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
a0638a7b 198 { year => 2000 },
199 { prefetch => 'artist' }
200 );
448c8424 201
880a1a0c 202 my $cd = $millennium_cds_rs->next; # SELECT ... FROM cds JOIN artists ...
bd077b47 203 my $cd_artist_name = $cd->artist->name; # Already has the data so no 2nd query
076652e8 204
fb13a49f 205 # new() makes a Result object but doesnt insert it into the DB.
264f1571 206 # create() is the same as new() then insert().
884559b1 207 my $new_cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->new({ title => 'Spoon' });
f183eccd 208 $new_cd->artist($cd->artist);
f183eccd 209 $new_cd->insert; # Auto-increment primary key filled in after INSERT
f183eccd 210 $new_cd->title('Fork');
211
884559b1 212 $schema->txn_do(sub { $new_cd->update }); # Runs the update in a transaction
f183eccd 213
bd077b47 214 # change the year of all the millennium CDs at once
215 $millennium_cds_rs->update({ year => 2002 });
f183eccd 216
217=head1 DESCRIPTION
218
219This is an SQL to OO mapper with an object API inspired by L<Class::DBI>
bd077b47 220(with a compatibility layer as a springboard for porting) and a resultset API
f183eccd 221that allows abstract encapsulation of database operations. It aims to make
222representing queries in your code as perl-ish as possible while still
a0638a7b 223providing access to as many of the capabilities of the database as possible,
f183eccd 224including retrieving related records from multiple tables in a single query,
53aa53f3 225C<JOIN>, C<LEFT JOIN>, C<COUNT>, C<DISTINCT>, C<GROUP BY>, C<ORDER BY> and
226C<HAVING> support.
f183eccd 227
228DBIx::Class can handle multi-column primary and foreign keys, complex
229queries and database-level paging, and does its best to only query the
75d07914 230database in order to return something you've directly asked for. If a
231resultset is used as an iterator it only fetches rows off the statement
232handle as requested in order to minimise memory usage. It has auto-increment
2053ab2a 233support for SQLite, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, SQL Server and DB2 and is
234known to be used in production on at least the first four, and is fork-
ec6415a9 235and thread-safe out of the box (although
9361b05d 236L<your DBD may not be|DBI/Threads and Thread Safety>).
f183eccd 237
dfccde48 238This project is still under rapid development, so large new features may be
53aa53f3 239marked B<experimental> - such APIs are still usable but may have edge bugs.
240Failing test cases are I<always> welcome and point releases are put out rapidly
dfccde48 241as bugs are found and fixed.
242
243We do our best to maintain full backwards compatibility for published
244APIs, since DBIx::Class is used in production in many organisations,
245and even backwards incompatible changes to non-published APIs will be fixed
246if they're reported and doing so doesn't cost the codebase anything.
247
264f1571 248The test suite is quite substantial, and several developer releases
249are generally made to CPAN before the branch for the next release is
250merged back to trunk for a major release.
f183eccd 251
6ed05cfd 252=head1 HOW TO CONTRIBUTE
253
254Contributions are always welcome, in all usable forms (we especially
255welcome documentation improvements). The delivery methods include git-
256or unified-diff formatted patches, GitHub pull requests, or plain bug
257reports either via RT or the Mailing list. Contributors are generally
cb32addc 258granted access to the official repository after their first several
259patches pass successful review. Don't hesitate to
260L<contact|/GETTING HELP/SUPPORT> either of the L</CAT HERDERS> with
261any further questions you may have.
6ed05cfd 262
263=for comment
264FIXME: Getty, frew and jnap need to get off their asses and finish the contrib section so we can link it here ;)
265
266This project is maintained in a git repository. The code and related tools are
267accessible at the following locations:
268
269=over
270
271=item * Official repo: L<git://git.shadowcat.co.uk/dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git>
272
273=item * Official gitweb: L<http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?p=dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git>
274
275=item * GitHub mirror: L<https://github.com/dbsrgits/DBIx-Class>
276
277=item * Authorized committers: L<ssh://dbsrgits@git.shadowcat.co.uk/DBIx-Class.git>
278
279=item * Travis-CI log: L<https://travis-ci.org/dbsrgits/dbix-class/builds>
280
281=for html
282&#x21AA; Stable branch CI status: <img src="https://secure.travis-ci.org/dbsrgits/dbix-class.png?branch=master"></img>
283
284=back
285
3440100b 286=head1 AUTHORS
34d52be2 287
3440100b 288Even though a large portion of the source I<appears> to be written by just a
289handful of people, this library continues to remain a collaborative effort -
290perhaps one of the most successful such projects on L<CPAN|http://cpan.org>.
291It is important to remember that ideas do not always result in a direct code
292contribution, but deserve acknowledgement just the same. Time and time again
293the seemingly most insignificant questions and suggestions have been shown
294to catalyze monumental improvements in consistency, accuracy and performance.
34d52be2 295
3440100b 296=for comment this line is replaced with the author list at dist-building time
dfccde48 297
3440100b 298The canonical source of authors and their details is the F<AUTHORS> file at
299the root of this distribution (or repository). The canonical source of
300per-line authorship is the L<git repository|/HOW TO CONTRIBUTE> history
301itself.
f9139687 302
cb32addc 303=head1 CAT HERDERS
304
305The fine folks nudging the project in a particular direction:
306
307=over
308
f06eb015 309B<ribasushi>: Peter Rabbitson <ribasushi@cpan.org>
cb32addc 310(present day maintenance and controlled evolution)
311
f06eb015 312B<castaway>: Jess Robinson <castaway@desert-island.me.uk>
cb32addc 313(lions share of the reference documentation and manuals)
314
f06eb015 315B<mst>: Matt S Trout <mst@shadowcat.co.uk> (project founder -
cb32addc 316original idea, architecture and implementation)
317
318=back
319
a2bd3796 320=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
b38e10bd 321
a2bd3796 322Copyright (c) 2005 by mst, castaway, ribasushi, and other DBIx::Class
323L</AUTHORS> as listed above and in F<AUTHORS>.
96154ef7 324
325This library is free software and may be distributed under the same terms
a2bd3796 326as perl5 itself. See F<LICENSE> for the complete licensing terms.