Inflators are not respected by find() (being a ResultSet method)
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Manual / FAQ.pod
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81791ac3 1=head1 NAME
2
3DBIx::Class::Manual::FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions (in theory)
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7This document is intended as an anti-map of the documentation. If you
8know what you want to do, but not how to do it in L<DBIx::Class>, then
b5871402 9look here. It does B<not> contain much code or examples, it just gives
81791ac3 10explanations and pointers to the correct pieces of documentation to
11read.
12
13=head1 FAQs
14
15How Do I:
16
17=head2 Getting started
18
19=over 4
20
21=item .. create a database to use?
22
4d1e63f4 23First, choose a database. For testing/experimenting, we recommend
e147365d 24L<DBD::SQLite>, which is a self-contained small database (i.e. all you
c0e1e949 25need to do is to install L<DBD::SQLite> from CPAN, and it works).
81791ac3 26
27Next, spend some time defining which data you need to store, and how
28it relates to the other data you have. For some help on normalisation,
30a3e744 29go to L<http://b62.tripod.com/doc/dbbase.htm>.
81791ac3 30
31Now, decide whether you want to have the database itself be the
32definitive source of information about the data layout, or your
33DBIx::Class schema. If it's the former, look up the documentation for
34your database, eg. L<http://sqlite.org/lang_createtable.html>, on how
35to create tables, and start creating them. For a nice universal
36interface to your database, you can try L<DBI::Shell>. If you decided
37on the latter choice, read the FAQ on setting up your classes
38manually, and the one on creating tables from your schema.
39
40=item .. use DBIx::Class with L<Catalyst>?
41
e147365d 42Install L<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema> from CPAN. See its
81791ac3 43documentation, or below, for further details.
44
45=item .. set up my DBIx::Class classes automatically from my database?
46
e147365d 47Install L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> from CPAN, and read its documentation.
81791ac3 48
49=item .. set up my DBIx::Class classes manually?
50
e147365d 51Look at the L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Example> and come back here if you get lost.
81791ac3 52
53=item .. create my database tables from my DBIx::Class schema?
54
55Create your classes manually, as above. Write a script that calls
56L<DBIx::Class::Schema/deploy>. See there for details, or the
57L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook>.
58
7c14c3cf 59=item .. store/retrieve Unicode data in my database?
60
61Make sure you database supports Unicode and set the connect
62attributes appropriately - see
63L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/Using Unicode>
64
7f613f3a 65=item .. connect to my database?
66
67Once you have created all the appropriate table/source classes, and an
b5871402 68overall L<Schema|DBIx::Class::Schema> class, you can start using
7f613f3a 69them in an application. To do this, you need to create a central
70Schema object, which is used to access all the data in the various
71tables. See L<DBIx::Class::Schema/connect> for details. The actual
72connection does not happen until you actually request data, so don't
73be alarmed if the error from incorrect connection details happens a
74lot later.
75
63426052 76=item .. use DBIx::Class across multiple databases?
77
4a0eed52 78If your database server allows you to run queries across multiple
63426052 79databases at once, then so can DBIx::Class. All you need to do is make
80sure you write the database name as part of the
5529838f 81L<table|DBIx::Class::ResultSourceProxy::Table/table> call. Eg:
63426052 82
83 __PACKAGE__->table('mydb.mytablename');
84
d71867ef 85And load all the Result classes for both / all databases by calling
86L<DBIx::Class::Schema/load_namespaces>.
63426052 87
88=item .. use DBIx::Class across PostgreSQL/DB2/Oracle schemas?
89
5529838f 90Add the name of the schema to the table name, when invoking
91L<table|DBIx::Class::ResultSourceProxy::Table/table>, and make sure the user
92you are about to connect as has permissions to read/write all the
93schemas/tables as necessary.
7f613f3a 94
40f2550b 95=back
81791ac3 96
97=head2 Relationships
98
99=over 4
100
101=item .. tell DBIx::Class about relationships between my tables?
102
2a2ab6ab 103There are a variety of relationship types that come pre-defined for
e147365d 104you to use. These are all listed in L<DBIx::Class::Relationship>. If
105you need a non-standard type, or more information, look in
106L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base>.
81791ac3 107
108=item .. define a one-to-many relationship?
109
e147365d 110This is called a C<has_many> relationship on the one side, and a
111C<belongs_to> relationship on the many side. Currently these need to
112be set up individually on each side. See L<DBIx::Class::Relationship>
113for details.
81791ac3 114
115=item .. define a relationship where this table contains another table's primary key? (foreign key)
116
e147365d 117Create a C<belongs_to> relationship for the field containing the
118foreign key. See L<DBIx::Class::Relationship/belongs_to>.
81791ac3 119
40f2550b 120=item .. define a foreign key relationship where the key field may contain NULL?
81791ac3 121
e147365d 122Just create a C<belongs_to> relationship, as above. If the column is
123NULL then the inflation to the foreign object will not happen. This
124has a side effect of not always fetching all the relevant data, if you
125use a nullable foreign-key relationship in a JOIN, then you probably
126want to set the C<join_type> to C<left>.
81791ac3 127
128=item .. define a relationship where the key consists of more than one column?
129
130Instead of supplying a single column name, all relationship types also
131allow you to supply a hashref containing the condition across which
132the tables are to be joined. The condition may contain as many fields
133as you like. See L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base>.
134
5947e409 135=item .. define a relationship bridge across an intermediate table? (many-to-many)
81791ac3 136
8273e845 137The term 'relationship' is used loosely with many_to_many as it is not considered a
138relationship in the fullest sense. For more info, read the documentation on L<DBIx::Class::Relationship/many_to_many>.
81791ac3 139
2a2ab6ab 140=item .. stop DBIx::Class from attempting to cascade deletes on my has_many and might_have relationships?
81791ac3 141
142By default, DBIx::Class cascades deletes and updates across
2a2ab6ab 143C<has_many> and C<might_have> relationships. You can disable this
144behaviour on a per-relationship basis by supplying
145C<< cascade_delete => 0 >> in the relationship attributes.
146
147The cascaded operations are performed after the requested delete or
148update, so if your database has a constraint on the relationship, it
149will have deleted/updated the related records or raised an exception
150before DBIx::Class gets to perform the cascaded operation.
151
152See L<DBIx::Class::Relationship>.
81791ac3 153
154=item .. use a relationship?
155
e147365d 156Use its name. An accessor is created using the name. See examples in
5529838f 157L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/USING RELATIONSHIPS>.
81791ac3 158
159=back
160
161=head2 Searching
162
163=over 4
164
165=item .. search for data?
166
c0e1e949 167Create a C<$schema> object, as mentioned above in L</.. connect to my
168database?>. Find the
169L<ResultSet|DBIx::Class::Manual::Glossary/ResultSet> that you want to
170search in, by calling C<< $schema->resultset('MySource') >> and call
171C<search> on it. See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search>.
7f613f3a 172
81791ac3 173=item .. search using database functions?
174
7f613f3a 175Supplying something like:
176
177 ->search({'mydatefield' => 'now()'})
178
179to search, will probably not do what you expect. It will quote the
180text "now()", instead of trying to call the function. To provide
181literal, unquoted text you need to pass in a scalar reference, like
182so:
183
184 ->search({'mydatefield' => \'now()'})
185
81791ac3 186=item .. sort the results of my search?
187
e147365d 188Supply a list of columns you want to sort by to the C<order_by>
189attribute. See L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/order_by>.
7f613f3a 190
191=item .. sort my results based on fields I've aliased using C<as>?
192
6aafb6a6 193You didn't alias anything, since L<as|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/as>
194B<has nothing to do> with the produced SQL. See
195L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/select> for details.
7f613f3a 196
81791ac3 197=item .. group the results of my search?
198
7f613f3a 199Supply a list of columns you want to group on, to the C<group_by>
200attribute, see L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/group_by>.
201
202=item .. group my results based on fields I've aliased using C<as>?
203
6aafb6a6 204You don't. See the explanation on ordering by an alias above.
b5871402 205
81791ac3 206=item .. filter the results of my search?
207
b5871402 208The first argument to C<search> is a hashref of accessor names and
209values to filter them by, for example:
210
36d41f4c 211 ->search({'created_time' => { '>=', '2006-06-01 00:00:00' } })
b5871402 212
f6a14bd4 213Note that to use a function here you need to make it a scalar
214reference:
b5871402 215
f6a14bd4 216 ->search({'created_time' => { '>=', \'yesterday()' } })
b5871402 217
81791ac3 218=item .. search in several tables simultaneously?
219
b5871402 220To search in two related tables, you first need to set up appropriate
221relationships between their respective classes. When searching you
222then supply the name of the relationship to the C<join> attribute in
223your search, for example when searching in the Books table for all the
224books by the author "Fred Bloggs":
225
36d41f4c 226 ->search({'authors.name' => 'Fred Bloggs'}, { join => 'authors' })
b5871402 227
228The type of join created in your SQL depends on the type of
229relationship between the two tables, see L<DBIx::Class::Relationship>
230for the join used by each relationship.
231
7f613f3a 232=item .. create joins with conditions other than column equality?
233
b5871402 234Currently, L<DBIx::Class> can only create join conditions using
f7a90adc 235equality, so you're probably better off creating a C<view> in your
e147365d 236database, and using that as your source. A C<view> is a stored SQL
237query, which can be accessed similarly to a table, see your database
f7a90adc 238documentation for details.
b5871402 239
1c133e22 240=item .. search with an SQL function on the left hand side?
241
b1d821de 242To use an SQL function on the left hand side of a comparison you currently need
243to resort to literal SQL:
1c133e22 244
3bc50bf9 245 ->search( \[ 'YEAR(date_of_birth) = ?', 1979 ] );
1c133e22 246
81791ac3 247=item .. find more help on constructing searches?
248
249Behind the scenes, DBIx::Class uses L<SQL::Abstract> to help construct
e147365d 250its SQL searches. So if you fail to find help in the
81791ac3 251L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook>, try looking in the SQL::Abstract
252documentation.
253
f4db0d90 254=item .. make searches in Oracle (10gR2 and newer) case-insensitive?
255
256To make Oracle behave like most RDBMS use on_connect_do to issue
257alter session statements on database connection establishment:
258
259 ->on_connect_do("ALTER SESSION SET NLS_COMP = 'LINGUISTIC'");
260 ->on_connect_do("ALTER SESSION SET NLS_SORT = '<NLS>_CI'");
261 e.g.
262 ->on_connect_do("ALTER SESSION SET NLS_SORT = 'BINARY_CI'");
263 ->on_connect_do("ALTER SESSION SET NLS_SORT = 'GERMAN_CI'");
264
b7fcdab3 265=item .. format a DateTime object for searching?
266
267L<search|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search> and L<find|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/find>
268do not take L<DBIx::Class::InflateColumn> into account, and so your L<DateTime>
269object will not be correctly deflated into a format your RDBMS expects.
270
271The L<datetime_parser|DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI/datetime_parser> method on your
272storage object can be used to return the object that would normally do this, so
273it's easy to do it manually:
274
275 my $dtf = $schema->storage->datetime_parser;
276 my $rs = $schema->resultset('users')->search(
277 {
278 signup_date => {
279 -between => [
280 $dtf->format_datetime($dt_start),
281 $dtf->format_datetime($dt_end),
282 ],
283 }
284 },
285 );
286
287With in a Result Class method, you can get this from the
288L<C<result_source>|DBIx::Class::Row/result_source>.
289
290 my $dtf = $self->result_source->storage->datetime_parser;
291
292This kludge is necessary only for conditions passed to
293L<search|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search> and L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/find>,
294whereas L<create|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/create> and L<DBIx::Class::Row/update>
295(but not L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/update>) are
296L<DBIx::Class::InflateColumn>-aware and will do the right thing when supplied
297an inflated L<DateTime> object.
f4db0d90 298
81791ac3 299=back
300
301=head2 Fetching data
302
303=over 4
304
d6702eab 305=item .. fetch as much data as possible in as few select calls as possible?
81791ac3 306
b5871402 307See the prefetch examples in the L<Cookbook|DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook>.
81791ac3 308
d6702eab 309=item .. fetch a whole column of data instead of a row?
310
40f2550b 311Call C<get_column> on a L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet>. This returns a
312L<DBIx::Class::ResultSetColumn>. See its documentation and the
d6702eab 313L<Cookbook|DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook> for details.
314
1697e138 315=item .. fetch a formatted column?
316
317In your table schema class, create a "private" column accessor with:
318
2acfa83c 319 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(my_column => { accessor => '_hidden_my_column' });
1697e138 320
321Then, in the same class, implement a subroutine called "my_column" that
322fetches the real value and does the formatting you want.
323
c0e1e949 324See the L<Cookbook|DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook> for more details.
1697e138 325
2486df86 326=item .. fetch a single (or topmost) row?
327
c0e1e949 328Use the L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/rows> and
329L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/order_by> attributes to order your data and
330pick off a single row.
331
9361b05d 332See also L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/Retrieve one and only one row from a resultset>.
2486df86 333
38fc8cf6 334A less readable way is to ask a regular search to return 1 row, using
335L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/slice>:
2486df86 336
2a2ab6ab 337 ->search->(undef, { order_by => "id DESC" })->slice(0)
2486df86 338
38fc8cf6 339which (if supported by the database) will use LIMIT/OFFSET to hint to the
340database that we really only need one row. This can result in a significant
341speed improvement. The method using L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/single> mentioned
342in the cookbook can do the same if you pass a C<rows> attribute to the search.
2486df86 343
aefa6508 344=item .. refresh a row from storage?
345
c0e1e949 346Use L<DBIx::Class::Row/discard_changes>.
aefa6508 347
47d7b769 348 $result->discard_changes
aefa6508 349
4a0eed52 350Discarding changes and refreshing from storage are two sides of the same coin. When you
aefa6508 351want to discard your local changes, just re-fetch the row from storage. When you want
352to get a new, fresh copy of the row, just re-fetch the row from storage.
c0e1e949 353L<DBIx::Class::Row/discard_changes> does just that by re-fetching the row from storage
aefa6508 354using the row's primary key.
355
dc64f1b5 356=item .. fetch my data a "page" at a time?
357
358Pass the C<rows> and C<page> attributes to your search, eg:
359
360 ->search({}, { rows => 10, page => 1});
361
362=item .. get a count of all rows even when paging?
363
364Call C<pager> on the paged resultset, it will return a L<Data::Page>
365object. Calling C<total_entries> on the pager will return the correct
366total.
367
368C<count> on the resultset will only return the total number in the page.
369
81791ac3 370=back
371
81791ac3 372=head2 Inserting and updating data
373
374=over 4
375
b5871402 376=item .. insert a row with an auto incrementing primary key?
377
c0e1e949 378This happens automatically. After
fb13a49f 379L<creating|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/create> a result object, the primary
c0e1e949 380key value created by your database can be fetched by calling C<id> (or
381the access of your primary key column) on the object.
b5871402 382
383=item .. insert a row with a primary key that uses a sequence?
384
385You need to create a trigger in your database that updates your
c0e1e949 386primary key field from the sequence. To help PK::Auto find the next
387key value, you can tell it the name of the sequence in the
b5871402 388C<column_info> supplied with C<add_columns>.
389
838ef78d 390 ->add_columns({ id => { sequence => 'mysequence', auto_nextval => 1 } });
b5871402 391
81791ac3 392=item .. insert many rows of data efficiently?
393
fd2a5332 394The C<populate> method in L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> provides
395efficient bulk inserts.
396
c0e1e949 397L<DBIx::Class::Fixtures> provides an alternative way to do this.
398
81791ac3 399=item .. update a collection of rows at the same time?
400
c0e1e949 401Create a resultset using a C<search>, to filter the rows of data you
402would like to update, then call C<update> on the resultset to change all
b5871402 403the rows at once.
404
81791ac3 405=item .. use database functions when updating rows?
406
407=item .. update a column using data from another column?
408
e6600283 409To stop the column name from being quoted, you'll need to tell DBIC
b1d821de 410that the right hand side is an SQL identifier (it will be quoted
e6600283 411properly if you have quoting enabled):
b5871402 412
e6600283 413 ->update({ somecolumn => { -ident => 'othercolumn' } })
b5871402 414
c0e1e949 415This method will not retrieve the new value and put it in your Row
416object. To fetch the new value, use the C<discard_changes> method on
417the Row.
418
419 # will return the scalar reference:
47d7b769 420 $result->somecolumn()
40f2550b 421
c0e1e949 422 # issue a select using the PK to re-fetch the row data:
47d7b769 423 $result->discard_changes();
40f2550b 424
c0e1e949 425 # Now returns the correct new value:
47d7b769 426 $result->somecolumn()
e338dbec 427
c0e1e949 428To update and refresh at once, chain your calls:
40f2550b 429
47d7b769 430 $result->update({ 'somecolumn' => { -ident => 'othercolumn' } })->discard_changes;
40f2550b 431
75e75a9f 432=item .. store JSON/YAML in a column and have it deflate/inflate automatically?
1697e138 433
75e75a9f 434You can use L<DBIx::Class::InflateColumn> to accomplish YAML/JSON storage transparently.
435
436If you want to use JSON, then in your table schema class, do the following:
1697e138 437
438 use JSON;
439
440 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ ... my_column ../)
441 __PACKAGE__->inflate_column('my_column', {
442 inflate => sub { jsonToObj(shift) },
443 deflate => sub { objToJson(shift) },
444 });
445
75e75a9f 446For YAML, in your table schema class, do the following:
447
448 use YAML;
449
450 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ ... my_column ../)
451 __PACKAGE__->inflate_column('my_column', {
452 inflate => sub { YAML::Load(shift) },
453 deflate => sub { YAML::Dump(shift) },
454 });
455
456This technique is an easy way to store supplemental unstructured data in a table. Be
457careful not to overuse this capability, however. If you find yourself depending more
458and more on some data within the inflated column, then it may be time to factor that
459data out.
460
81791ac3 461=back
462
a14a46e2 463=head2 Custom methods in Result classes
464
8273e845 465You can add custom methods that do arbitrary things, even to unrelated tables.
466For example, to provide a C<< $book->foo() >> method which searches the
a14a46e2 467cd table, you'd could add this to Book.pm:
468
469 sub foo {
470 my ($self, $col_data) = @_;
471 return $self->result_source->schema->resultset('cd')->search($col_data);
472 }
473
474And invoke that on any Book Result object like so:
475
476 my $rs = $book->foo({ title => 'Down to Earth' });
477
478When two tables ARE related, L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base> provides many
479methods to find or create data in related tables for you. But if you want to
480write your own methods, you can.
481
482For example, to provide a C<< $book->foo() >> method to manually implement
8273e845 483what create_related() from L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base> does, you could
a14a46e2 484add this to Book.pm:
485
486 sub foo {
a5f5e470 487 my ($self, $rel_name, $col_data) = @_;
488 return $self->related_resultset($rel_name)->create($col_data);
a14a46e2 489 }
490
491Invoked like this:
492
493 my $author = $book->foo('author', { name => 'Fred' });
494
81791ac3 495=head2 Misc
496
497=over 4
498
499=item How do I store my own (non-db) data in my DBIx::Class objects?
500
458c1651 501You can add your own data accessors to your Result classes.
b5871402 502
b7875f2b 503One method is to use the built in mk_group_accessors (via L<Class::Accessor::Grouped>)
504
458c1651 505 package App::Schema::Result::MyTable;
b7875f2b 506
458c1651 507 use parent 'DBIx::Class::Core';
b7875f2b 508
509 __PACKAGE__->table('foo'); #etc
510 __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('simple' => qw/non_column_data/); # must use simple group
511
512An another method is to use L<Moose> with your L<DBIx::Class> package.
513
458c1651 514 package App::Schema::Result::MyTable;
b7875f2b 515
516 use Moose; # import Moose
40f2550b 517 use Moose::Util::TypeConstraint; # import Moose accessor type constraints
b7875f2b 518
458c1651 519 extends 'DBIx::Class::Core'; # Moose changes the way we define our parent (base) package
b7875f2b 520
521 has 'non_column_data' => ( is => 'rw', isa => 'Str' ); # define a simple attribute
522
523 __PACKAGE__->table('foo'); # etc
524
4a0eed52 525With either of these methods the resulting use of the accessor would be
b7875f2b 526
47d7b769 527 my $result;
b7875f2b 528
47d7b769 529 # assume that somewhere in here $result will get assigned to a MyTable row
b7875f2b 530
47d7b769 531 $result->non_column_data('some string'); # would set the non_column_data accessor
b7875f2b 532
533 # some other stuff happens here
534
47d7b769 535 $result->update(); # would not inline the non_column_data accessor into the update
b7875f2b 536
40f2550b 537
f7a90adc 538=item How do I use DBIx::Class objects in my TT templates?
81791ac3 539
e147365d 540Like normal objects, mostly. However you need to watch out for TT
541calling methods in list context. When calling relationship accessors
542you will not get resultsets, but a list of all the related objects.
543
c0e1e949 544Use the L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search_rs> method, or the
545relationship accessor methods ending with "_rs" to work around this
546issue.
547
548See also L<DBIx::Class::Relationship/has_many>.
b5871402 549
81791ac3 550=item See the SQL statements my code is producing?
551
c0e1e949 552Set the shell environment variable C<DBIC_TRACE> to a true value.
553
554For more info see L<DBIx::Class::Storage> for details of how
f7a90adc 555to turn on debugging in the environment, pass your own filehandle to
556save debug to, or create your own callback.
b5871402 557
81791ac3 558=item Why didn't my search run any SQL?
559
b5871402 560L<DBIx::Class> runs the actual SQL statement as late as possible, thus
561if you create a resultset using C<search> in scalar context, no query
562is executed. You can create further resultset refinements by calling
563search again or relationship accessors. The SQL query is only run when
fb13a49f 564you ask the resultset for an actual result object.
81791ac3 565
e4773415 566=item How do I deal with tables that lack a primary key?
567
568If your table lacks a primary key, DBIx::Class can't work out which row
569it should operate on, for example to delete or update. However, a
570UNIQUE constraint on one or more columns allows DBIx::Class to uniquely
571identify the row, so you can tell L<DBIx::Class::ResultSource> these
572columns act as a primary key, even if they don't from the database's
573point of view:
574
575 $resultset->set_primary_key(@column);
576
bc96f260 577=item How do I make my program start faster?
578
579Look at the tips in L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/"STARTUP SPEED">
580
581=item How do I reduce the overhead of database queries?
582
583You can reduce the overhead of object creation within L<DBIx::Class>
fb13a49f 584using the tips in L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/"Skip result object creation for faster results">
bc96f260 585and L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/"Get raw data for blindingly fast results">
586
3e89f284 587=item How do I override a run time method (e.g. a relationship accessor)?
588
589If you need access to the original accessor, then you must "wrap around" the original method.
590You can do that either with L<Moose::Manual::MethodModifiers> or L<Class::Method::Modifiers>.
591The code example works for both modules:
592
593 package Your::Schema::Group;
594 use Class::Method::Modifiers;
8273e845 595
3e89f284 596 # ... declare columns ...
8273e845 597
3e89f284 598 __PACKAGE__->has_many('group_servers', 'Your::Schema::GroupServer', 'group_id');
599 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('servers', 'group_servers', 'server');
8273e845 600
3e89f284 601 # if the server group is a "super group", then return all servers
602 # otherwise return only servers that belongs to the given group
603 around 'servers' => sub {
604 my $orig = shift;
605 my $self = shift;
606
607 return $self->$orig(@_) unless $self->is_super_group;
608 return $self->result_source->schema->resultset('Server')->all;
609 };
610
611If you just want to override the original method, and don't care about the data
612from the original accessor, then you have two options. Either use
613L<Method::Signatures::Simple> that does most of the work for you, or do
614it the "dirty way".
615
616L<Method::Signatures::Simple> way:
617
618 package Your::Schema::Group;
619 use Method::Signatures::Simple;
8273e845 620
3e89f284 621 # ... declare columns ...
8273e845 622
3e89f284 623 __PACKAGE__->has_many('group_servers', 'Your::Schema::GroupServer', 'group_id');
624 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('servers', 'group_servers', 'server');
8273e845 625
3e89f284 626 # The method keyword automatically injects the annoying my $self = shift; for you.
627 method servers {
628 return $self->result_source->schema->resultset('Server')->search({ ... });
629 }
630
631The dirty way:
632
633 package Your::Schema::Group;
634 use Sub::Name;
8273e845 635
3e89f284 636 # ... declare columns ...
8273e845 637
3e89f284 638 __PACKAGE__->has_many('group_servers', 'Your::Schema::GroupServer', 'group_id');
639 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many('servers', 'group_servers', 'server');
8273e845 640
3e89f284 641 *servers = subname servers => sub {
642 my $self = shift;
643 return $self->result_source->schema->resultset('Server')->search({ ... });
644 };
8273e845 645
81791ac3 646=back
462bb847 647
648=head2 Notes for CDBI users
649
650=over 4
651
652=item Is there a way to make an object auto-stringify itself as a
653particular column or group of columns (a-la cdbi Stringfy column
654group, or stringify_self method) ?
655
c6d52fe4 656See L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/Stringification>
462bb847 657
658=back
acdda5b2 659
660=head2 Troubleshooting
661
662=over 4
663
664=item Help, I can't connect to postgresql!
665
666If you get an error such as:
667
668 DBI connect('dbname=dbic','user',...) failed: could not connect to server:
669 No such file or directory Is the server running locally and accepting
670 connections on Unix domain socket "/var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432"?
671
672Likely you have/had two copies of postgresql installed simultaneously, the
673second one will use a default port of 5433, while L<DBD::Pg> is compiled with a
674default port of 5432.
675
8f97b72b 676You can change the port setting in C<postgresql.conf>.
acdda5b2 677
e416146e 678=item I've lost or forgotten my mysql password
679
680Stop mysqld and restart it with the --skip-grant-tables option.
681
682Issue the following statements in the mysql client.
683
684 UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('MyNewPass') WHERE User='root';
685 FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
686
687Restart mysql.
688
689Taken from:
690
691L<http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/resetting-permissions.html>.
692
acdda5b2 693=back
a2bd3796 694
695=head1 FURTHER QUESTIONS?
696
697Check the list of L<additional DBIC resources|DBIx::Class/GETTING HELP/SUPPORT>.
698
699=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
700
701This module is free software L<copyright|DBIx::Class/COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE>
702by the L<DBIx::Class (DBIC) authors|DBIx::Class/AUTHORS>. You can
703redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the
704L<DBIx::Class library|DBIx::Class/COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE>.