trivial optimization to MODIFY_CODE_ATTRIBUTES
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / ResultSet.pm
CommitLineData
89c0a5a2 1package DBIx::Class::ResultSet;
2
3use strict;
4use warnings;
5use overload
ebaefbc2 6 '0+' => \&count,
a910dc57 7 'bool' => sub { 1; },
89c0a5a2 8 fallback => 1;
3c5b25c5 9use Data::Page;
ea20d0fd 10use Storable;
bcd26419 11use Scalar::Util qw/weaken/;
89c0a5a2 12
701da8c4 13use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
14__PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/AccessorGroup/);
a50bcd52 15__PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('simple' => qw/result_source result_class/);
701da8c4 16
ee38fa40 17=head1 NAME
18
bfab575a 19DBIx::Class::ResultSet - Responsible for fetching and creating resultset.
ee38fa40 20
bfab575a 21=head1 SYNOPSIS
ee38fa40 22
a33df5d4 23 my $rs = $schema->resultset('User')->search(registered => 1);
24 my @rows = $schema->resultset('Foo')->search(bar => 'baz');
ee38fa40 25
26=head1 DESCRIPTION
27
bfab575a 28The resultset is also known as an iterator. It is responsible for handling
a33df5d4 29queries that may return an arbitrary number of rows, e.g. via L</search>
bfab575a 30or a C<has_many> relationship.
ee38fa40 31
a33df5d4 32In the examples below, the following table classes are used:
33
34 package MyApp::Schema::Artist;
35 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
f4409169 36 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/Core/);
a33df5d4 37 __PACKAGE__->table('artist');
38 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/artistid name/);
39 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('artistid');
40 __PACKAGE__->has_many(cds => 'MyApp::Schema::CD');
41 1;
42
43 package MyApp::Schema::CD;
44 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
f4409169 45 __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/Core/);
46 __PACKAGE__->table('cd');
a33df5d4 47 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/cdid artist title year/);
48 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('cdid');
49 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(artist => 'MyApp::Schema::Artist');
50 1;
51
ee38fa40 52=head1 METHODS
53
87c4e602 54=head2 new
55
56=head3 Arguments: ($source, \%$attrs)
ee38fa40 57
a33df5d4 58The resultset constructor. Takes a source object (usually a
181a28f4 59L<DBIx::Class::ResultSourceProxy::Table>) and an attribute hash (see L</ATTRIBUTES>
a33df5d4 60below). Does not perform any queries -- these are executed as needed by the
61other methods.
62
63Generally you won't need to construct a resultset manually. You'll
64automatically get one from e.g. a L</search> called in scalar context:
65
66 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search({ title => '100th Window' });
ee38fa40 67
68=cut
69
89c0a5a2 70sub new {
fea3d045 71 my $class = shift;
f9db5527 72 return $class->new_result(@_) if ref $class;
5e8b1b2a 73
fea3d045 74 my ($source, $attrs) = @_;
bcd26419 75 weaken $source;
ea20d0fd 76 $attrs = Storable::dclone($attrs || {}); # { %{ $attrs || {} } };
bcd26419 77 #use Data::Dumper; warn Dumper($attrs);
6aeb9185 78 my $alias = ($attrs->{alias} ||= 'me');
5e8b1b2a 79
80 $attrs->{columns} ||= delete $attrs->{cols} if $attrs->{cols};
1c258fc1 81 delete $attrs->{as} if $attrs->{columns};
5e8b1b2a 82 $attrs->{columns} ||= [ $source->columns ] unless $attrs->{select};
1c258fc1 83 $attrs->{select} = [ map { m/\./ ? $_ : "${alias}.$_" } @{delete $attrs->{columns}} ]
84 if $attrs->{columns};
5e8b1b2a 85 $attrs->{as} ||= [ map { m/^\Q$alias.\E(.+)$/ ? $1 : $_ } @{$attrs->{select}} ];
5ac6a044 86 if (my $include = delete $attrs->{include_columns}) {
87 push(@{$attrs->{select}}, @$include);
223aea40 88 push(@{$attrs->{as}}, map { m/([^.]+)$/; $1; } @$include);
5ac6a044 89 }
976f3686 90 #use Data::Dumper; warn Dumper(@{$attrs}{qw/select as/});
5e8b1b2a 91
fea3d045 92 $attrs->{from} ||= [ { $alias => $source->from } ];
8fab5eef 93 $attrs->{seen_join} ||= {};
5e8b1b2a 94 my %seen;
b52e9bf8 95 if (my $join = delete $attrs->{join}) {
5e8b1b2a 96 foreach my $j (ref $join eq 'ARRAY' ? @$join : ($join)) {
c7ce65e6 97 if (ref $j eq 'HASH') {
98 $seen{$_} = 1 foreach keys %$j;
99 } else {
100 $seen{$j} = 1;
101 }
102 }
8fab5eef 103 push(@{$attrs->{from}}, $source->resolve_join($join, $attrs->{alias}, $attrs->{seen_join}));
c7ce65e6 104 }
5e8b1b2a 105
54540863 106 $attrs->{group_by} ||= $attrs->{select} if delete $attrs->{distinct};
1c258fc1 107 $attrs->{order_by} = [ $attrs->{order_by} ] if $attrs->{order_by} and !ref($attrs->{order_by});
a86b1efe 108 $attrs->{order_by} ||= [];
109
555af3d9 110 my $collapse = $attrs->{collapse} || {};
b3e8ac9b 111 if (my $prefetch = delete $attrs->{prefetch}) {
0f66a01b 112 my @pre_order;
5e8b1b2a 113 foreach my $p (ref $prefetch eq 'ARRAY' ? @$prefetch : ($prefetch)) {
114 if ( ref $p eq 'HASH' ) {
b3e8ac9b 115 foreach my $key (keys %$p) {
116 push(@{$attrs->{from}}, $source->resolve_join($p, $attrs->{alias}))
117 unless $seen{$key};
118 }
5e8b1b2a 119 } else {
b3e8ac9b 120 push(@{$attrs->{from}}, $source->resolve_join($p, $attrs->{alias}))
121 unless $seen{$p};
122 }
a86b1efe 123 my @prefetch = $source->resolve_prefetch(
0f66a01b 124 $p, $attrs->{alias}, {}, \@pre_order, $collapse);
489709af 125 push(@{$attrs->{select}}, map { $_->[0] } @prefetch);
126 push(@{$attrs->{as}}, map { $_->[1] } @prefetch);
b3e8ac9b 127 }
0f66a01b 128 push(@{$attrs->{order_by}}, @pre_order);
fef5d100 129 }
555af3d9 130 $attrs->{collapse} = $collapse;
5e8b1b2a 131# use Data::Dumper; warn Dumper($collapse) if keys %{$collapse};
555af3d9 132
6aeb9185 133 if ($attrs->{page}) {
134 $attrs->{rows} ||= 10;
135 $attrs->{offset} ||= 0;
136 $attrs->{offset} += ($attrs->{rows} * ($attrs->{page} - 1));
137 }
0f66a01b 138
5e8b1b2a 139 bless {
701da8c4 140 result_source => $source,
a50bcd52 141 result_class => $attrs->{result_class} || $source->result_class,
89c0a5a2 142 cond => $attrs->{where},
0a3c5b43 143 from => $attrs->{from},
0f66a01b 144 collapse => $collapse,
3c5b25c5 145 count => undef,
93b004d3 146 page => delete $attrs->{page},
3c5b25c5 147 pager => undef,
5e8b1b2a 148 attrs => $attrs
149 }, $class;
89c0a5a2 150}
151
bfab575a 152=head2 search
0a3c5b43 153
87f0da6a 154 my @obj = $rs->search({ foo => 3 }); # "... WHERE foo = 3"
155 my $new_rs = $rs->search({ foo => 3 });
156
6009260a 157If you need to pass in additional attributes but no additional condition,
5e8b1b2a 158call it as C<search(undef, \%attrs);>.
87f0da6a 159
a33df5d4 160 # "SELECT foo, bar FROM $class_table"
5e8b1b2a 161 my @all = $class->search(undef, { columns => [qw/foo bar/] });
0a3c5b43 162
163=cut
164
165sub search {
166 my $self = shift;
167
ff7bb7a1 168 my $rs;
169 if( @_ ) {
170
171 my $attrs = { %{$self->{attrs}} };
8839560b 172 my $having = delete $attrs->{having};
223aea40 173 $attrs = { %$attrs, %{ pop(@_) } } if @_ > 1 and ref $_[$#_] eq 'HASH';
6009260a 174
3e0e9e27 175 my $where = (@_
176 ? ((@_ == 1 || ref $_[0] eq "HASH")
177 ? shift
178 : ((@_ % 2)
179 ? $self->throw_exception(
180 "Odd number of arguments to search")
181 : {@_}))
182 : undef());
ff7bb7a1 183 if (defined $where) {
223aea40 184 $attrs->{where} = (defined $attrs->{where}
ad3d2d7c 185 ? { '-and' =>
186 [ map { ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' ? [ -or => $_ ] : $_ }
187 $where, $attrs->{where} ] }
0a3c5b43 188 : $where);
ff7bb7a1 189 }
0a3c5b43 190
8839560b 191 if (defined $having) {
223aea40 192 $attrs->{having} = (defined $attrs->{having}
8839560b 193 ? { '-and' =>
194 [ map { ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' ? [ -or => $_ ] : $_ }
195 $having, $attrs->{having} ] }
196 : $having);
8839560b 197 }
198
ff7bb7a1 199 $rs = (ref $self)->new($self->result_source, $attrs);
200 }
201 else {
202 $rs = $self;
223aea40 203 $rs->reset;
ff7bb7a1 204 }
0a3c5b43 205 return (wantarray ? $rs->all : $rs);
206}
207
87f0da6a 208=head2 search_literal
209
6009260a 210 my @obj = $rs->search_literal($literal_where_cond, @bind);
211 my $new_rs = $rs->search_literal($literal_where_cond, @bind);
212
213Pass a literal chunk of SQL to be added to the conditional part of the
87f0da6a 214resultset.
6009260a 215
bfab575a 216=cut
fd9f5466 217
6009260a 218sub search_literal {
219 my ($self, $cond, @vals) = @_;
220 my $attrs = (ref $vals[$#vals] eq 'HASH' ? { %{ pop(@vals) } } : {});
221 $attrs->{bind} = [ @{$self->{attrs}{bind}||[]}, @vals ];
222 return $self->search(\$cond, $attrs);
223}
0a3c5b43 224
87c4e602 225=head2 find
226
227=head3 Arguments: (@colvalues) | (\%cols, \%attrs?)
87f0da6a 228
229Finds a row based on its primary key or unique constraint. For example:
230
87f0da6a 231 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find(5);
232
233Also takes an optional C<key> attribute, to search by a specific key or unique
234constraint. For example:
235
fd9f5466 236 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find(
87f0da6a 237 {
238 artist => 'Massive Attack',
239 title => 'Mezzanine',
240 },
241 { key => 'artist_title' }
242 );
243
a33df5d4 244See also L</find_or_create> and L</update_or_create>.
245
87f0da6a 246=cut
716b3d29 247
248sub find {
249 my ($self, @vals) = @_;
250 my $attrs = (@vals > 1 && ref $vals[$#vals] eq 'HASH' ? pop(@vals) : {});
87f0da6a 251
701da8c4 252 my @cols = $self->result_source->primary_columns;
87f0da6a 253 if (exists $attrs->{key}) {
701da8c4 254 my %uniq = $self->result_source->unique_constraints;
223aea40 255 $self->throw_exception( "Unknown key $attrs->{key} on $self->name" )
87f0da6a 256 unless exists $uniq{$attrs->{key}};
257 @cols = @{ $uniq{$attrs->{key}} };
258 }
259 #use Data::Dumper; warn Dumper($attrs, @vals, @cols);
701da8c4 260 $self->throw_exception( "Can't find unless a primary key or unique constraint is defined" )
87f0da6a 261 unless @cols;
262
716b3d29 263 my $query;
264 if (ref $vals[0] eq 'HASH') {
01bc091e 265 $query = { %{$vals[0]} };
87f0da6a 266 } elsif (@cols == @vals) {
716b3d29 267 $query = {};
87f0da6a 268 @{$query}{@cols} = @vals;
716b3d29 269 } else {
270 $query = {@vals};
271 }
223aea40 272 foreach my $key (grep { ! m/\./ } keys %$query) {
273 $query->{"$self->{attrs}{alias}.$key"} = delete $query->{$key};
01bc091e 274 }
716b3d29 275 #warn Dumper($query);
8389d433 276
277 if (keys %$attrs) {
278 my $rs = $self->search($query,$attrs);
279 return keys %{$rs->{collapse}} ? $rs->next : $rs->single;
280 } else {
281 return keys %{$self->{collapse}} ? $self->search($query)->next : $self->single($query);
282 }
716b3d29 283}
284
b52e9bf8 285=head2 search_related
286
287 $rs->search_related('relname', $cond?, $attrs?);
288
a33df5d4 289Search the specified relationship. Optionally specify a condition for matching
290records.
291
b52e9bf8 292=cut
293
6aeb9185 294sub search_related {
64acc2bc 295 return shift->related_resultset(shift)->search(@_);
6aeb9185 296}
b52e9bf8 297
bfab575a 298=head2 cursor
ee38fa40 299
bfab575a 300Returns a storage-driven cursor to the given resultset.
ee38fa40 301
302=cut
303
73f58123 304sub cursor {
305 my ($self) = @_;
223aea40 306 my $attrs = { %{$self->{attrs}} };
73f58123 307 return $self->{cursor}
701da8c4 308 ||= $self->result_source->storage->select($self->{from}, $attrs->{select},
73f58123 309 $attrs->{where},$attrs);
310}
311
a04ab285 312=head2 single
313
314Inflates the first result without creating a cursor
315
316=cut
317
318sub single {
223aea40 319 my ($self, $where) = @_;
320 my $attrs = { %{$self->{attrs}} };
321 if ($where) {
a04ab285 322 if (defined $attrs->{where}) {
323 $attrs->{where} = {
223aea40 324 '-and' =>
325 [ map { ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' ? [ -or => $_ ] : $_ }
326 $where, delete $attrs->{where} ]
a04ab285 327 };
328 } else {
223aea40 329 $attrs->{where} = $where;
a04ab285 330 }
331 }
332 my @data = $self->result_source->storage->select_single(
333 $self->{from}, $attrs->{select},
334 $attrs->{where},$attrs);
335 return (@data ? $self->_construct_object(@data) : ());
336}
337
338
87f0da6a 339=head2 search_like
340
a33df5d4 341Perform a search, but use C<LIKE> instead of equality as the condition. Note
342that this is simply a convenience method; you most likely want to use
343L</search> with specific operators.
344
345For more information, see L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook>.
87f0da6a 346
347=cut
58a4bd18 348
349sub search_like {
223aea40 350 my $class = shift;
351 my $attrs = (@_ > 1 && ref $_[$#_] eq 'HASH' ? pop(@_) : {});
352 my $query = ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' ? { %{shift()} }: {@_};
58a4bd18 353 $query->{$_} = { 'like' => $query->{$_} } for keys %$query;
354 return $class->search($query, { %$attrs });
355}
356
87c4e602 357=head2 slice
358
359=head3 Arguments: ($first, $last)
ee38fa40 360
bfab575a 361Returns a subset of elements from the resultset.
ee38fa40 362
363=cut
364
89c0a5a2 365sub slice {
366 my ($self, $min, $max) = @_;
367 my $attrs = { %{ $self->{attrs} || {} } };
6aeb9185 368 $attrs->{offset} ||= 0;
369 $attrs->{offset} += $min;
89c0a5a2 370 $attrs->{rows} = ($max ? ($max - $min + 1) : 1);
701da8c4 371 my $slice = (ref $self)->new($self->result_source, $attrs);
89c0a5a2 372 return (wantarray ? $slice->all : $slice);
373}
374
87f0da6a 375=head2 next
ee38fa40 376
a33df5d4 377Returns the next element in the resultset (C<undef> is there is none).
378
379Can be used to efficiently iterate over records in the resultset:
380
5e8b1b2a 381 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search;
a33df5d4 382 while (my $cd = $rs->next) {
383 print $cd->title;
384 }
ee38fa40 385
386=cut
387
89c0a5a2 388sub next {
389 my ($self) = @_;
223aea40 390 if (@{$self->{all_cache} || []}) {
64acc2bc 391 $self->{all_cache_position} ||= 0;
223aea40 392 return $self->{all_cache}->[$self->{all_cache_position}++];
64acc2bc 393 }
3e0e9e27 394 if ($self->{attrs}{cache}) {
0f66a01b 395 $self->{all_cache_position} = 1;
3e0e9e27 396 return ($self->all)[0];
397 }
0f66a01b 398 my @row = (exists $self->{stashed_row}
399 ? @{delete $self->{stashed_row}}
400 : $self->cursor->next);
a953d8d9 401# warn Dumper(\@row); use Data::Dumper;
89c0a5a2 402 return unless (@row);
c7ce65e6 403 return $self->_construct_object(@row);
404}
405
406sub _construct_object {
407 my ($self, @row) = @_;
b3e8ac9b 408 my @as = @{ $self->{attrs}{as} };
223aea40 409
0f66a01b 410 my $info = $self->_collapse_result(\@as, \@row);
223aea40 411
a50bcd52 412 my $new = $self->result_class->inflate_result($self->result_source, @$info);
223aea40 413
33ce49d6 414 $new = $self->{attrs}{record_filter}->($new)
415 if exists $self->{attrs}{record_filter};
416 return $new;
89c0a5a2 417}
418
0f66a01b 419sub _collapse_result {
420 my ($self, $as, $row, $prefix) = @_;
421
422 my %const;
423
424 my @copy = @$row;
5a5bec6c 425 foreach my $this_as (@$as) {
426 my $val = shift @copy;
427 if (defined $prefix) {
428 if ($this_as =~ m/^\Q${prefix}.\E(.+)$/) {
429 my $remain = $1;
223aea40 430 $remain =~ /^(?:(.*)\.)?([^.]+)$/;
5a5bec6c 431 $const{$1||''}{$2} = $val;
432 }
433 } else {
223aea40 434 $this_as =~ /^(?:(.*)\.)?([^.]+)$/;
5a5bec6c 435 $const{$1||''}{$2} = $val;
0f66a01b 436 }
0f66a01b 437 }
438
0f66a01b 439 my $info = [ {}, {} ];
440 foreach my $key (keys %const) {
441 if (length $key) {
442 my $target = $info;
443 my @parts = split(/\./, $key);
444 foreach my $p (@parts) {
445 $target = $target->[1]->{$p} ||= [];
446 }
447 $target->[0] = $const{$key};
448 } else {
449 $info->[0] = $const{$key};
450 }
451 }
452
5a5bec6c 453 my @collapse = (defined($prefix)
454 ? (map { (m/^\Q${prefix}.\E(.+)$/ ? ($1) : ()); }
455 keys %{$self->{collapse}})
456 : keys %{$self->{collapse}});
457 if (@collapse) {
458 my ($c) = sort { length $a <=> length $b } @collapse;
0f66a01b 459 my $target = $info;
0f66a01b 460 foreach my $p (split(/\./, $c)) {
5a5bec6c 461 $target = $target->[1]->{$p} ||= [];
0f66a01b 462 }
5a5bec6c 463 my $c_prefix = (defined($prefix) ? "${prefix}.${c}" : $c);
464 my @co_key = @{$self->{collapse}{$c_prefix}};
0f66a01b 465 my %co_check = map { ($_, $target->[0]->{$_}); } @co_key;
5a5bec6c 466 my $tree = $self->_collapse_result($as, $row, $c_prefix);
0f66a01b 467 my (@final, @raw);
5a5bec6c 468 while ( !(grep {
469 !defined($tree->[0]->{$_})
470 || $co_check{$_} ne $tree->[0]->{$_}
471 } @co_key) ) {
0f66a01b 472 push(@final, $tree);
473 last unless (@raw = $self->cursor->next);
474 $row = $self->{stashed_row} = \@raw;
5a5bec6c 475 $tree = $self->_collapse_result($as, $row, $c_prefix);
476 #warn Data::Dumper::Dumper($tree, $row);
0f66a01b 477 }
223aea40 478 @$target = @final;
0f66a01b 479 }
480
0f66a01b 481 return $info;
482}
483
87c4e602 484=head2 result_source
701da8c4 485
486Returns a reference to the result source for this recordset.
487
488=cut
489
490
bfab575a 491=head2 count
ee38fa40 492
bfab575a 493Performs an SQL C<COUNT> with the same query as the resultset was built
6009260a 494with to find the number of elements. If passed arguments, does a search
495on the resultset and counts the results of that.
ee38fa40 496
bda4c2b8 497Note: When using C<count> with C<group_by>, L<DBIX::Class> emulates C<GROUP BY>
498using C<COUNT( DISTINCT( columns ) )>. Some databases (notably SQLite) do
499not support C<DISTINCT> with multiple columns. If you are using such a
500database, you should only use columns from the main table in your C<group_by>
501clause.
502
ee38fa40 503=cut
504
89c0a5a2 505sub count {
6009260a 506 my $self = shift;
223aea40 507 return $self->search(@_)->count if @_ and defined $_[0];
6aeb9185 508 unless (defined $self->{count}) {
223aea40 509 return scalar @{ $self->get_cache } if @{ $self->get_cache };
510 my $select = { count => '*' };
8839560b 511 my $attrs = { %{ $self->{attrs} } };
223aea40 512 if (my $group_by = delete $attrs->{group_by}) {
8839560b 513 delete $attrs->{having};
dec2517f 514 my @distinct = (ref $group_by ? @$group_by : ($group_by));
15c382be 515 # todo: try CONCAT for multi-column pk
516 my @pk = $self->result_source->primary_columns;
223aea40 517 if (@pk == 1) {
518 foreach my $column (@distinct) {
519 if ($column =~ qr/^(?:\Q$attrs->{alias}.\E)?$pk[0]$/) {
520 @distinct = ($column);
15c382be 521 last;
522 }
523 }
524 }
525
223aea40 526 $select = { count => { distinct => \@distinct } };
15c382be 527 #use Data::Dumper; die Dumper $select;
528 }
529
8839560b 530 $attrs->{select} = $select;
223aea40 531 $attrs->{as} = [qw/count/];
ea20d0fd 532 # offset, order by and page are not needed to count. record_filter is cdbi
533 delete $attrs->{$_} for qw/rows offset order_by page pager record_filter/;
3c5b25c5 534
701da8c4 535 ($self->{count}) = (ref $self)->new($self->result_source, $attrs)->cursor->next;
3c5b25c5 536 }
537 return 0 unless $self->{count};
6aeb9185 538 my $count = $self->{count};
539 $count -= $self->{attrs}{offset} if $self->{attrs}{offset};
540 $count = $self->{attrs}{rows} if
223aea40 541 $self->{attrs}{rows} and $self->{attrs}{rows} < $count;
6aeb9185 542 return $count;
89c0a5a2 543}
544
bfab575a 545=head2 count_literal
6009260a 546
a33df5d4 547Calls L</search_literal> with the passed arguments, then L</count>.
6009260a 548
549=cut
550
551sub count_literal { shift->search_literal(@_)->count; }
552
bfab575a 553=head2 all
ee38fa40 554
bfab575a 555Returns all elements in the resultset. Called implictly if the resultset
556is returned in list context.
ee38fa40 557
558=cut
559
89c0a5a2 560sub all {
561 my ($self) = @_;
223aea40 562 return @{ $self->get_cache } if @{ $self->get_cache };
5a5bec6c 563
564 my @obj;
565
566 if (keys %{$self->{collapse}}) {
567 # Using $self->cursor->all is really just an optimisation.
568 # If we're collapsing has_many prefetches it probably makes
569 # very little difference, and this is cleaner than hacking
570 # _construct_object to survive the approach
5a5bec6c 571 $self->cursor->reset;
479ed423 572 my @row = $self->cursor->next;
573 while (@row) {
5a5bec6c 574 push(@obj, $self->_construct_object(@row));
479ed423 575 @row = (exists $self->{stashed_row}
576 ? @{delete $self->{stashed_row}}
577 : $self->cursor->next);
5a5bec6c 578 }
579 } else {
223aea40 580 @obj = map { $self->_construct_object(@$_) } $self->cursor->all;
64acc2bc 581 }
5a5bec6c 582
223aea40 583 $self->set_cache(\@obj) if $self->{attrs}{cache};
5a5bec6c 584 return @obj;
89c0a5a2 585}
586
bfab575a 587=head2 reset
ee38fa40 588
bfab575a 589Resets the resultset's cursor, so you can iterate through the elements again.
ee38fa40 590
591=cut
592
89c0a5a2 593sub reset {
594 my ($self) = @_;
64acc2bc 595 $self->{all_cache_position} = 0;
73f58123 596 $self->cursor->reset;
89c0a5a2 597 return $self;
598}
599
bfab575a 600=head2 first
ee38fa40 601
bfab575a 602Resets the resultset and returns the first element.
ee38fa40 603
604=cut
605
89c0a5a2 606sub first {
607 return $_[0]->reset->next;
608}
609
87c4e602 610=head2 update
611
612=head3 Arguments: (\%values)
c01ab172 613
a33df5d4 614Sets the specified columns in the resultset to the supplied values.
c01ab172 615
616=cut
617
618sub update {
619 my ($self, $values) = @_;
701da8c4 620 $self->throw_exception("Values for update must be a hash") unless ref $values eq 'HASH';
621 return $self->result_source->storage->update(
622 $self->result_source->from, $values, $self->{cond});
c01ab172 623}
624
87c4e602 625=head2 update_all
626
627=head3 Arguments: (\%values)
c01ab172 628
a33df5d4 629Fetches all objects and updates them one at a time. Note that C<update_all>
630will run cascade triggers while L</update> will not.
c01ab172 631
632=cut
633
634sub update_all {
635 my ($self, $values) = @_;
701da8c4 636 $self->throw_exception("Values for update must be a hash") unless ref $values eq 'HASH';
c01ab172 637 foreach my $obj ($self->all) {
638 $obj->set_columns($values)->update;
639 }
640 return 1;
641}
642
bfab575a 643=head2 delete
ee38fa40 644
c01ab172 645Deletes the contents of the resultset from its result source.
ee38fa40 646
647=cut
648
28927b50 649sub delete {
89c0a5a2 650 my ($self) = @_;
ca4b5ab7 651 my $del = {};
652 $self->throw_exception("Can't delete on resultset with condition unless hash or array")
653 unless (ref($self->{cond}) eq 'HASH' || ref($self->{cond}) eq 'ARRAY');
654 if (ref $self->{cond} eq 'ARRAY') {
655 $del = [ map { my %hash;
656 foreach my $key (keys %{$_}) {
223aea40 657 $key =~ /([^.]+)$/;
ca4b5ab7 658 $hash{$1} = $_->{$key};
659 }; \%hash; } @{$self->{cond}} ];
660 } elsif ((keys %{$self->{cond}})[0] eq '-and') {
661 $del->{-and} = [ map { my %hash;
662 foreach my $key (keys %{$_}) {
223aea40 663 $key =~ /([^.]+)$/;
ca4b5ab7 664 $hash{$1} = $_->{$key};
665 }; \%hash; } @{$self->{cond}{-and}} ];
666 } else {
667 foreach my $key (keys %{$self->{cond}}) {
223aea40 668 $key =~ /([^.]+)$/;
ca4b5ab7 669 $del->{$1} = $self->{cond}{$key};
670 }
671 }
672 $self->result_source->storage->delete($self->result_source->from, $del);
89c0a5a2 673 return 1;
674}
675
c01ab172 676=head2 delete_all
677
a33df5d4 678Fetches all objects and deletes them one at a time. Note that C<delete_all>
679will run cascade triggers while L</delete> will not.
c01ab172 680
681=cut
682
683sub delete_all {
684 my ($self) = @_;
685 $_->delete for $self->all;
686 return 1;
687}
28927b50 688
bfab575a 689=head2 pager
ee38fa40 690
691Returns a L<Data::Page> object for the current resultset. Only makes
a33df5d4 692sense for queries with a C<page> attribute.
ee38fa40 693
694=cut
695
3c5b25c5 696sub pager {
697 my ($self) = @_;
698 my $attrs = $self->{attrs};
701da8c4 699 $self->throw_exception("Can't create pager for non-paged rs") unless $self->{page};
6aeb9185 700 $attrs->{rows} ||= 10;
701 $self->count;
702 return $self->{pager} ||= Data::Page->new(
93b004d3 703 $self->{count}, $attrs->{rows}, $self->{page});
3c5b25c5 704}
705
87c4e602 706=head2 page
707
708=head3 Arguments: ($page_num)
ee38fa40 709
bfab575a 710Returns a new resultset for the specified page.
ee38fa40 711
712=cut
713
3c5b25c5 714sub page {
715 my ($self, $page) = @_;
6aeb9185 716 my $attrs = { %{$self->{attrs}} };
3c5b25c5 717 $attrs->{page} = $page;
701da8c4 718 return (ref $self)->new($self->result_source, $attrs);
fea3d045 719}
720
87c4e602 721=head2 new_result
722
723=head3 Arguments: (\%vals)
fea3d045 724
87f0da6a 725Creates a result in the resultset's result class.
fea3d045 726
727=cut
728
729sub new_result {
730 my ($self, $values) = @_;
701da8c4 731 $self->throw_exception( "new_result needs a hash" )
fea3d045 732 unless (ref $values eq 'HASH');
701da8c4 733 $self->throw_exception( "Can't abstract implicit construct, condition not a hash" )
fea3d045 734 if ($self->{cond} && !(ref $self->{cond} eq 'HASH'));
735 my %new = %$values;
736 my $alias = $self->{attrs}{alias};
737 foreach my $key (keys %{$self->{cond}||{}}) {
223aea40 738 $new{$1} = $self->{cond}{$key} if ($key =~ m/^(?:\Q${alias}.\E)?([^.]+)$/);
fea3d045 739 }
a50bcd52 740 my $obj = $self->result_class->new(\%new);
701da8c4 741 $obj->result_source($self->result_source) if $obj->can('result_source');
223aea40 742 return $obj;
fea3d045 743}
744
87c4e602 745=head2 create
746
747=head3 Arguments: (\%vals)
fea3d045 748
87f0da6a 749Inserts a record into the resultset and returns the object.
fea3d045 750
a33df5d4 751Effectively a shortcut for C<< ->new_result(\%vals)->insert >>.
fea3d045 752
753=cut
754
755sub create {
756 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
701da8c4 757 $self->throw_exception( "create needs a hashref" ) unless ref $attrs eq 'HASH';
fea3d045 758 return $self->new_result($attrs)->insert;
3c5b25c5 759}
760
87c4e602 761=head2 find_or_create
762
763=head3 Arguments: (\%vals, \%attrs?)
87f0da6a 764
765 $class->find_or_create({ key => $val, ... });
c2b15ecc 766
fd9f5466 767Searches for a record matching the search condition; if it doesn't find one,
768creates one and returns that instead.
87f0da6a 769
87f0da6a 770 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find_or_create({
771 cdid => 5,
772 artist => 'Massive Attack',
773 title => 'Mezzanine',
774 year => 2005,
775 });
776
777Also takes an optional C<key> attribute, to search by a specific key or unique
778constraint. For example:
779
780 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->find_or_create(
781 {
782 artist => 'Massive Attack',
783 title => 'Mezzanine',
784 },
785 { key => 'artist_title' }
786 );
787
788See also L</find> and L</update_or_create>.
789
c2b15ecc 790=cut
791
792sub find_or_create {
793 my $self = shift;
87f0da6a 794 my $attrs = (@_ > 1 && ref $_[$#_] eq 'HASH' ? pop(@_) : {});
223aea40 795 my $hash = ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' ? shift : {@_};
87f0da6a 796 my $exists = $self->find($hash, $attrs);
223aea40 797 return defined $exists ? $exists : $self->create($hash);
c2b15ecc 798}
799
87f0da6a 800=head2 update_or_create
801
802 $class->update_or_create({ key => $val, ... });
803
804First, search for an existing row matching one of the unique constraints
805(including the primary key) on the source of this resultset. If a row is
806found, update it with the other given column values. Otherwise, create a new
807row.
808
809Takes an optional C<key> attribute to search on a specific unique constraint.
810For example:
811
812 # In your application
813 my $cd = $schema->resultset('CD')->update_or_create(
814 {
815 artist => 'Massive Attack',
816 title => 'Mezzanine',
817 year => 1998,
818 },
819 { key => 'artist_title' }
820 );
821
822If no C<key> is specified, it searches on all unique constraints defined on the
823source, including the primary key.
824
825If the C<key> is specified as C<primary>, search only on the primary key.
826
a33df5d4 827See also L</find> and L</find_or_create>.
828
87f0da6a 829=cut
830
831sub update_or_create {
832 my $self = shift;
87f0da6a 833 my $attrs = (@_ > 1 && ref $_[$#_] eq 'HASH' ? pop(@_) : {});
223aea40 834 my $hash = ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' ? shift : {@_};
87f0da6a 835
701da8c4 836 my %unique_constraints = $self->result_source->unique_constraints;
87f0da6a 837 my @constraint_names = (exists $attrs->{key}
838 ? ($attrs->{key})
839 : keys %unique_constraints);
840
841 my @unique_hashes;
842 foreach my $name (@constraint_names) {
843 my @unique_cols = @{ $unique_constraints{$name} };
844 my %unique_hash =
845 map { $_ => $hash->{$_} }
846 grep { exists $hash->{$_} }
847 @unique_cols;
848
849 push @unique_hashes, \%unique_hash
850 if (scalar keys %unique_hash == scalar @unique_cols);
851 }
852
87f0da6a 853 if (@unique_hashes) {
223aea40 854 my $row = $self->single(\@unique_hashes);
855 if (defined $row) {
87f0da6a 856 $row->set_columns($hash);
857 $row->update;
223aea40 858 return $row;
87f0da6a 859 }
860 }
861
223aea40 862 return $self->create($hash);
87f0da6a 863}
864
64acc2bc 865=head2 get_cache
866
867Gets the contents of the cache for the resultset.
868
869=cut
870
871sub get_cache {
223aea40 872 shift->{all_cache} || [];
64acc2bc 873}
874
875=head2 set_cache
876
877Sets the contents of the cache for the resultset. Expects an arrayref of objects of the same class as those produced by the resultset.
878
879=cut
880
881sub set_cache {
882 my ( $self, $data ) = @_;
883 $self->throw_exception("set_cache requires an arrayref")
884 if ref $data ne 'ARRAY';
a50bcd52 885 my $result_class = $self->result_class;
64acc2bc 886 foreach( @$data ) {
887 $self->throw_exception("cannot cache object of type '$_', expected '$result_class'")
888 if ref $_ ne $result_class;
889 }
890 $self->{all_cache} = $data;
891}
892
893=head2 clear_cache
894
895Clears the cache for the resultset.
896
897=cut
898
899sub clear_cache {
223aea40 900 shift->set_cache([]);
64acc2bc 901}
902
903=head2 related_resultset
904
905Returns a related resultset for the supplied relationship name.
906
907 $rs = $rs->related_resultset('foo');
908
909=cut
910
911sub related_resultset {
912 my ( $self, $rel, @rest ) = @_;
913 $self->{related_resultsets} ||= {};
223aea40 914 return $self->{related_resultsets}{$rel} ||= do {
915 #warn "fetching related resultset for rel '$rel'";
916 my $rel_obj = $self->result_source->relationship_info($rel);
917 $self->throw_exception(
918 "search_related: result source '" . $self->result_source->name .
919 "' has no such relationship ${rel}")
920 unless $rel_obj; #die Dumper $self->{attrs};
921
922 my $rs = $self->search(undef, { join => $rel });
923 my $alias = defined $rs->{attrs}{seen_join}{$rel}
924 && $rs->{attrs}{seen_join}{$rel} > 1
925 ? join('_', $rel, $rs->{attrs}{seen_join}{$rel})
926 : $rel;
927
64acc2bc 928 $self->result_source->schema->resultset($rel_obj->{class}
929 )->search( undef,
930 { %{$rs->{attrs}},
931 alias => $alias,
223aea40 932 select => undef,
933 as => undef }
934 )->search(@rest);
935 };
64acc2bc 936}
937
701da8c4 938=head2 throw_exception
939
940See Schema's throw_exception
941
942=cut
943
944sub throw_exception {
945 my $self=shift;
946 $self->result_source->schema->throw_exception(@_);
947}
948
40dbc108 949=head1 ATTRIBUTES
076652e8 950
a33df5d4 951The resultset takes various attributes that modify its behavior. Here's an
952overview of them:
bfab575a 953
954=head2 order_by
076652e8 955
a33df5d4 956Which column(s) to order the results by. This is currently passed through
957directly to SQL, so you can give e.g. C<foo DESC> for a descending order.
076652e8 958
5e8b1b2a 959=head2 columns
87c4e602 960
961=head3 Arguments: (arrayref)
976f3686 962
a33df5d4 963Shortcut to request a particular set of columns to be retrieved. Adds
964C<me.> onto the start of any column without a C<.> in it and sets C<select>
5e8b1b2a 965from that, then auto-populates C<as> from C<select> as normal. (You may also
966use the C<cols> attribute, as in earlier versions of DBIC.)
976f3686 967
87c4e602 968=head2 include_columns
969
970=head3 Arguments: (arrayref)
5ac6a044 971
972Shortcut to include additional columns in the returned results - for example
973
974 { include_columns => ['foo.name'], join => ['foo'] }
975
976would add a 'name' column to the information passed to object inflation
977
87c4e602 978=head2 select
979
980=head3 Arguments: (arrayref)
976f3686 981
4a28c340 982Indicates which columns should be selected from the storage. You can use
983column names, or in the case of RDBMS back ends, function or stored procedure
984names:
985
986 $rs = $schema->resultset('Foo')->search(
5e8b1b2a 987 undef,
4a28c340 988 {
cf7b40ed 989 select => [
4a28c340 990 'column_name',
991 { count => 'column_to_count' },
992 { sum => 'column_to_sum' }
cf7b40ed 993 ]
4a28c340 994 }
995 );
996
997When you use function/stored procedure names and do not supply an C<as>
998attribute, the column names returned are storage-dependent. E.g. MySQL would
999return a column named C<count(column_to_count)> in the above example.
976f3686 1000
87c4e602 1001=head2 as
1002
1003=head3 Arguments: (arrayref)
076652e8 1004
4a28c340 1005Indicates column names for object inflation. This is used in conjunction with
1006C<select>, usually when C<select> contains one or more function or stored
1007procedure names:
1008
1009 $rs = $schema->resultset('Foo')->search(
5e8b1b2a 1010 undef,
4a28c340 1011 {
cf7b40ed 1012 select => [
4a28c340 1013 'column1',
1014 { count => 'column2' }
cf7b40ed 1015 ],
4a28c340 1016 as => [qw/ column1 column2_count /]
1017 }
1018 );
1019
1020 my $foo = $rs->first(); # get the first Foo
1021
1022If the object against which the search is performed already has an accessor
1023matching a column name specified in C<as>, the value can be retrieved using
1024the accessor as normal:
1025
1026 my $column1 = $foo->column1();
1027
1028If on the other hand an accessor does not exist in the object, you need to
1029use C<get_column> instead:
1030
1031 my $column2_count = $foo->get_column('column2_count');
1032
1033You can create your own accessors if required - see
1034L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook> for details.
ee38fa40 1035
bfab575a 1036=head2 join
ee38fa40 1037
a33df5d4 1038Contains a list of relationships that should be joined for this query. For
1039example:
1040
1041 # Get CDs by Nine Inch Nails
1042 my $rs = $schema->resultset('CD')->search(
1043 { 'artist.name' => 'Nine Inch Nails' },
1044 { join => 'artist' }
1045 );
1046
1047Can also contain a hash reference to refer to the other relation's relations.
1048For example:
1049
1050 package MyApp::Schema::Track;
1051 use base qw/DBIx::Class/;
1052 __PACKAGE__->table('track');
1053 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/trackid cd position title/);
1054 __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('trackid');
1055 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(cd => 'MyApp::Schema::CD');
1056 1;
1057
1058 # In your application
1059 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
1060 { 'track.title' => 'Teardrop' },
1061 {
1062 join => { cd => 'track' },
1063 order_by => 'artist.name',
1064 }
1065 );
1066
2cb360cc 1067If the same join is supplied twice, it will be aliased to <rel>_2 (and
1068similarly for a third time). For e.g.
1069
1070 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search(
1071 { 'cds.title' => 'Foo',
1072 'cds_2.title' => 'Bar' },
1073 { join => [ qw/cds cds/ ] });
1074
1075will return a set of all artists that have both a cd with title Foo and a cd
1076with title Bar.
1077
1078If you want to fetch related objects from other tables as well, see C<prefetch>
ae1c90a1 1079below.
ee38fa40 1080
87c4e602 1081=head2 prefetch
1082
1083=head3 Arguments: arrayref/hashref
ee38fa40 1084
ae1c90a1 1085Contains one or more relationships that should be fetched along with the main
bfab575a 1086query (when they are accessed afterwards they will have already been
a33df5d4 1087"prefetched"). This is useful for when you know you will need the related
ae1c90a1 1088objects, because it saves at least one query:
1089
1090 my $rs = $schema->resultset('Tag')->search(
5e8b1b2a 1091 undef,
ae1c90a1 1092 {
1093 prefetch => {
1094 cd => 'artist'
1095 }
1096 }
1097 );
1098
1099The initial search results in SQL like the following:
1100
1101 SELECT tag.*, cd.*, artist.* FROM tag
1102 JOIN cd ON tag.cd = cd.cdid
1103 JOIN artist ON cd.artist = artist.artistid
1104
1105L<DBIx::Class> has no need to go back to the database when we access the
1106C<cd> or C<artist> relationships, which saves us two SQL statements in this
1107case.
1108
2cb360cc 1109Simple prefetches will be joined automatically, so there is no need
1110for a C<join> attribute in the above search. If you're prefetching to
1111depth (e.g. { cd => { artist => 'label' } or similar), you'll need to
1112specify the join as well.
ae1c90a1 1113
1114C<prefetch> can be used with the following relationship types: C<belongs_to>,
2cb360cc 1115C<has_one> (or if you're using C<add_relationship>, any relationship declared
1116with an accessor type of 'single' or 'filter').
ee38fa40 1117
87c4e602 1118=head2 from
1119
1120=head3 Arguments: (arrayref)
ee38fa40 1121
4a28c340 1122The C<from> attribute gives you manual control over the C<FROM> clause of SQL
1123statements generated by L<DBIx::Class>, allowing you to express custom C<JOIN>
1124clauses.
ee38fa40 1125
a33df5d4 1126NOTE: Use this on your own risk. This allows you to shoot off your foot!
4a28c340 1127C<join> will usually do what you need and it is strongly recommended that you
1128avoid using C<from> unless you cannot achieve the desired result using C<join>.
1129
1130In simple terms, C<from> works as follows:
1131
1132 [
1133 { <alias> => <table>, -join-type => 'inner|left|right' }
1134 [] # nested JOIN (optional)
1135 { <table.column> = <foreign_table.foreign_key> }
1136 ]
1137
1138 JOIN
1139 <alias> <table>
1140 [JOIN ...]
1141 ON <table.column> = <foreign_table.foreign_key>
1142
1143An easy way to follow the examples below is to remember the following:
1144
1145 Anything inside "[]" is a JOIN
1146 Anything inside "{}" is a condition for the enclosing JOIN
1147
1148The following examples utilize a "person" table in a family tree application.
1149In order to express parent->child relationships, this table is self-joined:
1150
1151 # Person->belongs_to('father' => 'Person');
1152 # Person->belongs_to('mother' => 'Person');
1153
1154C<from> can be used to nest joins. Here we return all children with a father,
1155then search against all mothers of those children:
1156
1157 $rs = $schema->resultset('Person')->search(
5e8b1b2a 1158 undef,
4a28c340 1159 {
1160 alias => 'mother', # alias columns in accordance with "from"
1161 from => [
1162 { mother => 'person' },
1163 [
1164 [
1165 { child => 'person' },
1166 [
1167 { father => 'person' },
1168 { 'father.person_id' => 'child.father_id' }
1169 ]
1170 ],
1171 { 'mother.person_id' => 'child.mother_id' }
fd9f5466 1172 ],
4a28c340 1173 ]
1174 },
1175 );
1176
1177 # Equivalent SQL:
1178 # SELECT mother.* FROM person mother
1179 # JOIN (
1180 # person child
1181 # JOIN person father
1182 # ON ( father.person_id = child.father_id )
1183 # )
1184 # ON ( mother.person_id = child.mother_id )
1185
1186The type of any join can be controlled manually. To search against only people
1187with a father in the person table, we could explicitly use C<INNER JOIN>:
1188
1189 $rs = $schema->resultset('Person')->search(
5e8b1b2a 1190 undef,
4a28c340 1191 {
1192 alias => 'child', # alias columns in accordance with "from"
1193 from => [
1194 { child => 'person' },
1195 [
1196 { father => 'person', -join-type => 'inner' },
1197 { 'father.id' => 'child.father_id' }
1198 ],
1199 ]
1200 },
1201 );
1202
1203 # Equivalent SQL:
1204 # SELECT child.* FROM person child
1205 # INNER JOIN person father ON child.father_id = father.id
ee38fa40 1206
bfab575a 1207=head2 page
076652e8 1208
a33df5d4 1209For a paged resultset, specifies which page to retrieve. Leave unset
bfab575a 1210for an unpaged resultset.
076652e8 1211
bfab575a 1212=head2 rows
076652e8 1213
4a28c340 1214For a paged resultset, how many rows per page:
1215
1216 rows => 10
1217
1218Can also be used to simulate an SQL C<LIMIT>.
076652e8 1219
87c4e602 1220=head2 group_by
1221
1222=head3 Arguments: (arrayref)
54540863 1223
bda4c2b8 1224A arrayref of columns to group by. Can include columns of joined tables.
54540863 1225
675ce4a6 1226 group_by => [qw/ column1 column2 ... /]
1227
54540863 1228=head2 distinct
1229
a33df5d4 1230Set to 1 to group by all columns.
1231
1232For more examples of using these attributes, see
1233L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook>.
54540863 1234
bfab575a 1235=cut
076652e8 1236
89c0a5a2 12371;