Failure to determine dbms version is *not* a fatal error - trap exceptions
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Storage / DBI / MSSQL.pm
CommitLineData
75d07914 1package DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::MSSQL;
3885cff6 2
75d07914 3use strict;
4use warnings;
3885cff6 5
548d1627 6use base qw/DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::UniqueIdentifier/;
2ad62d97 7use mro 'c3';
3885cff6 8
5a77aa8b 9use List::Util();
10
7b1b2582 11__PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors(simple => qw/
12 _identity _identity_method
13/);
14
ac93965c 15__PACKAGE__->sql_maker_class('DBIx::Class::SQLAHacks::MSSQL');
16
afcfff01 17sub _set_identity_insert {
18 my ($self, $table) = @_;
64690266 19
20 my $sql = sprintf (
afcfff01 21 'SET IDENTITY_INSERT %s ON',
64690266 22 $self->sql_maker->_quote ($table),
afcfff01 23 );
64690266 24
25 my $dbh = $self->_get_dbh;
26 eval { $dbh->do ($sql) };
27 if ($@) {
28 $self->throw_exception (sprintf "Error executing '%s': %s",
29 $sql,
30 $dbh->errstr,
31 );
32 }
afcfff01 33}
34
aac1a358 35sub _unset_identity_insert {
36 my ($self, $table) = @_;
37
38 my $sql = sprintf (
39 'SET IDENTITY_INSERT %s OFF',
40 $self->sql_maker->_quote ($table),
41 );
42
43 my $dbh = $self->_get_dbh;
44 $dbh->do ($sql);
45}
46
5a77aa8b 47sub insert_bulk {
48 my $self = shift;
49 my ($source, $cols, $data) = @_;
50
aac1a358 51 my $is_identity_insert = (List::Util::first
afcfff01 52 { $source->column_info ($_)->{is_auto_increment} }
53 (@{$cols})
aac1a358 54 )
55 ? 1
56 : 0;
5a77aa8b 57
aac1a358 58 if ($is_identity_insert) {
59 $self->_set_identity_insert ($source->name);
5a77aa8b 60 }
61
62 $self->next::method(@_);
63
aac1a358 64 if ($is_identity_insert) {
65 $self->_unset_identity_insert ($source->name);
5a77aa8b 66 }
67}
68
ca791b95 69sub insert {
70 my $self = shift;
71 my ($source, $to_insert) = @_;
72
afcfff01 73 my $supplied_col_info = $self->_resolve_column_info($source, [keys %$to_insert] );
ca791b95 74
aac1a358 75 my $is_identity_insert = (List::Util::first { $_->{is_auto_increment} } (values %$supplied_col_info) )
76 ? 1
77 : 0;
78
79 if ($is_identity_insert) {
80 $self->_set_identity_insert ($source->name);
afcfff01 81 }
82
548d1627 83 my $updated_cols = $self->next::method(@_);
ca791b95 84
aac1a358 85 if ($is_identity_insert) {
86 $self->_unset_identity_insert ($source->name);
87 }
88
ca791b95 89 return $updated_cols;
90}
91
5a77aa8b 92sub _prep_for_execute {
93 my $self = shift;
94 my ($op, $extra_bind, $ident, $args) = @_;
95
96# cast MONEY values properly
97 if ($op eq 'insert' || $op eq 'update') {
98 my $fields = $args->[0];
5a77aa8b 99
100 for my $col (keys %$fields) {
1537084d 101 # $ident is a result source object with INSERT/UPDATE ops
be294d66 102 if ($ident->column_info ($col)->{data_type}
103 &&
104 $ident->column_info ($col)->{data_type} =~ /^money\z/i) {
5a77aa8b 105 my $val = $fields->{$col};
106 $fields->{$col} = \['CAST(? AS MONEY)', [ $col => $val ]];
107 }
108 }
109 }
110
111 my ($sql, $bind) = $self->next::method (@_);
112
113 if ($op eq 'insert') {
114 $sql .= ';SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY()';
115
5a77aa8b 116 }
117
118 return ($sql, $bind);
119}
120
121sub _execute {
122 my $self = shift;
123 my ($op) = @_;
124
125 my ($rv, $sth, @bind) = $self->dbh_do($self->can('_dbh_execute'), @_);
1537084d 126
5a77aa8b 127 if ($op eq 'insert') {
5a77aa8b 128
1537084d 129 # this should bring back the result of SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY() we tacked
130 # on in _prep_for_execute above
4ffa5700 131 my ($identity) = eval { $sth->fetchrow_array };
ed8de058 132
1537084d 133 # SCOPE_IDENTITY failed, but we can do something else
134 if ( (! $identity) && $self->_identity_method) {
135 ($identity) = $self->_dbh->selectrow_array(
136 'select ' . $self->_identity_method
137 );
138 }
7b1b2582 139
1537084d 140 $self->_identity($identity);
141 $sth->finish;
7b1b2582 142 }
143
1537084d 144 return wantarray ? ($rv, $sth, @bind) : $rv;
7b1b2582 145}
5a77aa8b 146
7b1b2582 147sub last_insert_id { shift->_identity }
5a77aa8b 148
f0bd60fc 149#
e74c68ce 150# MSSQL is retarded wrt ordered subselects. One needs to add a TOP
151# to *all* subqueries, but one also can't use TOP 100 PERCENT
152# http://sqladvice.com/forums/permalink/18496/22931/ShowThread.aspx#22931
f0bd60fc 153#
154sub _select_args_to_query {
155 my $self = shift;
156
b8d88d9b 157 my ($sql, $prep_bind, @rest) = $self->next::method (@_);
f0bd60fc 158
b8d88d9b 159 # see if this is an ordered subquery
160 my $attrs = $_[3];
aca481d8 161 if (
162 $sql !~ /^ \s* SELECT \s+ TOP \s+ \d+ \s+ /xi
163 &&
164 scalar $self->_parse_order_by ($attrs->{order_by})
165 ) {
6de07ea3 166 $self->throw_exception(
d74f2da9 167 'An ordered subselect encountered - this is not safe! Please see "Ordered Subselects" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::MSSQL
69a8b315 168 ') unless $attrs->{unsafe_subselect_ok};
e74c68ce 169 my $max = 2 ** 32;
170 $sql =~ s/^ \s* SELECT \s/SELECT TOP $max /xi;
f0bd60fc 171 }
172
f0bd60fc 173 return wantarray
17555a0c 174 ? ($sql, $prep_bind, @rest)
175 : \[ "($sql)", @$prep_bind ]
f0bd60fc 176 ;
177}
178
179
4c0f4206 180# savepoint syntax is the same as in Sybase ASE
181
182sub _svp_begin {
183 my ($self, $name) = @_;
184
9ae966b9 185 $self->_get_dbh->do("SAVE TRANSACTION $name");
4c0f4206 186}
187
188# A new SAVE TRANSACTION with the same name releases the previous one.
189sub _svp_release { 1 }
190
191sub _svp_rollback {
192 my ($self, $name) = @_;
193
9ae966b9 194 $self->_get_dbh->do("ROLLBACK TRANSACTION $name");
4c0f4206 195}
196
fb95dc4d 197sub datetime_parser_type {
198 'DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::MSSQL::DateTime::Format'
199}
eb0323df 200
201sub sqlt_type { 'SQLServer' }
202
50772633 203sub sql_maker {
204 my $self = shift;
eb0323df 205
50772633 206 unless ($self->_sql_maker) {
207 unless ($self->{_sql_maker_opts}{limit_dialect}) {
ff153e24 208
6d766626 209 my $version = $self->_server_info->{normalized_dbms_version} || 0;
eb0323df 210
50772633 211 $self->{_sql_maker_opts} = {
212 limit_dialect => ($version >= 9 ? 'RowNumberOver' : 'Top'),
213 %{$self->{_sql_maker_opts}||{}}
214 };
215 }
216
217 my $maker = $self->next::method (@_);
218 }
e76e7b5c 219
50772633 220 return $self->_sql_maker;
ed8de058 221}
3885cff6 222
ecdf1ac8 223sub _ping {
224 my $self = shift;
225
226 my $dbh = $self->_dbh or return 0;
227
228 local $dbh->{RaiseError} = 1;
229 local $dbh->{PrintError} = 0;
230
231 eval {
232 $dbh->do('select 1');
233 };
234
235 return $@ ? 0 : 1;
236}
237
fb95dc4d 238package # hide from PAUSE
239 DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::MSSQL::DateTime::Format;
240
241my $datetime_format = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%3N'; # %F %T
242my $smalldatetime_format = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S';
243
244my ($datetime_parser, $smalldatetime_parser);
245
246sub parse_datetime {
247 shift;
248 require DateTime::Format::Strptime;
249 $datetime_parser ||= DateTime::Format::Strptime->new(
250 pattern => $datetime_format,
251 on_error => 'croak',
252 );
253 return $datetime_parser->parse_datetime(shift);
254}
255
256sub format_datetime {
257 shift;
258 require DateTime::Format::Strptime;
259 $datetime_parser ||= DateTime::Format::Strptime->new(
260 pattern => $datetime_format,
261 on_error => 'croak',
262 );
263 return $datetime_parser->format_datetime(shift);
264}
265
266sub parse_smalldatetime {
267 shift;
268 require DateTime::Format::Strptime;
269 $smalldatetime_parser ||= DateTime::Format::Strptime->new(
270 pattern => $smalldatetime_format,
271 on_error => 'croak',
272 );
273 return $smalldatetime_parser->parse_datetime(shift);
274}
275
276sub format_smalldatetime {
277 shift;
278 require DateTime::Format::Strptime;
279 $smalldatetime_parser ||= DateTime::Format::Strptime->new(
280 pattern => $smalldatetime_format,
281 on_error => 'croak',
282 );
283 return $smalldatetime_parser->format_datetime(shift);
284}
285
75d07914 2861;
3885cff6 287
75d07914 288=head1 NAME
3885cff6 289
5a77aa8b 290DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::MSSQL - Base Class for Microsoft SQL Server support
291in DBIx::Class
3885cff6 292
75d07914 293=head1 SYNOPSIS
3885cff6 294
5a77aa8b 295This is the base class for Microsoft SQL Server support, used by
296L<DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::ODBC::Microsoft_SQL_Server> and
297L<DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Sybase::Microsoft_SQL_Server>.
eb0323df 298
5a77aa8b 299=head1 IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
eb0323df 300
fd05d10a 301=head2 IDENTITY information
302
5a77aa8b 303Microsoft SQL Server supports three methods of retrieving the IDENTITY
304value for inserted row: IDENT_CURRENT, @@IDENTITY, and SCOPE_IDENTITY().
305SCOPE_IDENTITY is used here because it is the safest. However, it must
306be called is the same execute statement, not just the same connection.
eb0323df 307
5a77aa8b 308So, this implementation appends a SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY() statement
309onto each INSERT to accommodate that requirement.
eb0323df 310
7b1b2582 311C<SELECT @@IDENTITY> can also be used by issuing:
312
313 $self->_identity_method('@@identity');
314
08cdc412 315it will only be used if SCOPE_IDENTITY() fails.
316
317This is more dangerous, as inserting into a table with an on insert trigger that
318inserts into another table with an identity will give erroneous results on
319recent versions of SQL Server.
7b1b2582 320
c84189e1 321=head2 identity insert
fd05d10a 322
323Be aware that we have tried to make things as simple as possible for our users.
c84189e1 324For MSSQL that means that when a user tries to create a row, while supplying an
325explicit value for an autoincrementing column, we will try to issue the
326appropriate database call to make this possible, namely C<SET IDENTITY_INSERT
327$table_name ON>. Unfortunately this operation in MSSQL requires the
328C<db_ddladmin> privilege, which is normally not included in the standard
329write-permissions.
fd05d10a 330
d74f2da9 331=head2 Ordered Subselects
6de07ea3 332
d74f2da9 333If you attempted the following query (among many others) in Microsoft SQL
334Server
6de07ea3 335
6de07ea3 336 $rs->search ({}, {
6de07ea3 337 prefetch => 'relation',
338 rows => 2,
339 offset => 3,
340 });
341
d74f2da9 342You may be surprised to receive an exception. The reason for this is a quirk
343in the MSSQL engine itself, and sadly doesn't have a sensible workaround due
344to the way DBIC is built. DBIC can do truly wonderful things with the aid of
345subselects, and does so automatically when necessary. The list of situations
346when a subselect is necessary is long and still changes often, so it can not
347be exhaustively enumerated here. The general rule of thumb is a joined
348L<has_many|DBIx::Class::Relationship/has_many> relationship with limit/group
349applied to the left part of the join.
350
351In its "pursuit of standards" Microsft SQL Server goes to great lengths to
352forbid the use of ordered subselects. This breaks a very useful group of
353searches like "Give me things number 4 to 6 (ordered by name), and prefetch
354all their relations, no matter how many". While there is a hack which fools
355the syntax checker, the optimizer may B<still elect to break the subselect>.
356Testing has determined that while such breakage does occur (the test suite
357contains an explicit test which demonstrates the problem), it is relative
358rare. The benefits of ordered subselects are on the other hand too great to be
359outright disabled for MSSQL.
6de07ea3 360
361Thus compromise between usability and perfection is the MSSQL-specific
69a8b315 362L<resultset attribute|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/ATTRIBUTES> C<unsafe_subselect_ok>.
6de07ea3 363It is deliberately not possible to set this on the Storage level, as the user
48580715 364should inspect (and preferably regression-test) the return of every such
d74f2da9 365ResultSet individually. The example above would work if written like:
366
367 $rs->search ({}, {
69a8b315 368 unsafe_subselect_ok => 1,
d74f2da9 369 prefetch => 'relation',
370 rows => 2,
371 offset => 3,
372 });
6de07ea3 373
374If it is possible to rewrite the search() in a way that will avoid the need
375for this flag - you are urged to do so. If DBIC internals insist that an
d74f2da9 376ordered subselect is necessary for an operation, and you believe there is a
48580715 377different/better way to get the same result - please file a bugreport.
6de07ea3 378
5a77aa8b 379=head1 AUTHOR
3885cff6 380
548d1627 381See L<DBIx::Class/AUTHOR> and L<DBIx::Class/CONTRIBUTORS>.
3885cff6 382
75d07914 383=head1 LICENSE
3885cff6 384
75d07914 385You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself.
3885cff6 386
75d07914 387=cut