fix uninitialized warning
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Storage / DBIHacks.pm
CommitLineData
c443438f 1package #hide from PAUSE
2 DBIx::Class::Storage::DBIHacks;
d28bb90d 3
4#
5# This module contains code that should never have seen the light of day,
6# does not belong in the Storage, or is otherwise unfit for public
7eb76996 7# display. The arrival of SQLA2 should immediately oboslete 90% of this
d28bb90d 8#
9
10use strict;
11use warnings;
12
13use base 'DBIx::Class::Storage';
14use mro 'c3';
15
16use Carp::Clan qw/^DBIx::Class/;
17
18#
052e8431 19# This code will remove non-selecting/non-restricting joins from
4b1b5ea3 20# {from} specs, aiding the RDBMS query optimizer
052e8431 21#
22sub _prune_unused_joins {
4b1b5ea3 23 my ($self) = shift;
24
25 my ($from, $select, $where, $attrs) = @_;
052e8431 26
052e8431 27 if (ref $from ne 'ARRAY' || ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH' || ref $from->[1] ne 'ARRAY') {
28 return $from; # only standard {from} specs are supported
29 }
30
4b1b5ea3 31 my $aliastypes = $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args(@_);
32
33 # a grouped set will not be affected by amount of rows. Thus any
34 # {multiplying} joins can go
35 delete $aliastypes->{multiplying} if $attrs->{group_by};
36
052e8431 37
38 my @newfrom = $from->[0]; # FROM head is always present
39
40 my %need_joins = (map { %{$_||{}} } (values %$aliastypes) );
41 for my $j (@{$from}[1..$#$from]) {
539ffe87 42 push @newfrom, $j if (
4b1b5ea3 43 (! $j->[0]{-alias}) # legacy crap
539ffe87 44 ||
45 $need_joins{$j->[0]{-alias}}
46 );
052e8431 47 }
48
49 return \@newfrom;
50}
51
052e8431 52#
d28bb90d 53# This is the code producing joined subqueries like:
54# SELECT me.*, other.* FROM ( SELECT me.* FROM ... ) JOIN other ON ...
55#
56sub _adjust_select_args_for_complex_prefetch {
57 my ($self, $from, $select, $where, $attrs) = @_;
58
59 $self->throw_exception ('Nothing to prefetch... how did we get here?!')
60 if not @{$attrs->{_prefetch_select}};
61
62 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute')
63 if (ref $from ne 'ARRAY' || ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH' || ref $from->[1] ne 'ARRAY');
64
65
66 # generate inner/outer attribute lists, remove stuff that doesn't apply
67 my $outer_attrs = { %$attrs };
68 delete $outer_attrs->{$_} for qw/where bind rows offset group_by having/;
69
70 my $inner_attrs = { %$attrs };
71 delete $inner_attrs->{$_} for qw/for collapse _prefetch_select _collapse_order_by select as/;
72
73
74 # bring over all non-collapse-induced order_by into the inner query (if any)
75 # the outer one will have to keep them all
76 delete $inner_attrs->{order_by};
77 if (my $ord_cnt = @{$outer_attrs->{order_by}} - @{$outer_attrs->{_collapse_order_by}} ) {
78 $inner_attrs->{order_by} = [
79 @{$outer_attrs->{order_by}}[ 0 .. $ord_cnt - 1]
80 ];
81 }
82
d28bb90d 83 # generate the inner/outer select lists
84 # for inside we consider only stuff *not* brought in by the prefetch
85 # on the outside we substitute any function for its alias
86 my $outer_select = [ @$select ];
87 my $inner_select = [];
88 for my $i (0 .. ( @$outer_select - @{$outer_attrs->{_prefetch_select}} - 1) ) {
89 my $sel = $outer_select->[$i];
90
91 if (ref $sel eq 'HASH' ) {
92 $sel->{-as} ||= $attrs->{as}[$i];
93 $outer_select->[$i] = join ('.', $attrs->{alias}, ($sel->{-as} || "inner_column_$i") );
94 }
95
96 push @$inner_select, $sel;
bb9bffea 97
98 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $attrs->{as}[$i];
d28bb90d 99 }
100
d28bb90d 101 # construct the inner $from for the subquery
48580715 102 # we need to prune first, because this will determine if we need a group_by below
052e8431 103 my $inner_from = $self->_prune_unused_joins ($from, $inner_select, $where, $inner_attrs);
ad630f4b 104
539ffe87 105 # if a multi-type join was needed in the subquery - add a group_by to simulate the
106 # collapse in the subq
107 $inner_attrs->{group_by} ||= $inner_select
108 if List::Util::first
109 { ! $_->[0]{-is_single} }
110 (@{$inner_from}[1 .. $#$inner_from])
111 ;
d28bb90d 112
d28bb90d 113 # generate the subquery
114 my $subq = $self->_select_args_to_query (
052e8431 115 $inner_from,
d28bb90d 116 $inner_select,
117 $where,
118 $inner_attrs,
119 );
120
121 my $subq_joinspec = {
122 -alias => $attrs->{alias},
052e8431 123 -source_handle => $inner_from->[0]{-source_handle},
d28bb90d 124 $attrs->{alias} => $subq,
125 };
126
127 # Generate the outer from - this is relatively easy (really just replace
128 # the join slot with the subquery), with a major caveat - we can not
129 # join anything that is non-selecting (not part of the prefetch), but at
130 # the same time is a multi-type relationship, as it will explode the result.
131 #
132 # There are two possibilities here
133 # - either the join is non-restricting, in which case we simply throw it away
134 # - it is part of the restrictions, in which case we need to collapse the outer
135 # result by tackling yet another group_by to the outside of the query
136
052e8431 137 # normalize a copy of $from, so it will be easier to work with further
138 # down (i.e. promote the initial hashref to an AoH)
139 $from = [ @$from ];
140 $from->[0] = [ $from->[0] ];
141
d28bb90d 142 # so first generate the outer_from, up to the substitution point
143 my @outer_from;
144 while (my $j = shift @$from) {
145 if ($j->[0]{-alias} eq $attrs->{alias}) { # time to swap
146 push @outer_from, [
147 $subq_joinspec,
148 @{$j}[1 .. $#$j],
149 ];
150 last; # we'll take care of what's left in $from below
151 }
152 else {
153 push @outer_from, $j;
154 }
155 }
156
052e8431 157 # scan the from spec against different attributes, and see which joins are needed
158 # in what role
159 my $outer_aliastypes =
539ffe87 160 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args( $from, $outer_select, $where, $outer_attrs );
052e8431 161
d28bb90d 162 # see what's left - throw away if not selecting/restricting
163 # also throw in a group_by if restricting to guard against
164 # cross-join explosions
165 #
166 while (my $j = shift @$from) {
167 my $alias = $j->[0]{-alias};
168
1a736efb 169 if ($outer_aliastypes->{selecting}{$alias}) {
d28bb90d 170 push @outer_from, $j;
171 }
1a736efb 172 elsif ($outer_aliastypes->{restricting}{$alias}) {
d28bb90d 173 push @outer_from, $j;
539ffe87 174 $outer_attrs->{group_by} ||= $outer_select unless $j->[0]{-is_single};
d28bb90d 175 }
176 }
177
178 # demote the outer_from head
179 $outer_from[0] = $outer_from[0][0];
180
181 # This is totally horrific - the $where ends up in both the inner and outer query
182 # Unfortunately not much can be done until SQLA2 introspection arrives, and even
183 # then if where conditions apply to the *right* side of the prefetch, you may have
184 # to both filter the inner select (e.g. to apply a limit) and then have to re-filter
185 # the outer select to exclude joins you didin't want in the first place
186 #
187 # OTOH it can be seen as a plus: <ash> (notes that this query would make a DBA cry ;)
188 return (\@outer_from, $outer_select, $where, $outer_attrs);
189}
190
1a736efb 191#
192# I KNOW THIS SUCKS! GET SQLA2 OUT THE DOOR SO THIS CAN DIE!
193#
ad630f4b 194# Due to a lack of SQLA2 we fall back to crude scans of all the
195# select/where/order/group attributes, in order to determine what
196# aliases are neded to fulfill the query. This information is used
197# throughout the code to prune unnecessary JOINs from the queries
198# in an attempt to reduce the execution time.
199# Although the method is pretty horrific, the worst thing that can
1a736efb 200# happen is for it to fail due to some scalar SQL, which in turn will
201# result in a vocal exception.
539ffe87 202sub _resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args {
052e8431 203 my ( $self, $from, $select, $where, $attrs ) = @_;
546f1cd9 204
ad630f4b 205 $self->throw_exception ('Unable to analyze custom {from}')
206 if ref $from ne 'ARRAY';
546f1cd9 207
ad630f4b 208 # what we will return
964a3c71 209 my $aliases_by_type;
546f1cd9 210
ad630f4b 211 # see what aliases are there to work with
212 my $alias_list;
539ffe87 213 for (@$from) {
214 my $j = $_;
ad630f4b 215 $j = $j->[0] if ref $j eq 'ARRAY';
539ffe87 216 my $al = $j->{-alias}
217 or next;
218
219 $alias_list->{$al} = $j;
220 $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$al} = 1
221 unless $j->{-is_single};
546f1cd9 222 }
546f1cd9 223
1a736efb 224 # get a column to source/alias map (including unqualified ones)
225 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info ($from);
226
ad630f4b 227 # set up a botched SQLA
228 my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
229 my $sep = quotemeta ($self->_sql_maker_opts->{name_sep} || '.');
07f31d19 230
1a736efb 231 my ($orig_lquote, $orig_rquote) = map { quotemeta $_ } (do {
232 if (ref $sql_maker->{quote_char} eq 'ARRAY') {
233 @{$sql_maker->{quote_char}}
234 }
235 else {
236 ($sql_maker->{quote_char} || '') x 2;
237 }
ad630f4b 238 });
07f31d19 239
1a736efb 240 local $sql_maker->{quote_char} = "\x00"; # so that we can regex away
241
242 # generate sql chunks
243 my $to_scan = {
244 restricting => [
245 $sql_maker->_recurse_where ($where),
246 $sql_maker->_order_by({
247 map { $_ => $attrs->{$_} } (qw/group_by having/)
248 }),
249 ],
250 selecting => [
251 $self->_parse_order_by ($attrs->{order_by}, $sql_maker),
252 $sql_maker->_recurse_fields ($select),
253 ],
254 };
255
256 # throw away empty chunks
257 $_ = [ map { $_ || () } @$_ ] for values %$to_scan;
258
259 # first loop through all fully qualified columns and get the corresponding
260 # alias (should work even if they are in scalarrefs)
ad630f4b 261 for my $alias (keys %$alias_list) {
1a736efb 262 my $al_re = qr/
263 \x00 $alias \x00 $sep
264 |
265 \b $alias $sep
266 /x;
267
268 # add matching for possible quoted literal sql
269 $al_re = qr/ $al_re | $orig_lquote $alias $orig_rquote /x
270 if ($orig_lquote && $orig_rquote);
07f31d19 271
1a736efb 272
273 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
274 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
275 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} = 1 if ($piece =~ $al_re);
276 }
ad630f4b 277 }
1a736efb 278 }
279
280 # now loop through unqualified column names, and try to locate them within
281 # the chunks
282 for my $col (keys %$colinfo) {
283 next if $col =~ $sep; # if column is qualified it was caught by the above
284
285 my $col_re = qr/ \x00 $col \x00 /x;
286
287 $col_re = qr/ $col_re | $orig_lquote $col $orig_rquote /x
288 if ($orig_lquote && $orig_rquote);
289
290 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
291 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
292 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$colinfo->{$col}{-source_alias}} = 1 if ($piece =~ $col_re);
293 }
07f31d19 294 }
295 }
296
297 # Add any non-left joins to the restriction list (such joins are indeed restrictions)
ad630f4b 298 for my $j (values %$alias_list) {
07f31d19 299 my $alias = $j->{-alias} or next;
1a736efb 300 $aliases_by_type->{restricting}{$alias} = 1 if (
07f31d19 301 (not $j->{-join_type})
302 or
303 ($j->{-join_type} !~ /^left (?: \s+ outer)? $/xi)
304 );
305 }
306
307 # mark all join parents as mentioned
308 # (e.g. join => { cds => 'tracks' } - tracks will need to bring cds too )
964a3c71 309 for my $type (keys %$aliases_by_type) {
310 for my $alias (keys %{$aliases_by_type->{$type}}) {
311 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$_} = 1
faeb2407 312 for (map { values %$_ } @{ $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path} || [] });
07f31d19 313 }
314 }
ad630f4b 315
964a3c71 316 return $aliases_by_type;
07f31d19 317}
318
d28bb90d 319sub _resolve_ident_sources {
320 my ($self, $ident) = @_;
321
322 my $alias2source = {};
323 my $rs_alias;
324
325 # the reason this is so contrived is that $ident may be a {from}
326 # structure, specifying multiple tables to join
327 if ( Scalar::Util::blessed($ident) && $ident->isa("DBIx::Class::ResultSource") ) {
328 # this is compat mode for insert/update/delete which do not deal with aliases
329 $alias2source->{me} = $ident;
330 $rs_alias = 'me';
331 }
332 elsif (ref $ident eq 'ARRAY') {
333
334 for (@$ident) {
335 my $tabinfo;
336 if (ref $_ eq 'HASH') {
337 $tabinfo = $_;
338 $rs_alias = $tabinfo->{-alias};
339 }
340 if (ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' and ref $_->[0] eq 'HASH') {
341 $tabinfo = $_->[0];
342 }
343
344 $alias2source->{$tabinfo->{-alias}} = $tabinfo->{-source_handle}->resolve
345 if ($tabinfo->{-source_handle});
346 }
347 }
348
349 return ($alias2source, $rs_alias);
350}
351
352# Takes $ident, \@column_names
353#
354# returns { $column_name => \%column_info, ... }
355# also note: this adds -result_source => $rsrc to the column info
356#
09e14fdc 357# If no columns_names are supplied returns info about *all* columns
358# for all sources
d28bb90d 359sub _resolve_column_info {
360 my ($self, $ident, $colnames) = @_;
361 my ($alias2src, $root_alias) = $self->_resolve_ident_sources($ident);
362
363 my $sep = $self->_sql_maker_opts->{name_sep} || '.';
09e14fdc 364 my $qsep = quotemeta $sep;
d28bb90d 365
09e14fdc 366 my (%return, %seen_cols, @auto_colnames);
d28bb90d 367
368 # compile a global list of column names, to be able to properly
369 # disambiguate unqualified column names (if at all possible)
370 for my $alias (keys %$alias2src) {
371 my $rsrc = $alias2src->{$alias};
372 for my $colname ($rsrc->columns) {
373 push @{$seen_cols{$colname}}, $alias;
09e14fdc 374 push @auto_colnames, "$alias$sep$colname" unless $colnames;
d28bb90d 375 }
376 }
377
09e14fdc 378 $colnames ||= [
379 @auto_colnames,
380 grep { @{$seen_cols{$_}} == 1 } (keys %seen_cols),
381 ];
382
d28bb90d 383 COLUMN:
384 foreach my $col (@$colnames) {
09e14fdc 385 my ($alias, $colname) = $col =~ m/^ (?: ([^$qsep]+) $qsep)? (.+) $/x;
d28bb90d 386
387 unless ($alias) {
388 # see if the column was seen exactly once (so we know which rsrc it came from)
389 if ($seen_cols{$colname} and @{$seen_cols{$colname}} == 1) {
390 $alias = $seen_cols{$colname}[0];
391 }
392 else {
393 next COLUMN;
394 }
395 }
396
397 my $rsrc = $alias2src->{$alias};
398 $return{$col} = $rsrc && {
399 %{$rsrc->column_info($colname)},
400 -result_source => $rsrc,
401 -source_alias => $alias,
402 };
403 }
404
405 return \%return;
406}
407
289ac713 408# The DBIC relationship chaining implementation is pretty simple - every
409# new related_relationship is pushed onto the {from} stack, and the {select}
410# window simply slides further in. This means that when we count somewhere
411# in the middle, we got to make sure that everything in the join chain is an
412# actual inner join, otherwise the count will come back with unpredictable
413# results (a resultset may be generated with _some_ rows regardless of if
414# the relation which the $rs currently selects has rows or not). E.g.
415# $artist_rs->cds->count - normally generates:
416# SELECT COUNT( * ) FROM artist me LEFT JOIN cd cds ON cds.artist = me.artistid
417# which actually returns the number of artists * (number of cds || 1)
418#
419# So what we do here is crawl {from}, determine if the current alias is at
420# the top of the stack, and if not - make sure the chain is inner-joined down
421# to the root.
422#
423sub _straight_join_to_node {
424 my ($self, $from, $alias) = @_;
425
426 # subqueries and other oddness are naturally not supported
427 return $from if (
428 ref $from ne 'ARRAY'
429 ||
430 @$from <= 1
431 ||
432 ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH'
433 ||
434 ! $from->[0]{-alias}
435 ||
7eb76996 436 $from->[0]{-alias} eq $alias # this last bit means $alias is the head of $from - nothing to do
289ac713 437 );
438
439 # find the current $alias in the $from structure
440 my $switch_branch;
441 JOINSCAN:
442 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
443 if ($j->[0]{-alias} eq $alias) {
444 $switch_branch = $j->[0]{-join_path};
445 last JOINSCAN;
446 }
447 }
448
7eb76996 449 # something else went quite wrong
289ac713 450 return $from unless $switch_branch;
451
452 # So it looks like we will have to switch some stuff around.
453 # local() is useless here as we will be leaving the scope
454 # anyway, and deep cloning is just too fucking expensive
7eb76996 455 # So replace the first hashref in the node arrayref manually
289ac713 456 my @new_from = ($from->[0]);
faeb2407 457 my $sw_idx = { map { (values %$_), 1 } @$switch_branch }; #there's one k/v per join-path
289ac713 458
459 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
460 my $jalias = $j->[0]{-alias};
461
462 if ($sw_idx->{$jalias}) {
463 my %attrs = %{$j->[0]};
464 delete $attrs{-join_type};
465 push @new_from, [
466 \%attrs,
467 @{$j}[ 1 .. $#$j ],
468 ];
469 }
470 else {
471 push @new_from, $j;
472 }
473 }
474
475 return \@new_from;
476}
477
bac6c4fb 478# Most databases do not allow aliasing of tables in UPDATE/DELETE. Thus
479# a condition containing 'me' or other table prefixes will not work
480# at all. What this code tries to do (badly) is introspect the condition
481# and remove all column qualifiers. If it bails out early (returns undef)
482# the calling code should try another approach (e.g. a subquery)
483sub _strip_cond_qualifiers {
484 my ($self, $where) = @_;
485
486 my $cond = {};
487
488 # No-op. No condition, we're updating/deleting everything
489 return $cond unless $where;
490
491 if (ref $where eq 'ARRAY') {
492 $cond = [
493 map {
494 my %hash;
495 foreach my $key (keys %{$_}) {
496 $key =~ /([^.]+)$/;
497 $hash{$1} = $_->{$key};
498 }
499 \%hash;
500 } @$where
501 ];
502 }
503 elsif (ref $where eq 'HASH') {
504 if ( (keys %$where) == 1 && ( (keys %{$where})[0] eq '-and' )) {
505 $cond->{-and} = [];
506 my @cond = @{$where->{-and}};
507 for (my $i = 0; $i < @cond; $i++) {
508 my $entry = $cond[$i];
509 my $hash;
037e8dca 510 my $ref = ref $entry;
511 if ($ref eq 'HASH' or $ref eq 'ARRAY') {
bac6c4fb 512 $hash = $self->_strip_cond_qualifiers($entry);
513 }
037e8dca 514 elsif (! $ref) {
bac6c4fb 515 $entry =~ /([^.]+)$/;
516 $hash->{$1} = $cond[++$i];
517 }
037e8dca 518 else {
519 $self->throw_exception ("_strip_cond_qualifiers() is unable to handle a condition reftype $ref");
520 }
bac6c4fb 521 push @{$cond->{-and}}, $hash;
522 }
523 }
524 else {
525 foreach my $key (keys %$where) {
526 $key =~ /([^.]+)$/;
527 $cond->{$1} = $where->{$key};
528 }
529 }
530 }
531 else {
532 return undef;
533 }
534
535 return $cond;
536}
537
c0748280 538sub _parse_order_by {
1a736efb 539 my ($self, $order_by, $sql_maker) = @_;
c0748280 540
1a736efb 541 my $parser = sub {
542 my ($sql_maker, $order_by) = @_;
c0748280 543
1a736efb 544 return scalar $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by)
545 unless wantarray;
c0748280 546
1a736efb 547 my @chunks;
548 for my $chunk (map { ref $_ ? @$_ : $_ } ($sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by) ) ) {
549 $chunk =~ s/\s+ (?: ASC|DESC ) \s* $//ix;
550 push @chunks, $chunk;
551 }
552
553 return @chunks;
554 };
555
556 if ($sql_maker) {
557 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by);
558 }
559 else {
560 $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
561 local $sql_maker->{quote_char};
562 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by);
563 }
c0748280 564}
bac6c4fb 565
d28bb90d 5661;