Warn in case of iterative collapse being upgraded to an eager cursor slurp
[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
6a6394f1 7# display. The arrival of SQLA2 should immediately obsolete 90% of this
d28bb90d 8#
9
10use strict;
11use warnings;
12
13use base 'DBIx::Class::Storage';
14use mro 'c3';
15
6298a324 16use List::Util 'first';
17use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
ea5c7509 18use Sub::Name 'subname';
6298a324 19use namespace::clean;
d28bb90d 20
21#
052e8431 22# This code will remove non-selecting/non-restricting joins from
4b1b5ea3 23# {from} specs, aiding the RDBMS query optimizer
052e8431 24#
25sub _prune_unused_joins {
ea95892e 26 my $self = shift;
4b1b5ea3 27 my ($from, $select, $where, $attrs) = @_;
052e8431 28
ea95892e 29 return $from unless $self->_use_join_optimizer;
30
052e8431 31 if (ref $from ne 'ARRAY' || ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH' || ref $from->[1] ne 'ARRAY') {
32 return $from; # only standard {from} specs are supported
33 }
34
4b1b5ea3 35 my $aliastypes = $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args(@_);
36
37 # a grouped set will not be affected by amount of rows. Thus any
38 # {multiplying} joins can go
39 delete $aliastypes->{multiplying} if $attrs->{group_by};
40
052e8431 41 my @newfrom = $from->[0]; # FROM head is always present
42
a4812caa 43 my %need_joins;
44 for (values %$aliastypes) {
45 # add all requested aliases
46 $need_joins{$_} = 1 for keys %$_;
47
48 # add all their parents (as per joinpath which is an AoH { table => alias })
49 $need_joins{$_} = 1 for map { values %$_ } map { @$_ } values %$_;
50 }
052e8431 51 for my $j (@{$from}[1..$#$from]) {
539ffe87 52 push @newfrom, $j if (
4b1b5ea3 53 (! $j->[0]{-alias}) # legacy crap
539ffe87 54 ||
55 $need_joins{$j->[0]{-alias}}
56 );
052e8431 57 }
58
59 return \@newfrom;
60}
61
052e8431 62#
d28bb90d 63# This is the code producing joined subqueries like:
8273e845 64# SELECT me.*, other.* FROM ( SELECT me.* FROM ... ) JOIN other ON ...
d28bb90d 65#
66sub _adjust_select_args_for_complex_prefetch {
67 my ($self, $from, $select, $where, $attrs) = @_;
68
69 $self->throw_exception ('Nothing to prefetch... how did we get here?!')
a59246c3 70 if not @{$attrs->{_prefetch_selector_range}||[]};
d28bb90d 71
72 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute')
73 if (ref $from ne 'ARRAY' || ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH' || ref $from->[1] ne 'ARRAY');
74
d28bb90d 75 # generate inner/outer attribute lists, remove stuff that doesn't apply
76 my $outer_attrs = { %$attrs };
77 delete $outer_attrs->{$_} for qw/where bind rows offset group_by having/;
78
186ba34c 79 my $inner_attrs = { %$attrs };
908aa1bb 80 delete $inner_attrs->{$_} for qw/for collapse _prefetch_selector_range select as/;
d28bb90d 81
0077982b 82 # if the user did not request it, there is no point using it inside
83 delete $inner_attrs->{order_by} if delete $inner_attrs->{_order_is_artificial};
946f6260 84
d28bb90d 85 # generate the inner/outer select lists
86 # for inside we consider only stuff *not* brought in by the prefetch
87 # on the outside we substitute any function for its alias
88 my $outer_select = [ @$select ];
89 my $inner_select = [];
36fd7f07 90
27e0370d 91 my ($root_source, $root_source_offset);
92
93 for my $i (0 .. $#$from) {
94 my $node = $from->[$i];
95 my $h = (ref $node eq 'HASH') ? $node
96 : (ref $node eq 'ARRAY' and ref $node->[0] eq 'HASH') ? $node->[0]
97 : next
98 ;
99
100 if ( ($h->{-alias}||'') eq $attrs->{alias} and $root_source = $h->{-rsrc} ) {
101 $root_source_offset = $i;
102 last;
103 }
104 }
105
106 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute')
107 unless $root_source;
108
109 # use the heavy duty resolver to take care of aliased/nonaliased naming
110 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info($from);
111 my $selected_root_columns;
112
36fd7f07 113 my ($p_start, $p_end) = @{$outer_attrs->{_prefetch_selector_range}};
114 for my $i (0 .. $p_start - 1, $p_end + 1 .. $#$outer_select) {
d28bb90d 115 my $sel = $outer_select->[$i];
116
117 if (ref $sel eq 'HASH' ) {
118 $sel->{-as} ||= $attrs->{as}[$i];
119 $outer_select->[$i] = join ('.', $attrs->{alias}, ($sel->{-as} || "inner_column_$i") );
120 }
27e0370d 121 elsif (! ref $sel and my $ci = $colinfo->{$sel}) {
122 $selected_root_columns->{$ci->{-colname}} = 1;
123 }
d28bb90d 124
125 push @$inner_select, $sel;
bb9bffea 126
127 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $attrs->{as}[$i];
d28bb90d 128 }
129
27e0370d 130 # We will need to fetch all native columns in the inner subquery, which may be a part
131 # of an *outer* join condition. We can not just fetch everything because a potential
132 # has_many restricting join collapse *will not work* on heavy data types.
133 # Time for more horrible SQL parsing, aughhhh
134
135 # MASSIVE FIXME - in fact when we are fully transitioned to DQ and the support is
136 # is sane - we will need to trim the select list to *only* fetch stuff that is
137 # necessary to build joins. In the current implementation if I am selecting a blob
138 # and the group_by kicks in - we are fucked, and all the user can do is not select
139 # that column. This is silly!
140
141 my $retardo_sqla_cache = {};
142 for my $cond ( map { $_->[1] } @{$from}[$root_source_offset + 1 .. $#$from] ) {
143 for my $col (@{$self->_extract_condition_columns($cond, $retardo_sqla_cache)}) {
144 my $ci = $colinfo->{$col};
145 if (
146 $ci
147 and
148 $ci->{-source_alias} eq $attrs->{alias}
149 and
150 ! $selected_root_columns->{$ci->{-colname}}++
151 ) {
152 # adding it to both to keep limits not supporting dark selectors happy
153 push @$inner_select, $ci->{-fq_colname};
154 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $ci->{-fq_colname};
155 }
156 }
157 }
158
ea95892e 159 # construct the inner $from and lock it in a subquery
48580715 160 # we need to prune first, because this will determine if we need a group_by below
53c29913 161 # the fake group_by is so that the pruner throws away all non-selecting, non-restricting
162 # multijoins (since we def. do not care about those inside the subquery)
ea95892e 163
6395604e 164 my $inner_subq = do {
ea95892e 165
166 # must use it here regardless of user requests
167 local $self->{_use_join_optimizer} = 1;
168
169 my $inner_from = $self->_prune_unused_joins ($from, $inner_select, $where, {
170 group_by => ['dummy'], %$inner_attrs,
171 });
172
887a0aef 173 my $inner_aliastypes =
174 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args( $inner_from, $inner_select, $where, $inner_attrs );
175
a4812caa 176 # we need to simulate collapse in the subq if a multiplying join is pulled
177 # by being a non-selecting restrictor
0a3441ee 178 if (
179 ! $inner_attrs->{group_by}
180 and
887a0aef 181 first {
182 $inner_aliastypes->{restricting}{$_}
183 and
184 ! $inner_aliastypes->{selecting}{$_}
185 } ( keys %{$inner_aliastypes->{multiplying}||{}} )
0a3441ee 186 ) {
14e26c5f 187 my $unprocessed_order_chunks;
188 ($inner_attrs->{group_by}, $unprocessed_order_chunks) = $self->_group_over_selection (
0a3441ee 189 $inner_from, $inner_select, $inner_attrs->{order_by}
190 );
14e26c5f 191
192 $self->throw_exception (
193 'A required group_by clause could not be constructed automatically due to a complex '
194 . 'order_by criteria. Either order_by columns only (no functions) or construct a suitable '
195 . 'group_by by hand'
196 ) if $unprocessed_order_chunks;
0a3441ee 197 }
d28bb90d 198
ea95892e 199 # we already optimized $inner_from above
200 local $self->{_use_join_optimizer} = 0;
d28bb90d 201
ea95892e 202 # generate the subquery
6395604e 203 $self->_select_args_to_query (
ea95892e 204 $inner_from,
205 $inner_select,
206 $where,
207 $inner_attrs,
208 );
d28bb90d 209 };
210
211 # Generate the outer from - this is relatively easy (really just replace
212 # the join slot with the subquery), with a major caveat - we can not
213 # join anything that is non-selecting (not part of the prefetch), but at
214 # the same time is a multi-type relationship, as it will explode the result.
215 #
216 # There are two possibilities here
217 # - either the join is non-restricting, in which case we simply throw it away
218 # - it is part of the restrictions, in which case we need to collapse the outer
219 # result by tackling yet another group_by to the outside of the query
220
27e0370d 221 # work on a shallow copy
052e8431 222 $from = [ @$from ];
052e8431 223
d28bb90d 224 my @outer_from;
53c29913 225
27e0370d 226 # we may not be the head
227 if ($root_source_offset) {
228 # first generate the outer_from, up to the substitution point
229 @outer_from = splice @$from, 0, $root_source_offset;
6395604e 230
27e0370d 231 my $root_node = shift @$from;
232
233 push @outer_from, [
234 {
235 -alias => $attrs->{alias},
236 -rsrc => $root_node->[0]{-rsrc},
237 $attrs->{alias} => $inner_subq,
238 },
239 @{$root_node}[1 .. $#$root_node],
240 ];
241 }
242 else {
243 my $root_node = shift @$from;
244
245 @outer_from = {
246 -alias => $attrs->{alias},
247 -rsrc => $root_node->{-rsrc},
248 $attrs->{alias} => $inner_subq,
249 };
d28bb90d 250 }
251
ea95892e 252 # scan the *remaining* from spec against different attributes, and see which joins are needed
052e8431 253 # in what role
254 my $outer_aliastypes =
539ffe87 255 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args( $from, $outer_select, $where, $outer_attrs );
052e8431 256
a4812caa 257 # unroll parents
258 my ($outer_select_chain, $outer_restrict_chain) = map { +{
259 map { $_ => 1 } map { values %$_} map { @$_ } values %{ $outer_aliastypes->{$_} || {} }
260 } } qw/selecting restricting/;
261
d28bb90d 262 # see what's left - throw away if not selecting/restricting
a4812caa 263 # also throw in a group_by if a non-selecting multiplier,
264 # to guard against cross-join explosions
36fd7f07 265 my $need_outer_group_by;
d28bb90d 266 while (my $j = shift @$from) {
267 my $alias = $j->[0]{-alias};
268
a4812caa 269 if (
270 $outer_select_chain->{$alias}
271 ) {
272 push @outer_from, $j
d28bb90d 273 }
a4812caa 274 elsif ($outer_restrict_chain->{$alias}) {
d28bb90d 275 push @outer_from, $j;
a4812caa 276 $need_outer_group_by ||= $outer_aliastypes->{multiplying}{$alias} ? 1 : 0;
d28bb90d 277 }
278 }
279
36fd7f07 280 if ($need_outer_group_by and ! $outer_attrs->{group_by}) {
281
282 my $unprocessed_order_chunks;
283 ($outer_attrs->{group_by}, $unprocessed_order_chunks) = $self->_group_over_selection (
284 \@outer_from, $outer_select, $outer_attrs->{order_by}
285 );
286
287 $self->throw_exception (
288 'A required group_by clause could not be constructed automatically due to a complex '
289 . 'order_by criteria. Either order_by columns only (no functions) or construct a suitable '
290 . 'group_by by hand'
291 ) if $unprocessed_order_chunks;
292
293 }
294
d28bb90d 295 # This is totally horrific - the $where ends up in both the inner and outer query
296 # Unfortunately not much can be done until SQLA2 introspection arrives, and even
297 # then if where conditions apply to the *right* side of the prefetch, you may have
298 # to both filter the inner select (e.g. to apply a limit) and then have to re-filter
299 # the outer select to exclude joins you didin't want in the first place
300 #
301 # OTOH it can be seen as a plus: <ash> (notes that this query would make a DBA cry ;)
302 return (\@outer_from, $outer_select, $where, $outer_attrs);
303}
304
1a736efb 305#
306# I KNOW THIS SUCKS! GET SQLA2 OUT THE DOOR SO THIS CAN DIE!
307#
ad630f4b 308# Due to a lack of SQLA2 we fall back to crude scans of all the
309# select/where/order/group attributes, in order to determine what
310# aliases are neded to fulfill the query. This information is used
311# throughout the code to prune unnecessary JOINs from the queries
312# in an attempt to reduce the execution time.
313# Although the method is pretty horrific, the worst thing that can
1a736efb 314# happen is for it to fail due to some scalar SQL, which in turn will
315# result in a vocal exception.
539ffe87 316sub _resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args {
052e8431 317 my ( $self, $from, $select, $where, $attrs ) = @_;
546f1cd9 318
ad630f4b 319 $self->throw_exception ('Unable to analyze custom {from}')
320 if ref $from ne 'ARRAY';
546f1cd9 321
ad630f4b 322 # what we will return
964a3c71 323 my $aliases_by_type;
546f1cd9 324
ad630f4b 325 # see what aliases are there to work with
326 my $alias_list;
539ffe87 327 for (@$from) {
328 my $j = $_;
ad630f4b 329 $j = $j->[0] if ref $j eq 'ARRAY';
539ffe87 330 my $al = $j->{-alias}
331 or next;
332
333 $alias_list->{$al} = $j;
a4812caa 334 $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$al} ||= $j->{-join_path}||[] if (
335 # not array == {from} head == can't be multiplying
336 ( ref($_) eq 'ARRAY' and ! $j->{-is_single} )
337 or
338 # a parent of ours is already a multiplier
339 ( grep { $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$_} } @{ $j->{-join_path}||[] } )
340 );
546f1cd9 341 }
546f1cd9 342
1a736efb 343 # get a column to source/alias map (including unqualified ones)
344 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info ($from);
345
ad630f4b 346 # set up a botched SQLA
347 my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
07f31d19 348
4c2b30d6 349 # these are throw away results, do not pollute the bind stack
4c2b30d6 350 local $sql_maker->{select_bind};
0542ec57 351 local $sql_maker->{where_bind};
352 local $sql_maker->{group_bind};
353 local $sql_maker->{having_bind};
3f5b99fe 354
355 # we can't scan properly without any quoting (\b doesn't cut it
356 # everywhere), so unless there is proper quoting set - use our
357 # own weird impossible character.
358 # Also in the case of no quoting, we need to explicitly disable
359 # name_sep, otherwise sorry nasty legacy syntax like
360 # { 'count(foo.id)' => { '>' => 3 } } will stop working >:(
361 local $sql_maker->{quote_char} = $sql_maker->{quote_char};
362 local $sql_maker->{name_sep} = $sql_maker->{name_sep};
363
364 unless (defined $sql_maker->{quote_char} and length $sql_maker->{quote_char}) {
e493ecb2 365 $sql_maker->{quote_char} = ["\x00", "\xFF"];
366 # if we don't unset it we screw up retarded but unfortunately working
367 # 'MAX(foo.bar)' => { '>', 3 }
3f5b99fe 368 $sql_maker->{name_sep} = '';
369 }
370
371 my ($lquote, $rquote, $sep) = map { quotemeta $_ } ($sql_maker->_quote_chars, $sql_maker->name_sep);
07f31d19 372
1a736efb 373 # generate sql chunks
374 my $to_scan = {
375 restricting => [
376 $sql_maker->_recurse_where ($where),
a7e643b1 377 $sql_maker->_parse_rs_attrs ({
1a736efb 378 map { $_ => $attrs->{$_} } (qw/group_by having/)
379 }),
380 ],
381 selecting => [
1a736efb 382 $sql_maker->_recurse_fields ($select),
bac358c9 383 ( map { $_->[0] } $self->_extract_order_criteria ($attrs->{order_by}, $sql_maker) ),
1a736efb 384 ],
385 };
07f31d19 386
1a736efb 387 # throw away empty chunks
388 $_ = [ map { $_ || () } @$_ ] for values %$to_scan;
07f31d19 389
1a736efb 390 # first loop through all fully qualified columns and get the corresponding
391 # alias (should work even if they are in scalarrefs)
ad630f4b 392 for my $alias (keys %$alias_list) {
1a736efb 393 my $al_re = qr/
3f5b99fe 394 $lquote $alias $rquote $sep
1a736efb 395 |
3f5b99fe 396 \b $alias \.
1a736efb 397 /x;
398
1a736efb 399 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
400 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
a4812caa 401 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} ||= $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path}||[]
402 if ($piece =~ $al_re);
1a736efb 403 }
ad630f4b 404 }
1a736efb 405 }
406
407 # now loop through unqualified column names, and try to locate them within
408 # the chunks
409 for my $col (keys %$colinfo) {
3f5b99fe 410 next if $col =~ / \. /x; # if column is qualified it was caught by the above
1a736efb 411
3f5b99fe 412 my $col_re = qr/ $lquote $col $rquote /x;
07f31d19 413
1a736efb 414 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
415 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
a4812caa 416 if ($piece =~ $col_re) {
417 my $alias = $colinfo->{$col}{-source_alias};
418 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} ||= $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path}||[];
419 }
1a736efb 420 }
07f31d19 421 }
422 }
423
424 # Add any non-left joins to the restriction list (such joins are indeed restrictions)
ad630f4b 425 for my $j (values %$alias_list) {
07f31d19 426 my $alias = $j->{-alias} or next;
a4812caa 427 $aliases_by_type->{restricting}{$alias} ||= $j->{-join_path}||[] if (
07f31d19 428 (not $j->{-join_type})
429 or
430 ($j->{-join_type} !~ /^left (?: \s+ outer)? $/xi)
431 );
432 }
433
964a3c71 434 return $aliases_by_type;
07f31d19 435}
436
bac358c9 437# This is the engine behind { distinct => 1 }
0a3441ee 438sub _group_over_selection {
439 my ($self, $from, $select, $order_by) = @_;
440
441 my $rs_column_list = $self->_resolve_column_info ($from);
442
443 my (@group_by, %group_index);
444
36fd7f07 445 # the logic is: if it is a { func => val } we assume an aggregate,
446 # otherwise if \'...' or \[...] we assume the user knows what is
447 # going on thus group over it
0a3441ee 448 for (@$select) {
449 if (! ref($_) or ref ($_) ne 'HASH' ) {
450 push @group_by, $_;
451 $group_index{$_}++;
452 if ($rs_column_list->{$_} and $_ !~ /\./ ) {
453 # add a fully qualified version as well
454 $group_index{"$rs_column_list->{$_}{-source_alias}.$_"}++;
455 }
07f31d19 456 }
457 }
ad630f4b 458
0a3441ee 459 # add any order_by parts that are not already present in the group_by
460 # we need to be careful not to add any named functions/aggregates
bac358c9 461 # i.e. order_by => [ ... { count => 'foo' } ... ]
14e26c5f 462 my @leftovers;
bac358c9 463 for ($self->_extract_order_criteria($order_by)) {
0a3441ee 464 # only consider real columns (for functions the user got to do an explicit group_by)
14e26c5f 465 if (@$_ != 1) {
466 push @leftovers, $_;
467 next;
468 }
bac358c9 469 my $chunk = $_->[0];
14e26c5f 470 my $colinfo = $rs_column_list->{$chunk} or do {
471 push @leftovers, $_;
472 next;
473 };
0a3441ee 474
475 $chunk = "$colinfo->{-source_alias}.$chunk" if $chunk !~ /\./;
476 push @group_by, $chunk unless $group_index{$chunk}++;
477 }
478
14e26c5f 479 return wantarray
480 ? (\@group_by, (@leftovers ? \@leftovers : undef) )
481 : \@group_by
482 ;
07f31d19 483}
484
d28bb90d 485sub _resolve_ident_sources {
486 my ($self, $ident) = @_;
487
488 my $alias2source = {};
489 my $rs_alias;
490
491 # the reason this is so contrived is that $ident may be a {from}
492 # structure, specifying multiple tables to join
6298a324 493 if ( blessed $ident && $ident->isa("DBIx::Class::ResultSource") ) {
d28bb90d 494 # this is compat mode for insert/update/delete which do not deal with aliases
495 $alias2source->{me} = $ident;
496 $rs_alias = 'me';
497 }
498 elsif (ref $ident eq 'ARRAY') {
499
500 for (@$ident) {
501 my $tabinfo;
502 if (ref $_ eq 'HASH') {
503 $tabinfo = $_;
504 $rs_alias = $tabinfo->{-alias};
505 }
506 if (ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' and ref $_->[0] eq 'HASH') {
507 $tabinfo = $_->[0];
508 }
509
4376a157 510 $alias2source->{$tabinfo->{-alias}} = $tabinfo->{-rsrc}
511 if ($tabinfo->{-rsrc});
d28bb90d 512 }
513 }
514
515 return ($alias2source, $rs_alias);
516}
517
518# Takes $ident, \@column_names
519#
520# returns { $column_name => \%column_info, ... }
521# also note: this adds -result_source => $rsrc to the column info
522#
09e14fdc 523# If no columns_names are supplied returns info about *all* columns
524# for all sources
d28bb90d 525sub _resolve_column_info {
526 my ($self, $ident, $colnames) = @_;
527 my ($alias2src, $root_alias) = $self->_resolve_ident_sources($ident);
528
52416317 529 my (%seen_cols, @auto_colnames);
d28bb90d 530
531 # compile a global list of column names, to be able to properly
532 # disambiguate unqualified column names (if at all possible)
533 for my $alias (keys %$alias2src) {
534 my $rsrc = $alias2src->{$alias};
535 for my $colname ($rsrc->columns) {
536 push @{$seen_cols{$colname}}, $alias;
3f5b99fe 537 push @auto_colnames, "$alias.$colname" unless $colnames;
d28bb90d 538 }
539 }
540
09e14fdc 541 $colnames ||= [
542 @auto_colnames,
543 grep { @{$seen_cols{$_}} == 1 } (keys %seen_cols),
544 ];
545
52416317 546 my (%return, $colinfos);
d28bb90d 547 foreach my $col (@$colnames) {
52416317 548 my ($source_alias, $colname) = $col =~ m/^ (?: ([^\.]+) \. )? (.+) $/x;
d28bb90d 549
52416317 550 # if the column was seen exactly once - we know which rsrc it came from
551 $source_alias ||= $seen_cols{$colname}[0]
552 if ($seen_cols{$colname} and @{$seen_cols{$colname}} == 1);
d28bb90d 553
52416317 554 next unless $source_alias;
555
556 my $rsrc = $alias2src->{$source_alias}
557 or next;
558
559 $return{$col} = {
6395604e 560 %{
561 ( $colinfos->{$source_alias} ||= $rsrc->columns_info )->{$colname}
562 ||
563 $self->throw_exception(
564 "No such column '$colname' on source " . $rsrc->source_name
565 );
566 },
d28bb90d 567 -result_source => $rsrc,
52416317 568 -source_alias => $source_alias,
81bf295c 569 -fq_colname => $col eq $colname ? "$source_alias.$col" : $col,
570 -colname => $colname,
d28bb90d 571 };
81bf295c 572
573 $return{"$source_alias.$colname"} = $return{$col} if $col eq $colname;
d28bb90d 574 }
575
576 return \%return;
577}
578
289ac713 579# The DBIC relationship chaining implementation is pretty simple - every
580# new related_relationship is pushed onto the {from} stack, and the {select}
581# window simply slides further in. This means that when we count somewhere
582# in the middle, we got to make sure that everything in the join chain is an
583# actual inner join, otherwise the count will come back with unpredictable
584# results (a resultset may be generated with _some_ rows regardless of if
585# the relation which the $rs currently selects has rows or not). E.g.
586# $artist_rs->cds->count - normally generates:
587# SELECT COUNT( * ) FROM artist me LEFT JOIN cd cds ON cds.artist = me.artistid
588# which actually returns the number of artists * (number of cds || 1)
589#
590# So what we do here is crawl {from}, determine if the current alias is at
591# the top of the stack, and if not - make sure the chain is inner-joined down
592# to the root.
593#
31a8aaaf 594sub _inner_join_to_node {
289ac713 595 my ($self, $from, $alias) = @_;
596
597 # subqueries and other oddness are naturally not supported
598 return $from if (
599 ref $from ne 'ARRAY'
600 ||
601 @$from <= 1
602 ||
603 ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH'
604 ||
605 ! $from->[0]{-alias}
606 ||
7eb76996 607 $from->[0]{-alias} eq $alias # this last bit means $alias is the head of $from - nothing to do
289ac713 608 );
609
610 # find the current $alias in the $from structure
611 my $switch_branch;
612 JOINSCAN:
613 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
614 if ($j->[0]{-alias} eq $alias) {
615 $switch_branch = $j->[0]{-join_path};
616 last JOINSCAN;
617 }
618 }
619
7eb76996 620 # something else went quite wrong
289ac713 621 return $from unless $switch_branch;
622
623 # So it looks like we will have to switch some stuff around.
624 # local() is useless here as we will be leaving the scope
625 # anyway, and deep cloning is just too fucking expensive
8273e845 626 # So replace the first hashref in the node arrayref manually
289ac713 627 my @new_from = ($from->[0]);
faeb2407 628 my $sw_idx = { map { (values %$_), 1 } @$switch_branch }; #there's one k/v per join-path
289ac713 629
630 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
631 my $jalias = $j->[0]{-alias};
632
633 if ($sw_idx->{$jalias}) {
634 my %attrs = %{$j->[0]};
635 delete $attrs{-join_type};
636 push @new_from, [
637 \%attrs,
638 @{$j}[ 1 .. $#$j ],
639 ];
640 }
641 else {
642 push @new_from, $j;
643 }
644 }
645
646 return \@new_from;
647}
648
ea5c7509 649# yet another atrocity: attempt to extract all columns from a
650# where condition by hooking _quote
651sub _extract_condition_columns {
27e0370d 652 my ($self, $cond, $sql_maker_cache) = @_;
ea5c7509 653
654 return [] unless $cond;
655
27e0370d 656 my $sm = $sql_maker_cache->{condparser} ||= $self->{_sql_ident_capturer} ||= do {
ea5c7509 657 # FIXME - replace with a Moo trait
658 my $orig_sm_class = ref $self->sql_maker;
659 my $smic_class = "${orig_sm_class}::_IdentCapture_";
660
661 unless ($smic_class->isa('SQL::Abstract')) {
662
663 no strict 'refs';
664 *{"${smic_class}::_quote"} = subname "${smic_class}::_quote" => sub {
665 my ($self, $ident) = @_;
666 if (ref $ident eq 'SCALAR') {
667 $ident = $$ident;
668 my $storage_quotes = $self->sql_quote_char || '"';
669 my ($ql, $qr) = map
670 { quotemeta $_ }
671 (ref $storage_quotes eq 'ARRAY' ? @$storage_quotes : ($storage_quotes) x 2 )
672 ;
673
674 while ($ident =~ /
675 $ql (\w+) $qr
676 |
677 ([\w\.]+)
678 /xg) {
679 $self->{_captured_idents}{$1||$2}++;
680 }
bac6c4fb 681 }
037e8dca 682 else {
ea5c7509 683 $self->{_captured_idents}{$ident}++;
037e8dca 684 }
ea5c7509 685 return $ident;
686 };
687
688 *{"${smic_class}::_get_captured_idents"} = subname "${smic_class}::_get_captures" => sub {
689 (delete shift->{_captured_idents}) || {};
690 };
691
692 $self->inject_base ($smic_class, $orig_sm_class);
693
bac6c4fb 694 }
ea5c7509 695
696 $smic_class->new();
697 };
698
27e0370d 699 $sm->_recurse_where($cond);
ea5c7509 700
27e0370d 701 return [ sort keys %{$sm->_get_captured_idents} ];
ea5c7509 702}
703
bac358c9 704sub _extract_order_criteria {
1a736efb 705 my ($self, $order_by, $sql_maker) = @_;
c0748280 706
1a736efb 707 my $parser = sub {
708 my ($sql_maker, $order_by) = @_;
c0748280 709
1a736efb 710 return scalar $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by)
711 unless wantarray;
c0748280 712
1a736efb 713 my @chunks;
bac358c9 714 for ($sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by) ) {
715 my $chunk = ref $_ ? $_ : [ $_ ];
716 $chunk->[0] =~ s/\s+ (?: ASC|DESC ) \s* $//ix;
1a736efb 717 push @chunks, $chunk;
bac6c4fb 718 }
1a736efb 719
720 return @chunks;
721 };
722
723 if ($sql_maker) {
724 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by);
bac6c4fb 725 }
726 else {
1a736efb 727 $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
728 local $sql_maker->{quote_char};
729 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by);
bac6c4fb 730 }
bac6c4fb 731}
732
7cec4356 733sub _order_by_is_stable {
5f11e54f 734 my ($self, $ident, $order_by, $where) = @_;
c0748280 735
5f11e54f 736 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info($ident, [
737 (map { $_->[0] } $self->_extract_order_criteria($order_by)),
738 $where ? @{$self->_extract_fixed_condition_columns($where)} :(),
739 ]);
c0748280 740
7cec4356 741 return undef unless keys %$colinfo;
742
743 my $cols_per_src;
744 $cols_per_src->{$_->{-source_alias}}{$_->{-colname}} = $_ for values %$colinfo;
745
746 for (values %$cols_per_src) {
747 my $src = (values %$_)[0]->{-result_source};
748 return 1 if $src->_identifying_column_set($_);
c0748280 749 }
750
7cec4356 751 return undef;
752}
753
5f11e54f 754# returns an arrayref of column names which *definitely* have som
755# sort of non-nullable equality requested in the given condition
756# specification. This is used to figure out if a resultset is
757# constrained to a column which is part of a unique constraint,
758# which in turn allows us to better predict how ordering will behave
759# etc.
760#
761# this is a rudimentary, incomplete, and error-prone extractor
762# however this is OK - it is conservative, and if we can not find
763# something that is in fact there - the stack will recover gracefully
764# Also - DQ and the mst it rode in on will save us all RSN!!!
765sub _extract_fixed_condition_columns {
766 my ($self, $where, $nested) = @_;
767
768 return unless ref $where eq 'HASH';
769
770 my @cols;
771 for my $lhs (keys %$where) {
772 if ($lhs =~ /^\-and$/i) {
773 push @cols, ref $where->{$lhs} eq 'ARRAY'
774 ? ( map { $self->_extract_fixed_condition_columns($_, 1) } @{$where->{$lhs}} )
775 : $self->_extract_fixed_condition_columns($where->{$lhs}, 1)
776 ;
777 }
778 elsif ($lhs !~ /^\-/) {
779 my $val = $where->{$lhs};
780
781 push @cols, $lhs if (defined $val and (
782 ! ref $val
783 or
784 (ref $val eq 'HASH' and keys %$val == 1 and defined $val->{'='})
785 ));
786 }
787 }
788 return $nested ? @cols : \@cols;
c0748280 789}
bac6c4fb 790
d28bb90d 7911;