Pass the main rsrc in attrs, instead of trying to fish it out later
[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';
3705e3b2 19use DBIx::Class::_Util qw(is_plain_value is_literal_value);
6298a324 20use namespace::clean;
d28bb90d 21
22#
052e8431 23# This code will remove non-selecting/non-restricting joins from
4b1b5ea3 24# {from} specs, aiding the RDBMS query optimizer
052e8431 25#
26sub _prune_unused_joins {
e1861c2c 27 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
ea95892e 28
e1861c2c 29 # only standard {from} specs are supported, and we could be disabled in general
30 return ($attrs->{from}, {}) unless (
31 ref $attrs->{from} eq 'ARRAY'
32 and
33 @{$attrs->{from}} > 1
34 and
35 ref $attrs->{from}[0] eq 'HASH'
36 and
37 ref $attrs->{from}[1] eq 'ARRAY'
38 and
39 $self->_use_join_optimizer
40 );
052e8431 41
eb58c082 42 my $orig_aliastypes = $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args($attrs);
4b1b5ea3 43
eb58c082 44 my $new_aliastypes = { %$orig_aliastypes };
45
46 # we will be recreating this entirely
47 my @reclassify = 'joining';
97e130fa 48
4b1b5ea3 49 # a grouped set will not be affected by amount of rows. Thus any
eb58c082 50 # purely multiplicator classifications can go
51 # (will be reintroduced below if needed by something else)
52 push @reclassify, qw(multiplying premultiplied)
437a9cfa 53 if $attrs->{_force_prune_multiplying_joins} or $attrs->{group_by};
4b1b5ea3 54
eb58c082 55 # nuke what will be recalculated
56 delete @{$new_aliastypes}{@reclassify};
57
e1861c2c 58 my @newfrom = $attrs->{from}[0]; # FROM head is always present
052e8431 59
eb58c082 60 # recalculate what we need once the multipliers are potentially gone
61 # ignore premultiplies, since they do not add any value to anything
a4812caa 62 my %need_joins;
eb58c082 63 for ( @{$new_aliastypes}{grep { $_ ne 'premultiplied' } keys %$new_aliastypes }) {
a4812caa 64 # add all requested aliases
65 $need_joins{$_} = 1 for keys %$_;
66
67 # add all their parents (as per joinpath which is an AoH { table => alias })
97e130fa 68 $need_joins{$_} = 1 for map { values %$_ } map { @{$_->{-parents}} } values %$_;
a4812caa 69 }
97e130fa 70
e1861c2c 71 for my $j (@{$attrs->{from}}[1..$#{$attrs->{from}}]) {
539ffe87 72 push @newfrom, $j if (
a6ef93cb 73 (! defined $j->[0]{-alias}) # legacy crap
539ffe87 74 ||
75 $need_joins{$j->[0]{-alias}}
76 );
052e8431 77 }
78
eb58c082 79 # we have a new set of joiners - for everything we nuked pull the classification
80 # off the original stack
81 for my $ctype (@reclassify) {
82 $new_aliastypes->{$ctype} = { map
83 { $need_joins{$_} ? ( $_ => $orig_aliastypes->{$ctype}{$_} ) : () }
84 keys %{$orig_aliastypes->{$ctype}}
85 }
86 }
87
88 return ( \@newfrom, $new_aliastypes );
052e8431 89}
90
052e8431 91#
d28bb90d 92# This is the code producing joined subqueries like:
8273e845 93# SELECT me.*, other.* FROM ( SELECT me.* FROM ... ) JOIN other ON ...
d28bb90d 94#
95sub _adjust_select_args_for_complex_prefetch {
e1861c2c 96 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
d28bb90d 97
e1861c2c 98 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute') unless (
99 ref $attrs->{from} eq 'ARRAY'
100 and
101 @{$attrs->{from}} > 1
102 and
103 ref $attrs->{from}[0] eq 'HASH'
104 and
105 ref $attrs->{from}[1] eq 'ARRAY'
106 );
d28bb90d 107
1e4f9fb3 108 my $root_alias = $attrs->{alias};
109
d28bb90d 110 # generate inner/outer attribute lists, remove stuff that doesn't apply
111 my $outer_attrs = { %$attrs };
e1861c2c 112 delete @{$outer_attrs}{qw(from bind rows offset group_by _grouped_by_distinct having)};
d28bb90d 113
186ba34c 114 my $inner_attrs = { %$attrs };
e1861c2c 115 delete @{$inner_attrs}{qw(for collapse select as _related_results_construction)};
d28bb90d 116
4df1400e 117 # there is no point of ordering the insides if there is no limit
118 delete $inner_attrs->{order_by} if (
119 delete $inner_attrs->{_order_is_artificial}
120 or
121 ! $inner_attrs->{rows}
122 );
946f6260 123
d28bb90d 124 # generate the inner/outer select lists
125 # for inside we consider only stuff *not* brought in by the prefetch
126 # on the outside we substitute any function for its alias
e1861c2c 127 $outer_attrs->{select} = [ @{$attrs->{select}} ];
36fd7f07 128
97e130fa 129 my ($root_node, $root_node_offset);
27e0370d 130
e1861c2c 131 for my $i (0 .. $#{$inner_attrs->{from}}) {
132 my $node = $inner_attrs->{from}[$i];
27e0370d 133 my $h = (ref $node eq 'HASH') ? $node
134 : (ref $node eq 'ARRAY' and ref $node->[0] eq 'HASH') ? $node->[0]
135 : next
136 ;
137
1e4f9fb3 138 if ( ($h->{-alias}||'') eq $root_alias and $h->{-rsrc} ) {
97e130fa 139 $root_node = $h;
140 $root_node_offset = $i;
27e0370d 141 last;
142 }
143 }
144
145 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute')
97e130fa 146 unless $root_node;
27e0370d 147
148 # use the heavy duty resolver to take care of aliased/nonaliased naming
e1861c2c 149 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info($inner_attrs->{from});
27e0370d 150 my $selected_root_columns;
151
e1861c2c 152 for my $i (0 .. $#{$outer_attrs->{select}}) {
153 my $sel = $outer_attrs->{select}->[$i];
d28bb90d 154
1e4f9fb3 155 next if (
156 $colinfo->{$sel} and $colinfo->{$sel}{-source_alias} ne $root_alias
157 );
158
d28bb90d 159 if (ref $sel eq 'HASH' ) {
160 $sel->{-as} ||= $attrs->{as}[$i];
e1861c2c 161 $outer_attrs->{select}->[$i] = join ('.', $root_alias, ($sel->{-as} || "inner_column_$i") );
d28bb90d 162 }
27e0370d 163 elsif (! ref $sel and my $ci = $colinfo->{$sel}) {
164 $selected_root_columns->{$ci->{-colname}} = 1;
165 }
d28bb90d 166
e1861c2c 167 push @{$inner_attrs->{select}}, $sel;
bb9bffea 168
169 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $attrs->{as}[$i];
d28bb90d 170 }
171
97e130fa 172 # We will need to fetch all native columns in the inner subquery, which may
173 # be a part of an *outer* join condition, or an order_by (which needs to be
e1861c2c 174 # preserved outside), or wheres. In other words everything but the inner
175 # selector
97e130fa 176 # We can not just fetch everything because a potential has_many restricting
177 # join collapse *will not work* on heavy data types.
e1861c2c 178 my $connecting_aliastypes = $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args({
179 %$inner_attrs,
180 select => [],
181 });
97e130fa 182
183 for (sort map { keys %{$_->{-seen_columns}||{}} } map { values %$_ } values %$connecting_aliastypes) {
184 my $ci = $colinfo->{$_} or next;
185 if (
1e4f9fb3 186 $ci->{-source_alias} eq $root_alias
97e130fa 187 and
188 ! $selected_root_columns->{$ci->{-colname}}++
189 ) {
190 # adding it to both to keep limits not supporting dark selectors happy
e1861c2c 191 push @{$inner_attrs->{select}}, $ci->{-fq_colname};
97e130fa 192 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $ci->{-fq_colname};
27e0370d 193 }
194 }
195
e1861c2c 196 # construct the inner {from} and lock it in a subquery
48580715 197 # we need to prune first, because this will determine if we need a group_by below
97e130fa 198 # throw away all non-selecting, non-restricting multijoins
eb58c082 199 # (since we def. do not care about multiplication of the contents of the subquery)
6395604e 200 my $inner_subq = do {
ea95892e 201
eb58c082 202 # must use it here regardless of user requests (vastly gentler on optimizer)
ea95892e 203 local $self->{_use_join_optimizer} = 1;
204
97e130fa 205 # throw away multijoins since we def. do not care about those inside the subquery
e1861c2c 206 ($inner_attrs->{from}, my $inner_aliastypes) = $self->_prune_unused_joins ({
437a9cfa 207 %$inner_attrs, _force_prune_multiplying_joins => 1
208 });
ea95892e 209
eb58c082 210 # uh-oh a multiplier (which is not us) left in, this is a problem for limits
211 # we will need to add a group_by to collapse the resultset for proper counts
0a3441ee 212 if (
eb58c082 213 grep { $_ ne $root_alias } keys %{ $inner_aliastypes->{multiplying} || {} }
1e4f9fb3 214 and
560978e2 215 # if there are user-supplied groups - assume user knows wtf they are up to
216 ( ! $inner_aliastypes->{grouping} or $inner_attrs->{_grouped_by_distinct} )
0a3441ee 217 ) {
1e4f9fb3 218
eb58c082 219 my $cur_sel = { map { $_ => 1 } @{$inner_attrs->{select}} };
1e4f9fb3 220
eb58c082 221 # *possibly* supplement the main selection with pks if not already
222 # there, as they will have to be a part of the group_by to collapse
223 # things properly
224 my $inner_select_with_extras;
225 my @pks = map { "$root_alias.$_" } $root_node->{-rsrc}->primary_columns
226 or $self->throw_exception( sprintf
227 'Unable to perform complex limited prefetch off %s without declared primary key',
228 $root_node->{-rsrc}->source_name,
e1861c2c 229 );
eb58c082 230 for my $col (@pks) {
231 push @{ $inner_select_with_extras ||= [ @{$inner_attrs->{select}} ] }, $col
232 unless $cur_sel->{$col}++;
1e4f9fb3 233 }
eb58c082 234
235 ($inner_attrs->{group_by}, $inner_attrs->{order_by}) = $self->_group_over_selection({
236 %$inner_attrs,
237 $inner_select_with_extras ? ( select => $inner_select_with_extras ) : (),
238 _aliastypes => $inner_aliastypes,
239 });
0a3441ee 240 }
d28bb90d 241
e1861c2c 242 # we already optimized $inner_attrs->{from} above
97e130fa 243 # and already local()ized
244 $self->{_use_join_optimizer} = 0;
d28bb90d 245
ea95892e 246 # generate the subquery
6395604e 247 $self->_select_args_to_query (
e1861c2c 248 @{$inner_attrs}{qw(from select where)},
ea95892e 249 $inner_attrs,
250 );
d28bb90d 251 };
252
253 # Generate the outer from - this is relatively easy (really just replace
254 # the join slot with the subquery), with a major caveat - we can not
255 # join anything that is non-selecting (not part of the prefetch), but at
256 # the same time is a multi-type relationship, as it will explode the result.
257 #
258 # There are two possibilities here
259 # - either the join is non-restricting, in which case we simply throw it away
260 # - it is part of the restrictions, in which case we need to collapse the outer
261 # result by tackling yet another group_by to the outside of the query
262
27e0370d 263 # work on a shallow copy
e1861c2c 264 my @orig_from = @{$attrs->{from}};
265
052e8431 266
e1861c2c 267 $outer_attrs->{from} = \ my @outer_from;
53c29913 268
27e0370d 269 # we may not be the head
97e130fa 270 if ($root_node_offset) {
e1861c2c 271 # first generate the outer_from, up to the substitution point
272 @outer_from = splice @orig_from, 0, $root_node_offset;
27e0370d 273
e1861c2c 274 # substitute the subq at the right spot
27e0370d 275 push @outer_from, [
276 {
1e4f9fb3 277 -alias => $root_alias,
97e130fa 278 -rsrc => $root_node->{-rsrc},
1e4f9fb3 279 $root_alias => $inner_subq,
27e0370d 280 },
e1861c2c 281 # preserve attrs from what is now the head of the from after the splice
282 @{$orig_from[0]}[1 .. $#{$orig_from[0]}],
27e0370d 283 ];
284 }
285 else {
27e0370d 286 @outer_from = {
1e4f9fb3 287 -alias => $root_alias,
27e0370d 288 -rsrc => $root_node->{-rsrc},
1e4f9fb3 289 $root_alias => $inner_subq,
27e0370d 290 };
d28bb90d 291 }
292
e1861c2c 293 shift @orig_from; # what we just replaced above
97e130fa 294
ea95892e 295 # scan the *remaining* from spec against different attributes, and see which joins are needed
052e8431 296 # in what role
975b573a 297 my $outer_aliastypes = $outer_attrs->{_aliastypes} =
e1861c2c 298 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args({ %$outer_attrs, from => \@orig_from });
052e8431 299
a4812caa 300 # unroll parents
1e4f9fb3 301 my ($outer_select_chain, @outer_nonselecting_chains) = map { +{
302 map { $_ => 1 } map { values %$_} map { @{$_->{-parents}} } values %{ $outer_aliastypes->{$_} || {} }
303 } } qw/selecting restricting grouping ordering/;
a4812caa 304
d28bb90d 305 # see what's left - throw away if not selecting/restricting
eb58c082 306 my $may_need_outer_group_by;
e1861c2c 307 while (my $j = shift @orig_from) {
d28bb90d 308 my $alias = $j->[0]{-alias};
309
a4812caa 310 if (
311 $outer_select_chain->{$alias}
312 ) {
313 push @outer_from, $j
d28bb90d 314 }
1e4f9fb3 315 elsif (first { $_->{$alias} } @outer_nonselecting_chains ) {
d28bb90d 316 push @outer_from, $j;
eb58c082 317 $may_need_outer_group_by ||= $outer_aliastypes->{multiplying}{$alias} ? 1 : 0;
d28bb90d 318 }
319 }
320
eb58c082 321 # also throw in a synthetic group_by if a non-selecting multiplier,
322 # to guard against cross-join explosions
323 # the logic is somewhat fragile, but relies on the idea that if a user supplied
324 # a group by on their own - they know what they were doing
325 if ( $may_need_outer_group_by and $attrs->{_grouped_by_distinct} ) {
326 ($outer_attrs->{group_by}, $outer_attrs->{order_by}) = $self->_group_over_selection ({
560978e2 327 %$outer_attrs,
328 from => \@outer_from,
560978e2 329 });
36fd7f07 330 }
331
e1861c2c 332 # This is totally horrific - the {where} ends up in both the inner and outer query
d28bb90d 333 # Unfortunately not much can be done until SQLA2 introspection arrives, and even
334 # then if where conditions apply to the *right* side of the prefetch, you may have
335 # to both filter the inner select (e.g. to apply a limit) and then have to re-filter
4a0eed52 336 # the outer select to exclude joins you didn't want in the first place
d28bb90d 337 #
338 # OTOH it can be seen as a plus: <ash> (notes that this query would make a DBA cry ;)
e1861c2c 339 return $outer_attrs;
d28bb90d 340}
341
1a736efb 342#
343# I KNOW THIS SUCKS! GET SQLA2 OUT THE DOOR SO THIS CAN DIE!
344#
ad630f4b 345# Due to a lack of SQLA2 we fall back to crude scans of all the
346# select/where/order/group attributes, in order to determine what
4a0eed52 347# aliases are needed to fulfill the query. This information is used
ad630f4b 348# throughout the code to prune unnecessary JOINs from the queries
349# in an attempt to reduce the execution time.
350# Although the method is pretty horrific, the worst thing that can
1a736efb 351# happen is for it to fail due to some scalar SQL, which in turn will
352# result in a vocal exception.
539ffe87 353sub _resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args {
e1861c2c 354 my ( $self, $attrs ) = @_;
546f1cd9 355
ad630f4b 356 $self->throw_exception ('Unable to analyze custom {from}')
e1861c2c 357 if ref $attrs->{from} ne 'ARRAY';
546f1cd9 358
ad630f4b 359 # what we will return
964a3c71 360 my $aliases_by_type;
546f1cd9 361
ad630f4b 362 # see what aliases are there to work with
eb58c082 363 # and record who is a multiplier and who is premultiplied
ad630f4b 364 my $alias_list;
e1861c2c 365 for my $node (@{$attrs->{from}}) {
366
367 my $j = $node;
ad630f4b 368 $j = $j->[0] if ref $j eq 'ARRAY';
539ffe87 369 my $al = $j->{-alias}
370 or next;
371
372 $alias_list->{$al} = $j;
eb58c082 373
374 $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$al} ||= { -parents => $j->{-join_path}||[] }
a4812caa 375 # not array == {from} head == can't be multiplying
eb58c082 376 if ref($node) eq 'ARRAY' and ! $j->{-is_single};
377
378 $aliases_by_type->{premultiplied}{$al} ||= { -parents => $j->{-join_path}||[] }
379 # parts of the path that are not us but are multiplying
380 if grep { $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$_} }
381 grep { $_ ne $al }
382 map { values %$_ }
383 @{ $j->{-join_path}||[] }
546f1cd9 384 }
546f1cd9 385
318e3d94 386 # get a column to source/alias map (including unambiguous unqualified ones)
e1861c2c 387 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info ($attrs->{from});
1a736efb 388
ad630f4b 389 # set up a botched SQLA
390 my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
07f31d19 391
4c2b30d6 392 # these are throw away results, do not pollute the bind stack
0542ec57 393 local $sql_maker->{where_bind};
394 local $sql_maker->{group_bind};
395 local $sql_maker->{having_bind};
97e130fa 396 local $sql_maker->{from_bind};
3f5b99fe 397
398 # we can't scan properly without any quoting (\b doesn't cut it
399 # everywhere), so unless there is proper quoting set - use our
400 # own weird impossible character.
401 # Also in the case of no quoting, we need to explicitly disable
402 # name_sep, otherwise sorry nasty legacy syntax like
403 # { 'count(foo.id)' => { '>' => 3 } } will stop working >:(
404 local $sql_maker->{quote_char} = $sql_maker->{quote_char};
405 local $sql_maker->{name_sep} = $sql_maker->{name_sep};
406
407 unless (defined $sql_maker->{quote_char} and length $sql_maker->{quote_char}) {
e493ecb2 408 $sql_maker->{quote_char} = ["\x00", "\xFF"];
409 # if we don't unset it we screw up retarded but unfortunately working
410 # 'MAX(foo.bar)' => { '>', 3 }
3f5b99fe 411 $sql_maker->{name_sep} = '';
412 }
413
414 my ($lquote, $rquote, $sep) = map { quotemeta $_ } ($sql_maker->_quote_chars, $sql_maker->name_sep);
07f31d19 415
1a736efb 416 # generate sql chunks
417 my $to_scan = {
418 restricting => [
e1861c2c 419 $sql_maker->_recurse_where ($attrs->{where}),
1e4f9fb3 420 $sql_maker->_parse_rs_attrs ({ having => $attrs->{having} }),
421 ],
422 grouping => [
423 $sql_maker->_parse_rs_attrs ({ group_by => $attrs->{group_by} }),
1a736efb 424 ],
97e130fa 425 joining => [
426 $sql_maker->_recurse_from (
e1861c2c 427 ref $attrs->{from}[0] eq 'ARRAY' ? $attrs->{from}[0][0] : $attrs->{from}[0],
428 @{$attrs->{from}}[1 .. $#{$attrs->{from}}],
97e130fa 429 ),
430 ],
1a736efb 431 selecting => [
ad1d374e 432 map { ($sql_maker->_recurse_fields($_))[0] } @{$attrs->{select}},
1e4f9fb3 433 ],
434 ordering => [
435 map { $_->[0] } $self->_extract_order_criteria ($attrs->{order_by}, $sql_maker),
1a736efb 436 ],
437 };
07f31d19 438
0dadd60d 439 # throw away empty chunks and all 2-value arrayrefs: the thinking is that these are
440 # bind value specs left in by the sloppy renderer above. It is ok to do this
441 # at this point, since we are going to end up rewriting this crap anyway
442 for my $v (values %$to_scan) {
443 my @nv;
444 for (@$v) {
445 next if (
446 ! defined $_
447 or
448 (
449 ref $_ eq 'ARRAY'
450 and
451 ( @$_ == 0 or @$_ == 2 )
452 )
453 );
454
455 if (ref $_) {
456 require Data::Dumper::Concise;
457 $self->throw_exception("Unexpected ref in scan-plan: " . Data::Dumper::Concise::Dumper($v) );
458 }
459
460 push @nv, $_;
461 }
462
463 $v = \@nv;
464 }
465
466 # kill all selectors which look like a proper subquery
467 # this is a sucky heuristic *BUT* - if we get it wrong the query will simply
468 # fail to run, so we are relatively safe
469 $to_scan->{selecting} = [ grep {
470 $_ !~ / \A \s* \( \s* SELECT \s+ .+? \s+ FROM \s+ .+? \) \s* \z /xsi
471 } @{ $to_scan->{selecting} || [] } ];
07f31d19 472
318e3d94 473 # first see if we have any exact matches (qualified or unqualified)
474 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
475 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
476 if ($colinfo->{$piece} and my $alias = $colinfo->{$piece}{-source_alias}) {
477 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} ||= { -parents => $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path}||[] };
478 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias}{-seen_columns}{$colinfo->{$piece}{-fq_colname}} = $piece;
479 }
480 }
481 }
482
483 # now loop through all fully qualified columns and get the corresponding
1a736efb 484 # alias (should work even if they are in scalarrefs)
ad630f4b 485 for my $alias (keys %$alias_list) {
1a736efb 486 my $al_re = qr/
97e130fa 487 $lquote $alias $rquote $sep (?: $lquote ([^$rquote]+) $rquote )?
1a736efb 488 |
97e130fa 489 \b $alias \. ([^\s\)\($rquote]+)?
1a736efb 490 /x;
491
1a736efb 492 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
493 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
97e130fa 494 if (my @matches = $piece =~ /$al_re/g) {
495 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} ||= { -parents => $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path}||[] };
1e4f9fb3 496 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias}{-seen_columns}{"$alias.$_"} = "$alias.$_"
97e130fa 497 for grep { defined $_ } @matches;
498 }
1a736efb 499 }
ad630f4b 500 }
1a736efb 501 }
502
503 # now loop through unqualified column names, and try to locate them within
504 # the chunks
505 for my $col (keys %$colinfo) {
3f5b99fe 506 next if $col =~ / \. /x; # if column is qualified it was caught by the above
1a736efb 507
97e130fa 508 my $col_re = qr/ $lquote ($col) $rquote /x;
07f31d19 509
1a736efb 510 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
511 for my $piece (@{$to_scan->{$type}}) {
318e3d94 512 if ( my @matches = $piece =~ /$col_re/g) {
a4812caa 513 my $alias = $colinfo->{$col}{-source_alias};
97e130fa 514 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} ||= { -parents => $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path}||[] };
1e4f9fb3 515 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias}{-seen_columns}{"$alias.$_"} = $_
97e130fa 516 for grep { defined $_ } @matches;
a4812caa 517 }
1a736efb 518 }
07f31d19 519 }
520 }
521
522 # Add any non-left joins to the restriction list (such joins are indeed restrictions)
ad630f4b 523 for my $j (values %$alias_list) {
07f31d19 524 my $alias = $j->{-alias} or next;
97e130fa 525 $aliases_by_type->{restricting}{$alias} ||= { -parents => $j->{-join_path}||[] } if (
07f31d19 526 (not $j->{-join_type})
527 or
528 ($j->{-join_type} !~ /^left (?: \s+ outer)? $/xi)
529 );
530 }
531
1e4f9fb3 532 for (keys %$aliases_by_type) {
533 delete $aliases_by_type->{$_} unless keys %{$aliases_by_type->{$_}};
534 }
535
964a3c71 536 return $aliases_by_type;
07f31d19 537}
538
eb58c082 539# This is the engine behind { distinct => 1 } and the general
540# complex prefetch grouper
0a3441ee 541sub _group_over_selection {
560978e2 542 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
0a3441ee 543
560978e2 544 my $colinfos = $self->_resolve_column_info ($attrs->{from});
0a3441ee 545
546 my (@group_by, %group_index);
547
36fd7f07 548 # the logic is: if it is a { func => val } we assume an aggregate,
549 # otherwise if \'...' or \[...] we assume the user knows what is
550 # going on thus group over it
560978e2 551 for (@{$attrs->{select}}) {
0a3441ee 552 if (! ref($_) or ref ($_) ne 'HASH' ) {
553 push @group_by, $_;
554 $group_index{$_}++;
560978e2 555 if ($colinfos->{$_} and $_ !~ /\./ ) {
0a3441ee 556 # add a fully qualified version as well
560978e2 557 $group_index{"$colinfos->{$_}{-source_alias}.$_"}++;
0a3441ee 558 }
07f31d19 559 }
560 }
ad630f4b 561
eb58c082 562 my @order_by = $self->_extract_order_criteria($attrs->{order_by})
563 or return (\@group_by, $attrs->{order_by});
564
565 # add any order_by parts that are not already present in the group_by
566 # to maintain SQL cross-compatibility and general sanity
567 #
568 # also in case the original selection is *not* unique, or in case part
569 # of the ORDER BY refers to a multiplier - we will need to replace the
570 # skipped order_by elements with their MIN/MAX equivalents as to maintain
571 # the proper overall order without polluting the group criteria (and
572 # possibly changing the outcome entirely)
573
574 my ($leftovers, $sql_maker, @new_order_by, $order_chunks, $aliastypes);
575
576 my $group_already_unique = $self->_columns_comprise_identifying_set($colinfos, \@group_by);
577
578 for my $o_idx (0 .. $#order_by) {
579
580 # if the chunk is already a min/max function - there is nothing left to touch
581 next if $order_by[$o_idx][0] =~ /^ (?: min | max ) \s* \( .+ \) $/ix;
582
0a3441ee 583 # only consider real columns (for functions the user got to do an explicit group_by)
eb58c082 584 my $chunk_ci;
585 if (
586 @{$order_by[$o_idx]} != 1
587 or
588 # only declare an unknown *plain* identifier as "leftover" if we are called with
589 # aliastypes to examine. If there are none - we are still in _resolve_attrs, and
590 # can just assume the user knows what they want
591 ( ! ( $chunk_ci = $colinfos->{$order_by[$o_idx][0]} ) and $attrs->{_aliastypes} )
592 ) {
593 push @$leftovers, $order_by[$o_idx][0];
14e26c5f 594 }
560978e2 595
eb58c082 596 next unless $chunk_ci;
597
598 # no duplication of group criteria
599 next if $group_index{$chunk_ci->{-fq_colname}};
600
601 $aliastypes ||= (
602 $attrs->{_aliastypes}
560978e2 603 or
eb58c082 604 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args({
605 from => $attrs->{from},
606 order_by => $attrs->{order_by},
607 })
608 ) if $group_already_unique;
609
610 # check that we are not ordering by a multiplier (if a check is requested at all)
611 if (
612 $group_already_unique
613 and
614 ! $aliastypes->{multiplying}{$chunk_ci->{-source_alias}}
615 and
616 ! $aliastypes->{premultiplied}{$chunk_ci->{-source_alias}}
560978e2 617 ) {
eb58c082 618 push @group_by, $chunk_ci->{-fq_colname};
619 $group_index{$chunk_ci->{-fq_colname}}++
560978e2 620 }
eb58c082 621 else {
622 # We need to order by external columns without adding them to the group
623 # (eiehter a non-unique selection, or a multi-external)
624 #
625 # This doesn't really make sense in SQL, however from DBICs point
626 # of view is rather valid (e.g. order the leftmost objects by whatever
627 # criteria and get the offset/rows many). There is a way around
628 # this however in SQL - we simply tae the direction of each piece
629 # of the external order and convert them to MIN(X) for ASC or MAX(X)
630 # for DESC, and group_by the root columns. The end result should be
631 # exactly what we expect
632
633 # FIXME - this code is a joke, will need to be completely rewritten in
634 # the DQ branch. But I need to push a POC here, otherwise the
635 # pesky tests won't pass
636 # wrap any part of the order_by that "responds" to an ordering alias
637 # into a MIN/MAX
638 $sql_maker ||= $self->sql_maker;
639 $order_chunks ||= [
640 map { ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' ? $_ : [ $_ ] } $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks($attrs->{order_by})
641 ];
0a3441ee 642
eb58c082 643 my ($chunk, $is_desc) = $sql_maker->_split_order_chunk($order_chunks->[$o_idx][0]);
644
645 $new_order_by[$o_idx] = \[
646 sprintf( '%s( %s )%s',
647 ($is_desc ? 'MAX' : 'MIN'),
648 $chunk,
649 ($is_desc ? ' DESC' : ''),
650 ),
651 @ {$order_chunks->[$o_idx]} [ 1 .. $#{$order_chunks->[$o_idx]} ]
652 ];
653 }
0a3441ee 654 }
655
eb58c082 656 $self->throw_exception ( sprintf
9736be65 657 'Unable to programatically derive a required group_by from the supplied '
658 . 'order_by criteria. To proceed either add an explicit group_by, or '
659 . 'simplify your order_by to only include plain columns '
660 . '(supplied order_by: %s)',
eb58c082 661 join ', ', map { "'$_'" } @$leftovers,
662 ) if $leftovers;
663
664 # recreate the untouched order parts
665 if (@new_order_by) {
666 $new_order_by[$_] ||= \ $order_chunks->[$_] for ( 0 .. $#$order_chunks );
667 }
668
669 return (
670 \@group_by,
671 (@new_order_by ? \@new_order_by : $attrs->{order_by} ), # same ref as original == unchanged
672 );
07f31d19 673}
674
d28bb90d 675sub _resolve_ident_sources {
676 my ($self, $ident) = @_;
677
678 my $alias2source = {};
d28bb90d 679
680 # the reason this is so contrived is that $ident may be a {from}
681 # structure, specifying multiple tables to join
6298a324 682 if ( blessed $ident && $ident->isa("DBIx::Class::ResultSource") ) {
d28bb90d 683 # this is compat mode for insert/update/delete which do not deal with aliases
684 $alias2source->{me} = $ident;
d28bb90d 685 }
686 elsif (ref $ident eq 'ARRAY') {
687
688 for (@$ident) {
689 my $tabinfo;
690 if (ref $_ eq 'HASH') {
691 $tabinfo = $_;
d28bb90d 692 }
693 if (ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' and ref $_->[0] eq 'HASH') {
694 $tabinfo = $_->[0];
695 }
696
4376a157 697 $alias2source->{$tabinfo->{-alias}} = $tabinfo->{-rsrc}
698 if ($tabinfo->{-rsrc});
d28bb90d 699 }
700 }
701
90f10b5a 702 return $alias2source;
d28bb90d 703}
704
705# Takes $ident, \@column_names
706#
707# returns { $column_name => \%column_info, ... }
708# also note: this adds -result_source => $rsrc to the column info
709#
09e14fdc 710# If no columns_names are supplied returns info about *all* columns
711# for all sources
d28bb90d 712sub _resolve_column_info {
713 my ($self, $ident, $colnames) = @_;
8d005ad9 714
715 return {} if $colnames and ! @$colnames;
716
90f10b5a 717 my $alias2src = $self->_resolve_ident_sources($ident);
d28bb90d 718
52416317 719 my (%seen_cols, @auto_colnames);
d28bb90d 720
721 # compile a global list of column names, to be able to properly
722 # disambiguate unqualified column names (if at all possible)
723 for my $alias (keys %$alias2src) {
724 my $rsrc = $alias2src->{$alias};
725 for my $colname ($rsrc->columns) {
726 push @{$seen_cols{$colname}}, $alias;
3f5b99fe 727 push @auto_colnames, "$alias.$colname" unless $colnames;
d28bb90d 728 }
729 }
730
09e14fdc 731 $colnames ||= [
732 @auto_colnames,
733 grep { @{$seen_cols{$_}} == 1 } (keys %seen_cols),
734 ];
735
52416317 736 my (%return, $colinfos);
d28bb90d 737 foreach my $col (@$colnames) {
52416317 738 my ($source_alias, $colname) = $col =~ m/^ (?: ([^\.]+) \. )? (.+) $/x;
d28bb90d 739
52416317 740 # if the column was seen exactly once - we know which rsrc it came from
741 $source_alias ||= $seen_cols{$colname}[0]
742 if ($seen_cols{$colname} and @{$seen_cols{$colname}} == 1);
d28bb90d 743
52416317 744 next unless $source_alias;
745
746 my $rsrc = $alias2src->{$source_alias}
747 or next;
748
749 $return{$col} = {
6395604e 750 %{
751 ( $colinfos->{$source_alias} ||= $rsrc->columns_info )->{$colname}
752 ||
753 $self->throw_exception(
754 "No such column '$colname' on source " . $rsrc->source_name
755 );
756 },
d28bb90d 757 -result_source => $rsrc,
52416317 758 -source_alias => $source_alias,
81bf295c 759 -fq_colname => $col eq $colname ? "$source_alias.$col" : $col,
760 -colname => $colname,
d28bb90d 761 };
81bf295c 762
763 $return{"$source_alias.$colname"} = $return{$col} if $col eq $colname;
d28bb90d 764 }
765
766 return \%return;
767}
768
289ac713 769# The DBIC relationship chaining implementation is pretty simple - every
770# new related_relationship is pushed onto the {from} stack, and the {select}
771# window simply slides further in. This means that when we count somewhere
772# in the middle, we got to make sure that everything in the join chain is an
773# actual inner join, otherwise the count will come back with unpredictable
774# results (a resultset may be generated with _some_ rows regardless of if
775# the relation which the $rs currently selects has rows or not). E.g.
776# $artist_rs->cds->count - normally generates:
777# SELECT COUNT( * ) FROM artist me LEFT JOIN cd cds ON cds.artist = me.artistid
778# which actually returns the number of artists * (number of cds || 1)
779#
780# So what we do here is crawl {from}, determine if the current alias is at
781# the top of the stack, and if not - make sure the chain is inner-joined down
782# to the root.
783#
31a8aaaf 784sub _inner_join_to_node {
289ac713 785 my ($self, $from, $alias) = @_;
786
787 # subqueries and other oddness are naturally not supported
788 return $from if (
789 ref $from ne 'ARRAY'
790 ||
791 @$from <= 1
792 ||
793 ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH'
794 ||
795 ! $from->[0]{-alias}
796 ||
7eb76996 797 $from->[0]{-alias} eq $alias # this last bit means $alias is the head of $from - nothing to do
289ac713 798 );
799
800 # find the current $alias in the $from structure
801 my $switch_branch;
802 JOINSCAN:
803 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
804 if ($j->[0]{-alias} eq $alias) {
805 $switch_branch = $j->[0]{-join_path};
806 last JOINSCAN;
807 }
808 }
809
7eb76996 810 # something else went quite wrong
289ac713 811 return $from unless $switch_branch;
812
813 # So it looks like we will have to switch some stuff around.
814 # local() is useless here as we will be leaving the scope
815 # anyway, and deep cloning is just too fucking expensive
8273e845 816 # So replace the first hashref in the node arrayref manually
289ac713 817 my @new_from = ($from->[0]);
faeb2407 818 my $sw_idx = { map { (values %$_), 1 } @$switch_branch }; #there's one k/v per join-path
289ac713 819
820 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
821 my $jalias = $j->[0]{-alias};
822
823 if ($sw_idx->{$jalias}) {
824 my %attrs = %{$j->[0]};
825 delete $attrs{-join_type};
826 push @new_from, [
827 \%attrs,
828 @{$j}[ 1 .. $#$j ],
829 ];
830 }
831 else {
832 push @new_from, $j;
833 }
834 }
835
836 return \@new_from;
837}
838
bac358c9 839sub _extract_order_criteria {
1a736efb 840 my ($self, $order_by, $sql_maker) = @_;
c0748280 841
1a736efb 842 my $parser = sub {
e6977bbb 843 my ($sql_maker, $order_by, $orig_quote_chars) = @_;
c0748280 844
1a736efb 845 return scalar $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by)
846 unless wantarray;
c0748280 847
e6977bbb 848 my ($lq, $rq, $sep) = map { quotemeta($_) } (
849 ($orig_quote_chars ? @$orig_quote_chars : $sql_maker->_quote_chars),
850 $sql_maker->name_sep
851 );
852
1a736efb 853 my @chunks;
bac358c9 854 for ($sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by) ) {
e6977bbb 855 my $chunk = ref $_ ? [ @$_ ] : [ $_ ];
cb3e87f5 856 ($chunk->[0]) = $sql_maker->_split_order_chunk($chunk->[0]);
e6977bbb 857
858 # order criteria may have come back pre-quoted (literals and whatnot)
859 # this is fragile, but the best we can currently do
860 $chunk->[0] =~ s/^ $lq (.+?) $rq $sep $lq (.+?) $rq $/"$1.$2"/xe
861 or $chunk->[0] =~ s/^ $lq (.+) $rq $/$1/x;
862
1a736efb 863 push @chunks, $chunk;
bac6c4fb 864 }
1a736efb 865
866 return @chunks;
867 };
868
869 if ($sql_maker) {
870 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by);
bac6c4fb 871 }
872 else {
1a736efb 873 $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
e6977bbb 874
875 # pass these in to deal with literals coming from
876 # the user or the deep guts of prefetch
877 my $orig_quote_chars = [$sql_maker->_quote_chars];
878
1a736efb 879 local $sql_maker->{quote_char};
e6977bbb 880 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by, $orig_quote_chars);
bac6c4fb 881 }
bac6c4fb 882}
883
7cec4356 884sub _order_by_is_stable {
5f11e54f 885 my ($self, $ident, $order_by, $where) = @_;
c0748280 886
eb58c082 887 my @cols = (
8d005ad9 888 ( map { $_->[0] } $self->_extract_order_criteria($order_by) ),
889 ( $where ? @{ $self->_extract_fixed_condition_columns($where) || [] } : () ),
df4312bc 890 ) or return 0;
eb58c082 891
892 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info($ident, \@cols);
893
894 return keys %$colinfo
895 ? $self->_columns_comprise_identifying_set( $colinfo, \@cols )
df4312bc 896 : 0
eb58c082 897 ;
898}
c0748280 899
eb58c082 900sub _columns_comprise_identifying_set {
901 my ($self, $colinfo, $columns) = @_;
7cec4356 902
903 my $cols_per_src;
eb58c082 904 $cols_per_src -> {$_->{-source_alias}} -> {$_->{-colname}} = $_
905 for grep { defined $_ } @{$colinfo}{@$columns};
7cec4356 906
907 for (values %$cols_per_src) {
908 my $src = (values %$_)[0]->{-result_source};
909 return 1 if $src->_identifying_column_set($_);
c0748280 910 }
911
df4312bc 912 return 0;
7cec4356 913}
914
df4312bc 915# this is almost similar to _order_by_is_stable, except it takes
0e81e691 916# a single rsrc, and will succeed only if the first portion of the order
917# by is stable.
918# returns that portion as a colinfo hashref on success
df4312bc 919sub _extract_colinfo_of_stable_main_source_order_by_portion {
0e81e691 920 my ($self, $main_rsrc, $order_by, $where) = @_;
921
922 die "Huh... I expect a blessed result_source..."
923 if ref($main_rsrc) eq 'ARRAY';
924
925 my @ord_cols = map
926 { $_->[0] }
927 ( $self->_extract_order_criteria($order_by) )
928 ;
929 return unless @ord_cols;
930
318e3d94 931 my $colinfos = $self->_resolve_column_info($main_rsrc);
932
0e81e691 933 for (0 .. $#ord_cols) {
934 if (
935 ! $colinfos->{$ord_cols[$_]}
936 or
937 $colinfos->{$ord_cols[$_]}{-result_source} != $main_rsrc
938 ) {
939 $#ord_cols = $_ - 1;
940 last;
941 }
942 }
943
944 # we just truncated it above
945 return unless @ord_cols;
946
0e81e691 947 my $order_portion_ci = { map {
948 $colinfos->{$_}{-colname} => $colinfos->{$_},
949 $colinfos->{$_}{-fq_colname} => $colinfos->{$_},
950 } @ord_cols };
951
318e3d94 952 # since all we check here are the start of the order_by belonging to the
953 # top level $rsrc, a present identifying set will mean that the resultset
954 # is ordered by its leftmost table in a stable manner
955 #
956 # RV of _identifying_column_set contains unqualified names only
957 my $unqualified_idset = $main_rsrc->_identifying_column_set({
958 ( $where ? %{
959 $self->_resolve_column_info(
8d005ad9 960 $main_rsrc, $self->_extract_fixed_condition_columns($where)||[]
318e3d94 961 )
962 } : () ),
963 %$order_portion_ci
964 }) or return;
965
966 my $ret_info;
967 my %unqualified_idcols_from_order = map {
968 $order_portion_ci->{$_} ? ( $_ => $order_portion_ci->{$_} ) : ()
969 } @$unqualified_idset;
970
971 # extra optimization - cut the order_by at the end of the identifying set
972 # (just in case the user was stupid and overlooked the obvious)
973 for my $i (0 .. $#ord_cols) {
974 my $col = $ord_cols[$i];
975 my $unqualified_colname = $order_portion_ci->{$col}{-colname};
976 $ret_info->{$col} = { %{$order_portion_ci->{$col}}, -idx_in_order_subset => $i };
977 delete $unqualified_idcols_from_order{$ret_info->{$col}{-colname}};
978
979 # we didn't reach the end of the identifying portion yet
980 return $ret_info unless keys %unqualified_idcols_from_order;
981 }
0e81e691 982
318e3d94 983 die 'How did we get here...';
0e81e691 984}
985
8d005ad9 986# Attempts to flatten a passed in SQLA condition as much as possible towards
987# a plain hashref, *without* altering its semantics. Required by
988# create/populate being able to extract definitive conditions from preexisting
989# resultset {where} stacks
990#
991# FIXME - while relatively robust, this is still imperfect, one of the first
992# things to tackle with DQ
993sub _collapse_cond {
994 my ($self, $where, $where_is_anded_array) = @_;
995
996 if (! $where) {
997 return;
998 }
999 elsif ($where_is_anded_array or ref $where eq 'HASH') {
1000
1001 my @pairs;
1002
1003 my @pieces = $where_is_anded_array ? @$where : $where;
1004 while (@pieces) {
1005 my $chunk = shift @pieces;
1006
1007 if (ref $chunk eq 'HASH') {
1008 push @pairs, map { [ $_ => $chunk->{$_} ] } sort keys %$chunk;
1009 }
1010 elsif (ref $chunk eq 'ARRAY') {
1011 push @pairs, [ -or => $chunk ]
1012 if @$chunk;
1013 }
1014 elsif ( ! ref $chunk) {
1015 push @pairs, [ $chunk, shift @pieces ];
1016 }
1017 else {
1018 push @pairs, [ '', $chunk ];
1019 }
1020 }
1021
1022 return unless @pairs;
1023
1024 my @conds = $self->_collapse_cond_unroll_pairs(\@pairs)
1025 or return;
1026
1027 # Consolidate various @conds back into something more compact
1028 my $fin;
1029
1030 for my $c (@conds) {
1031 if (ref $c ne 'HASH') {
1032 push @{$fin->{-and}}, $c;
1033 }
1034 else {
1035 for my $col (sort keys %$c) {
1036 if (exists $fin->{$col}) {
1037 my ($l, $r) = ($fin->{$col}, $c->{$col});
1038
1039 (ref $_ ne 'ARRAY' or !@$_) and $_ = [ -and => $_ ] for ($l, $r);
1040
1041 if (@$l and @$r and $l->[0] eq $r->[0] and $l->[0] eq '-and') {
1042 $fin->{$col} = [ -and => map { @$_[1..$#$_] } ($l, $r) ];
1043 }
1044 else {
1045 $fin->{$col} = [ -and => $fin->{$col}, $c->{$col} ];
1046 }
1047 }
1048 else {
1049 $fin->{$col} = $c->{$col};
1050 }
1051 }
1052 }
1053 }
1054
1055 if ( ref $fin->{-and} eq 'ARRAY' and @{$fin->{-and}} == 1 ) {
1056 my $piece = (delete $fin->{-and})->[0];
1057 if (ref $piece eq 'ARRAY') {
1058 $fin->{-or} = $fin->{-or} ? [ $piece, $fin->{-or} ] : $piece;
1059 }
1060 elsif (! exists $fin->{''}) {
1061 $fin->{''} = $piece;
1062 }
1063 }
1064
1065 return $fin;
1066 }
1067 elsif (ref $where eq 'ARRAY') {
1068 my @w = @$where;
1069
1070 while ( @w and (
1071 (ref $w[0] eq 'ARRAY' and ! @{$w[0]} )
1072 or
1073 (ref $w[0] eq 'HASH' and ! keys %{$w[0]})
1074 )) { shift @w };
1075
1076 return unless @w;
1077
1078 if ( @w == 1 ) {
1079 return ( ref $w[0] )
1080 ? $self->_collapse_cond($w[0])
1081 : { $w[0] => undef }
1082 ;
1083 }
1084 elsif ( ref $w[0] ) {
1085 return \@w;
1086 }
1087 elsif ( @w == 2 ) {
1088 if ( ( $w[0]||'' ) =~ /^\-and$/i ) {
1089 return (ref $w[1] eq 'HASH' or ref $w[1] eq 'ARRAY')
1090 ? $self->_collapse_cond($w[1], (ref $w[1] eq 'ARRAY') )
1091 : $self->throw_exception("Unsupported top-level op/arg pair: [ $w[0] => $w[1] ]")
1092 ;
1093 }
1094 else {
1095 return $self->_collapse_cond({ @w });
1096 }
1097 }
1098 }
1099 else {
1100 # not a hash not an array
1101 return { '' => $where };
1102 }
1103
1104 # catchall, some of the things above fall through
1105 return $where;
1106}
1107
1108sub _collapse_cond_unroll_pairs {
1109 my ($self, $pairs) = @_;
1110
1111 my @conds;
1112
1113 while (@$pairs) {
1114 my ($lhs, $rhs) = @{ shift @$pairs };
1115
1116 if ($lhs eq '') {
1117 push @conds, $self->_collapse_cond($rhs);
1118 }
1119 elsif ( $lhs =~ /^\-and$/i ) {
1120 push @conds, $self->_collapse_cond($rhs, (ref $rhs eq 'ARRAY'));
1121 }
1122 elsif ( $lhs =~ /^\-or$/i ) {
1123 push @conds, $self->_collapse_cond(
1124 (ref $rhs eq 'HASH') ? [ map { $_ => $rhs->{$_} } sort keys %$rhs ] : $rhs
1125 );
1126 }
1127 else {
1128 if (ref $rhs eq 'HASH' and ! keys %$rhs) {
1129 # FIXME - SQLA seems to be doing... nothing...?
1130 }
1131 elsif (ref $rhs eq 'HASH' and keys %$rhs == 1 and exists $rhs->{'='}) {
1132 for my $p ($self->_collapse_cond_unroll_pairs([ [ $lhs => $rhs->{'='} ] ])) {
1133
1134 # extra sanity check
1135 if (keys %$p > 1) {
1136 require Data::Dumper::Concise;
1137 local $Data::Dumper::Deepcopy = 1;
1138 $self->throw_exception(
1139 "Internal error: unexpected collapse unroll:"
1140 . Data::Dumper::Concise::Dumper { in => { $lhs => $rhs }, out => $p }
1141 );
1142 }
1143
1144 my ($l, $r) = %$p;
1145
3705e3b2 1146 push @conds, ( ! length ref $r or is_plain_value($r) )
8d005ad9 1147 ? { $l => $r }
1148 : { $l => { '=' => $r } }
1149 ;
1150 }
1151 }
1152 elsif (ref $rhs eq 'ARRAY') {
1153 # some of these conditionals encounter multi-values - roll them out using
1154 # an unshift, which will cause extra looping in the while{} above
1155 if (! @$rhs ) {
1156 push @conds, { $lhs => [] };
1157 }
1158 elsif ( ($rhs->[0]||'') =~ /^\-(?:and|or)$/i ) {
1159 $self->throw_exception("Value modifier not followed by any values: $lhs => [ $rhs->[0] ] ")
1160 if @$rhs == 1;
1161
1162 if( $rhs->[0] =~ /^\-and$/i ) {
1163 unshift @$pairs, map { [ $lhs => $_ ] } @{$rhs}[1..$#$rhs];
1164 }
1165 # if not an AND then it's an OR
1166 elsif(@$rhs == 2) {
1167 unshift @$pairs, [ $lhs => $rhs->[1] ];
1168 }
1169 else {
1170 push @conds, { $lhs => $rhs };
1171 }
1172 }
1173 elsif (@$rhs == 1) {
1174 unshift @$pairs, [ $lhs => $rhs->[0] ];
1175 }
1176 else {
1177 push @conds, { $lhs => $rhs };
1178 }
1179 }
1180 else {
1181 push @conds, { $lhs => $rhs };
1182 }
1183 }
1184 }
1185
1186 return @conds;
1187}
1188
1189
4a0eed52 1190# returns an arrayref of column names which *definitely* have some
8d005ad9 1191# sort of non-nullable *single* equality requested in the given condition
5f11e54f 1192# specification. This is used to figure out if a resultset is
1193# constrained to a column which is part of a unique constraint,
1194# which in turn allows us to better predict how ordering will behave
1195# etc.
1196#
1197# this is a rudimentary, incomplete, and error-prone extractor
1198# however this is OK - it is conservative, and if we can not find
1199# something that is in fact there - the stack will recover gracefully
5f11e54f 1200sub _extract_fixed_condition_columns {
8d005ad9 1201 my $self = shift;
1202 my $where_hash = $self->_collapse_cond(shift);
1203
1204 my $res;
1205 for my $c (keys %$where_hash) {
1206 if (defined (my $v = $where_hash->{$c}) ) {
1207 if (
3705e3b2 1208 ! length ref $v
5f11e54f 1209 or
7638636b 1210 is_plain_value ($v)
1211 or
1212 (
1213 ref $v eq 'HASH'
1214 and
1215 keys %$v == 1
1216 and
1217 ref $v->{'='}
1218 and
1219 is_literal_value($v->{'='})
1220 )
8d005ad9 1221 ) {
1222 $res->{$c} = 1;
1223 }
1224 elsif (ref $v eq 'ARRAY' and ($v->[0]||'') eq '-and') {
1225 $res->{$_} = 1 for map { @{ $self->_extract_fixed_condition_columns({ $c => $_ }) } } @{$v}[1..$#$v];
1226 }
5f11e54f 1227 }
1228 }
8d005ad9 1229
1230 return [ sort keys %$res ];
c0748280 1231}
bac6c4fb 1232
d28bb90d 12331;