Fix unpredictable use of reverse_relationship_info() in the SQLT parser
[dbsrgits/DBIx-Class.git] / lib / DBIx / Class / Storage / DBIHacks.pm
CommitLineData
c443438f 1package #hide from PAUSE
2 DBIx::Class::Storage::DBIHacks;
d28bb90d 3
4#
07fadea8 5# This module contains code supporting a battery of special cases and tests for
6# many corner cases pushing the envelope of what DBIC can do. When work on
7# these utilities began in mid 2009 (51a296b402c) it wasn't immediately obvious
497d0451 8# that these pieces, despite their misleading on-first-sight-flakiness, will
07fadea8 9# become part of the generic query rewriting machinery of DBIC, allowing it to
10# both generate and process queries representing incredibly complex sets with
11# reasonable efficiency.
12#
13# Now (end of 2015), more than 6 years later the routines in this class have
14# stabilized enough, and are meticulously covered with tests, to a point where
15# an effort to formalize them into user-facing APIs might be worthwhile.
16#
17# An implementor working on publicizing and/or replacing the routines with a
18# more modern SQL generation framework should keep in mind that pretty much all
19# existing tests are constructed on the basis of real-world code used in
20# production somewhere.
21#
22# Please hack on this responsibly ;)
d28bb90d 23#
24
25use strict;
26use warnings;
27
28use base 'DBIx::Class::Storage';
29use mro 'c3';
30
6298a324 31use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
497d0451 32use DBIx::Class::_Util qw(
33 dump_value fail_on_internal_call
34);
35use DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::Util 'extract_equality_conditions';
e466c62b 36use DBIx::Class::Carp;
6298a324 37use namespace::clean;
d28bb90d 38
39#
052e8431 40# This code will remove non-selecting/non-restricting joins from
4b1b5ea3 41# {from} specs, aiding the RDBMS query optimizer
052e8431 42#
43sub _prune_unused_joins {
e1861c2c 44 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
ea95892e 45
e1861c2c 46 # only standard {from} specs are supported, and we could be disabled in general
47 return ($attrs->{from}, {}) unless (
48 ref $attrs->{from} eq 'ARRAY'
49 and
50 @{$attrs->{from}} > 1
51 and
52 ref $attrs->{from}[0] eq 'HASH'
53 and
54 ref $attrs->{from}[1] eq 'ARRAY'
55 and
56 $self->_use_join_optimizer
57 );
052e8431 58
757891ed 59 my $orig_aliastypes =
60 $attrs->{_precalculated_aliastypes}
61 ||
62 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args($attrs)
63 ;
4b1b5ea3 64
eb58c082 65 my $new_aliastypes = { %$orig_aliastypes };
66
67 # we will be recreating this entirely
68 my @reclassify = 'joining';
97e130fa 69
4b1b5ea3 70 # a grouped set will not be affected by amount of rows. Thus any
eb58c082 71 # purely multiplicator classifications can go
72 # (will be reintroduced below if needed by something else)
73 push @reclassify, qw(multiplying premultiplied)
437a9cfa 74 if $attrs->{_force_prune_multiplying_joins} or $attrs->{group_by};
4b1b5ea3 75
eb58c082 76 # nuke what will be recalculated
77 delete @{$new_aliastypes}{@reclassify};
78
e1861c2c 79 my @newfrom = $attrs->{from}[0]; # FROM head is always present
052e8431 80
eb58c082 81 # recalculate what we need once the multipliers are potentially gone
82 # ignore premultiplies, since they do not add any value to anything
a4812caa 83 my %need_joins;
eb58c082 84 for ( @{$new_aliastypes}{grep { $_ ne 'premultiplied' } keys %$new_aliastypes }) {
a4812caa 85 # add all requested aliases
86 $need_joins{$_} = 1 for keys %$_;
87
88 # add all their parents (as per joinpath which is an AoH { table => alias })
97e130fa 89 $need_joins{$_} = 1 for map { values %$_ } map { @{$_->{-parents}} } values %$_;
a4812caa 90 }
97e130fa 91
e1861c2c 92 for my $j (@{$attrs->{from}}[1..$#{$attrs->{from}}]) {
539ffe87 93 push @newfrom, $j if (
a6ef93cb 94 (! defined $j->[0]{-alias}) # legacy crap
539ffe87 95 ||
96 $need_joins{$j->[0]{-alias}}
97 );
052e8431 98 }
99
eb58c082 100 # we have a new set of joiners - for everything we nuked pull the classification
101 # off the original stack
102 for my $ctype (@reclassify) {
103 $new_aliastypes->{$ctype} = { map
104 { $need_joins{$_} ? ( $_ => $orig_aliastypes->{$ctype}{$_} ) : () }
105 keys %{$orig_aliastypes->{$ctype}}
106 }
107 }
108
109 return ( \@newfrom, $new_aliastypes );
052e8431 110}
111
052e8431 112#
d28bb90d 113# This is the code producing joined subqueries like:
8273e845 114# SELECT me.*, other.* FROM ( SELECT me.* FROM ... ) JOIN other ON ...
d28bb90d 115#
116sub _adjust_select_args_for_complex_prefetch {
e1861c2c 117 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
d28bb90d 118
e1861c2c 119 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute') unless (
120 ref $attrs->{from} eq 'ARRAY'
121 and
122 @{$attrs->{from}} > 1
123 and
124 ref $attrs->{from}[0] eq 'HASH'
125 and
126 ref $attrs->{from}[1] eq 'ARRAY'
127 );
d28bb90d 128
1e4f9fb3 129 my $root_alias = $attrs->{alias};
130
d28bb90d 131 # generate inner/outer attribute lists, remove stuff that doesn't apply
132 my $outer_attrs = { %$attrs };
e1861c2c 133 delete @{$outer_attrs}{qw(from bind rows offset group_by _grouped_by_distinct having)};
d28bb90d 134
6aa93928 135 my $inner_attrs = { %$attrs, _simple_passthrough_construction => 1 };
136 delete @{$inner_attrs}{qw(for collapse select as)};
d28bb90d 137
4df1400e 138 # there is no point of ordering the insides if there is no limit
139 delete $inner_attrs->{order_by} if (
140 delete $inner_attrs->{_order_is_artificial}
141 or
142 ! $inner_attrs->{rows}
143 );
946f6260 144
d28bb90d 145 # generate the inner/outer select lists
146 # for inside we consider only stuff *not* brought in by the prefetch
147 # on the outside we substitute any function for its alias
e1861c2c 148 $outer_attrs->{select} = [ @{$attrs->{select}} ];
36fd7f07 149
97e130fa 150 my ($root_node, $root_node_offset);
27e0370d 151
e1861c2c 152 for my $i (0 .. $#{$inner_attrs->{from}}) {
153 my $node = $inner_attrs->{from}[$i];
27e0370d 154 my $h = (ref $node eq 'HASH') ? $node
155 : (ref $node eq 'ARRAY' and ref $node->[0] eq 'HASH') ? $node->[0]
156 : next
157 ;
158
1e4f9fb3 159 if ( ($h->{-alias}||'') eq $root_alias and $h->{-rsrc} ) {
97e130fa 160 $root_node = $h;
161 $root_node_offset = $i;
27e0370d 162 last;
163 }
164 }
165
166 $self->throw_exception ('Complex prefetches are not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute')
97e130fa 167 unless $root_node;
27e0370d 168
169 # use the heavy duty resolver to take care of aliased/nonaliased naming
e1861c2c 170 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info($inner_attrs->{from});
27e0370d 171 my $selected_root_columns;
172
e1861c2c 173 for my $i (0 .. $#{$outer_attrs->{select}}) {
174 my $sel = $outer_attrs->{select}->[$i];
d28bb90d 175
1e4f9fb3 176 next if (
177 $colinfo->{$sel} and $colinfo->{$sel}{-source_alias} ne $root_alias
178 );
179
d28bb90d 180 if (ref $sel eq 'HASH' ) {
181 $sel->{-as} ||= $attrs->{as}[$i];
e1861c2c 182 $outer_attrs->{select}->[$i] = join ('.', $root_alias, ($sel->{-as} || "inner_column_$i") );
d28bb90d 183 }
27e0370d 184 elsif (! ref $sel and my $ci = $colinfo->{$sel}) {
185 $selected_root_columns->{$ci->{-colname}} = 1;
186 }
d28bb90d 187
e1861c2c 188 push @{$inner_attrs->{select}}, $sel;
bb9bffea 189
190 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $attrs->{as}[$i];
d28bb90d 191 }
192
757891ed 193 my $inner_aliastypes = $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args($inner_attrs);
194
195 # In the inner subq we will need to fetch *only* native columns which may
97e130fa 196 # be a part of an *outer* join condition, or an order_by (which needs to be
e1861c2c 197 # preserved outside), or wheres. In other words everything but the inner
198 # selector
97e130fa 199 # We can not just fetch everything because a potential has_many restricting
200 # join collapse *will not work* on heavy data types.
97e130fa 201
757891ed 202 # essentially a map of all non-selecting seen columns
203 # the sort is there for a nicer select list
204 for (
205 sort
206 map
207 { keys %{$_->{-seen_columns}||{}} }
208 map
209 { values %{$inner_aliastypes->{$_}} }
210 grep
211 { $_ ne 'selecting' }
212 keys %$inner_aliastypes
213 ) {
97e130fa 214 my $ci = $colinfo->{$_} or next;
215 if (
1e4f9fb3 216 $ci->{-source_alias} eq $root_alias
97e130fa 217 and
218 ! $selected_root_columns->{$ci->{-colname}}++
219 ) {
220 # adding it to both to keep limits not supporting dark selectors happy
e1861c2c 221 push @{$inner_attrs->{select}}, $ci->{-fq_colname};
97e130fa 222 push @{$inner_attrs->{as}}, $ci->{-fq_colname};
27e0370d 223 }
224 }
225
e1861c2c 226 # construct the inner {from} and lock it in a subquery
48580715 227 # we need to prune first, because this will determine if we need a group_by below
97e130fa 228 # throw away all non-selecting, non-restricting multijoins
eb58c082 229 # (since we def. do not care about multiplication of the contents of the subquery)
6395604e 230 my $inner_subq = do {
ea95892e 231
eb58c082 232 # must use it here regardless of user requests (vastly gentler on optimizer)
7db939de 233 local $self->{_use_join_optimizer} = 1
234 unless $self->{_use_join_optimizer};
ea95892e 235
97e130fa 236 # throw away multijoins since we def. do not care about those inside the subquery
757891ed 237 # $inner_aliastypes *will* be redefined at this point
238 ($inner_attrs->{from}, $inner_aliastypes ) = $self->_prune_unused_joins ({
239 %$inner_attrs,
240 _force_prune_multiplying_joins => 1,
241 _precalculated_aliastypes => $inner_aliastypes,
437a9cfa 242 });
ea95892e 243
eb58c082 244 # uh-oh a multiplier (which is not us) left in, this is a problem for limits
245 # we will need to add a group_by to collapse the resultset for proper counts
0a3441ee 246 if (
eb58c082 247 grep { $_ ne $root_alias } keys %{ $inner_aliastypes->{multiplying} || {} }
1e4f9fb3 248 and
560978e2 249 # if there are user-supplied groups - assume user knows wtf they are up to
250 ( ! $inner_aliastypes->{grouping} or $inner_attrs->{_grouped_by_distinct} )
0a3441ee 251 ) {
1e4f9fb3 252
eb58c082 253 my $cur_sel = { map { $_ => 1 } @{$inner_attrs->{select}} };
1e4f9fb3 254
eb58c082 255 # *possibly* supplement the main selection with pks if not already
256 # there, as they will have to be a part of the group_by to collapse
257 # things properly
258 my $inner_select_with_extras;
259 my @pks = map { "$root_alias.$_" } $root_node->{-rsrc}->primary_columns
260 or $self->throw_exception( sprintf
261 'Unable to perform complex limited prefetch off %s without declared primary key',
262 $root_node->{-rsrc}->source_name,
e1861c2c 263 );
eb58c082 264 for my $col (@pks) {
265 push @{ $inner_select_with_extras ||= [ @{$inner_attrs->{select}} ] }, $col
266 unless $cur_sel->{$col}++;
1e4f9fb3 267 }
eb58c082 268
269 ($inner_attrs->{group_by}, $inner_attrs->{order_by}) = $self->_group_over_selection({
270 %$inner_attrs,
271 $inner_select_with_extras ? ( select => $inner_select_with_extras ) : (),
272 _aliastypes => $inner_aliastypes,
273 });
0a3441ee 274 }
d28bb90d 275
e1861c2c 276 # we already optimized $inner_attrs->{from} above
97e130fa 277 # and already local()ized
278 $self->{_use_join_optimizer} = 0;
d28bb90d 279
ea95892e 280 # generate the subquery
6395604e 281 $self->_select_args_to_query (
e1861c2c 282 @{$inner_attrs}{qw(from select where)},
ea95892e 283 $inner_attrs,
284 );
d28bb90d 285 };
286
287 # Generate the outer from - this is relatively easy (really just replace
288 # the join slot with the subquery), with a major caveat - we can not
289 # join anything that is non-selecting (not part of the prefetch), but at
290 # the same time is a multi-type relationship, as it will explode the result.
291 #
292 # There are two possibilities here
293 # - either the join is non-restricting, in which case we simply throw it away
294 # - it is part of the restrictions, in which case we need to collapse the outer
295 # result by tackling yet another group_by to the outside of the query
296
27e0370d 297 # work on a shallow copy
e1861c2c 298 my @orig_from = @{$attrs->{from}};
299
052e8431 300
e1861c2c 301 $outer_attrs->{from} = \ my @outer_from;
53c29913 302
27e0370d 303 # we may not be the head
97e130fa 304 if ($root_node_offset) {
e1861c2c 305 # first generate the outer_from, up to the substitution point
306 @outer_from = splice @orig_from, 0, $root_node_offset;
27e0370d 307
e1861c2c 308 # substitute the subq at the right spot
27e0370d 309 push @outer_from, [
310 {
1e4f9fb3 311 -alias => $root_alias,
97e130fa 312 -rsrc => $root_node->{-rsrc},
1e4f9fb3 313 $root_alias => $inner_subq,
27e0370d 314 },
e1861c2c 315 # preserve attrs from what is now the head of the from after the splice
316 @{$orig_from[0]}[1 .. $#{$orig_from[0]}],
27e0370d 317 ];
318 }
319 else {
27e0370d 320 @outer_from = {
1e4f9fb3 321 -alias => $root_alias,
27e0370d 322 -rsrc => $root_node->{-rsrc},
1e4f9fb3 323 $root_alias => $inner_subq,
27e0370d 324 };
d28bb90d 325 }
326
e1861c2c 327 shift @orig_from; # what we just replaced above
97e130fa 328
ea95892e 329 # scan the *remaining* from spec against different attributes, and see which joins are needed
052e8431 330 # in what role
975b573a 331 my $outer_aliastypes = $outer_attrs->{_aliastypes} =
e1861c2c 332 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args({ %$outer_attrs, from => \@orig_from });
052e8431 333
a4812caa 334 # unroll parents
1e4f9fb3 335 my ($outer_select_chain, @outer_nonselecting_chains) = map { +{
336 map { $_ => 1 } map { values %$_} map { @{$_->{-parents}} } values %{ $outer_aliastypes->{$_} || {} }
337 } } qw/selecting restricting grouping ordering/;
a4812caa 338
d28bb90d 339 # see what's left - throw away if not selecting/restricting
eb58c082 340 my $may_need_outer_group_by;
e1861c2c 341 while (my $j = shift @orig_from) {
d28bb90d 342 my $alias = $j->[0]{-alias};
343
a4812caa 344 if (
345 $outer_select_chain->{$alias}
346 ) {
347 push @outer_from, $j
d28bb90d 348 }
87b12551 349 elsif (grep { $_->{$alias} } @outer_nonselecting_chains ) {
d28bb90d 350 push @outer_from, $j;
eb58c082 351 $may_need_outer_group_by ||= $outer_aliastypes->{multiplying}{$alias} ? 1 : 0;
d28bb90d 352 }
353 }
354
eb58c082 355 # also throw in a synthetic group_by if a non-selecting multiplier,
356 # to guard against cross-join explosions
357 # the logic is somewhat fragile, but relies on the idea that if a user supplied
358 # a group by on their own - they know what they were doing
359 if ( $may_need_outer_group_by and $attrs->{_grouped_by_distinct} ) {
360 ($outer_attrs->{group_by}, $outer_attrs->{order_by}) = $self->_group_over_selection ({
560978e2 361 %$outer_attrs,
362 from => \@outer_from,
560978e2 363 });
36fd7f07 364 }
365
07fadea8 366 # FIXME: The {where} ends up in both the inner and outer query, i.e. *twice*
367 #
368 # This is rather horrific, and while we currently *do* have enough
369 # introspection tooling available to attempt a stab at properly deciding
370 # whether or not to include the where condition on the outside, the
371 # machinery is still too slow to apply it here.
372 # Thus for the time being we do not attempt any sanitation of the where
373 # clause and just pass it through on both sides of the subquery. This *will*
374 # be addressed at a later stage, most likely after folding the SQL generator
375 # into SQLMaker proper
d28bb90d 376 #
377 # OTOH it can be seen as a plus: <ash> (notes that this query would make a DBA cry ;)
07fadea8 378 #
e1861c2c 379 return $outer_attrs;
d28bb90d 380}
381
07fadea8 382# This is probably the ickiest, yet most relied upon part of the codebase:
383# this is the place where we take arbitrary SQL input and break it into its
384# constituent parts, making sure we know which *sources* are used in what
385# *capacity* ( selecting / restricting / grouping / ordering / joining, etc )
386# Although the method is pretty horrific, the worst thing that can happen is
387# for a classification failure, which in turn will result in a vocal exception,
388# and will lead to a relatively prompt fix.
389# The code has been slowly improving and is covered with a formiddable battery
390# of tests, so can be considered "reliably stable" at this point (Oct 2015).
1a736efb 391#
07fadea8 392# A note to implementors attempting to "replace" this - keep in mind that while
393# there are multiple optimization avenues, the actual "scan literal elements"
394# part *MAY NEVER BE REMOVED*, even if it is limited only ot the (future) AST
395# nodes that are deemed opaque (i.e. contain literal expressions). The use of
396# blackbox literals is at this point firmly a user-facing API, and is one of
397# *the* reasons DBIC remains as flexible as it is. In other words, when working
398# on this keep in mind that the following is widespread and *encouraged* way
399# of using DBIC in the wild when push comes to shove:
400#
401# $rs->search( {}, {
402# select => \[ $random, @stuff],
403# from => \[ $random, @stuff ],
404# where => \[ $random, @stuff ],
405# group_by => \[ $random, @stuff ],
406# order_by => \[ $random, @stuff ],
407# } )
408#
409# Various incarnations of the above are reflected in many of the tests. If one
410# gets to fail, you get to fix it. A "this is crazy, nobody does that" is not
411# acceptable going forward.
1a736efb 412#
539ffe87 413sub _resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args {
e1861c2c 414 my ( $self, $attrs ) = @_;
546f1cd9 415
ad630f4b 416 $self->throw_exception ('Unable to analyze custom {from}')
e1861c2c 417 if ref $attrs->{from} ne 'ARRAY';
546f1cd9 418
ad630f4b 419 # what we will return
964a3c71 420 my $aliases_by_type;
546f1cd9 421
ad630f4b 422 # see what aliases are there to work with
eb58c082 423 # and record who is a multiplier and who is premultiplied
ad630f4b 424 my $alias_list;
e1861c2c 425 for my $node (@{$attrs->{from}}) {
426
427 my $j = $node;
ad630f4b 428 $j = $j->[0] if ref $j eq 'ARRAY';
539ffe87 429 my $al = $j->{-alias}
430 or next;
431
432 $alias_list->{$al} = $j;
eb58c082 433
434 $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$al} ||= { -parents => $j->{-join_path}||[] }
a4812caa 435 # not array == {from} head == can't be multiplying
eb58c082 436 if ref($node) eq 'ARRAY' and ! $j->{-is_single};
437
438 $aliases_by_type->{premultiplied}{$al} ||= { -parents => $j->{-join_path}||[] }
439 # parts of the path that are not us but are multiplying
440 if grep { $aliases_by_type->{multiplying}{$_} }
441 grep { $_ ne $al }
442 map { values %$_ }
443 @{ $j->{-join_path}||[] }
546f1cd9 444 }
546f1cd9 445
318e3d94 446 # get a column to source/alias map (including unambiguous unqualified ones)
e1861c2c 447 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info ($attrs->{from});
1a736efb 448
ad630f4b 449 # set up a botched SQLA
450 my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
07f31d19 451
4c2b30d6 452 # these are throw away results, do not pollute the bind stack
0542ec57 453 local $sql_maker->{where_bind};
454 local $sql_maker->{group_bind};
455 local $sql_maker->{having_bind};
97e130fa 456 local $sql_maker->{from_bind};
3f5b99fe 457
458 # we can't scan properly without any quoting (\b doesn't cut it
459 # everywhere), so unless there is proper quoting set - use our
460 # own weird impossible character.
461 # Also in the case of no quoting, we need to explicitly disable
462 # name_sep, otherwise sorry nasty legacy syntax like
463 # { 'count(foo.id)' => { '>' => 3 } } will stop working >:(
464 local $sql_maker->{quote_char} = $sql_maker->{quote_char};
465 local $sql_maker->{name_sep} = $sql_maker->{name_sep};
466
467 unless (defined $sql_maker->{quote_char} and length $sql_maker->{quote_char}) {
e493ecb2 468 $sql_maker->{quote_char} = ["\x00", "\xFF"];
469 # if we don't unset it we screw up retarded but unfortunately working
470 # 'MAX(foo.bar)' => { '>', 3 }
3f5b99fe 471 $sql_maker->{name_sep} = '';
472 }
473
474 my ($lquote, $rquote, $sep) = map { quotemeta $_ } ($sql_maker->_quote_chars, $sql_maker->name_sep);
07f31d19 475
1a736efb 476 # generate sql chunks
477 my $to_scan = {
478 restricting => [
a9e985b7 479 ($sql_maker->_recurse_where ($attrs->{where}))[0],
1e4f9fb3 480 $sql_maker->_parse_rs_attrs ({ having => $attrs->{having} }),
481 ],
482 grouping => [
483 $sql_maker->_parse_rs_attrs ({ group_by => $attrs->{group_by} }),
1a736efb 484 ],
97e130fa 485 joining => [
486 $sql_maker->_recurse_from (
e1861c2c 487 ref $attrs->{from}[0] eq 'ARRAY' ? $attrs->{from}[0][0] : $attrs->{from}[0],
488 @{$attrs->{from}}[1 .. $#{$attrs->{from}}],
97e130fa 489 ),
490 ],
1a736efb 491 selecting => [
fdd47fe8 492 # kill all selectors which look like a proper subquery
493 # this is a sucky heuristic *BUT* - if we get it wrong the query will simply
494 # fail to run, so we are relatively safe
495 grep
496 { $_ !~ / \A \s* \( \s* SELECT \s+ .+? \s+ FROM \s+ .+? \) \s* \z /xsi }
497 map
498 { ($sql_maker->_recurse_fields($_))[0] }
499 @{$attrs->{select}}
1e4f9fb3 500 ],
66bbb12c 501 ordering => [ map
502 {
503 ( my $sql = (ref $_ ? $_->[0] : $_) ) =~ s/ \s+ (?: ASC | DESC ) \s* \z //xi;
504 $sql;
505 }
506 $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks( $attrs->{order_by} ),
1a736efb 507 ],
508 };
07f31d19 509
89203568 510 # we will be bulk-scanning anyway - pieces will not matter in that case,
511 # thus join everything up
fdd47fe8 512 # throw away empty-string chunks, and make sure no binds snuck in
513 # note that we operate over @{$to_scan->{$type}}, hence the
514 # semi-mindbending ... map ... for values ...
89203568 515 ( $_ = join ' ', map {
0dadd60d 516
89203568 517 ( ! defined $_ ) ? ()
8fc4291e 518 : ( length ref $_ ) ? $self->throw_exception(
519 "Unexpected ref in scan-plan: " . dump_value $_
520 )
89203568 521 : ( $_ =~ /^\s*$/ ) ? ()
522 : $_
0dadd60d 523
89203568 524 } @$_ ) for values %$to_scan;
fdd47fe8 525
526 # throw away empty to-scan's
527 (
89203568 528 length $to_scan->{$_}
fdd47fe8 529 or
530 delete $to_scan->{$_}
531 ) for keys %$to_scan;
0dadd60d 532
07f31d19 533
89203568 534
90c9dd1d 535 # these will be used for matching in the loop below
536 my $all_aliases = join ' | ', map { quotemeta $_ } keys %$alias_list;
537 my $fq_col_re = qr/
538 $lquote ( $all_aliases ) $rquote $sep (?: $lquote ([^$rquote]+) $rquote )?
539 |
540 \b ( $all_aliases ) \. ( [^\s\)\($rquote]+ )?
541 /x;
542
89203568 543
90c9dd1d 544 my $all_unq_columns = join ' | ',
545 map
546 { quotemeta $_ }
547 grep
548 # using a regex here shows up on profiles, boggle
549 { index( $_, '.') < 0 }
550 keys %$colinfo
551 ;
552 my $unq_col_re = $all_unq_columns
89203568 553 ? qr/
554 $lquote ( $all_unq_columns ) $rquote
555 |
556 (?: \A | \s ) ( $all_unq_columns ) (?: \s | \z )
557 /x
90c9dd1d 558 : undef
559 ;
560
561
19955cdf 562 # the actual scan, per type
318e3d94 563 for my $type (keys %$to_scan) {
19955cdf 564
90c9dd1d 565
19955cdf 566 # now loop through all fully qualified columns and get the corresponding
567 # alias (should work even if they are in scalarrefs)
90c9dd1d 568 #
89203568 569 # The regex captures in multiples of 4, with one of the two pairs being
90c9dd1d 570 # undef. There may be a *lot* of matches, hence the convoluted loop
89203568 571 my @matches = $to_scan->{$type} =~ /$fq_col_re/g;
90c9dd1d 572 my $i = 0;
573 while( $i < $#matches ) {
574
575 if (
576 defined $matches[$i]
577 ) {
578 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$matches[$i]} ||= { -parents => $alias_list->{$matches[$i]}{-join_path}||[] };
579
580 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$matches[$i]}{-seen_columns}{"$matches[$i].$matches[$i+1]"} = "$matches[$i].$matches[$i+1]"
581 if defined $matches[$i+1];
582
583 $i += 2;
1a736efb 584 }
1a736efb 585
90c9dd1d 586 $i += 2;
587 }
1a736efb 588
07f31d19 589
90c9dd1d 590 # now loop through unqualified column names, and try to locate them within
591 # the chunks, if there are any unqualified columns in the 1st place
592 next unless $unq_col_re;
89203568 593
594 # The regex captures in multiples of 2, one of the two being undef
595 for ( $to_scan->{$type} =~ /$unq_col_re/g ) {
596 defined $_ or next;
90c9dd1d 597 my $alias = $colinfo->{$_}{-source_alias} or next;
598 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias} ||= { -parents => $alias_list->{$alias}{-join_path}||[] };
599 $aliases_by_type->{$type}{$alias}{-seen_columns}{"$alias.$_"} = $_
07f31d19 600 }
601 }
602
90c9dd1d 603
07f31d19 604 # Add any non-left joins to the restriction list (such joins are indeed restrictions)
19955cdf 605 (
606 $_->{-alias}
607 and
608 ! $aliases_by_type->{restricting}{ $_->{-alias} }
609 and
610 (
611 not $_->{-join_type}
07f31d19 612 or
19955cdf 613 $_->{-join_type} !~ /^left (?: \s+ outer)? $/xi
614 )
615 and
616 $aliases_by_type->{restricting}{ $_->{-alias} } = { -parents => $_->{-join_path}||[] }
617 ) for values %$alias_list;
07f31d19 618
90c9dd1d 619
19955cdf 620 # final cleanup
621 (
622 keys %{$aliases_by_type->{$_}}
623 or
624 delete $aliases_by_type->{$_}
625 ) for keys %$aliases_by_type;
1e4f9fb3 626
90c9dd1d 627
19955cdf 628 $aliases_by_type;
07f31d19 629}
630
eb58c082 631# This is the engine behind { distinct => 1 } and the general
632# complex prefetch grouper
0a3441ee 633sub _group_over_selection {
560978e2 634 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
0a3441ee 635
560978e2 636 my $colinfos = $self->_resolve_column_info ($attrs->{from});
0a3441ee 637
638 my (@group_by, %group_index);
639
36fd7f07 640 # the logic is: if it is a { func => val } we assume an aggregate,
641 # otherwise if \'...' or \[...] we assume the user knows what is
642 # going on thus group over it
560978e2 643 for (@{$attrs->{select}}) {
0a3441ee 644 if (! ref($_) or ref ($_) ne 'HASH' ) {
645 push @group_by, $_;
646 $group_index{$_}++;
560978e2 647 if ($colinfos->{$_} and $_ !~ /\./ ) {
0a3441ee 648 # add a fully qualified version as well
560978e2 649 $group_index{"$colinfos->{$_}{-source_alias}.$_"}++;
0a3441ee 650 }
07f31d19 651 }
652 }
ad630f4b 653
eb58c082 654 my @order_by = $self->_extract_order_criteria($attrs->{order_by})
655 or return (\@group_by, $attrs->{order_by});
656
657 # add any order_by parts that are not already present in the group_by
658 # to maintain SQL cross-compatibility and general sanity
659 #
660 # also in case the original selection is *not* unique, or in case part
661 # of the ORDER BY refers to a multiplier - we will need to replace the
662 # skipped order_by elements with their MIN/MAX equivalents as to maintain
663 # the proper overall order without polluting the group criteria (and
664 # possibly changing the outcome entirely)
665
666 my ($leftovers, $sql_maker, @new_order_by, $order_chunks, $aliastypes);
667
668 my $group_already_unique = $self->_columns_comprise_identifying_set($colinfos, \@group_by);
669
670 for my $o_idx (0 .. $#order_by) {
671
672 # if the chunk is already a min/max function - there is nothing left to touch
673 next if $order_by[$o_idx][0] =~ /^ (?: min | max ) \s* \( .+ \) $/ix;
674
0a3441ee 675 # only consider real columns (for functions the user got to do an explicit group_by)
eb58c082 676 my $chunk_ci;
677 if (
678 @{$order_by[$o_idx]} != 1
679 or
680 # only declare an unknown *plain* identifier as "leftover" if we are called with
681 # aliastypes to examine. If there are none - we are still in _resolve_attrs, and
682 # can just assume the user knows what they want
683 ( ! ( $chunk_ci = $colinfos->{$order_by[$o_idx][0]} ) and $attrs->{_aliastypes} )
684 ) {
685 push @$leftovers, $order_by[$o_idx][0];
14e26c5f 686 }
560978e2 687
eb58c082 688 next unless $chunk_ci;
689
690 # no duplication of group criteria
691 next if $group_index{$chunk_ci->{-fq_colname}};
692
693 $aliastypes ||= (
694 $attrs->{_aliastypes}
560978e2 695 or
eb58c082 696 $self->_resolve_aliastypes_from_select_args({
697 from => $attrs->{from},
698 order_by => $attrs->{order_by},
699 })
700 ) if $group_already_unique;
701
702 # check that we are not ordering by a multiplier (if a check is requested at all)
703 if (
704 $group_already_unique
705 and
706 ! $aliastypes->{multiplying}{$chunk_ci->{-source_alias}}
707 and
708 ! $aliastypes->{premultiplied}{$chunk_ci->{-source_alias}}
560978e2 709 ) {
eb58c082 710 push @group_by, $chunk_ci->{-fq_colname};
711 $group_index{$chunk_ci->{-fq_colname}}++
560978e2 712 }
eb58c082 713 else {
714 # We need to order by external columns without adding them to the group
715 # (eiehter a non-unique selection, or a multi-external)
716 #
717 # This doesn't really make sense in SQL, however from DBICs point
718 # of view is rather valid (e.g. order the leftmost objects by whatever
719 # criteria and get the offset/rows many). There is a way around
720 # this however in SQL - we simply tae the direction of each piece
721 # of the external order and convert them to MIN(X) for ASC or MAX(X)
722 # for DESC, and group_by the root columns. The end result should be
723 # exactly what we expect
07fadea8 724 #
7fe322c8 725
726 # both populated on the first loop over $o_idx
eb58c082 727 $sql_maker ||= $self->sql_maker;
728 $order_chunks ||= [
729 map { ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' ? $_ : [ $_ ] } $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks($attrs->{order_by})
730 ];
0a3441ee 731
eb58c082 732 my ($chunk, $is_desc) = $sql_maker->_split_order_chunk($order_chunks->[$o_idx][0]);
733
07fadea8 734 # we reached that far - wrap any part of the order_by that "responded"
735 # to an ordering alias into a MIN/MAX
eb58c082 736 $new_order_by[$o_idx] = \[
737 sprintf( '%s( %s )%s',
7fe322c8 738 $self->_minmax_operator_for_datatype($chunk_ci->{data_type}, $is_desc),
eb58c082 739 $chunk,
740 ($is_desc ? ' DESC' : ''),
741 ),
742 @ {$order_chunks->[$o_idx]} [ 1 .. $#{$order_chunks->[$o_idx]} ]
743 ];
744 }
0a3441ee 745 }
746
eb58c082 747 $self->throw_exception ( sprintf
9736be65 748 'Unable to programatically derive a required group_by from the supplied '
749 . 'order_by criteria. To proceed either add an explicit group_by, or '
750 . 'simplify your order_by to only include plain columns '
751 . '(supplied order_by: %s)',
eb58c082 752 join ', ', map { "'$_'" } @$leftovers,
753 ) if $leftovers;
754
755 # recreate the untouched order parts
756 if (@new_order_by) {
757 $new_order_by[$_] ||= \ $order_chunks->[$_] for ( 0 .. $#$order_chunks );
758 }
759
760 return (
761 \@group_by,
762 (@new_order_by ? \@new_order_by : $attrs->{order_by} ), # same ref as original == unchanged
763 );
07f31d19 764}
765
7fe322c8 766sub _minmax_operator_for_datatype {
767 #my ($self, $datatype, $want_max) = @_;
768
769 $_[2] ? 'MAX' : 'MIN';
770}
771
d28bb90d 772sub _resolve_ident_sources {
773 my ($self, $ident) = @_;
774
775 my $alias2source = {};
d28bb90d 776
777 # the reason this is so contrived is that $ident may be a {from}
778 # structure, specifying multiple tables to join
6298a324 779 if ( blessed $ident && $ident->isa("DBIx::Class::ResultSource") ) {
d28bb90d 780 # this is compat mode for insert/update/delete which do not deal with aliases
781 $alias2source->{me} = $ident;
d28bb90d 782 }
783 elsif (ref $ident eq 'ARRAY') {
784
785 for (@$ident) {
786 my $tabinfo;
787 if (ref $_ eq 'HASH') {
788 $tabinfo = $_;
d28bb90d 789 }
790 if (ref $_ eq 'ARRAY' and ref $_->[0] eq 'HASH') {
791 $tabinfo = $_->[0];
792 }
793
4376a157 794 $alias2source->{$tabinfo->{-alias}} = $tabinfo->{-rsrc}
795 if ($tabinfo->{-rsrc});
d28bb90d 796 }
797 }
798
90f10b5a 799 return $alias2source;
d28bb90d 800}
801
802# Takes $ident, \@column_names
803#
804# returns { $column_name => \%column_info, ... }
805# also note: this adds -result_source => $rsrc to the column info
806#
09e14fdc 807# If no columns_names are supplied returns info about *all* columns
808# for all sources
d28bb90d 809sub _resolve_column_info {
810 my ($self, $ident, $colnames) = @_;
8d005ad9 811
812 return {} if $colnames and ! @$colnames;
813
229401a0 814 my $sources = $self->_resolve_ident_sources($ident);
815
816 $_ = { rsrc => $_, colinfos => $_->columns_info }
817 for values %$sources;
d28bb90d 818
52416317 819 my (%seen_cols, @auto_colnames);
d28bb90d 820
821 # compile a global list of column names, to be able to properly
822 # disambiguate unqualified column names (if at all possible)
229401a0 823 for my $alias (keys %$sources) {
824 (
825 ++$seen_cols{$_}{$alias}
826 and
827 ! $colnames
828 and
829 push @auto_colnames, "$alias.$_"
830 ) for keys %{ $sources->{$alias}{colinfos} };
d28bb90d 831 }
832
09e14fdc 833 $colnames ||= [
834 @auto_colnames,
229401a0 835 ( grep { keys %{$seen_cols{$_}} == 1 } keys %seen_cols ),
09e14fdc 836 ];
837
229401a0 838 my %return;
839 for (@$colnames) {
840 my ($colname, $source_alias) = reverse split /\./, $_;
d28bb90d 841
229401a0 842 my $assumed_alias =
843 $source_alias
844 ||
845 # if the column was seen exactly once - we know which rsrc it came from
846 (
847 $seen_cols{$colname}
848 and
849 keys %{$seen_cols{$colname}} == 1
850 and
851 ( %{$seen_cols{$colname}} )[0]
852 )
853 ||
854 next
855 ;
52416317 856
229401a0 857 $self->throw_exception(
858 "No such column '$colname' on source " . $sources->{$assumed_alias}{rsrc}->source_name
859 ) unless $seen_cols{$colname}{$assumed_alias};
52416317 860
229401a0 861 $return{$_} = {
862 %{ $sources->{$assumed_alias}{colinfos}{$colname} },
863 -result_source => $sources->{$assumed_alias}{rsrc},
864 -source_alias => $assumed_alias,
865 -fq_colname => "$assumed_alias.$colname",
81bf295c 866 -colname => $colname,
d28bb90d 867 };
81bf295c 868
229401a0 869 $return{"$assumed_alias.$colname"} = $return{$_}
870 unless $source_alias;
d28bb90d 871 }
872
873 return \%return;
874}
875
289ac713 876# The DBIC relationship chaining implementation is pretty simple - every
877# new related_relationship is pushed onto the {from} stack, and the {select}
878# window simply slides further in. This means that when we count somewhere
879# in the middle, we got to make sure that everything in the join chain is an
880# actual inner join, otherwise the count will come back with unpredictable
881# results (a resultset may be generated with _some_ rows regardless of if
882# the relation which the $rs currently selects has rows or not). E.g.
883# $artist_rs->cds->count - normally generates:
884# SELECT COUNT( * ) FROM artist me LEFT JOIN cd cds ON cds.artist = me.artistid
885# which actually returns the number of artists * (number of cds || 1)
886#
887# So what we do here is crawl {from}, determine if the current alias is at
888# the top of the stack, and if not - make sure the chain is inner-joined down
889# to the root.
890#
31a8aaaf 891sub _inner_join_to_node {
289ac713 892 my ($self, $from, $alias) = @_;
893
302d35f8 894 my $switch_branch = $self->_find_join_path_to_node($from, $alias);
289ac713 895
302d35f8 896 return $from unless @{$switch_branch||[]};
289ac713 897
898 # So it looks like we will have to switch some stuff around.
899 # local() is useless here as we will be leaving the scope
900 # anyway, and deep cloning is just too fucking expensive
8273e845 901 # So replace the first hashref in the node arrayref manually
289ac713 902 my @new_from = ($from->[0]);
faeb2407 903 my $sw_idx = { map { (values %$_), 1 } @$switch_branch }; #there's one k/v per join-path
289ac713 904
905 for my $j (@{$from}[1 .. $#$from]) {
906 my $jalias = $j->[0]{-alias};
907
908 if ($sw_idx->{$jalias}) {
909 my %attrs = %{$j->[0]};
910 delete $attrs{-join_type};
911 push @new_from, [
912 \%attrs,
913 @{$j}[ 1 .. $#$j ],
914 ];
915 }
916 else {
917 push @new_from, $j;
918 }
919 }
920
921 return \@new_from;
922}
923
302d35f8 924sub _find_join_path_to_node {
925 my ($self, $from, $target_alias) = @_;
926
927 # subqueries and other oddness are naturally not supported
928 return undef if (
929 ref $from ne 'ARRAY'
930 ||
931 ref $from->[0] ne 'HASH'
932 ||
933 ! defined $from->[0]{-alias}
934 );
935
936 # no path - the head is the alias
937 return [] if $from->[0]{-alias} eq $target_alias;
938
939 for my $i (1 .. $#$from) {
940 return $from->[$i][0]{-join_path} if ( ($from->[$i][0]{-alias}||'') eq $target_alias );
941 }
942
943 # something else went quite wrong
944 return undef;
945}
946
bac358c9 947sub _extract_order_criteria {
1a736efb 948 my ($self, $order_by, $sql_maker) = @_;
c0748280 949
1a736efb 950 my $parser = sub {
e6977bbb 951 my ($sql_maker, $order_by, $orig_quote_chars) = @_;
c0748280 952
1a736efb 953 return scalar $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by)
954 unless wantarray;
c0748280 955
e6977bbb 956 my ($lq, $rq, $sep) = map { quotemeta($_) } (
957 ($orig_quote_chars ? @$orig_quote_chars : $sql_maker->_quote_chars),
958 $sql_maker->name_sep
959 );
960
1a736efb 961 my @chunks;
bac358c9 962 for ($sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($order_by) ) {
e6977bbb 963 my $chunk = ref $_ ? [ @$_ ] : [ $_ ];
cb3e87f5 964 ($chunk->[0]) = $sql_maker->_split_order_chunk($chunk->[0]);
e6977bbb 965
966 # order criteria may have come back pre-quoted (literals and whatnot)
967 # this is fragile, but the best we can currently do
968 $chunk->[0] =~ s/^ $lq (.+?) $rq $sep $lq (.+?) $rq $/"$1.$2"/xe
969 or $chunk->[0] =~ s/^ $lq (.+) $rq $/$1/x;
970
1a736efb 971 push @chunks, $chunk;
bac6c4fb 972 }
1a736efb 973
974 return @chunks;
975 };
976
977 if ($sql_maker) {
978 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by);
bac6c4fb 979 }
980 else {
1a736efb 981 $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
e6977bbb 982
983 # pass these in to deal with literals coming from
984 # the user or the deep guts of prefetch
985 my $orig_quote_chars = [$sql_maker->_quote_chars];
986
1a736efb 987 local $sql_maker->{quote_char};
e6977bbb 988 return $parser->($sql_maker, $order_by, $orig_quote_chars);
bac6c4fb 989 }
bac6c4fb 990}
991
7cec4356 992sub _order_by_is_stable {
5f11e54f 993 my ($self, $ident, $order_by, $where) = @_;
c0748280 994
eb58c082 995 my @cols = (
8d005ad9 996 ( map { $_->[0] } $self->_extract_order_criteria($order_by) ),
497d0451 997 ( $where ? keys %{ extract_equality_conditions( $where ) } : () ),
df4312bc 998 ) or return 0;
eb58c082 999
1000 my $colinfo = $self->_resolve_column_info($ident, \@cols);
1001
1002 return keys %$colinfo
1003 ? $self->_columns_comprise_identifying_set( $colinfo, \@cols )
df4312bc 1004 : 0
eb58c082 1005 ;
1006}
c0748280 1007
eb58c082 1008sub _columns_comprise_identifying_set {
1009 my ($self, $colinfo, $columns) = @_;
7cec4356 1010
1011 my $cols_per_src;
eb58c082 1012 $cols_per_src -> {$_->{-source_alias}} -> {$_->{-colname}} = $_
1013 for grep { defined $_ } @{$colinfo}{@$columns};
7cec4356 1014
1015 for (values %$cols_per_src) {
1016 my $src = (values %$_)[0]->{-result_source};
1017 return 1 if $src->_identifying_column_set($_);
c0748280 1018 }
1019
df4312bc 1020 return 0;
7cec4356 1021}
1022
df4312bc 1023# this is almost similar to _order_by_is_stable, except it takes
0e81e691 1024# a single rsrc, and will succeed only if the first portion of the order
1025# by is stable.
1026# returns that portion as a colinfo hashref on success
df4312bc 1027sub _extract_colinfo_of_stable_main_source_order_by_portion {
302d35f8 1028 my ($self, $attrs) = @_;
0e81e691 1029
302d35f8 1030 my $nodes = $self->_find_join_path_to_node($attrs->{from}, $attrs->{alias});
1031
1032 return unless defined $nodes;
0e81e691 1033
1034 my @ord_cols = map
1035 { $_->[0] }
302d35f8 1036 ( $self->_extract_order_criteria($attrs->{order_by}) )
0e81e691 1037 ;
1038 return unless @ord_cols;
1039
302d35f8 1040 my $valid_aliases = { map { $_ => 1 } (
1041 $attrs->{from}[0]{-alias},
1042 map { values %$_ } @$nodes,
1043 ) };
318e3d94 1044
302d35f8 1045 my $colinfos = $self->_resolve_column_info($attrs->{from});
1046
1047 my ($colinfos_to_return, $seen_main_src_cols);
1048
1049 for my $col (@ord_cols) {
1050 # if order criteria is unresolvable - there is nothing we can do
1051 my $colinfo = $colinfos->{$col} or last;
1052
1053 # if we reached the end of the allowed aliases - also nothing we can do
1054 last unless $valid_aliases->{$colinfo->{-source_alias}};
1055
1056 $colinfos_to_return->{$col} = $colinfo;
1057
1058 $seen_main_src_cols->{$colinfo->{-colname}} = 1
1059 if $colinfo->{-source_alias} eq $attrs->{alias};
0e81e691 1060 }
1061
497d0451 1062 # FIXME: the condition may be singling out things on its own, so we
1063 # conceivably could come back with "stable-ordered by nothing"
1064 # not confident enough in the parser yet, so punt for the time being
302d35f8 1065 return unless $seen_main_src_cols;
0e81e691 1066
302d35f8 1067 my $main_src_fixed_cols_from_cond = [ $attrs->{where}
1068 ? (
1069 map
1070 {
1071 ( $colinfos->{$_} and $colinfos->{$_}{-source_alias} eq $attrs->{alias} )
1072 ? $colinfos->{$_}{-colname}
1073 : ()
1074 }
497d0451 1075 keys %{ extract_equality_conditions( $attrs->{where} ) }
302d35f8 1076 )
1077 : ()
1078 ];
0e81e691 1079
302d35f8 1080 return $attrs->{result_source}->_identifying_column_set([
1081 keys %$seen_main_src_cols,
1082 @$main_src_fixed_cols_from_cond,
1083 ]) ? $colinfos_to_return : ();
0e81e691 1084}
1085
497d0451 1086sub _collapse_cond :DBIC_method_is_indirect_sugar {
1087 DBIx::Class::_ENV_::ASSERT_NO_INTERNAL_INDIRECT_CALLS and fail_on_internal_call;
1088 carp_unique("_collapse_cond() is deprecated, ask on IRC for a better alternative");
135ac69d 1089
497d0451 1090 shift;
1091 DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::Util::normalize_sqla_condition(@_);
8d005ad9 1092}
1093
497d0451 1094sub _extract_fixed_condition_columns :DBIC_method_is_indirect_sugar {
1095 DBIx::Class::_ENV_::ASSERT_NO_INTERNAL_INDIRECT_CALLS and fail_on_internal_call;
1096 carp_unique("_extract_fixed_condition_columns() is deprecated, ask on IRC for a better alternative");
8d005ad9 1097
497d0451 1098 shift;
1099 extract_equality_conditions(@_);
c0748280 1100}
bac6c4fb 1101
d28bb90d 11021;