package Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema; use Moose; use mro 'c3'; extends 'Catalyst::Model'; with 'CatalystX::Component::Traits'; our $VERSION = '0.66'; $VERSION =~ tr/_//d; use namespace::autoclean; use Carp::Clan '^Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema'; use Data::Dumper; use DBIx::Class (); use Module::Runtime qw/use_module/; use Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema::Types qw/ConnectInfo SchemaClass Schema/; use MooseX::Types::Moose qw/Str Bool/; use MooseX::Types::LoadableClass qw/LoadableClass/; =head1 NAME Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema - DBIx::Class::Schema Model Class =head1 SYNOPSIS First, prepare your database schema using L, see L for how to generate a L from your database using the Helper script, and L. A typical usage of the helper script would be: script/myapp_create.pl model FilmDB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema::FilmDB \ create=static dbi:mysql:filmdb dbusername dbpass \ quote_names=1 If you are unfamiliar with L, see L first. These examples assume that you already have a schema called C, which defines some Result classes for tables in C and C. Either created by the helper script (as shown above) or manually. The helper also creates a Model in C, if you already have a schema you can create just the Model using: script/myapp_create.pl model FilmDB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema::FilmDB dbi:mysql:filmdb dbusername dbpass The connect_info is optional and will be hardcoded into the Model if provided. It's better to configure it in your L config file, which will also override any hardcoded config, see L for examples. Now you have a working Model which accesses your separate DBIC Schema. This can be used/accessed in the normal Catalyst manner, via C<< $c->model() >>: my $db_model = $c->model('FilmDB'); # a Catalyst::Model my $dbic = $c->model('FilmDB')->schema; # the actual DBIC object There is also a shortcut, which returns a L directly, instead of a L: my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB::Actor'); See L to find out more about which methods can be called on ResultSets. You can also define your own ResultSet methods to encapsulate the database/business logic of your applications. These go into, for example, C. The class must inherit from L and is automatically loaded. Then call your methods like any other L method: $c->model('FilmDB::Actor')->SAG_members =head2 Some examples: # to access schema methods directly: $c->model('FilmDB')->schema->source(...); # to access the source object, resultset, and class: $c->model('FilmDB')->source(...); $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset(...); $c->model('FilmDB')->class(...); # For resultsets, there's an even quicker shortcut: $c->model('FilmDB::Actor') # is the same as $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset('Actor') # To get the composed schema for making new connections: my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->composed_schema->connect(...); # Or the same thing via a convenience shortcut: my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->connect(...); # or, if your schema works on different storage drivers: my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->composed_schema->clone(); $newconn->storage_type('::LDAP'); $newconn->connection(...); # and again, a convenience shortcut my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->clone(); $newconn->storage_type('::LDAP'); $newconn->connection(...); To set up authentication, see L below. =head1 DESCRIPTION This is a Catalyst Model for L-based Models. See the documentation for L for information on generating these Models via Helper scripts. When your Catalyst app starts up, a thin Model layer is created as an interface to your DBIC Schema. It should be clearly noted that the model object returned by C<< $c->model('FilmDB') >> is NOT itself a DBIC schema or resultset object, but merely a wrapper proving L to access the underlying schema. In addition to this model class, a shortcut class is generated for each source in the schema, allowing easy and direct access to a resultset of the corresponding type. These generated classes are even thinner than the model class, providing no public methods but simply hooking into Catalyst's model() accessor via the L mechanism. The complete contents of each generated class is roughly equivalent to the following: package MyApp::Model::FilmDB::Actor sub ACCEPT_CONTEXT { my ($self, $c) = @_; $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset('Actor'); } In short, there are three techniques available for obtaining a DBIC resultset object: # the long way my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB')->schema->resultset('Actor'); # using the shortcut method on the model object my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset('Actor'); # using the generated class directly my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB::Actor'); In order to add methods to a DBIC resultset, you cannot simply add them to the source (row, table) definition class; you must define a separate custom resultset class. This is just a matter of making a C class that inherits from L, if you are using L, the default for helper script generated schemas. See L for information on definining your own L classes for use with L, the old default. =head1 CONFIG PARAMETERS =head2 schema_class This is the classname of your L Schema. It needs to be findable in C<@INC>, but it does not need to be inside the C namespace. This parameter is required. =head2 connect_info This is a hashref or arrayref of connection parameters, which are specific to your C (see your storage type documentation for more details). If you only need one parameter (e.g. the DSN), you can just pass a string. This is not required if C already has connection information defined inside itself (which isn't highly recommended, but can be done.) For L, which is the only supported C in L at the time of this writing, the parameters are your dsn, username, password, and connect options hashref. See L for a detailed explanation of the arguments supported. Examples: connect_info => { dsn => 'dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb', user => 'postgres', password => '' } connect_info => { dsn => 'dbi:SQLite:dbname=foo.db', on_connect_do => [ 'PRAGMA synchronous = OFF', ] } connect_info => { dsn => 'dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb', user => 'postgres', password => '', pg_enable_utf8 => 1, on_connect_do => [ 'some SQL statement', 'another SQL statement', ], } Or using L: schema_class MyApp::Schema::FilmDB traits Caching dsn dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb user postgres password "" auto_savepoint 1 quote_names 1 on_connect_do some SQL statement on_connect_do another SQL statement user_defined_schema_accessor foo or schema_class MyApp::Schema::FilmDB connect_info dbi:SQLite:dbname=foo.db Or using L: Model::MyDB: schema_class: MyDB traits: Caching connect_info: dsn: dbi:Oracle:mydb user: mtfnpy password: mypass LongReadLen: 1000000 LongTruncOk: 1 on_connect_call: 'datetime_setup' quote_names: 1 The old arrayref style with hashrefs for L then L options is also supported: connect_info => [ 'dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb', 'postgres', '', { pg_enable_utf8 => 1, }, { auto_savepoint => 1, on_connect_do => [ 'some SQL statement', 'another SQL statement', ], } ] =head2 traits Array of Traits to apply to the instance. Traits are Ls. They are relative to the C<< MyApp::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema:: >>, then the C<< Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema:: >> namespaces, unless prefixed with C<+> in which case they are taken to be a fully qualified name. E.g.: traits Caching traits +MyApp::TraitFor::Model::Foo A new instance is created at application time, so any consumed required attributes, coercions and modifiers will work. Traits are applied at L time using L. C will be an anon class if any traits are applied, C<< $self->_original_class_name >> will be the original class. When writing a Trait, interesting points to modify are C, L and L. Traits that come with the distribution: =over 4 =item L =item L =item L =item L =back =head2 compose_namespaces This model calls L by default to install classes into the model namespaces. You can turn that off by setting this attribute to false. Default is true. =head2 install_model_shortcuts If you don't want shortcut models so you can do e.g. C<< $c->model('DB::Book') >> set this attribute to false, Default is true. =head2 storage_type Allows the use of a different C than what is set in your C (which in turn defaults to C<::DBI> if not set in current L). Completely optional, and probably unnecessary for most people until other storage backends become available for L. =head1 ATTRIBUTES The keys you pass in the model configuration are available as attributes. Other attributes available: =head2 connect_info Your connect_info args normalized to hashref form (with dsn/user/password.) See L for more info on the hashref form of L. =head2 model_name The model name L uses to resolve this model, the part after C<::Model::> or C<::M::> in your class name. E.g. if your class name is C the L will be C. =head2 _default_cursor_class What to reset your L to if a custom one doesn't work out. Defaults to L. =head1 ATTRIBUTES FROM L =head2 _original_class_name The class name of your model before any L are applied. E.g. C. =head2 _traits Unresolved arrayref of traits passed in the config. =head2 _resolved_traits Traits you used resolved to full class names. =head1 CONFIGURING YOUR SCHEMA AND RESULTSETS See the documentation for L for instructions on how to pass config values from your L config to your L and/or L classes. =head1 METHODS =head2 new Instantiates the Model based on the above-documented ->config parameters. The only required parameter is C. C is required in the case that C does not already have connection information defined for it. =head2 schema Accessor which returns the connected schema being used by the this model. There are direct shortcuts on the model class itself for schema->resultset, schema->source, and schema->class. =head2 composed_schema Accessor which returns the composed schema, which has no connection info, which was used in constructing the L. Useful for creating new connections based on the same schema/model. There are direct shortcuts from the model object for composed_schema->clone and composed_schema->connect If L is not true, L is equivalent to C<< $model->schema_class->clone >>. =head2 clone Shortcut for ->composed_schema->clone =head2 connect Shortcut for ->composed_schema->connect =head2 source Shortcut for ->schema->source =head2 class Shortcut for ->schema->class =head2 resultset Shortcut for ->schema->resultset =head2 txn_do Shortcut for ->schema->txn_do =head2 txn_scope_guard Shortcut for ->schema->txn_scope_guard =head2 storage Provides an accessor for the connected schema's storage object. See L and L. =cut has schema_class => ( is => 'ro', isa => SchemaClass, required => 1 ); has compose_namespaces => (is => 'ro', isa => Bool, default => 1 ); has install_model_shortcuts => (is => 'ro', isa => Bool, default => 1 ); has storage_type => (is => 'rw', isa => Str); has connect_info => (is => 'rw', isa => ConnectInfo, coerce => 1); has model_name => ( is => 'ro', isa => Str, required => 1, lazy_build => 1, ); has _default_cursor_class => ( is => 'ro', isa => LoadableClass, default => 'DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Cursor', ); has schema => (is => 'rw', isa => Schema); my $app_class; before COMPONENT => sub { $app_class = ref $_[1] || $_[1]; }; sub app_class { $app_class } sub BUILD { my ($self, $args) = @_; my $class = $self->_original_class_name; my $schema_class = $self->schema_class; if( !$self->connect_info ) { if($schema_class->storage && $schema_class->storage->connect_info) { $self->connect_info($schema_class->storage->connect_info); } else { die "Either ->config->{connect_info} must be defined for $class" . " or $schema_class must have connect info defined on it." . " Here's what we got:\n" . Dumper($args); } } if (exists $self->connect_info->{cursor_class}) { eval { use_module($self->connect_info->{cursor_class}) } or croak "invalid connect_info: Cannot load your cursor_class" . " ".$self->connect_info->{cursor_class}.": $@"; } $self->setup($args); my $is_installed = defined $self->composed_schema; if (not $is_installed) { $self->composed_schema($self->compose_namespaces ? $schema_class->compose_namespace($class) : $schema_class->clone ); } $self->schema($self->composed_schema->clone) unless $self->schema; $self->schema->storage_type($self->storage_type) if $self->storage_type; $self->schema->connection($self->connect_info); if ((not $is_installed) && $self->install_model_shortcuts) { $self->_install_rs_models; } } sub clone { shift->composed_schema->clone(@_); } sub connect { shift->composed_schema->connect(@_); } # some proxy methods, see also SchemaProxy sub resultset { shift->schema->resultset(@_); } sub txn_do { shift->schema->txn_do(@_); } sub txn_scope_guard { shift->schema->txn_scope_guard(@_); } sub storage { shift->schema->storage(@_); } =head2 setup Called at C time before configuration, but after L is set. To do something after configuuration use C<< after BUILD => >>. Receives a hashref of args passed to C. =cut sub setup { 1 } =head2 ACCEPT_CONTEXT Point of extension for doing things at C<< $c->model >> time with context, returns the model instance, see L for more information. =cut sub ACCEPT_CONTEXT { shift } sub _install_rs_models { my $self = shift; my $class = $self->_original_class_name; no strict 'refs'; my @sources = $self->schema->sources; unless (@sources) { warn <<'EOF' unless $ENV{CMDS_NO_SOURCES}; ******************************* WARNING *************************************** * No sources found (did you forget to define your tables?) * * * * To turn off this warning, set the CMDS_NO_SOURCES environment variable. * ******************************************************************************* EOF } foreach my $moniker (@sources) { my $classname = "${class}::$moniker"; *{"${classname}::ACCEPT_CONTEXT"} = sub { shift; shift->model($self->model_name)->resultset($moniker); } } } sub _reset_cursor_class { my $self = shift; if ($self->storage->can('cursor_class')) { $self->storage->cursor_class($self->_default_cursor_class) if $self->storage->cursor_class ne $self->_default_cursor_class; } } { my %COMPOSED_CACHE; sub composed_schema { my $self = shift; my $class = $self->_original_class_name; my $store = \$COMPOSED_CACHE{$class}{$self->schema_class}; $$store = shift if @_; return $$store } } sub _build_model_name { my $self = shift; my $class = $self->_original_class_name; (my $model_name = $class) =~ s/^[\w:]+::(?:Model|M):://; return $model_name; } __PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable; =head1 ENVIRONMENT =over 4 =item CMDS_NO_SOURCES Set this variable if you will be using schemas with no sources (Result classes) to disable the warning. The warning is there because having no Result classes is usually a mistake. =back =head1 Setting up DBIC authentication You can set this up with L in MyApp.pm: package MyApp; use Catalyst qw/... Authentication .../; ... __PACKAGE__->config('Plugin::Authentication' => { default_realm => 'members', members => { credential => { class => 'Password', password_field => 'password', password_type => 'hashed' password_hash_type => 'SHA-256' }, store => { class => 'DBIx::Class', user_model => 'DB::User', role_relation => 'roles', role_field => 'rolename', } } }); =head1 METHOD PROXYING The automatic proxying to the underlying L has been removed as of version C<0.34>, to enable this feature add C to L. See L. =head1 SEE ALSO General Catalyst Stuff: L, L, L, L, L, L, Stuff related to DBIC and this Model style: L, L, L, L, L, L Traits: L, L, L, L, L =head1 AUTHOR Brandon L Black C =head1 CONTRIBUTORS caelum: Rafael Kitover C dandv: Dan Dascalescu C bluefeet: Aran Deltac C t0m: Tomas Doran C osfameron: C ozum: Ozum Eldogan C Pavel I. Shaydo C SineSwiper: Brendan Byrd =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2006 - 2010 the Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema L and L as listed above. =head1 LICENSE This program is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut 1; # vim:sts=4 sw=4 et tw=80: