package DBIx::DBSchema;
use strict;
-use vars qw(@ISA $VERSION $DEBUG $errstr);
-#use Exporter;
+use vars qw($VERSION $DEBUG $errstr);
use Storable;
-use DBIx::DBSchema::_util qw(_load_driver _dbh);
-use DBIx::DBSchema::Table 0.03;
+use DBIx::DBSchema::_util qw(_load_driver _dbh _parse_opt);
+use DBIx::DBSchema::Table 0.05;
+use DBIx::DBSchema::Index;
use DBIx::DBSchema::Column;
use DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Unique;
use DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Index;
-#@ISA = qw(Exporter);
-@ISA = ();
+$VERSION = "0.35";
+$VERSION = eval $VERSION; # modperlstyle: convert the string into a number
-$VERSION = "0.32";
$DEBUG = 0;
=head1 NAME
This module implements an OO-interface to database schemas. Using this module,
you can create a database schema with an OO Perl interface. You can read the
schema from an existing database. You can save the schema to disk and restore
-it a different process. You can write SQL CREATE statements statements for
+it in a different process. You can write SQL CREATE statements statements for
different databases from a single source. In recent versions, you can
-transform one schema to another, adding any necessary new columsn and tables.
+transform one schema to another, adding any necessary new columns and tables
+(and, as of 0.33, indices).
Currently supported databases are MySQL, PostgreSQL and SQLite. Sybase and
Oracle drivers are partially implemented. DBIx::DBSchema will attempt to use
Although the username and password are optional, it is best to call this method
with a database handle or data source including a valid username and password -
-a DBI connection will be opened and the quoting and type mapping will be more
-reliable.
+a DBI connection will be opened and used to check the database version as well
+as for more reliable quoting and type mapping. Note that the database
+connection will be used passively, B<not> to actually run the CREATE
+statements.
If passed a DBI data source (or handle) such as `DBI:mysql:database' or
`DBI:Pg:dbname=database', will use syntax specific to that database engine.
map { $self->table($_)->sql_create_table($dbh); } $self->tables;
}
-=item sql_update_schema PROTOTYPE_SCHEMA [ DATABASE_HANDLE | DATA_SOURCE [ USERNAME PASSWORD [ ATTR ] ] ]
+=item sql_update_schema [ OPTIONS_HASHREF, ] PROTOTYPE_SCHEMA [ DATABASE_HANDLE | DATA_SOURCE [ USERNAME PASSWORD [ ATTR ] ] ]
Returns a list of SQL statements to update this schema so that it is idential
to the provided prototype schema, also a DBIx::DBSchema object.
- #Optionally, the data source can be specified by passing an open DBI database
- #handle, or by passing the DBI data source name, username and password.
- #
- #If passed a DBI data source (or handle) such as `DBI:mysql:database' or
- #`DBI:Pg:dbname=database', will use syntax specific to that database engine.
- #Currently supported databases are MySQL and PostgreSQL.
- #
- #If not passed a data source (or handle), or if there is no driver for the
- #specified database, will attempt to use generic SQL syntax.
-
-Right now this method knows how to add new tables and alter existing tables.
-It doesn't know how to drop tables yet.
+Right now this method knows how to add new tables and alter existing tables,
+including indices. If specifically requested by passing an options hashref
+with B<drop_tables> set true before all other arguments, it will also drop
+tables.
See L<DBIx::DBSchema::Table/sql_alter_table>,
L<DBIx::DBSchema::Column/sql_add_coumn> and
L<DBIx::DBSchema::Column/sql_alter_column> for additional specifics and
limitations.
+The data source can be specified by passing an open DBI database handle, or by
+passing the DBI data source name, username and password.
+
+Although the username and password are optional, it is best to call this method
+with a database handle or data source including a valid username and password -
+a DBI connection will be opened and used to check the database version as well
+as for more reliable quoting and type mapping. Note that the database
+connection will be used passively, B<not> to actually run the CREATE
+statements.
+
+If passed a DBI data source (or handle) such as `DBI:mysql:database' or
+`DBI:Pg:dbname=database', will use syntax specific to that database engine.
+Currently supported databases are MySQL and PostgreSQL.
+
+If not passed a data source (or handle), or if there is no driver for the
+specified database, will attempt to use generic SQL syntax.
+
=cut
#gosh, false laziness w/DBSchema::Table::sql_alter_schema
sub sql_update_schema {
- my($self, $new, $dbh) = ( shift, shift, _dbh(@_) );
+ #my($self, $new, $dbh) = ( shift, shift, _dbh(@_) );
+ my($self, $opt, $new, $dbh) = ( shift, _parse_opt(\@_), shift, _dbh(@_) );
my @r = ();
}
- # should eventually drop tables not in $new
+ if ( $opt->{'drop_tables'} ) {
+
+ warn "drop_tables enabled\n" if $DEBUG;
+
+ # drop tables not in $new
+ foreach my $table ( grep !$new->table($_), $self->tables ) {
+
+ warn "table $table should be dropped.\n" if $DEBUG;
+
+ push @r, $self->table($table)->sql_drop_table( $dbh );
+
+ }
+
+ }
warn join("\n", @r). "\n"
- if $DEBUG;
+ if $DEBUG > 1;
@r;
}
-=item update_schema PROTOTYPE_SCHEMA, DATABASE_HANDLE | DATA_SOURCE [ USERNAME PASSWORD [ ATTR ] ]
+=item update_schema [ OPTIONS_HASHREF, ] PROTOTYPE_SCHEMA, DATABASE_HANDLE | DATA_SOURCE [ USERNAME PASSWORD [ ATTR ] ]
Same as sql_update_schema, except actually runs the SQL commands to update
the schema. Throws a fatal error if any statement fails.
=cut
sub update_schema {
- my($self, $new, $dbh) = ( shift, shift, _dbh(@_) );
+ #my($self, $new, $dbh) = ( shift, shift, _dbh(@_) );
+ my($self, $opt, $new, $dbh) = ( shift, _parse_opt(\@_), shift, _dbh(@_) );
- foreach my $statement ( $self->sql_update_schema( $new, $dbh ) ) {
+ foreach my $statement ( $self->sql_update_schema( $opt, $new, $dbh ) ) {
$dbh->do( $statement )
or die "Error: ". $dbh->errstr. "\n executing: $statement";
}
sub pretty_print {
my($self) = @_;
+
join("},\n\n",
map {
- my $table = $_;
- "'$table' => {\n".
+ my $tablename = $_;
+ my $table = $self->table($tablename);
+ my %indices = $table->indices;
+
+ "'$tablename' => {\n".
" 'columns' => [\n".
join("", map {
#cant because -w complains about , in qw()
# (also biiiig problems with empty lengths)
#" qw( $_ ".
- #$self->table($table)->column($_)->type. " ".
- #( $self->table($table)->column($_)->null ? 'NULL' : 0 ). " ".
- #$self->table($table)->column($_)->length. " ),\n"
+ #$table->column($_)->type. " ".
+ #( $table->column($_)->null ? 'NULL' : 0 ). " ".
+ #$table->column($_)->length. " ),\n"
" '$_', ".
- "'". $self->table($table)->column($_)->type. "', ".
- "'". $self->table($table)->column($_)->null. "', ".
- "'". $self->table($table)->column($_)->length. "', ".
- "'". $self->table($table)->column($_)->default. "', ".
- "'". $self->table($table)->column($_)->local. "',\n"
- } $self->table($table)->columns
+ "'". $table->column($_)->type. "', ".
+ "'". $table->column($_)->null. "', ".
+ "'". $table->column($_)->length. "', ".
+ "'". $table->column($_)->default. "', ".
+ "'". $table->column($_)->local. "',\n"
+ } $table->columns
).
" ],\n".
- " 'primary_key' => '". $self->table($table)->primary_key. "',\n".
- " 'unique' => [ ". join(', ',
- map { "[ '". join("', '", @{$_}). "' ]" }
- @{$self->table($table)->unique->lol_ref}
- ). " ],\n".
- " 'index' => [ ". join(', ',
- map { "[ '". join("', '", @{$_}). "' ]" }
- @{$self->table($table)->index->lol_ref}
- ). " ],\n"
- #" 'index' => [ ". " ],\n"
+ " 'primary_key' => '". $table->primary_key. "',\n".
+
+ #old style index representation..
+
+ (
+ $table->{'unique'} # $table->_unique
+ ? " 'unique' => [ ". join(', ',
+ map { "[ '". join("', '", @{$_}). "' ]" }
+ @{$table->_unique->lol_ref}
+ ). " ],\n"
+ : ''
+ ).
+
+ ( $table->{'index'} # $table->_index
+ ? " 'index' => [ ". join(', ',
+ map { "[ '". join("', '", @{$_}). "' ]" }
+ @{$table->_index->lol_ref}
+ ). " ],\n"
+ : ''
+ ).
+
+ #new style indices
+ " 'indices' => { ". join( ",\n ",
+
+ map { my $iname = $_;
+ my $index = $indices{$iname};
+ "'$iname' => { \n".
+ ( $index->using
+ ? " 'using' => '". $index->using ."',\n"
+ : ''
+ ).
+ " 'unique' => ". $index->unique .",\n".
+ " 'columns' => [ '".
+ join("', '", @{$index->columns} ).
+ "' ],\n".
+ " },\n";
+ }
+ keys %indices
+
+ ). "\n }, \n"
+
} $self->tables
). "}\n";
}
=item pretty_read HASHREF
+This method is B<not> recommended. If you need to load and save your schema
+to a file, see the L</load|load> and L</save|save> methods.
+
Creates a schema as specified by a data structure such as that created by
B<pretty_print> method.
sub pretty_read {
my($proto, $href) = @_;
+
my $schema = $proto->new( map {
- my(@columns);
- while ( @{$href->{$_}{'columns'}} ) {
+
+ my $tablename = $_;
+ my $info = $href->{$tablename};
+
+ my @columns;
+ while ( @{$info->{'columns'}} ) {
push @columns, DBIx::DBSchema::Column->new(
- splice @{$href->{$_}{'columns'}}, 0, 6
+ splice @{$info->{'columns'}}, 0, 6
);
}
- DBIx::DBSchema::Table->new(
- $_,
- $href->{$_}{'primary_key'},
- DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Unique->new($href->{$_}{'unique'}),
- DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Index->new($href->{$_}{'index'}),
- @columns,
- );
+
+ DBIx::DBSchema::Table->new({
+ 'name' => $tablename,
+ 'primary_key' => $info->{'primary_key'},
+ 'columns' => \@columns,
+
+ #old-style indices
+ 'unique' => DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Unique->new($info->{'unique'}),
+ 'index' => DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Index->new($info->{'index'}),
+
+ #new-style indices
+ 'indices' => [ map { my $idx_info = $info->{'indices'}{$_};
+ DBIx::DBSchema::Index->new({
+ 'name' => $_,
+ #'using' =>
+ 'unique' => $idx_info->{'unique'},
+ 'columns' => $idx_info->{'columns'},
+ });
+ }
+ keys %{ $info->{'indices'} }
+ ],
+ } );
+
} (keys %{$href}) );
+
}
# private subroutines
Daniel Hanks <hanksdc@about-inc.com> contributed the Oracle driver.
-Jesse Vincent contributed the SQLite driver.
+Jesse Vincent contributed the SQLite driver and fixes to quiet down
+internal usage of the old API.
+
+Slaven Rezic <srezic@cpan.org> contributed column and table dropping, Pg
+bugfixes and more.
=head1 CONTRIBUTIONS
-Contributions are welcome! I'm especially keen on any interest in the first
-three items/projects below under BUGS.
+Contributions are welcome! I'm especially keen on any interest in the top
+items/projects below under BUGS.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
-Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Ivan Kohler
+Copyright (c) 2000-2007 Ivan Kohler
Copyright (c) 2000 Mail Abuse Prevention System LLC
+Copyright (c) 2007 Freeside Internet Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
-=head1 BUGS
-
-Indices are not stored by name. Index representation could use an overhaul.
+=head1 BUGS AND TODO
Multiple primary keys are not yet supported.
Foreign keys and other constraints are not yet supported.
Eventually it would be nice to have additional transformations (deleted,
-modified columns, added/modified/indices (probably need em named first),
-added/deleted tables
+modified columns). sql_update_schema doesn't deal with deleted or modified
+columns yet.
Need to port and test with additional databases
pretty_print is actually pretty ugly.
+pretty_print isn't so good about quoting values... save/load is a much better
+alternative to using pretty_print/pretty_read
+
+pretty_read is pretty ugly too.
+
+pretty_read should *not* create and pass in old-style unique/index indices
+when nothing is given in the read.
+
Perhaps pretty_read should eval column types so that we can use DBI
qw(:sql_types) here instead of externally.
+Need to support "using" index attribute in pretty_read and in reverse
+engineering
+
+perhaps we should just get rid of pretty_read entirely. pretty_print is useful
+for debugging, but pretty_read is pretty bunk.
+
sql CREATE TABLE output should convert integers
(i.e. use DBI qw(:sql_types);) to local types using DBI->type_info plus a hash
to fudge things
-sql_update_schema doesn't drop tables yet.
-
=head1 SEE ALSO
-L<DBIx::DBSchema::Table>, L<DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup>,
-L<DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Unique>, L<DBIx::DBSchema::ColGroup::Index>,
+L<DBIx::DBSchema::Table>, L<DBIx::DBSchema::Index>,
L<DBIx::DBSchema::Column>, L<DBIx::DBSchema::DBD>,
L<DBIx::DBSchema::DBD::mysql>, L<DBIx::DBSchema::DBD::Pg>, L<FS::Record>,
L<DBI>