NAME
Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema - DBIx::Class::Schema Model Class
SYNOPSIS
Manual creation of a DBIx::Class::Schema and a
Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema:
1. Create the DBIx:Class schema in MyApp/Schema/FilmDB.pm:
package MyApp::Schema::FilmDB;
use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema/;
__PACKAGE__->load_classes(qw/Actor Role/);
2. Create some classes for the tables in the database, for example an
Actor in MyApp/Schema/FilmDB/Actor.pm:
package MyApp::Schema::FilmDB::Actor;
use base qw/DBIx::Class/
__PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/Core/);
__PACKAGE__->table('actor');
...
and a Role in MyApp/Schema/FilmDB/Role.pm:
package MyApp::Schema::FilmDB::Role;
use base qw/DBIx::Class/
__PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/Core/);
__PACKAGE__->table('role');
...
Notice that the schema is in MyApp::Schema, not in MyApp::Model.
This way it's usable as a standalone module and you can test/run it
without Catalyst.
3. To expose it to Catalyst as a model, you should create a DBIC Model
in MyApp/Model/FilmDB.pm:
package MyApp::Model::FilmDB;
use base qw/Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema/;
__PACKAGE__->config(
schema_class => 'MyApp::Schema::FilmDB',
connect_info => {
dsn => "DBI:...",
user => "username",
password => "password",
}
);
See below for a full list of the possible config parameters.
Now you have a working Model which accesses your separate DBIC Schema.
This can be used/accessed in the normal Catalyst manner, via
$c->model():
my $actor = $c->model('FilmDB::Actor')->find(1);
You can also use it to set up DBIC authentication with
Catalyst::Authentication::Store::DBIx::Class in MyApp.pm:
package MyApp;
use Catalyst qw/... Authentication .../;
...
__PACKAGE__->config->{authentication} =
{
default_realm => 'members',
realms => {
members => {
credential => {
class => 'Password',
password_field => 'password',
password_type => 'hashed'
password_hash_type => 'SHA-256'
},
store => {
class => 'DBIx::Class',
user_model => 'DB::User',
role_relation => 'roles',
role_field => 'rolename',
}
}
}
};
"$c->model('Schema::Source')" returns a DBIx::Class::ResultSet for the
source name parameter passed. To find out more about which methods can
be called on a ResultSet, or how to add your own methods to it, please
see the ResultSet documentation in the DBIx::Class distribution.
Some examples are given below:
# 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');
$newconn->connection(...);
DESCRIPTION
This is a Catalyst Model for DBIx::Class::Schema-based Models. See the
documentation for Catalyst::Helper::Model::DBIC::Schema for information
on generating these Models via Helper scripts.
When your Catalyst app starts up, a thin Model layer is created as an
interface to your DBIC Schema. It should be clearly noted that the model
object returned by "$c->model('FilmDB')" is NOT itself a DBIC schema or
resultset object, but merely a wrapper proving methods 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 ACCEPT_CONTEXT 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. See "Predefined searches" in
DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook for more info.
CONFIG PARAMETERS
Any options in your config not listed here are passed to your schema.
schema_class
This is the classname of your DBIx::Class::Schema Schema. It needs to be
findable in @INC, but it does not need to be inside the
"Catalyst::Model::" namespace. This parameter is required.
connect_info
This is an arrayref of connection parameters, which are specific to your
"storage_type" (see your storage type documentation for more details).
If you only need one parameter (e.g. the DSN), you can just pass a
string instead of an arrayref.
This is not required if "schema_class" already has connection
information defined inside itself (which isn't highly recommended, but
can be done)
For DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI, which is the only supported
"storage_type" in DBIx::Class at the time of this writing, the
parameters are your dsn, username, password, and connect options
hashref.
See "connect_info" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI 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 Config::General:
schema_class MyApp::Schema::FilmDB
traits Caching
dsn dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb
user postgres
password ""
auto_savepoint 1
quote_char """
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 YAML:
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_char: '"'
The old arrayref style with hashrefs for DBI then DBIx::Class 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',
],
}
]
traits
Array of Traits to apply to the instance. Traits are Moose::Roles.
They are relative to the "MyApp::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::", then
the "Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::" namespaces, unless
prefixed with "+" 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 "COMPONENT" in Catalyst::Component time using
CatalystX::Component::Traits.
"ref $self" will be an anon class if any traits are applied,
"$self->_original_class_name" will be the original class.
When writing a Trait, interesting points to modify are "BUILD", "setup"
and "ACCEPT_CONTEXT".
Traits that come with the distribution:
Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Caching
Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Replicated
storage_type
Allows the use of a different "storage_type" than what is set in your
"schema_class" (which in turn defaults to "::DBI" if not set in current
DBIx::Class). Completely optional, and probably unnecessary for most
people until other storage backends become available for DBIx::Class.
ATTRIBUTES
The keys you pass in the model configuration are available as
attributes.
Other attributes available:
connect_info
Your connect_info args normalized to hashref form (with
dsn/user/password.) See "connect_info" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI for
more info on the hashref form of "connect_info".
model_name
The model name Catalyst uses to resolve this model, the part after
"::Model::" or "::M::" in your class name. E.g. if your class name is
"MyApp::Model::DB" the "model_name" will be "DB".
_default_cursor_class
What to reset your "cursor_class" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI to if a
custom one doesn't work out. Defaults to
DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Cursor.
ATTRIBUTES FROM MooseX::Traits::Pluggable
_original_class_name
The class name of your model before any "traits" are applied. E.g.
"MyApp::Model::DB".
_traits
Unresolved arrayref of traits passed in the config.
_resolved_traits
Traits you used resolved to full class names.
METHODS
Methods not listed here are delegated to the connected schema used by
the model instance, so the following are equivalent:
$c->model('DB')->schema->my_accessor('foo');
# or
$c->model('DB')->my_accessor('foo');
Methods on the model take precedence over schema methods.
new
Instantiates the Model based on the above-documented ->config
parameters. The only required parameter is "schema_class".
"connect_info" is required in the case that "schema_class" does not
already have connection information defined for it.
schema
Accessor which returns the connected schema being used by the this
model. There are direct shortcuts on the model class itself for
schema->resultset, schema->source, and schema->class.
composed_schema
Accessor which returns the composed schema, which has no connection
info, which was used in constructing the "schema" above. Useful for
creating new connections based on the same schema/model. There are
direct shortcuts from the model object for composed_schema->clone and
composed_schema->connect
clone
Shortcut for ->composed_schema->clone
connect
Shortcut for ->composed_schema->connect
source
Shortcut for ->schema->source
class
Shortcut for ->schema->class
resultset
Shortcut for ->schema->resultset
storage
Provides an accessor for the connected schema's storage object. Used
often for debugging and controlling transactions.
setup
Called at "BUILD" time before configuration, but after "connect_info" is
set. To do something after configuuration use "after BUILD =>".
ACCEPT_CONTEXT
Point of extension for doing things at "$c->model" time with context,
returns the model instance, see "ACCEPT_CONTEXT" in
Catalyst::Manual::Intro for more information.
ENVIRONMENT
CMDS_NO_SOURCES
Set this variable if you will be using schemas with no sources
(tables) to disable the warning. The warning is there because this
is usually a mistake.
SEE ALSO
General Catalyst Stuff:
Catalyst::Manual, Catalyst::Test, Catalyst::Request, Catalyst::Response,
Catalyst::Helper, Catalyst,
Stuff related to DBIC and this Model style:
DBIx::Class, DBIx::Class::Schema, DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader,
Catalyst::Helper::Model::DBIC::Schema, CatalystX::Component::Traits,
MooseX::Traits::Pluggable
Traits:
Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Caching,
Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Replicated
AUTHOR
Brandon L Black "blblack at gmail.com"
CONTRIBUTORS
caelum: Rafael Kitover "rkitover at cpan.org"
Dan Dascalescu "dandv at cpan.org"
Aran Deltac "bluefeet@cpan.org"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2006 - 2009 the Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema "AUTHOR" and
"CONTRIBUTORS" as listed above.
LICENSE
This program is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.