Provided by: libdbix-class-schema-populatemore-perl_0.19-2_all bug

NAME

       DBIx::Class::Schema::PopulateMore - An enhanced populate method

VERSION

       Version 0.19

SYNOPSIS

       The following is example usage for this component.

               package Myapp::Schema;
               use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema/;

               __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/Schema::PopulateMore/);
               __PACKAGE__->load_namespaces();

               ## All the rest of your setup

       Then assuming you have ResultSources of Gender, Person and FriendList:

               my $setup_rows = [

                       {Gender => {
                               fields => 'label',
                               data => {
                                       male => 'male',
                                       female => 'female',
                               }}},

                       {Person => {
                               fields => ['name', 'age', 'gender'],
                               data => {
                                       john => ['john', 38, "!Index:Gender.male"],
                                       jane => ['jane', 40, '!Index:Gender.female'],
                               }}},

                       {FriendList => {
                               fields => ['person', 'friend', 'created_date'],
                               data => {
                                       john_jane => [
                                               '!Index:Person.john',
                                               '!Index:Person.jane'
                                               '!Date: March 30, 1996',
                                       ],
                               }}},
               ];

               $schema->populate_more($setup_rows);

       Please see the test cases for more detailed examples.

DESCRIPTION

       This is a DBIx::Class::Schema component that provides an enhanced version of the builtin
       method "populate" in DBIx::Class::Schema.  What it does is make it easier when you are
       doing a first time setup and need to insert a bunch of rows, like the first time you
       deploy a new database, or after you update it.

       It's not as full featured as DBIx::Class::Fixtures but is targeted more directly at making
       it easier to just take a prewritten perl structure --or one loaded from a configuration
       file-- and setup your database.

       Most of us using DBIx::CLass have written a version of this at one time or another.  What
       is special to this component is the fact that unlike the normal populate method you can
       insert to multiple result_sources in one go.  While doing this, we index the created rows
       so as to make it easy to reference them in relationships. I did this because I think it's
       very ugly to have to type in all the primary keys by hand, particularly if your PK is
       multi column, or is using some lengthy format such as uuid.  Also, we can embed expansion
       commands in the row values to do inflation for us.  For example, any value starting with
       "!Index:" will substitute it's value for that of the relating fields in the named row.

       This distribution supplies three expansion commands:

       Index
           Use for creating relationships.  This is a string in the form of "Source.Label" where
           the Source is the name of the result source that you are creating rows in and Label is
           a key name from the key part of the data hash.

       Env Get's it's value from %ENV.  Typically this will be setup in your shell or at
           application runtime.  This is a string in the form of "!Env:MY_ENV_VAR"

       Date
           converts it's value to a DateTime object.  Will use a various methods to try and
           coerce a string, like "today", or "January 6, 1974".  Makes it easier to insert dates
           into your database without knowing or caring about the expected format.  For this to
           work correctly, you need to use the class component
           DBIx::Class::InflateColumn::DateTime and mark your column data type as 'datetime' or
           similar.

       Find
           Used for when you want the value of something that you expect already exists in the
           database (but for which you didn't just populatemore for, use 'Index' for that case.)
           Use cases for this include lookup style tables, like 'Status' or 'Gender', 'State',
           etc. which you may already have installed. This is a string in the form of
           '!Find:Source.[key1=val1,key2=val2,...'.

           If your find doesn't return a single result, expect an error.

           It's trivial to write more; please feel free to post me your contributions.

       Please note the when inserting rows, we are actually calling "create_or_update" on each
       data item, so this will not be as fast as using $schema->bulk_insert.

METHODS

       This module defines the following methods.

   populate_more ($ArrayRef||@Array)
       Given an arrayref formatted as in the "SYNOPSIS" example, populate a rows in a database.
       Confesses on errors.

       We allow a few different inputs to make it less verbose to use under different situations,
       as well as format nicely using your configuration format of choice.

       The $ArrayRef contains one or more elements in the following pattern;

               $schema->populate_more([
                       {Source1 => {
                               fields => [qw/ column belongs_to has_many/],
                               data => {
                                       key_1 => ['value', $row, \@rows ],
                       }}},
                       {Source2 => {
                               fields => [qw/ column belongs_to has_many/],
                               data => {
                                       key_1 => ['value', $row, \@rows ],
                       }}},
               ]);

       The @Array version can be one of the following:

               ## Option One
               $schema->populate_more(
                       {Source1 => {
                               fields => [qw/ column belongs_to has_many/],
                               data => {
                                       key_1 => ['value', $row, \@rows ],
                       }}},
                       {Source2 => {
                               fields => [qw/ column belongs_to has_many/],
                               data => {
                                       key_1 => ['value', $row, \@rows ],
                       }}},
               );

               ## Option Two
               $schema->populate_more(
                       Source1 => {
                               fields => [qw/ column belongs_to has_many/],
                               data => {
                                       key_1 => ['value', $row, \@rows ],
                               }
                       },
                       Source2 => {
                               fields => [qw/ column belongs_to has_many/],
                               data => {
                                       key_1 => ['value', $row, \@rows ],
                               }
                       },
               );

       The last option is probably your choice if you are building a Perl structure directly,
       since it's the least verbose.

       'SourceX' is the name of a DBIC source (as in $schema->resultset($Source)->...)  while
       fields is an arrayref of either columns or named relationships and data is a hashref of
       rows that you will insert into the Source.

       See "SYNOPSIS" for more.

ARGUMENT NOTES

       The perl structure used in "populate_more" was designed to be reasonable friendly to type
       in most of the popular configuration formats.  For example, the above serialized to YAML
       would look like:

               - Gender:
                       fields: label
                       data:
                         female: female
                         male: male
               - Person:
                       fields:
                         - name
                         - age
                         - gender
                       data:
                         jane:
                               - jane
                               - 40
                               - '!Index:Gender.female'
                         john:
                               - john
                               - 38
                               - !Index:Gender.male'
               - FriendList:
                       fields:
                         - person
                         - friend
                         - created_date
                       data:
                         john_jane:
                               - '!Index:Person.john'
                               - '!Index:Person.jane'
                               - '!Date: March 30, 1996'

       Since the argument is an arrayref or an array, the same base result source can appear as
       many times as you like.  This could be useful when a second insert to a given source
       requires completion of other inserts.  The insert order follows the index of the arrayref
       you create.

AUTHOR

       John Napiorkowski, "<jjnapiork@cpan.org>"

BUGS

       Please report any bugs or feature requests to:

               C<bug-DBIx-Class-Schema-PopulateMore at rt.cpan.org>

       or through the web interface at:

               L<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=DBIx-Class-Schema-PopulateMore>

       I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I
       make changes.

SUPPORT

       You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

           perldoc DBIx::Class::Schema::PopulateMore

       You can also look for information at:

       •   RT: CPAN's request tracker

           <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=DBIx-Class-Schema-PopulateMore>

       •   AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation

           <http://annocpan.org/dist/DBIx-Class-Schema-PopulateMore>

       •   CPAN Ratings

           <http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/DBIx-Class-Schema-PopulateMore>

       •   Search CPAN

           <http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-Class-Schema-PopulateMore>

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       Thanks to the entire DBIx::Class team for providing such a useful and extensible ORM.
       Also thanks to the Moose developers for making it fun and easy to write beautiful Perl.

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

       Copyright 2011, John Napiorkowski

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.