Provided by: libclass-dbi-fromcgi-perl_1.00-4_all bug

NAME

       Class::DBI::FromCGI - Update Class::DBI data using CGI::Untaint

SYNOPSIS

         package Film;
         use Class::DBI::FromCGI;
         use base 'Class::DBI';
         # set up as any other Class::DBI class.

         __PACKAGE__->untaint_columns(
           printable => [qw/Title Director/],
           integer   => [qw/DomesticGross NumExplodingSheep/],
           date      => [qw/OpeningDate/],
         );

         # Later on, over in another package ...

         my $h = CGI::Untaint->new( ... );
         my $film = Film->retrieve('Godfather II');
            $film->update_from_cgi($h);

         my $new_film = Film->create_from_cgi($h);

         if (my %errors = $film->cgi_update_errors) {
           while (my ($field, $problem) = each %errors) {
             warn "Problem with $field: $problem\n";
           }
         }

         # or
         $film->update_from_cgi($h => @columns_to_update);

         # or
         $film->update_from_cgi($h => { ignore => \@cols_to_ignore,
                                        required => \@cols_needed,
                                        all => \@columns_which_may_be_empty });

         my $how = $film->untaint_type('Title'); # printable

DESCRIPTION

       Lots of times, Class::DBI is used in web-based applications. (In fact, coupled with a
       templating system that allows you to pass objects, such as Template::Toolkit, Class::DBI
       is very much your friend for these.)

       And, as we all know, one of the most irritating things about writing web-based
       applications is the monotony of writing much of the same stuff over and over again. And,
       where there's monotony there's a tendency to skip over stuff that we all know is really
       important, but is a pain to write - like Taint Checking and sensible input validation.
       (Especially as we can still show a 'working' application without it!). So, we now have
       CGI::Untaint to take care of a lot of that for us.

       It so happens that CGI::Untaint also plays well with Class::DBI.  Class::DBI::FromCGI is a
       little wrapper that ties these two together.

METHODS

   untaint_columns
       All you need to do is to 'use Class::DBI::FromCGI' in your class (or in your local
       Class::DBI subclass that all your other classes inherit from. You do do that, don't you?).

       Then, in each class in which you want to use this, you declare how you want to untaint
       each column:

         __PACKAGE__->untaint_columns(
           printable => [qw/Title Director/],
           integer   => [qw/DomesticGross NumExplodingSheep/],
           date      => [qw/OpeningDate/],
         );

       (where the keys are the CGI::Untaint package to be used, and the values a listref of the
       relevant columns).

   update_from_cgi
       When you want to update based on the values coming in from a web-based form, you just
       call:

         $obj->update_from_cgi($h => @columns_to_update);

       If every value passed in gets through the CGI::Untaint process, the object will be updated
       (but not committed, in case you want to do anything else with it). Otherwise the update
       will fail (there are no partial updates), and $obj->cgi_update_errors will tell you what
       went wrong (as a hash of problem field => error from CGI::Untaint).

   create_from_cgi
       Similarly, if you wish to create a new object, then you can call:

         my $obj = Class->create_from_cgi($h => @columns_to_update);

       If this fails, $obj will be a defined object, containing the errors, as with an update,
       but will not contain the values submitted, nor have been written to the database.

   untaint_type
         my $how = $film->untaint_type('Title'); # printable

       This tells you how we're going to untaint a given column.

   cgi_update_errors
         if (my %errors = $film->cgi_update_errors) {
           while (my ($field, $problem) = each %errors) {
             warn "Problem with $field: $problem\n";
           }
         }

       This returns a hash of any errors when updating. Despite its name it also applies when
       inserting.

Column Auto-Detection

       As Class::DBI knows all its columns, you don't even have to say what columns you're
       interested in, unless it's a subset, as we can auto-fill these:

         $obj->update_from_cgi($h);

       You can also specify columns which must be present, or columns to be ignored even if they
       are present:

         $film->update_from_cgi($h => {
           all      => \@all_columns, # auto-filled if left blank
           ignore   => \@cols_to_ignore,
           required => \@cols_needed,
         });

       Doesn't this all make your life so much easier?

NOTE

       Don't try to update the value of your primary key. Class::DBI doesn't like that. If you
       try to do this it will be silently skipped.

ANOTHER NOTE

       If you haven't set up any 'untaint_column' information for a column which you later
       attempt to untaint, then we try to call $self->column_type to ascertain the default
       handler to use. Currently this will only use if you're using Class::DBI::mysql, and only
       for certain column types.

SEE ALSO

       Class::DBI. CGI::Untaint. Template.

AUTHOR

       Tony Bowden

BUGS and QUERIES

       Please direct all correspondence regarding this module to:
         bug-Class-DBI-FromCGI@rt.cpan.org

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2001-2005 Kasei. All rights reserved.

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