bionic (3) Jifty::DBI::Schema.3pm.gz

Provided by: libjifty-dbi-perl_0.78-2_all bug

NAME

       Jifty::DBI::Schema - Use a simple syntax to describe a Jifty table.

SYNOPSIS

           package MyApp::Model::Page;
           use Jifty::DBI::Schema;
           use Jifty::DBI::Record schema {
           # ... your columns here ...
           };

DESCRIPTION

       Each Jifty Application::Model::Class module describes a record class for a Jifty application.  Each
       "column" statement sets out the name and attributes used to describe the column in a backend database, in
       user interfaces, and other contexts.  For example:

           column content =>
              type is 'text',
              label is 'Content',
              render as 'textarea';

       defines a column called "content" that is of type "text".  It will be rendered with the label "Content"
       (note the capital) and as a "textarea" in a HTML form.

       Jifty::DBI::Schema builds a Jifty::DBI::Column.  That class defines other attributes for database
       structure that are not exposed directly here.  One example of this is the "refers_to" method used to
       create associations between classes.

       It re-exports "defer" and "lazy" from Scalar::Defer, for setting parameter fields that must be recomputed
       at request-time:

           column name =>
               default is defer { Jifty->web->current_user->name };

       See Scalar::Defer for more information about "defer".

   filter_die

FUNCTIONS

       All these functions are exported.  However, if you use the "schema" helper function, they will be
       unimported at the end of the block passed to "schema".

   schema
       Takes a block with schema declarations.  Unimports all helper functions after executing the code block.
       Usually used at "BEGIN" time via this idiom:

           use Jifty::DBI::Record schema { ... };

       If your application subclasses "::Record", then write this instead:

           use MyApp::Record schema { ... };

   column
       DEPRECATED.  This method of defining columns will not work anymore.  Please use the "schema {}" method
       documented above.

   merge_params HASHREF HASHREF
       Takes two hashrefs. Merges them together and returns the merged hashref.

           - Empty fields in subclasses don't override nonempty fields in superclass anymore.
           - Arrays don't merge; e.g. if parent class's valid_values is [1,2,3,4], and
             subclass's valid_values() is [1,2], they don't somehow become [1,2,3,4,1,2].

       BUG: This should either be a private routine or factored out into Jifty::Util

   register_types
   references
       Indicates that the column references an object or a collection of objects in another class.  You may
       refer to either a class that inherits from Jifty::Record by a primary key in that class or to a class
       that inherits from Jifty::Collection.

       referencing a record

       Correct usage is "references Application::Model::OtherClass by 'column_name'", where
       Application::Model::OtherClass is a valid Jifty model, subclass of Jifty::Record, and 'column_name' is a
       distinct column of OtherClass. You can omit "by 'column_name'" and the column name 'id' will be used.

       At this moment you must specify type of the column your self to match type of the column you refer to.

       You can name a column as combination of 'name' and 'by', for example:

           column user_name => references App::Model::User by 'name', type is 'varchar(64)';

       Then user, user_name and respective setters will be generated. user method will return object, user_name
       will return actual value. Note that if you're using some magic on load for user records then to get real
       name of loaded record you should use "$record->user->name" instead.

       In the above case name of the column in the DB will be 'user_name'. If you don't like suffixes like
       '_id', '_name' and other in the DB then you can name column without suffix, for example:

           column user => references App::Model::User by 'name', type is 'varchar(64)';

       In this case name of the column in the DB will be 'user', accessors will be the same as in above example.

       referencing a collection

       Correct usage is "references Application::Model::OtherCollection by 'column_name'", where
       Application::Model::OtherCollection is a valid Jifty model, subclass of Jifty::Collection, and
       'column_name' is a column of records in OtherCollection. In this case  "by 'column_name'" is not
       optional.

       Columns that refers to a collection are virtual and can be changed. So such columns in a model doesn't
       create real columns in the DB, but instead it's way to name collection of records that refer to this
       records.

       example

       Simple model with users and multiple phone records per user:

           package TestApp::Model::User;
           use Jifty::DBI::Schema;
           use Jifty::DBI::Record schema {
               column name  => type is 'varchar(18)';
               ...
               column phones => references TestApp::Model::PhoneCollection by 'user';
           };

           package TestApp::Model::Phone;
           use Jifty::DBI::Schema;
           use Jifty::DBI::Record schema {
               column user  => references TestApp::Model::User by 'id',
                   is mandatory;
               column type  => ...;
               column value => ...;
           };

       From a user record you get his phones and do something:

           my $phones = $user->phones;
           while ( my $phone = $phones->next ) {
               ...
           }

       From a phone record you can get its owner or change it:

           my $user_object = $phone->user;
           my $user_id = $phone->user_id;

           $phone->set_user( $new_owner_object );
           $phone->set_user( 123 );    # using id
           $phone->set_user_id( 123 ); # the same, but only using id

   refers_to
       Synonym for "references".

   by
       Helper for "references".  Used to specify what column name should be used in the referenced model.  See
       the documentation for "references".

   type
       type passed to our database abstraction layer, which should resolve it to a database-specific type.
       Correct usage is "type is 'text'".

       Currently type is passed directly to the database.  There is no intermediary mapping from abstract type
       names to database specific types.

       The impact of this is that not all column types are portable between databases.  For example blobs have
       different names between mysql and postgres.

   default
       Give a default value for the column.  Correct usage is "default is 'foo'".

   literal
       Used for default values, to connote that they should not be quoted before being supplied as the default
       value for the column.  Correct usage is "default is literal 'now()'".

   validator
       Defines a subroutine which returns a true value only for valid values this column can have.  Correct
       usage is "validator is \&foo".

   immutable
       States that this column is not writable.  This is useful for properties that are set at creation time but
       not modifiable thereafter, like 'created by'.  Correct usage is "is immutable".

   unreadable
       States that this column is not directly readable by the application using "$record->column"; this is
       useful for password columns and the like.  The data is still accessible via "$record->_value('')".
       Correct usage is "is unreadable".

   max_length
       Sets a maximum max_length to store in the database; values longer than this are truncated before being
       inserted into the database, using Jifty::DBI::Filter::Truncate.  Note that this is in bytes, not
       characters.  Correct usage is "max_length is 42".

   mandatory
       Mark as a required column.  May be used for generating user interfaces.  Correct usage is "is mandatory".

   not_null
       Same as "mandatory".  This is deprecated.  Correct usage would be "is not_null".

   autocompleted
       Mark as an autocompleted column.  May be used for generating user interfaces.  Correct usage is "is
       autocompleted".

   distinct
       Declares that a column should only have distinct values.  This currently is implemented via database
       queries prior to updates and creates instead of constraints on the database columns themselves. This is
       because there is no support for distinct columns implemented in DBIx::DBSchema at this time.  Correct
       usage is "is distinct".

   virtual
       Used to declare that a column references a collection, which hides it from many parts of Jifty. You
       probably do not want to set this manually, use "references" instead.

   computed
       Declares that a column is not backed by an actual column in the database, but is instead computed on-the-
       fly using a method written by the application author. Such columns cannot (yet) be used in searching,
       sorting, and so on, only inspected on an individual record.

   sort_order
       Declares an integer sort value for this column. By default, Jifty will sort columns in the order they are
       defined.

   order
       Alias for "sort_order".

   input_filters
       Sets a list of input filters on the data.  Correct usage is "input_filters are
       'Jifty::DBI::Filter::DateTime'".  See Jifty::DBI::Filter.

   output_filters
       Sets a list of output filters on the data.  Correct usage is "output_filters are
       'Jifty::DBI::Filter::DateTime'".  See Jifty::DBI::Filter.  You usually don't need to set this, as the
       output filters default to the input filters in reverse order.

   filters
       Sets a list of filters on the data.  These are applied when reading and writing to the database.  Correct
       usage is "filters are 'Jifty::DBI::Filter::DateTime'".  See Jifty::DBI::Filter.  In actuality, this is
       the exact same as "input_filters", since output filters default to the input filters, reversed.

   since
       What application version this column was last changed.  Correct usage is "since '0.1.5'".

   till
       The version after this column was supported. The column is not available in the version named, but would
       have been in the version immediately prior.

       Correct usage is "till '0.2.5'". This indicates that the column is not available in version 0.2.5, but
       was available in 0.2.4. The value specified for "since" must be less than this version.

   valid_values
       A list of valid values for this column. Jifty will use this to automatically construct a validator for
       you.  This list may also be used to generate the user interface.  Correct usage is "valid_values are
       qw/foo bar baz/".

       If you want to display different values than are stored in the DB you can pass a list of hashrefs, each
       containing two keys, display and value.

        valid_values are
         { display => 'Blue', value => 'blue' },
         { display => 'Red', value => 'red' }

   valid
       Alias for "valid_values".

   label
       Designates a human-readable label for the column, for use in user interfaces.  Correct usage is "label is
       'Your foo value'".

   hints
       A sentence or two to display in long-form user interfaces about what might go in this column.  Correct
       usage is "hints is 'Used by the frobnicator to do strange things'".

   display_length
       The displayed length of form fields. Though you may be able to fit 500 characters in the field, you would
       not want to display an HTML form with a size 500 input box.

   render_as
       Used in user interface generation to know how to render the column.

       The values for this attribute are the same as the names of the modules under Jifty::Web::Form::Field,
       i.e.

       •   Button

       •   Checkbox

       •   Combobox

       •   Date

       •   Hidden

       •   InlineButton

       •   Password

       •   Radio

       •   Select

       •   Textarea

       •   Upload

       •   Unrendered

       You may also use the same names with the initial character in lowercase.

       The "Unrendered" may seem counter-intuitive, but is there to allow for internal fields that should not
       actually be displayed.

       If these don't meet your needs, you can write your own subclass of Jifty::Web::Form::Field. See the
       documentation for that module.

   render
       Alias for "render_as".

   indexed
       An index will be built on this column Correct usage is "is indexed"

EXAMPLE

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