Provided by: libdbix-class-helpers-perl_2.033003-1_all
NAME
DBIx::Class::Helper::ResultSet::Random - Get random rows from a ResultSet
SYNOPSIS
# note that this is normally a component for a ResultSet package MySchema::ResultSet::Bar; use strict; use warnings; use parent 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet'; __PACKAGE__->load_components('Helper::ResultSet::Random'); # in code using resultset: my $random_row = $schema->resultset('Bar')->rand->single;
DESCRIPTION
This component allows convenient selection of random rows. See "NOTE" in DBIx::Class::Helper::ResultSet for a nice way to apply it to your entire schema. Currently this works by doing something akin to SELECT TOP($x) from $table ORDER BY RANDOM() Lots of people think this is slow. My own benchmarks show that doing the above, for 10 rows in a table with just over 8 million rows, is nearly instant. Although that was with SQL Server, and different databases will handle that differently. So please, if you have performance issues and want this to work with your database, get in touch and I will do what I can to get it to work quickly enough to suite your needs.
METHODS
rand This method takes a single argument, being the size of the random ResultSet to return. It defaults to 1. This Component will throw exceptions if the argument is not an integer or not greater than zero. _rand_order_by This module currently does an "ORDER BY" on some db specific function. If for some reason it guesses incorrectly for your database the easiest way to fix that in the short-term (ie without patching upstream) is to override this method. So for example, if your db uses "RAND()" instead of "RANDOM()" and it's not in the predefined list of dbs you could just do the following in your ResultSet class: sub _rand_order_by { 'RAND()' }
AUTHOR
Arthur Axel "fREW" Schmidt <frioux+cpan@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Arthur Axel "fREW" Schmidt. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.