NAME
Audit::DBI - Audit data changes in your code and store searchable log records in a database.
VERSION
Version 1.9.0
SYNOPSIS
use Audit::DBI;
# Create the audit object.
my $audit = Audit::DBI->new(
database_handle => $dbh,
);
# Create the necessary tables.
$audit->create_tables();
# Record an audit event.
$audit->record(
event => $event,
subject_type => $subject_type,
subject_id => $subject_id,
event_time => $event_time,
diff => [ $old_structure, $new_structure ],
search_data => \%search_data,
information => \%information,
affected_account_id => $account_id,
file => $file,
line => $line,
);
# Search audit events.
my $audit_events = $audit->review(
[ search criteria ]
);
To see an example of a search interface for audit events recorded by Audit::DBI, check the examples/
directory of Audit::DBI::TT2.
FORCE OBJECT STRINGIFICATION
When data structures are dumped (for diffs or to store information), it is sometimes desirable to turn some of the objects into strings, for two reasons:
First, two output strings can be the same even if the objects aren't, which is common when working with floats.
Second, the string version is easier to read than a dump of the object's internal variables.
A good example of this is Math::Currency. To convert those objects to strings, you can use the following:
local $Audit::DBI::FORCE_OBJECT_STRINGIFICATION =
{
'Math::Currency' => 'bstr',
};
METHODS
new()
Create a new Audit::DBI object.
my $audit = Audit::DBI->new(
database_handle => $dbh,
);
Parameters:
database handle
Mandatory, a DBI object.
memcache
Optional, a Cache::Memcached or Cache::Memcached::Fast object to use for rate limiting. If not specified, rate-limiting functions will not be available.
record()
Record an audit event along with information on the context and data changed.
$audit->record(
event => $event,
subject_type => $subject_type,
subject_id => $subject_id,
event_time => $event_time,
diff =>
[
$old_structure,
$new_structure,
],
search_data => \%search_data,
information => \%information,
affected_account_id => $account_id,
file => $file,
line => $line,
);
Required:
event
The type of action performed (48 characters maximum).
subject_type
Normally, the singular form of the name of a table, such as "object" or "account" or "order".
subject_id
If subject_type is a table, the corresponding record ID.
Optional:
diff
This automatically calculates the differences between the two data structures passed as values for this parameter, and makes a new structure recording those differences.
search_data
A hashref of all the key/value pairs that we may want to be able search on later to find this type of event. You may pass either a scalar or an arrayref of multiple values for each key.
information
Any other useful information (such as user input) to understand the context of this change.
account_affected
The ID of the account to which the data affected during that event where linked to, if applicable.
event_time
Unix timestamp of the time that the event occurred, the default being the current time.
file and line
The filename and line number where the event occurred, the default being the immediate caller of Audit::DBI->record().
Notes:
If you want to delay the insertion of audit events (to group them, for performance), subclass Audit::DBI and add a custom
insert_event()
method.You can specify a custom comparison function to use for comparing leaf nodes in the data structures passed to diff, with the following syntax.
diff => [ $old_structure, $new_structure, comparison_function => sub { ... }, ]
See
diff_structures()
in Audit::DBI::Utils for more information on how to write custom comparison functions.
review()
Return the logged audit events corresponding to the criteria passed as parameter.
my $results = $audit->review(
ip_ranges =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
begin => $begin,
end => $end
},
...
],
subjects =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
type => $type1,
ids => \@id1,
},
{
include => $boolean,
type => $type2,
ids => \@id2,
},
...
],
date_ranges =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
begin => $begin,
end => $end
},
...
],
values =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
name => $name1,
values => \@value1,
},
{
include => $boolean,
name => $name2,
values => \@value2,
},
...
],
events =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
event => $event,
},
...
],
logged_in =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
account_id => $account_id,
},
...
],
affected =>
[
{
include => $boolean,
account_id => $account_id,
},
...
],
);
All the parameters are optional, but at least one of them is required due to the sheer volume of data this module tends to generate. If multiple parameters are passed, they are additive, i.e. use AND to combine themselves.
ip_ranges
Allows restricting the search to ranges of IPs. Can be given in either dot-decimal notation (n.n.n.n) or as an integer.
events
Allows searching on specific events.
subjects
Allows to search on the subject types and subject IDs passed when calling record(). Multiple subject types can be passed, and for each subject type multiple IDs can be passed, hence the use of an arrayref of hashes for this parameter. Using
[ { type => $type1, ids => \@id1, }, { type => $type2, ids => \@id2, } ]
would translate into
(subject_type = '[type1]' AND subject_id IN([ids1]) ) OR (subject_type = '[type2]' AND subject_id IN([ids2]) )
for searching purposes.
date_ranges
Allows restricting the search to specific date ranges.
values
Searches on the key/values pairs initially passed via 'search_data' to record().
logged_in
Searches on the ID of the account that was logged in at the time of the record() call.
affected
Searches on the ID of the account that was linked to the data that changed at the time of the record() call.
Optional parameters that are not search criteria:
database_handle
A specific database handle to use when searching for audit events. This allows the use of a separate reader database for example, to do expensive search queries. If this parameter is omitted, then the database handle specified when calling new() is used.
order_by
An arrayref of fields and corresponding sort orders to use for sorting. By default, the audit events are sorted by ascending created date.
order_by => [ 'created' => 'DESC', ]
create_tables()
Create the tables required to store audit events.
$audit->create_tables(
drop_if_exist => $boolean, #default 0
database_type => $database_type #default SQLite
);
ACCESSORS
get_database_handle()
Return the database handle tied to the audit object.
my $database_handle = $audit->_get_database_handle();
get_memcache()
Return the database handle tied to the audit object.
my $memcache = $audit->get_memcache();
INTERNAL METHODS
get_cache()
Get a value from the cache.
my $value = $audit->get_cache( key => $key );
set_cache()
Set a value into the cache.
$audit->set_cache(
key => $key,
value => $value,
expire_time => $expire_time,
);
insert_event()
Insert an audit event in the database.
my $audit_event = $audit->insert_event( \%data );
Important: note that this is an internal function that record() calls. You should be using record() instead. What you can do with this function is to subclass it if you need to extend/change how events are inserted, for example:
if you want to stash it into a register_cleanup() when you're making the all in Apache context (so that audit calls don't slow down the main request);
if you want to insert extra information.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests through the web interface at https://github.com/guillaumeaubert/Audit-DBI/issues/new. 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 Audit::DBI
You can also look for information at:
GitHub's request tracker
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
MetaCPAN
AUTHOR
Guillaume Aubert, <aubertg at cpan.org>
.
CONTRIBUTORS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I originally developed this project for ThinkGeek (http://www.thinkgeek.com/). Thanks for allowing me to open-source it!
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2010-2017 Guillaume Aubert.
This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl 5 itself.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the LICENSE file for more details.