NAME
Tangram::Storage
SYNOPSIS
use Tangram;
$storage = Tangram::Storage->connect( $schema,
$data_source, $username, $password );
$oid = $storage->insert( $obj );
@oids = $storage->insert( @objs );
$storage->update( $obj );
$storage->update( @objs );
$obj = $storage->load( $oid );
@objs = $storage->load( $oids );
@objs = $storage->select( $class );
$cursor = $storage->select( $query_obj, $filter );
$storage->disconnect();
DESCRIPTION
An Tangram::Storage object is a connection to a database configured for use with Tangram.
CLASS METHODS
connect( $schema, @dbi_args )
Connects to a storage and return a handle object. Dies in case of failure.
$schema is an Tangram::Schema object consistent with the database.
The other arguments (@dbi_args) are passed directly to DBI::connect.
connect( $schema, $handle )
Connects an Tangram::Storage object to an already opened DBI data source.
$schema is an Tangram::Schema object compatible with the database content.
$handle is a DBI handle object (or an object supporting the DBI protocol) connected to a database.
INSTANCE METHODS
SCALAR AND LIST CONTEXTS
Most instance methods in Storage can be called in both scalar and list contexts. In scalar context, a single argument is allowed, and a single scalar value is returned. In list context, any number of arguments is allowed; the results are returned as a list of the same size as the argument list.
When both context types are allowed, the following code:
@results = $storage->method( @args )
...is equivalent to:
@results = map { $storage->method( $_ ) } @args
insert( @objs )
Inserts objects in storage. Returns the ID(s) assigned to the object(s). This method is valid in both "scalar and list contexts".
The inserted objects must be of a class described in the schema associated to the storage.
Attempting to insert an object that is already persistent in the storage is an error.
Tangram will automatically insert any object that is refered by $obj if it is not already present in storage. In the following example:
my $homer = NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Homer', name => 'Simpson',
children => Set::Object->new(
NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Bart', name => 'Simpson' ),
NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Lisa', name => 'Simpson' ),
NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Maggie', name => 'Simpson' ) ) );
$storage->insert( $homer );
...Tangram automatically inserts the kids along with Homer.
update( @objs )
Save objects to storage. This method is valid in both "scalar and list contexts".
The objects must be of a class described in the schema associated to the storage.
Attempting to update an object that is not already present in the storage is an error.
Tangram will automatically insert any object that is refered by an inserted object if it is not already present in storage. It will not automatically update the refered objects that are already stored. In the following example:
my $homer = NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Homer', name => 'Simpson' );
$storage->insert( $homer );
my $marge = NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Marge', name => 'Simpson', age => 34 );
$storage->insert( $marge );
$marge->{age} = 35;
$homer->{partner} = $marge;
$homer->{children} = Set::Object->new(
NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Bart', name => 'Simpson' ),
NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Lisa', name => 'Simpson' ),
NaturalPerson->new( firstName => 'Maggie', name => 'Simpson' ) );
$storage->update( $homer );
...Tangram automatically inserts the kids when their father is updated. OTOH, $marge will not be automatically inserted nor updated; her age will remain '34' in persistent storage.
id( @ids )
Returns the IDs of the given objects. If an object is not persistent in storage yet, its corresponding ID is undef().
This method is valid in both "scalar and list contexts".
load( @ids )
Returns a list of objects given their IDs. Dies if any ID has no corresponding persistent object in storage.
This method is valid in both "scalar and list contexts".
remote( @classes )
Returns a list of Tangram::Remote objects of given classes. This method is valid in both "scalar and list contexts".
select( $remote [ , $filter ] )
Returns a list containing all the objects that are type-compatible with $remote, and satisfy $filter if it is present (see also: Remote and Filter).
Valid only in list context.
cursor( $remote [ , $filter ] )
Returns a Cursor on the objects that are type-compatible with $remote, and satisfy $filter if it is present (see also: Remote and Filter).
$remote must be an Tangram::Remote object. $filter must be an Tangram::Filter if it is present.
Valid only in scalar context.
erase( @objs )
Removes objects from persistent storage. The objects remain present in transient storage.
tx_start
Starts a new Tangram transaction.
Tangram transactions can be nested.
Tangram maintains a transaction nesting count for each storage and commits the operations only when that count reaches zero. This scheme makes it easy for a function to collaborate with its caller in the management of the "internal connection".
Example:
sub f
{
$storage->tx_start();
$storage->update( $homer );
$storage->tx_commit(); # or perhaps rollback()
}
sub g
{
$storage->tx_start();
f();
$storage->update( $marge );
$storage->tx_commit(); # or perhaps rollback()
}
f(); # 1
g(); # 2
In (1), f() commits the changes to $homer directly to the database.
In (2), f() transparently reuses the transaction opened by g().\ Changes to both $homer and $marge are commited to the database when g() calls tx_commit().
tx_commit
Commits the current Tangram transaction for this storage. If the transaction being commited is the outermost transaction for this storage, the DBI transaction is also commited.
tx_rollback
Rolls back the current Tangram transaction for this storage. If the transaction being rolled back is the outermost transaction for this storage, the DBI transaction is also rolled back.
tx_do( CODEREF )
Executes CODEREF under the protection of a Tangram transaction. Rolls back the transaction if CODEREF dies; in which case the exception is re-thrown. Returns the results of CODEREF, either as a scalar or as a list depending on the context in which tx_do was called.
Example:
$storage->tx_do(
sub
{
$storage->update( $homer );
# do things, die perhaps
$storage->update( $marge );
} );
Both $homer and $marge will be updated, or none will, depending on whether the anonymous subroutine passed to tx_do() dies.
disconnect
Disconnects from the database. Storages must be explicitly disconnected or objects will be leaked.
INTERNAL CONNECTION
Except in the implementation of cursor(), Tangram uses a single DBI connection in its operations. That connection is called the 'internal' connection. Since, in general, database managers do not allow multiple result sets on the same connection, the internal connection can be used only to carray a single task at a time.
Tangram::Cursors returned by cursor() do not suffer from this limitation because they use a separate DBI connection.