NAME¶
Tangram::Storage - persistent object database
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 );
@objs = $storage->select( $remote, $filter );
$cursor = $storage->cursor( $remote, $filter );
if ($storage->oid_isa($oid, "ClassName")) {
# oid $oid is a ClassName
}
$storage->disconnect();
DESCRIPTION¶
A Tangram::Storage object is a connection to a database configured for use with
Tangram.
MEMORY MANAGEMENT¶
Starting with version 1.18, Tangram attempts to use the support for weak
reference that was introduced in Perl 5.6. Whether that support is found or
not has a major impact on how Storage influences object lifetime.
If weakref support
is available, Storage uses weak references to keep
track of objects that have already been loaded. This does
not prevent
the objects from being reclaimed by Perl. IOW, the
client code decides
how long an object remains in memory.
If weakref support
is not available, Storage uses normal, 'strong'
references. Storage will pin in memory all the objects that have been loaded
and inserted through it, until you call "disconnect" or
"unload".
In either case, Tangram will
not break circular structures for you.
Note that caching objects between transactions is a great way to ruin the
transactional guarantees that your database (hopefully) provides.
That being said, be sure to check out the "unload_all()" method.
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.
CLASS METHODS¶
connect¶
$storage = connect( $schema,
$data_source, $username, $auth, \%options )
Connects to a storage and return a handle object. Dies in case of failure.
$schema is an Tangram::Schema object consistent with the database.
$data_source, $username and $auth are passed directly to
DBI::connect().
\%options is a reference to a hash that may contain the following fields:
- •
- dbh
Pass in an already connected DBI handle
- •
- no_tx
Specify explicitly whether or not transactions are possible. If they are
not, then Tangram can guarantee consistency by serialising transaction
updates - which guarantees poor performance and means that you can never
use "$storage->rollback".
If you are using MySQL, you should consider using the InnoDB table type to
avoid this problem. Also note that you will explicitly have to set this
option if you have InnoDB tables configured, as there is no real way of
telling if transactions are available for any given query without either
trying to do a rollback, or querying the table types for every table.
Which I don't think it's Tangram's duty to do!
- •
- no_subselects
Functions that need to perform sub-selects will die immediately or attempt
to emulate the functionality required, rather than relying on the RDBMS to
return a failure.
This is currently ignored, but that's not functionally relevant :-). It can
be read as "$storage->{no_subselects}" however, as the
correct value is automatically detected on connection.
All fields are optional.
"dbh" can be used to connect a Storage via an existing DBI handle.
$data_source, $username and $auth are still needed because Tangram may need to
open extra connections (see below).
INSTANCE METHODS¶
insert¶
$storage->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¶
$storage->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.
Tangram does not perform any deadlock detection on updates. You have to rely on
your database back-end for that.
$id = $storage->id( $obj );
@id = $storage->id( @obj );
Returns the IDs of the given objects. If an object is not persistent in storage
yet, its corresponding ID is
undef().
This method is valid in both "scalar and list contexts".
oid_isa¶
if ($storage->oid_isa($id, "ClassName")) {
...
}
Checks that the passed Object ID, $id, is a "ClassName" according to
the schema. This check relies solely on the information in the schema, not
Perl's idea of "->isa" relationships.
load¶
$obj = $storage->load( $id );
@obj = $storage->load( @id );
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¶
@remote = $storage->remote( @classes );
Returns a list of "Tangram::Remote" objects of given classes. See
Tangram::Remote for a more detailed description. These objects are called
remote objects in the documentation.
select¶
@objs = $storage->select( $remote );
@objs = $storage->select( $remote, $filter );
@objs = $storage->select( $remote,
opt1 => val1, opt2 => val2, ...);
Valid only in list context. Returns a list containing all the objects that
satisfy $filter.
$remote can be either a
remote object of an array of
remote
objects. If it is a single
remote object, a list of objects is
returned. If it is an array, a list of arrays of objects is returned.
If one argument is passed, return all the objects of the given type.
If two arguments are passed, the second argument must be a Filter.
"select()" returns the objects that satisfy $filter and are
type-compatible with the corresponding
remote object.
If more than two arguments are passed, the arguments after $remote are treated
as key/value pairs. Currently Tangram recognizes the following directives:
- •
- filter
- •
- distinct
- •
- order
- •
- desc
- •
- distinct
- •
- limit
- •
- outer_filter
- •
- force_outer
"filter" specifies a Filter that can be used to restrict the result
set.
Filters are based on simple Perl expressions involving
remote objects.
The expression is eventually compiled into its SQL equivalent, becoming part
of a WHERE-CLAUSE.
For example:
my $remote_person = $storage->remote('Foo::Person');
my @martians = $storage->select(
$remote_person,
filter => ($remote_person->{location} eq 'Mars')
);
Would retrieve all martians from the database.
Note that the fields are accessed as hash reference keys instead of the
(expected) method calls.
In the previous example, "->{location}" is seen as a scalar from
Perl and as some derivative of a VARCHAR/TEXT field on the database side. But
filters can operate on many other types, including references to other
persistent objects. For instance:
# instantiate the obj and add it to the DB
my $mars = Foo::Location->new( name => 'Mars');
$storage->insert($mars);
my $remote_person = $storage->remote('Foo::Person');
my @martians = $storage->select(
$remote_person,
filter => ($remote_person->{location} == $mars)
);
In this case, having a reference to the persistent object $mars handy allows us
to look for all objects that reference it. Keep in mind that these are
introductory examples - the relationship between two classes of objects and
how they behave depends on defined relationships between them - whether it's a
"ref", an "array", etc -- see Tangram::Schema and
Tangram::Type for more information on relationship types.
Filters can also be joined together with boolean expressions:
my $r_user = $storage->remote('My::Users');
my @active_premium_users = $storage->select( $r_user,
filter => (# "&" is not a typo - see below
($r_user->{is_logged_in} eq 'Y') &
($r_user->{is_premium} eq 'Y' )
)
);
This select retrieves all the users currently logged in who also have a premium
account. Note the use of "&" instead of "&&"
(or "and") - this is due to a problem in the way Perl handles
operator overloading ("&&" may not be overloaded). For the
basic boolean operators, use "&" as AND, "|" as OR and
"!" as NOT.
Other overloaded bits that work as expected are:
+ - * / == eq != ne < lt <= le > gt >= ge cos sin acos
...which are translated to their SQL counterparts as closely as possible.
Tip: Filters can also be created beforehand by using this simple syntax:
my $new_filter = ($r_user->{is_logged_in} eq 'Y');
Then you can add expressions to it by doing (for example):
$new_filter &= (r_user->{is_premium} eq 'Y');
and use it in the expression like so:
my @active_premium_users = $storage->select
( $r_user,
filter => $new_filter
);
As of Tangram 2.08_02, The scalar value 1 may be used as an "identity"
filter.
See also "Tangram::Expr".
"distinct" specifies that each object in the result set must be unique
(Tangram generates a SELECT DISTINCT).
"order" specifies attributes in terms of one or more of the remote
objects - any that are being selected, or any that appear in the filter.
As of Tangram 2.09, you can also directly use SQL expressions in
"order" expressions, though you should consider how portable this
may or may not be.
"desc" specifies that the order should be descending. For example:
$storage->select( $object, filter => (...),
order => [ $remote_foo->{field1} ],
desc => 1 );
would order DESC (descending, high to low) all the fields listed in the
"order" clause.
Passing:
desc => 0
would order all the fields ASC (ascending, low to high).
To specify which fields should be ordered DESC and which ones should be ordered
ASC, pass an array ref to "desc", like this:
$storage->select( $object, filter => (...),
order => [
$remote_foo->{field1},
$remote_foo->{field2},
$remote_foo->{field3},
],
desc => [ 1, 0, 1 ] );
This will order "field1" and "field3" descending, and
"field2" ascending.
"distinct" is a boolean; a true value specifies that the same object
should ocur only once in the result set. In general, this is a good idea;
"limit" is a maximum number of rows to retrieve; in fact, with some
databases you can give two numbers to this to get the rows between N and M of
a select. See your RDBMS manual for more. If you want to specify more than one
number, you may use the following syntax:
$storage->select( $object, filter => (...),
limit => [ 5, 10 ] );
The above example would return rows 6 through 15 on a MySQL database.
The select method is valid only in list context.
"outer_filter" and "force_outer" are EXPERIMENTAL API
features.
If you pass any filter conditions into "outer_filter" instead of
"filter", then any mentioned tables are connected by an outer join.
What this means is that the object does not necessarily have to be present for
the select to return a row; it may also be "undef".
The "force_outer" option expects an array ref of Tangram::Remote
objects. These tables are joined with an outer join clause.
The outer join related code is extremely hairy, and you are advised to ensure
that you test each outer join query that you are going to use with new
versions of Tangram.
Do not try to combine inheritance and outer joins if you want to run your
application on toy databases, currently this means SQLite and MySQL. SQLite
does not parse SQL nested join syntax and MySQL just gets the join all wrong.
At least, on my testbed system. YMMV.
sum( $expr, [$filter] )¶
Returns the total of the remote expression ($expr) for all rows that match
$filter, as summed by the RDBMS. $filter is optional, and if not passed the
implication is to sum the value for ALL objects of that type.
my $r_thing = $storage->remote("Thing");
$sum = $storage->sum( $r_thing->{field},
($r_thing->{foo} eq "bar") );
It is also possible to pass a list of fields to sum, as an array ref:
($sum_expr1, $sum_expr2)
= $storage->sum( [ $expr1, $expr2 ], $filter );
count( $expr, [$filter] )¶
Works as
sum(), but returns the count of the given
objects or columns instead of the sum.
This function does
not support counting multiple columns by passing an
array ref. However, this can be achieved using the "->count()"
remote expression function (see Tangram::Expr).
cursor¶
$cursor = $storage->cursor( $remote );
$cursor = $storage->cursor( $remote, $filter );
$cursor = cursor( $remote,
opt1 => val1, op2 => val2, ...);
Valid only in scalar context.
Returns a Cursor on the objects that are type-compatible with $remote.
If one argument is passed, the cursor returns all the objects of the given type.
If two arguments are passed, the second argument must be a Filter. The cursor
returns the objects that satisfy $filter and are type-compatible with the
corresponding Remote.
If more than two arguments are passed, the arguments after $remote are treated
as key/value pairs. Currently Tangram recognizes the following directives:
- •
- filter
- •
- order
- •
- desc
- •
- distinct
- •
- retrieve
For options "filter", "order", "desc" and
"distinct", see "select".
Option "retrieve" is an array of Expr, to be retrieved in addition to
the object itself.
prefetch¶
$storage->prefetch("Class", "collection", $filter);
This method fetches all the "collection" collections from
"Class", where $filter.
You need to be very careful with your filter - it is quite easy to end up with a
filter that will include a single table twice with no join.
You
should not include an expression in the filter that matches the type
of object that you are prefetching, unless that is a *different* object to the
one you want to load.
You
should replace the text "Class" with a Tangram::Remote
object from your $filter if it appears in the expression.
This code is OK:
my $r_parent = $storage->remote( "NaturalPerson" );
my $filter = ($r_parent->{age} > 40);
my @parent = $storage->select($r_parent, $filter);
$storage->prefetch($r_parent, "children" $filter);
But this code has the problem:
my $r_parent = $storage->remote( "NaturalPerson" );
my $r_child = $storage->remote( "NaturalPerson" );
my $filter = (
($r_parent->{age} > 40) &;
$r_parent->{children}->includes($r_child)
);
my @parent = $storage->select($r_parent, $filter);
my @children = $storage->select($r_child, $filter);
$storage->prefetch($r_parent, "children", $filter);
Because $filter contains an extra `unnecessary' relationship with $r_child, the
filter that Tangram builds internally ends up looking like:
(
($r_parent->{age} > 40) &
$r_parent->{children}->includes($r_child) &
$r_parent->{children}->includes($r_child2) &
);
So, you end up including extra tables without joining them. This situation does
not make any sense, but unfortunately because of the definition of how RDBMS'
work, it is required behaviour for it to give you a permutation of all of the
unjoined tables. <sigh>
erase¶
$storage->erase( @obj );
Removes objects from persistent storage. The objects remain present in transient
storage.
tx_start¶
$storage->tx_start();
Starts a new Tangram transaction. Tangram transactions can be nested, but
currently this does not actually make SQL "SAVEPOINT"'s (for partial
transaction rollback).
Instead, tangram maintains a transaction nesting count for each storage object
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 committed to the database when g() calls
tx_commit().
By default with ACID compliant database back-ends (such as Pg, MySQL/InnoDB,
Oracle and pretty much any commercial RDBMS), the first time you open a
database connection, you are beginning a transaction. However, this is not the
case with the Tangram::SQLite or Tangram::mysql back-ends, both of which do
not implement transaction isolation; therefore it is not good to assume that
the database can handle concurrent writing efficiently.
To be run safely on these non-compliant back-ends, you should explicitly
"tx_start()" at the beginning of transaction blocks rather than
relying on the default behaviour.
tx_commit¶
$storage->tx_commit();
Commits the current Tangram transaction for this storage. If the transaction
being committed is the outermost transaction for this storage, the DBI
transaction is also committed.
When using the SQLite back-end, when the DBI transaction is committed, the
connection is also marked read-only (ie, AutoCommit is enabled).
tx_rollback¶
$storage->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¶
$storage->tx_do( sub { ... } );
Executes CODEREF under the protection of a Tangram transaction and pass it @args
in the argument list.
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.
unload¶
$storage->unload( @obj );
Drops references to persistent objects present in memory. @objs may contain both
objects and object ids. If @objs is empty, unloads all the objects loaded by
this storage.
Storage keeps track of all the persistent objects that are present in memory, in
order to make sure that loading the same object twice results in a single copy
of the object.
As a consequence, these objects will not be reclaimed by Perl's automatic memory
management mechanism until either
disconnect() or
unload() is
called.
unload() should be called only when no other references exist to
persistent objects, otherwise the same object (in the database) may end up
having two copies in transient storage, or vice versa!
In most cases, you never want to use this function - letting objects pass out of
scope and be cleaned up is a much more natural way to let the object cache
take care of itself.
unload_all( [ $notify_method ])¶
Drops references to all objects in the object cache. If you pass a notify
method, then this will be passed to all objects as they are dumped (so long as
they "->can()" handle it). This can be used, for instance, with
Class::Tangram objects to make sure all circular references in cached objects
are cleared, if you pass "clear_refs" as the $notify_method.
Similar warnings apply to this function as "$storage->unload()".
This function is particularly useful in OLTP (online transaction processing)
servers. In those, it should be called before the first
"$storage->tx_start()", so that all objects are known to be
"fresh" in the current transaction. Due to ACID guarantees of
consistent reads etc (not on MySQL/MyISAM!), you should then not have the
classic "dirty read" problem - so long as you wrap the entire
transaction in a function that catches a failure on "-e<gt"
tx_commit()> and attempts a retry (make sure to clear the cache
again before a retry!).
You might also want to see your RDBMS manual under the topic of
"transaction isolation", in particular the SQL command "SET
TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL".
disconnect¶
$storage->disconnect();
Disconnects from the database. Drops references to persistent objects present in
memory (see "unload").