table of contents
Catmandu::Importer(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Catmandu::Importer(3pm) |
NAME¶
Catmandu::Importer - Namespace for packages that can import
SYNOPSIS¶
# From the command line # JSON is an importer and YAML an exporter $ catmandu convert JSON to YAML < data.json # OAI is an importer and JSON an exporter $ catmandu convert OAI --url http://biblio.ugent.be/oai to JSON # Fetch remote content $ catmandu convert JSON --file http://example.com/data.json to YAML # From Perl use Catmandu; use Data::Dumper; my $importer = Catmandu->importer('JSON', file => 'data.json'); $importer->each(sub { my $item = shift; print Dumper($item); }); my $num = $importer->count; my $first_item = $importer->first; # Convert OAI to JSON in Perl my $importer = Catmandu->importer('OAI', url => 'http://biblio.ugent.be/oai'); my $exporter = Catmandu->exporter('JSON'); $exporter->add_many($importer);
DESCRIPTION¶
A Catmandu::Importer is a Perl package that can generate structured data from sources such as JSON, YAML, XML, RDF or network protocols such as Atom, OAI-PMH, SRU and even DBI databases. Given an Catmandu::Importer a programmer can read data from using one of the many Catmandu::Iterable methods:
$importer->to_array; $importer->count; $importer->each(\&callback); $importer->first; $importer->rest; ...etc...
Every Catmandu::Importer is also Catmandu::Fixable and thus inherits a 'fix' parameter that can be set in the constructor. When given a 'fix' parameter, then each item returned by the generator will be automatically Fixed using one or more Catmandu::Fixes. E.g.
my $importer = Catmandu->importer('JSON',fix => ['upcase(title)']); $importer->each( sub { my $item = shift ; # Every $item->{title} is now upcased... }); # or via a Fix file my $importer = Catmandu->importer('JSON',fix => ['/my/fixes.txt']); $importer->each( sub { my $item = shift ; # Every $item->{title} is now upcased... });
CONFIGURATION¶
- file
- Read input from a local file given by its path. If the path looks like a url, the content will be fetched first and then passed to the importer. Alternatively a scalar reference can be passed to read from a string.
- fh
- Read input from an IO::Handle. If not specified, Catmandu::Util::io is used to create the input stream from the "file" argument or by using STDIN.
- encoding
- Binmode of the input stream "fh". Set to ":utf8" by default.
- fix
- An ARRAY of one or more Fix-es or Fix scripts to be applied to imported items.
- data_path
- The data at "data_path" is imported
instead of the original data.
# given this imported item: {abc => [{a=>1},{b=>2},{c=>3}]} # with data_path 'abc', this item gets imported instead: [{a=>1},{b=>2},{c=>3}] # with data_path 'abc.*', 3 items get imported: {a=>1} {b=>2} {c=>3}
- variables
- Variables given here will interpolate the
"file" and
"http_body" options. The syntax is the
same as URI::Template.
# named arguments my $importer = Catmandu->importer('JSON', file => 'http://{server}/{path}', variables => {server => 'biblio.ugent.be', path => 'file.json'}, ); # positional arguments my $importer = Catmandu->importer('JSON', file => 'http://{server}/{path}', variables => 'biblio.ugent.be,file.json', ); # or my $importer = Catmandu->importer('JSON', url => 'http://{server}/{path}', variables => ['biblio.ugent.be','file.json'], ); # or via the command line $ catmandu convert JSON --file 'http://{server}/{path}' --variables 'biblio.ugent.be,file.json'
HTTP CONFIGURATION¶
These options are only relevant if "file" is a url. See LWP::UserAgent for details about these options.
- http_body
- Set the GET/POST message body.
- http_method
- Set the type of HTTP request 'GET', 'POST' , ...
- http_headers
- A reference to a HTTP::Headers objects.
Set an own HTTP client¶
- user_agent(LWP::UserAgent->new(...))
- Set an own HTTP client
Alternative set the parameters of the default client¶
- http_agent
- A string containing the name of the HTTP client.
- http_max_redirect
- Maximum number of HTTP redirects allowed.
- http_timeout
- Maximum execution time.
- http_verify_hostname
- Verify the SSL certificate.
- http_retry
- Maximum times to retry the HTTP request if it temporarily fails. Default is not to retry. See LWP::UserAgent::Determined for the HTTP status codes that initiate a retry.
- http_timing
- Maximum times and timeouts to retry the HTTP request if it temporarily fails. Default is not to retry. See LWP::UserAgent::Determined for the HTTP status codes that initiate a retry and the format of the timing value.
METHODS¶
first, each, rest , ...¶
See Catmandu::Iterable for all inherited methods.
CODING¶
Create your own importer by creating a Perl package in the Catmandu::Importer namespace that implements "Catmandu::Importer". Basically, you need to create a method 'generate' which returns a callback that creates one Perl hash for each call:
my $importer = Catmandu::Importer::Hello->new; $importer->generate(); # record $importer->generate(); # next record $importer->generate(); # undef = end of stream
Here is an example of a simple "Hello" importer:
package Catmandu::Importer::Hello; use Catmandu::Sane; use Moo; with 'Catmandu::Importer'; sub generator { my ($self) = @_; state $fh = $self->fh; my $n = 0; return sub { $self->log->debug("generating record " . ++$n); my $name = $self->fh->readline; return defined $name ? { "hello" => $name } : undef; }; } 1;
This importer can be called via the command line as:
$ catmandu convert Hello to JSON < /tmp/names.txt $ catmandu convert Hello to YAML < /tmp/names.txt $ catmandu import Hello to MongoDB --database_name test < /tmp/names.txt
Or, via Perl
use Catmandu; my $importer = Catmandu->importer('Hello', file => '/tmp/names.txt'); $importer->each(sub { my $items = shift; });
SEE ALSO¶
Catmandu::Iterable , Catmandu::Fix , Catmandu::Importer::CSV, Catmandu::Importer::JSON , Catmandu::Importer::YAML
2025-01-17 | perl v5.40.0 |