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NameDBIx::Connector::Driver - Database-specific connection interfaceDescriptionSome of the things that DBIx::Connector does are implemented differently by different drivers, or the official interface provided by the DBI may not be implemented for a particular driver. The driver-specific code therefore is encapsulated in this separate driver class.Most of the DBI drivers work uniformly, so in most cases the implementation provided here in DBIx::Connector::Driver will work just fine. It's only when something is different that a driver subclass needs to be added. In such a case, the subclass's name is the same as the DBI driver. For example the driver for DBD::Pg is DBIx::Connector::Driver::Pg and the driver for DBD::mysql is DBIx::Connector::Driver::mysql. If you're just a user of DBIx::Connector, you can ignore the driver classes. DBIx::Connector uses them internally to do its magic, so you needn't worry about them. InterfaceIn case you need to implement a driver, here's the interface you can modify.Constructor"new"my $driver = DBIx::Connector::Driver->new( $driver ); Constructs and returns a driver object. Each driver class is implemented as a singleton, so the same driver object is always returned for the same driver. The "driver" parameter should be a Perl DBI driver name, such as "Pg" for DBD::Pg or "SQLite" for DBD::SQLite. If a subclass has been defined for $driver, then the object will be of that class. Otherwise it will be an instance of the driver base class. Instance Methods"ping"$driver->ping($dbh); Calls "$dbh->ping". Override if for some reason the DBI driver doesn't do it right. "begin_work" $driver->begin_work($dbh); Calls "$dbh->begin_work". Override if for some reason the DBI driver doesn't do it right. "commit" $driver->commit($dbh); Calls "$dbh->commit". Override if for some reason the DBI driver doesn't do it right. "rollback" $driver->rollback($dbh); Calls "$dbh->rollback". Override if for some reason the DBI driver doesn't do it right. "savepoint" $driver->savepoint($dbh, $name); A no-op. Override if your database does in fact support savepoints. The driver subclass should create a savepoint with the given $name. See the implementations in DBIx::Connector::Driver::Pg and DBIx::Connector::Driver::Oracle for examples. "release" $driver->release($dbh, $name); A no-op. Override if your database does in fact support savepoints. The driver subclass should release the savepoint with the given $name. See the implementations in DBIx::Connector::Driver::Pg and DBIx::Connector::Driver::Oracle for examples. "rollback_to" $driver->rollback_to($dbh, $name); A no-op. Override if your database does in fact support savepoints. The driver subclass should rollback to the savepoint with the given $name. See the implementations in DBIx::Connector::Driver::Pg and DBIx::Connector::Driver::Oracle for examples. AuthorsThis module was written by:
It is based on code written by:
Copyright and LicenseCopyright (c) 2009-2013 David E. Wheeler. Some Rights Reserved.This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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