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Exception::Class::DBI(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Exception::Class::DBI(3) |
Exception::Class::DBI - DBI Exception objects
use DBI;
use Exception::Class::DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $pass, {
PrintError => 0,
RaiseError => 0,
HandleError => Exception::Class::DBI->handler,
});
eval { $dbh->do($sql) };
if (my $ex = $@) {
print STDERR "DBI Exception:\n";
print STDERR " Exception Type: ", ref $ex, "\n";
print STDERR " Error: ", $ex->error, "\n";
print STDERR " Err: ", $ex->err, "\n";
print STDERR " Errstr: ", $ex->errstr, "\n";
print STDERR " State: ", $ex->state, "\n";
print STDERR " Return Value: ", ($ex->retval || 'undef'), "\n";
}
This module offers a set of DBI-specific exception classes. They inherit from
Exception::Class, the base class for all exception objects created by the
Exception::Class module from the CPAN. Exception::Class::DBI itself offers a
single class method, "handler()", that
returns a code reference appropriate for passing to the DBI
"HandleError" attribute.
The exception classes created by Exception::Class::DBI are
designed to be thrown in certain DBI contexts; the code reference returned
by "handler()" and passed to the DBI
"HandleError" attribute determines the
context and throws the appropriate exception.
Each of the Exception::Class::DBI classes offers a set of object
accessor methods in addition to those provided by Exception::Class. These
can be used to output detailed diagnostic information in the event of an
exception.
Exception::Class::DBI inherits from Exception::Class, and thus its entire
interface. Refer to the Exception::Class documentation for details.
- "handler"
-
my $dbh = DBI->connect($data_source, $username, $auth, {
PrintError => 0,
RaiseError => 0,
HandleError => Exception::Class::DBI->handler
});
This method returns a code reference appropriate for passing
to the DBI "HandleError" attribute.
When DBI encounters an error, it checks its
"PrintError",
"RaiseError", and
"HandleError" attributes to decide
what to do about it. When
"HandleError" has been set to a code
reference, DBI executes it, passing it the error string that would be
printed for "PrintError", the DBI
handle object that was executing the method call that triggered the
error, and the return value of that method call (usually
"undef"). Using these arguments, the
code reference provided by "handler()"
determines what type of exception to throw. Exception::Class::DBI
contains the subclasses detailed below, each relevant to the DBI handle
that triggered the error.
Exception::Class::DBI creates a number of exception classes, each one specific
to a particular DBI error context. Most of the object methods described below
correspond to like-named attributes in the DBI itself. Thus the documentation
below summarizes the DBI attribute documentation, so you should refer to DBI
itself for more in-depth information.
All of the Exception::Class::DBI classes documented below inherit from
Exception::Class::DBI. It offers the several object methods in addition to
those it inherits from its parent, Exception::Class. These methods
correspond to the DBI dynamic attributes, as well as to the values passed to
the "handler()" exception handler via the
DBI "HandleError" attribute. Exceptions of
this base class are only thrown when there is no DBI handle object executing,
e.g. in the DBI "connect()" method.
Note: This functionality is not yet implemented in DBI -- see the
discusion that starts here:
<http://archive.develooper.com/dbi-dev@perl.org/msg01438.html>.
- "error"
-
my $error = $ex->error;
Exception::Class::DBI actually inherits this method from
Exception::Class. It contains the error string that DBI prints when its
"PrintError" attribute is enabled, or
"die"s with when its
<RaiseError> attribute is enabled.
- "err"
-
my $err = $ex->err;
Corresponds to the $DBI::err dynamic
attribute. Returns the native database engine error code from the last
driver method called.
- "errstr"
-
my $errstr = $ex->errstr;
Corresponds to the $DBI::errstr
dynamic attribute. Returns the native database engine error message from
the last driver method called.
- "state"
-
my $state = $ex->state;
Corresponds to the $DBI::state dynamic
attribute. Returns an error code in the standard SQLSTATE five character
format.
- "retval"
-
my $retval = $ex->retval;
The first value being returned by the DBI method that failed
(typically "undef").
- "handle"
-
my $db_handle = $ex->handle;
The DBI handle appropriate to the exception class. For
Exception::Class::DBI::DRH, it will be a driver handle. For
Exception::Class::DBI::DBH it will be a database handle. And for
Exception::Class::DBI::STH it will be a statement handle. If there is no
handle thrown in the exception (because, say, the exception was thrown
before a driver handle could be created), the
"handle" will be
"undef".
This class inherits from Exception::Class::DBI, and is the base class for all
DBI handle exceptions (see below). It will not be thrown directly. Its methods
correspond to the DBI attributes common to all handles.
- "warn"
-
my $warn = $ex->warn;
Boolean value indicating whether DBI warnings have been
enabled. Corresponds to the DBI "Warn"
attribute.
- "active"
-
my $active = $ex->active;
Boolean value indicating whether the DBI handle that
encountered the error is active. Corresponds to the DBI
"Active" attribute.
- "kids"
-
my $kids = $ex->kids;
For a driver handle, Kids is the number of currently existing
database handles that were created from that driver handle. For a
database handle, Kids is the number of currently existing statement
handles that were created from that database handle. Corresponds to the
DBI "Kids" attribute.
- "active_kids"
-
my $active_kids = $ex->active_kids;
Like "kids", but only
counting those that are "active" (as
above). Corresponds to the DBI
"ActiveKids" attribute.
- "compat_mode"
-
my $compat_mode = $ex->compat_mode;
Boolean value indicating whether an emulation layer (such as
Oraperl) enables compatible behavior in the underlying driver (e.g.,
DBD::Oracle) for this handle. Corresponds to the DBI
"CompatMode" attribute.
- "inactive_destroy"
-
my $inactive_destroy = $ex->inactive_destroy;
Boolean value indicating whether the DBI has disabled the
database engine related effect of
"DESTROY"ing a handle. Corresponds to
the DBI "InactiveDestroy"
attribute.
- "trace_level"
-
my $trace_level = $ex->trace_level;
Returns the DBI trace level set on the handle that encountered
the error. Corresponds to the DBI
"TraceLevel" attribute.
- "fetch_hash_key_name"
-
my $fetch_hash_key_name = $ex->fetch_hash_key_name;
Returns the attribute name the DBI
"fetchrow_hashref()" method should use
to get the field names for the hash keys. Corresponds to the DBI
"FetchHashKeyName" attribute.
- "chop_blanks"
-
my $chop_blanks = $ex->chop_blanks;
Boolean value indicating whether DBI trims trailing space
characters from fixed width character (CHAR) fields. Corresponds to the
DBI "ChopBlanks" attribute.
- "long_read_len"
-
my $long_read_len = $ex->long_read_len;
Returns the maximum length of long fields ("blob",
"memo", etc.) which the DBI driver will read from the database
automatically when it fetches each row of data. Corresponds to the DBI
"LongReadLen" attribute.
- "long_trunc_ok"
-
my $long_trunc_ok = $ex->long_trunc_ok;
Boolean value indicating whether the DBI will truncate values
it retrieves from long fields that are longer than the value returned by
"long_read_len()". Corresponds to the
DBI "LongTruncOk" attribute.
- "taint"
-
my $taint = $ex->taint;
Boolean value indicating whether data fetched from the
database is considered tainted. Corresponds to the DBI
"Taint" attribute.
DBI driver handle exceptions objects. This class inherits from
Exception::Class::DBI::H, and offers no extra methods of its own.
DBI database handle exceptions objects. This class inherits from
Exception::Class::DBI::H Its methods correspond to the DBI database handle
attributes.
- "auto_commit"
-
my $auto_commit = $ex->auto_commit;
Returns true if the database handle
"AutoCommit" attribute is enabled.
meaning that database changes cannot be rolled back. Corresponds to the
DBI database handle "AutoCommit"
attribute.
- "db_name"
-
my $db_name = $ex->db_name;
Returns the "name" of the database. Corresponds to
the DBI database handle "Name"
attribute.
- "statement"
-
my $statement = $ex->statement;
Returns the statement string passed to the most recent call to
the DBI "prepare()" method in this
database handle. If it was the
"prepare()" method that encountered
the error and triggered the exception, the statement string will be the
statement passed to "prepare()".
Corresponds to the DBI database handle
"Statement" attribute.
- "row_cache_size"
-
my $row_cache_size = $ex->row_cache_size;
Returns the hint to the database driver indicating the size of
the local row cache that the application would like the driver to use
for future "SELECT" statements.
Corresponds to the DBI database handle
"RowCacheSize" attribute.
DBI statement handle exceptions objects. This class inherits from
Exception::Class::DBI::H Its methods correspond to the DBI statement handle
attributes.
- "num_of_fields"
-
my $num_of_fields = $ex->num_of_fields;
Returns the number of fields (columns) the prepared statement
will return. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"NUM_OF_FIELDS" attribute.
- "num_of_params"
-
my $num_of_params = $ex->num_of_params;
Returns the number of parameters (placeholders) in the
prepared statement. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"NUM_OF_PARAMS" attribute.
- "field_names"
-
my $field_names = $ex->field_names;
Returns a reference to an array of field names for each
column. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"NAME" attribute.
- "type"
-
my $type = $ex->type;
Returns a reference to an array of integer values for each
column. The value indicates the data type of the corresponding column.
Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"TYPE" attribute.
- "precision"
-
my $precision = $ex->precision;
Returns a reference to an array of integer values for each
column. For non-numeric columns, the value generally refers to either
the maximum length or the defined length of the column. For numeric
columns, the value refers to the maximum number of significant digits
used by the data type (without considering a sign character or decimal
point). Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"PRECISION" attribute.
- "scale"
-
my $scale = $ex->scale;
Returns a reference to an array of integer values for each
column. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"SCALE" attribute.
- "nullable"
-
my $nullable = $ex->nullable;
Returns a reference to an array indicating the possibility of
each column returning a null. Possible values are 0 (or an empty string)
= no, 1 = yes, 2 = unknown. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"NULLABLE" attribute.
- "cursor_name"
-
my $cursor_name = $ex->cursor_name;
Returns the name of the cursor associated with the statement
handle, if available. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"CursorName" attribute.
- "param_values"
-
my $param_values = $ex->param_values;
Returns a reference to a hash containing the values currently
bound to placeholders. Corresponds to the DBI statement handle
"ParamValues" attribute.
- "statement"
-
my $statement = $ex->statement;
Returns the statement string passed to the DBI
"prepare()" method. Corresponds to the
DBI statement handle "Statement"
attribute.
- "rows_in_cache"
-
my $rows_in_cache = $ex->rows_in_cache;
the number of unfetched rows in the cache if the driver
supports a local row cache for
"SELECT" statements. Corresponds to
the DBI statement handle "RowsInCache"
attribute.
Exceptions of this class are thrown when the context for a DBI error cannot be
determined. Inherits from Exception::Class::DBI, but implements no methods of
its own.
Note: Not all of the attributes offered by the DBI are exploited
by these exception classes. For example, the
"PrintError" and
"RaiseError" attributes seemed redundant.
But if folks think it makes sense to include the missing attributes for the
sake of completeness, let me know. Enough interest will motivate me to get
them in.
It is possible to subclass Exception::Class::DBI. The trick is to subclass its
subclasses, too. Similar to subclassing DBI itself, this means that the handle
subclasses should exist as subnamespaces of your base subclass.
It's easier to explain with an example. Say that you wanted to add
a new method to all DBI exceptions that outputs a nicely formatted error
message. You might do it like this:
package MyApp::Ex::DBI;
use base 'Exception::Class::DBI';
sub full_message {
my $self = shift;
return $self->SUPER::full_message unless $self->can('statement');
return $self->SUPER::full_message
. ' [for Statement "'
. $self->statement . '"]';
}
You can then use this subclass just like Exception::Class::DBI
itself:
my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $pass, {
PrintError => 0,
RaiseError => 0,
HandleError => MyApp::Ex::DBI->handler,
});
And that's all well and good, except that none of
Exception::Class::DBI's own subclasses inherit from your class, so most
exceptions won't be able to use your spiffy new method.
The solution is to create subclasses of both the
Exception::Class::DBI subclasses and your own base subclass, as long as they
each use the same package name as your subclass, plus "H",
"DRH", "DBH", "STH", and "Unknown".
Here's what it looks like:
package MyApp::Ex::DBI::H;
use base 'MyApp::Ex::DBI', 'Exception::Class::DBI::H';
package MyApp::Ex::DBI::DRH;
use base 'MyApp::Ex::DBI', 'Exception::Class::DBI::DRH';
package MyApp::Ex::DBI::DBH;
use base 'MyApp::Ex::DBI', 'Exception::Class::DBI::DBH';
package MyApp::Ex::DBI::STH;
use base 'MyApp::Ex::DBI', 'Exception::Class::DBI::STH';
package MyApp::Ex::DBI::Unknown;
use base 'MyApp::Ex::DBI', 'Exception::Class::DBI::Unknown';
And then things should work just spiffy! Of course, you probably
don't need the H subclass unless you want to add other methods for the DRH,
DBH, and STH classes to inherit from.
- •
- I need to figure out a non-database specific way of testing STH
exceptions. DBD::ExampleP works well for DRH and DBH exceptions, but not
so well for STH exceptions.
This module is stored in an open GitHub repository
<http://github.com/plicease/Exception-Class-DBI/>. Feel free to fork and
contribute!
Please file bug reports via GitHub Issues
<http://github.com/plicease/Exception-Class-DBI/issues/> or by sending
mail to bug-Exception-Class-DBI@rt.cpan.org
<mailto:bug-Exception-Class-DBI@rt.cpan.org>.
Original Author is David E. Wheeler <david@justatheory.com>
Current maintainer is Graham Ollis <plicease@cpan.org>
You should really only be using this module in conjunction with Tim Bunce's DBI,
so it pays to be familiar with its documentation.
See the documentation for Dave Rolsky's Exception::Class module
for details on the methods this module's classes inherit from it. There's
lots more information in these exception objects, so use them!
Copyright (c) 2002-2019, 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.
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc.
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