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NAMETangram::Schema - describe a system of persistent classesSYNOPSISuse Tangram; $schema = Tangram::Schema->new( $hashref ); Tangram::Relational->connect( $schema, ... ); # write SQL to FILE $schema->deploy( \*FILE ); # write SQL to STDOUT $schema->deploy(); DESCRIPTIONA Schema contains all the information about the persistent aspects of a system of classes. That information is used to perform the mapping between OO constructs and a relational database.Schema objects are initialized from a nested data structure called a schema hash. The general structure of the schema hash is described here. The resulting Schema object becomes the owner of the schema hash passed to new(). The hash may not be modified afterwards, and no assumptions can be made regarding its content. note: No corresponding Perl classes are generated from calling "Tangram::Schema->new". If you want that, and like the behaviour of the seperately distributed "Class::Tangram" module, then you should pass the $hashref in the above example to the "Class::Tangram::Generator->new()" constructor. See Class::Tangram::Generator for more information. CLASS METHODSnew$schema = Tangram::Schema->new( $hash ); Returns a new Schema object. The newly created Schema object becomes the owner of the hash, which can no longer be modified nor reused by client code. The schema hash describes the persistent aspects of a system of classes. It is a multilevel data structure.
Global propertiesThe first level of the schema hash describes aspects that are global to a system of persistent classes. It has the following aspect:{ classes => [ Identity => { table => 'IdentityState', abstract => 1 }, NaturalPerson => { bases => [ qw( Identity ) ], }, LegalPerson => { bases => [ qw( Identity ) ], }, ], make_object => sub { ... }, set_id => sub { ... } get_id => sub { ... } normalize => sub { ... }, control => '...' sql => { ... }, } "classes" is an array called the "class registry". It contains a description of each persistent class. "make_object" contains a reference to a closure that returns a new object of a given class. This field is optional: by default, Tangram calls class method new(). "set_id" and "get_id" are used together to associate an object ID with a persistent object. By default, Tangram converts a reference to an object to a unique integer value by evaluating the expression "0 + $obj". The result is used as a key in a hash contained in the Storage object. The values in that hash are the object IDs. If any of your classes use overloading, this approach will not work and you will need to supply your own get/set_id methods. "control" is the name of a table that has a single row, containing the major and minor version numbers of the Tangram that created the storage, and the highest allocated object id. It defaults to 'Tangram'. Optional field "normalize" contains a subroutine that's called to transform classnames and fieldnames into table and column names. The function is called with two arguments; the name to be transformed, and a 'type' argument (currently one of 'tablename' or 'fieldname'). The return value should be the transformed string. Note that it is expected that the normalize sub will return identical strings with identical arguments, that "normalize(normalize($string, $flag), $flag) eq normalize($string, $flag)" Optional field "sql" contains a hash that can be used to customize some of the SQL generated by Tangram. The available options are:
The other fields are related to the SQL types that Tangram uses to store meta-information. class registryThe class registry is an array containing one entry per persistent class. The array contains a list of "key => value" pairs. The key is the class name, the value is a reference to a hash called the class hash. It contains information on how to map the class.The class hash can have the following fields:
Field "abstract" contains a boolean that should be true if the class is abstract. If this field is not present, the class is considered to be concrete. Field "bases" contains a reference to an array of base classes. Field "fields" contains a reference to the "field hash". Field "table" sets the name of the table that Tangram should use to store the state of objects pertaining to this class. This field is optional: it defaults to the class name. If the class name is not an acceptable SQL table identifier, you will need to set this field. Field "table_type" sets the type of the table, for instance, the storage back-end to the RDBMS or storage format; it specifies on a per-table basis what the "table_type" attribute of the schema defines. You almost certainly don't want to set this on a per-table basis. Field "id" contains an integer identifier for this class. That identifier must be unique within the same schema. If this field is not present, Tangram sets it to the last class id plus one. Fields "oid_sequence" and "make_id" are per-class versions of their schema-wide versions documented above. These should be inherited by their subclasses, but currently (as of 2.07_06) aren't. To be safe, until this documentation is fixed, define them in all subclasses. field hashEach persistent type is identified by a 'typetag', e.g. "int", "string" or "array".All the persistent fields of a given type are grouped together inside the field hash, where the typetag is used as a key. The individual fields are specified in an array or a hash, whose layout is type-dependant. For example: fields => { string => [ qw( firstName name ) ], int => [ qw( age ) ], ref => { partner => { null => 1 } }, array => { children => 'NaturalPerson' }, }, The typetag not only specifies the type of a field, but also the way in which it should be mapped to SQL constructs. Sometimes the same Perl type lends itself to more than one mapping, for example there are at least two plausible ways of mapping a Perl array (see Tangram::Type::Array::FromMany and Tangram::Type::Array::FromOne). Tangram's persistent type system is extensible, allowing you to mount your own types and make them persistent. All you have to do is to register your type and provide mapping code. See Tangram::Type. Tangram comes with built-in support for the following types: * string, int, real: see Tangram::Type::Scalar * reference : see Tangram::Type::Ref::FromMany * array : see Tangram::Type::Array::FromMany, Tangram::Type::Array::FromOne * Set::Object : see Tangram::Type::Set::FromMany, Tangram::Type::Set::FromOne INSTANCE METHODSdeployThis method is deprecated. See Tangram::Relational.retreatThis method is deprecated. See Tangram::Relational.
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