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native::Core(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
native::Core(3) |
SVN::Core - Core module of the subversion perl bindings
use SVN::Core; # does apr_initialize and cleanup for you
# create a root pool and set it as default pool for later use
my $pool = SVN::Pool->new_default;
sub something {
# create a subpool of the current default pool
my $pool = SVN::Pool->new_default_sub;
# some svn operations...
# $pool gets destroyed and the previous default pool
# is restored when $pool's lexical scope ends
}
# svn_stream_t as native perl io handle
my $stream = $txn->root->apply_text('trunk/filea', undef);
print $stream $text;
close $stream;
# native perl io handle as svn_stream_t
SVN::Repos::dump_fs($repos, \*STDOUT, \*STDERR,
0, $repos->fs->youngest_rev, 0);
SVN::Core implements higher level functions of fundamental subversion functions.
- SVN::Core::auth_open([auth provider array]);
- Takes a reference to an array of authentication providers and returns an
auth_baton. If you use prompt providers you can not use this function, but
need to use the auth_open_helper.
- SVN::Core::auth_open_helper([auth provider array]);
- Prompt providers return two values instead of one. The 2nd parameter is a
reference to whatever was passed into them as the callback.
auth_open_helper splits up these arguments, passing the provider objects
into auth_open which gives it an auth_baton and putting the other ones in
an array. The first return value of this function is the auth_baton, the
second is a reference to an array containing the references to the
callbacks.
These callback arrays should be stored in the object the
auth_baton is attached to.
You can use native perl io handles (including io globs) as svn_stream_t in
subversion functions. Returned svn_stream_t are also translated into perl io
handles, so you could access them with regular print, read, etc.
Note that some functions take a stream to read from or write to,
but do not close the stream while still holding the reference to the io
handle. In this case the handle won't be destroyed properly. You should
always set up the correct default pool before calling such functions.
The perl bindings significantly simplify the usage of pools, while still being
manually adjustable.
For functions requiring a pool as the last argument (which are,
almost all of the subversion functions), the pool argument is optional. The
default pool is used if it is omitted. When
"SVN::Core" is loaded, it creates a new
default pool, which is also available from
"SVN::Core->gpool".
For callback functions providing a pool to your subroutine, you
could also use $pool->default to make it the
default pool in the scope.
Methods
- new([$parent])
- Create a new pool. The pool is a root pool if
$parent is not supplied.
- new_default([$parent])
- Create a new pool. The pool is a root pool if
$parent is not supplied. Set the new pool as
default pool.
- new_default_sub
- Create a new subpool of the current default pool, and set the resulting
pool as new default pool.
- clear
- Clear the pool.
- DESTROY
- Destroy the pool. If the pool was the default pool, restore the previous
default pool. This is normally called automatically when the SVN::Pool
object is no longer used and destroyed by the perl garbage collector.
By default the perl bindings handle exceptions for you. The default handler
automatically croaks with an appropriate error message. This is likely
sufficient for simple scripts, but more complex usage may demand handling of
errors.
You can override the default exception handler by changing the
$SVN::Error::handler variable. This variable holds a
reference to a perl sub that should be called whenever an error is returned
by a svn function. This sub will be passed a svn_error_t object. Its return
value is ignored.
If you set the $SVN::Error::handler to
undef then each call will return an svn_error_t object as its first return
in the case of an error, followed by the normal return values. If there is
no error then a svn_error_t will not be returned and only the normal return
values will be returned. When using this mode you should be careful only to
call functions in array context. For example: my ($ci) =
$ctx->mkdir('http://svn/foo'); In this case
$ci will be an svn_error_t object if an error occurs
and a svn_client_commit_info object otherwise. If you leave the parenthesis
off around $ci (scalar context) it will be the
commit_info object, which in the case of an error will be undef.
If you plan on using explicit exception handling, understanding
the exception handling system the C API uses is helpful. You can find
information on it in the HACKING file and the API documentation. Looking at
the implementation of SVN::Error::croak_on_error and
SVN::Error::expanded_message may be helpful as well.
- $svn_error_t->apr_err()
- APR error value, possibly SVN_ custom error.
- $svn_error_t->message()
- Details from producer of error.
- $svn_error_t->child()
- svn_error_t object of the error that's wrapped.
- $svn_error_t->pool()
- The pool holding this error and any child errors it wraps.
- $svn_error_t->file()
- Source file where the error originated.
- $svn_error_t->line()
- Source line where the error originated.
- SVN::Error::strerror($apr_status_t)
- Returns the english description of the status code.
- $svn_error_t->strerror()
- Returns the english description of the apr_err status code set on the
$svn_error_t. This is short for:
SVN::Error::strerror($svn_error_t->apr_err());
- SVN::Error::create($apr_err, $child, $message);
- Returns a new svn_error_t object with the error status specified in
$apr_err, the child as
$child, and error message of
$message.
- SVN::Error::quick_wrap($child, $new_msg); or
$child->quick_wrap($new_msg);
- A quick n' easy way to create a wrappered exception with your own message
before throwing it up the stack.
$child is the svn_error_t object you
want to wrap and $new_msg is the new error
string you want to set.
- SVN::Error::compose($chain, $new_error); or
$chain->compose($new_error);
- Add new_err to the end of $chain's chain of
errors.
The $new_err chain will be copied into
$chain's pool and destroyed, so
$new_err itself becomes invalid after this
function.
- SVN::Error::clear($svn_error_t); or $svn_error_t->clear();
- Free the memory used by $svn_error_t, as well as
all ancestors and descendants of $svn_error_t.
You must call this on every svn_error_t object you get or you
will leak memory.
- SVN::Error::expanded_message($svn_error_t) or
$svn_error_t->expanded_message()
- Returns the error message by tracing through the svn_error_t object and
its children and concatenating the error messages. This is how the
internal exception handlers get their error messages.
- SVN::Error::is_error($value)
- Returns true if value is of type svn_error. Returns false if value is
anything else or undefined. This is useful for seeing if a call has
returned an error.
- SVN::Error::croak_on_error
- Default error handler. It takes an svn_error_t and extracts the error
messages from it and croaks with those messages.
It can be used in two ways. The first is detailed above as
setting it as the automatic exception handler via setting
$SVN::Error::handler.
The second is if you have
$SVN::Error::handler set to undef as a wrapper
for calls you want to croak on when there is an error, but you don't
want to write an explicit error handler. For example:
my $rev =
SVN::Error::croak_on_error($ctx->checkout($url,$path,'HEAD',1));
If there is no error then croak_on_error will return the
arguments passed to it unchanged.
- SVN::Error::confess_on_error
- The same as croak_on_error except it will give a more detailed stack
backtrace, including internal calls within the implementation of the perl
bindings. This is useful when you are doing development work on the
bindings themselves.
- SVN::Error::ignore_error
- This is useful for wrapping around calls which you wish to ignore any
potential error. It checks to see if the first parameter is an error and
if it is it clears it. It then returns all the other parameters.
- $lcp->action()
- 'A'dd, 'D'elete, 'R'eplace, 'M'odify
- $lcp->copyfrom_path()
- Source path of copy, or "undef" if there
isn't any previous revision history.
- $lcp->copyfrom_rev()
- Source revision of copy, or
$SVN::Core::INVALID_REVNUM if there is no previous
history.
An object to represent a path that changed for a log entry.
- $lcp->action()
- 'A'dd, 'D'elete, 'R'eplace, 'M'odify
- $lcp->copyfrom_path()
- Source path of copy, or "undef" if there
isn't any previous revision history.
- $lcp->copyfrom_rev()
- Source revision of copy, or
$SVN::Core::INVALID_REVNUM if there is no previous
history.
- $lcp->node_kind()
- The type of the node, a $SVN::Node enum; may be
$SVN::Node::unknown.
- $lcp->text_modified()
- Is the text modified, a "SVN::Tristate"
enum, may be $SVN::Tristate::unknown.
- $lcp->props_modified()
- Are properties modified, a
"SVN::Tristate" enum, may be
$SVN::Tristate::unknown.
An enum of the following constants:
$SVN::Node::none,
$SVN::Node::file,
$SVN::Node::dir,
$SVN::Node::unknown.
An enum of the following constants:
$SVN::Tristate::true,
$SVN::Tristate::false,
$SVN::Tristate::unknown
Note that these true/false values have nothing to do with Perl's
concept of truth. In fact, each constant would evaluate to true in a boolean
context.
An enum of the following constants:
- $SVN::Depth::unknown
- Depth undetermined or ignored. In some contexts, this means the client
should choose an appropriate default depth. The server will generally
treat it as $SVN::Depth::infinity.
- $SVN::Depth::exclude
- Exclude (i.e., don't descend into) directory D.
Note: In Subversion 1.5,
$SVN::Depth::exclude is not supported
anyhwere in the client-side (Wc/Client/etc) code; it is only supported
as an argument to set_path functions in the Ra and Repos reporters.
(This will enable future versions of Subversion to run updates, etc,
against 1.5 servers with proper
$SVN::Depth::exclude behavior, once we get a
chance to implement client side support for
$SVN::Depth::exclude).
- $SVN::Depth::empty
- Just the named directory D, no entries.
Updates will not pull in any files or subdirectories not
already present.
- $SVN::Depth::files
- D + its files children, but not subdirs.
Updates will pull in any files not already present, but not
subdirectories.
- $SVN::Depth::immediates
- D + immediate children (D and its entries).
Updates will pull in any files or subdirectories not already
present; those subdirectories' this_dir entries will have
depth-empty.
- $SVN::Depth::infinity
- D + all descendants (full recursion from D).
Updates will pull in any files or subdirectories not already
present; those subdirectories' this_dir entries will have
depth-infinity. Equivalent to the pre 1.5 default update behavior.
A revision, specified in one of
"SVN::Core::opt_revision_*" ways.
- $rev->kind()
- An enum denoting how the revision $rev was
specified. One of
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_unspecified,
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_number,
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_date,
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_committed,
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_previous,
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_base,
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_working or
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_head.
- $rev->value()
- Extra data about the revision. Only relevant if
"$rev->kind" is
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_number (where it contains
the revision number) or
$SVN::Core::opt_revision_date (where it contains a
date).
An object representing a range of revisions.
- $range->start()
- The first revision in the range, a
"_p_svn_opt_revision_t" object.
- $range->end()
- The last revision in the range, a
"_p_svn_opt_revision_t" object.
Opaque object describing a set of configuration options.
- $dirent->kind()
- Node kind. A number which matches one of these constants:
$SVN::Node::none,
$SVN::Node::file,
$SVN::Node::dir,
$SVN::Node::unknown.
- $dirent->size()
- Length of file text, or 0 for directories.
- $dirent->has_props()
- Does the node have properties?
- $dirent->created_rev()
- Last revision in which this node changed.
- $dirent->time()
- Time of created_rev (mod-time).
- $dirent->last_author()
- Author of created rev.
- $commit->revision()
- Just committed revision.
- $commit->date()
- Server-side date of the commit.
- $commit->author()
- Author of the commit.
- $commit->post_commit_err()
- Error message from the post-commit hook, or undef.
- $commit->repos_root()
- Repository root, may be "undef" if
unknown.
- $entry->revision()
- The revision of the commit.
- $entry->revprops()
- A reference to a hash of requested revision properties, which may be
"undef" if it would contain no
revprops.
- $entry->has_children()
- Whether or not this message has children.
- $entry->changed_paths2()
- A reference to hash containing as keys every path committed in
"$entry->revision()"; the values are
"_p_svn_log_changed_path2_t"
objects.
- $entry->non_inheritable()
- Whether "$entry->revision()" should
be interpreted as non-inheritable in the same sense of
"_p_svn_merge_range_t".
- $entry->subtractive_merge()
- Whether "$entry->revision()" is a
merged revision resulting from a reverse merge.
- $simple->username()
- Username.
- $simple->password()
- Password.
- $simple->may_save()
- Indicates if the credentials may be saved (to disk).
- $username->username()
- Username.
- $username->may_save()
- Indicates if the credentials may be saved (to disk).
- $strust->may_save()
- Indicates if the credentials may be saved (to disk).
- $strust->accepted_failures()
- Bit mask of the accepted failures.
- $scert->hostname()
- Primary CN.
- $scert->fingerprint()
- ASCII fingerprint.
- $scert->valid_from()
- ASCII date from which the certificate is valid.
- $scert->valid_until()
- ASCII date until which the certificate is valid.
- $scert->issuer_dname()
- DN of the certificate issuer.
- $scert->ascii_cert()
- Base-64 encoded DER certificate representation.
- $ccert->cert_file()
- Full paths to the certificate file.
- $ccert->may_save()
- Indicates if the credentials may be saved (to disk).
- $ccertpw->password()
- Certificate password.
- $ccertpw->may_save()
- Indicates if the credentials may be saved (to disk).
- $SVN::Auth::SSL::NOTYETVALID
- Certificate is not yet valid.
- $SVN::Auth::SSL::EXPIRED
- Certificate has expired.
- $SVN::Auth::SSL::CNMISMATCH
- Certificate's CN (hostname) does not match the remote hostname.
- $SVN::Auth::SSL::UNKNOWNCA
- Certificate authority is unknown (i.e. not trusted).
- $SVN::Auth::SSL::OTHER
- Other failure. This can happen if some unknown error condition
occurs.
Objects of this class contain information about locks placed on files in a
repository. It has the following accessor methods:
- path
- The full path to the file which is locked, starting with a forward slash
("/").
- token
- A string containing the lock token, which is a unique URI.
- owner
- The username of whoever owns the lock.
- comment
- A comment associated with the lock, or undef if there isn't one.
- is_dav_comment
- True if the comment was made by a generic DAV client.
- creation_date
- Time at which the lock was created, as the number of microseconds since
00:00:00 January 1, 1970 UTC. Divide it by 1_000_000 to get a Unix
time_t value.
- expiration_date
- When the lock will expire. Has the value '0' if the lock will never
expire.
Chia-liang Kao <clkao@clkao.org>
Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
distributed with this work for additional information
regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.
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