1DBD::File(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation DBD::File(3)
2
3
4
6 DBD::File - Base class for writing file based DBI drivers
7
9 This module is a base class for writing other DBDs. It is not intended
10 to function as a DBD itself (though it is possible). If you want to
11 access flat files, use DBD::AnyData, or DBD::CSV (both of which are
12 subclasses of DBD::File).
13
15 The DBD::File module is not a true DBI driver, but an abstract base
16 class for deriving concrete DBI drivers from it. The implication is,
17 that these drivers work with plain files, for example CSV files or INI
18 files. The module is based on the SQL::Statement module, a simple SQL
19 engine.
20
21 See DBI for details on DBI, SQL::Statement for details on
22 SQL::Statement and DBD::CSV, DBD::DBM or DBD::AnyData for example
23 drivers.
24
25 Metadata
26 The following attributes are handled by DBI itself and not by
27 DBD::File, thus they all work as expected:
28
29 Active
30 ActiveKids
31 CachedKids
32 CompatMode (Not used)
33 InactiveDestroy
34 AutoInactiveDestroy
35 Kids
36 PrintError
37 RaiseError
38 Warn (Not used)
39
40 The following DBI attributes are handled by DBD::File:
41
42 AutoCommit
43
44 Always on.
45
46 ChopBlanks
47
48 Works.
49
50 NUM_OF_FIELDS
51
52 Valid after "$sth->execute".
53
54 NUM_OF_PARAMS
55
56 Valid after "$sth->prepare".
57
58 NAME
59
60 Valid after "$sth->execute"; undef for Non-Select statements.
61
62 NULLABLE
63
64 Not really working, always returns an array ref of ones, except the
65 affected table has been created in this session. Valid after
66 "$sth->execute"; undef for non-select statements.
67
68 Unsupported DBI attributes and methods
69
70 bind_param_inout
71
72 CursorName
73
74 LongReadLen
75
76 LongTruncOk
77
78 DBD::File specific attributes
79
80 In addition to the DBI attributes, you can use the following dbh
81 attributes:
82
83 f_dir
84
85 This attribute is used for setting the directory where the files are
86 opened and it defaults to the current directory (.). Usually you set it
87 on the dbh but it may be overridden per table (see f_meta).
88
89 When the value for "f_dir" is a relative path, it is converted into the
90 appropriate absolute path name (based on the current working directory)
91 when the dbh attribute is set.
92
93 f_dir => "/data/foo/csv",
94
95 See "KNOWN BUGS AND LIMITATIONS".
96
97 f_dir_search
98
99 This optional attribute can be set to pass a list of folders to also
100 find existing tables. It will not be used to create new files.
101
102 f_dir_search => [ "/data/bar/csv", "/dump/blargh/data" ],
103
104 f_ext
105
106 This attribute is used for setting the file extension. The format is:
107
108 extension{/flag}
109
110 where the /flag is optional and the extension is case-insensitive.
111 "f_ext" allows you to specify an extension which:
112
113 f_ext => ".csv/r",
114
115 · makes DBD::File prefer table.extension over table.
116
117 · makes the table name the filename minus the extension.
118
119 DBI:CSV:f_dir=data;f_ext=.csv
120
121 In the above example and when "f_dir" contains both table.csv and
122 table, DBD::File will open table.csv and the table will be named
123 "table". If table.csv does not exist but table does that file is opened
124 and the table is also called "table".
125
126 If "f_ext" is not specified and table.csv exists it will be opened and
127 the table will be called "table.csv" which is probably not what you
128 want.
129
130 NOTE: even though extensions are case-insensitive, table names are not.
131
132 DBI:CSV:f_dir=data;f_ext=.csv/r
133
134 The "r" flag means the file extension is required and any filename that
135 does not match the extension is ignored.
136
137 Usually you set it on the dbh but it may be overridden per table (see
138 f_meta).
139
140 f_schema
141
142 This will set the schema name and defaults to the owner of the
143 directory in which the table file resides. You can set "f_schema" to
144 "undef".
145
146 my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", "", "", {
147 f_schema => undef,
148 f_dir => "data",
149 f_ext => ".csv/r",
150 }) or die $DBI::errstr;
151
152 By setting the schema you affect the results from the tables call:
153
154 my @tables = $dbh->tables ();
155
156 # no f_schema
157 "merijn".foo
158 "merijn".bar
159
160 # f_schema => "dbi"
161 "dbi".foo
162 "dbi".bar
163
164 # f_schema => undef
165 foo
166 bar
167
168 Defining "f_schema" to the empty string is equal to setting it to
169 "undef" so the DSN can be "dbi:CSV:f_schema=;f_dir=.".
170
171 f_lock
172
173 The "f_lock" attribute is used to set the locking mode on the opened
174 table files. Note that not all platforms support locking. By default,
175 tables are opened with a shared lock for reading, and with an exclusive
176 lock for writing. The supported modes are:
177
178 0: No locking at all.
179
180 1: Shared locks will be used.
181
182 2: Exclusive locks will be used.
183
184 But see KNOWN BUGS below.
185
186 f_lockfile
187
188 If you wish to use a lockfile extension other than ".lck", simply
189 specify the "f_lockfile" attribute:
190
191 $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:DBM:f_lockfile=.foo");
192 $dbh->{f_lockfile} = ".foo";
193 $dbh->{dbm_tables}{qux}{f_lockfile} = ".foo";
194
195 If you wish to disable locking, set the "f_lockfile" to 0.
196
197 $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:DBM:f_lockfile=0");
198 $dbh->{f_lockfile} = 0;
199 $dbh->{dbm_tables}{qux}{f_lockfile} = 0;
200
201 f_encoding
202
203 With this attribute, you can set the encoding in which the file is
204 opened. This is implemented using "binmode $fh,
205 ":encoding(<f_encoding>)"".
206
207 f_meta
208
209 Private data area aliasing "sql_meta" in DBI::DBD::SqlEngine which
210 contains information about the tables this module handles. Table meta
211 data might not be available until the table has been accessed for the
212 first time e.g., by issuing a select on it however it is possible to
213 pre-initialize attributes for each table you use.
214
215 DBD::File recognizes the (public) attributes "f_ext", "f_dir",
216 "f_file", "f_encoding", "f_lock", "f_lockfile", "f_schema", in addition
217 to the attributes "sql_meta" in DBI::DBD::SqlEngine already supports.
218 Be very careful when modifying attributes you do not know, the
219 consequence might be a destroyed or corrupted table.
220
221 "f_file" is an attribute applicable to table meta data only and you
222 will not find a corresponding attribute in the dbh. Whilst it may be
223 reasonable to have several tables with the same column names, it is not
224 for the same file name. If you need access to the same file using
225 different table names, use "SQL::Statement" as the SQL engine and the
226 "AS" keyword:
227
228 SELECT * FROM tbl AS t1, tbl AS t2 WHERE t1.id = t2.id
229
230 "f_file" can be an absolute path name or a relative path name but if it
231 is relative, it is interpreted as being relative to the "f_dir"
232 attribute of the table meta data. When "f_file" is set DBD::File will
233 use "f_file" as specified and will not attempt to work out an
234 alternative for "f_file" using the "table name" and "f_ext" attribute.
235
236 While "f_meta" is a private and readonly attribute (which means, you
237 cannot modify it's values), derived drivers might provide restricted
238 write access through another attribute. Well known accessors are
239 "csv_tables" for DBD::CSV, "ad_tables" for DBD::AnyData and
240 "dbm_tables" for DBD::DBM.
241
242 New opportunities for attributes from DBI::DBD::SqlEngine
243
244 sql_table_source
245
246 "$dbh->{sql_table_source}" can be set to
247 DBD::File::TableSource::FileSystem (and is the default setting of
248 DBD::File). This provides usual behaviour of previous DBD::File
249 releases on
250
251 @ary = DBI->data_sources ($driver);
252 @ary = DBI->data_sources ($driver, \%attr);
253
254 @ary = $dbh->data_sources ();
255 @ary = $dbh->data_sources (\%attr);
256
257 @names = $dbh->tables ($catalog, $schema, $table, $type);
258
259 $sth = $dbh->table_info ($catalog, $schema, $table, $type);
260 $sth = $dbh->table_info ($catalog, $schema, $table, $type, \%attr);
261
262 $dbh->func ("list_tables");
263
264 sql_data_source
265
266 "$dbh->{sql_data_source}" can be set to either
267 DBD::File::DataSource::File, which is default and provides the well
268 known behavior of DBD::File releases prior to 0.41, or
269 DBD::File::DataSource::Stream, which reuses already opened file-handle
270 for operations.
271
272 Internally private attributes to deal with SQL backends
273
274 Do not modify any of these private attributes unless you understand the
275 implications of doing so. The behavior of DBD::File and derived DBDs
276 might be unpredictable when one or more of those attributes are
277 modified.
278
279 sql_nano_version
280
281 Contains the version of loaded DBI::SQL::Nano.
282
283 sql_statement_version
284
285 Contains the version of loaded SQL::Statement.
286
287 sql_handler
288
289 Contains either the text 'SQL::Statement' or 'DBI::SQL::Nano'.
290
291 sql_ram_tables
292
293 Contains optionally temporary tables.
294
295 sql_flags
296
297 Contains optional flags to instantiate the SQL::Parser parsing engine
298 when SQL::Statement is used as SQL engine. See SQL::Parser for valid
299 flags.
300
301 Driver private methods
302 Default DBI methods
303
304 data_sources
305
306 The "data_sources" method returns a list of subdirectories of the
307 current directory in the form "dbi:CSV:f_dir=$dirname".
308
309 If you want to read the subdirectories of another directory, use
310
311 my ($drh) = DBI->install_driver ("CSV");
312 my (@list) = $drh->data_sources (f_dir => "/usr/local/csv_data");
313
314 Additional methods
315
316 The following methods are only available via their documented name when
317 DBD::File is used directly. Because this is only reasonable for testing
318 purposes, the real names must be used instead. Those names can be
319 computed by replacing the "f_" in the method name with the driver
320 prefix.
321
322 f_versions
323
324 Signature:
325
326 sub f_versions (;$)
327 {
328 my ($table_name) = @_;
329 $table_name ||= ".";
330 ...
331 }
332
333 Returns the versions of the driver, including the DBI version, the Perl
334 version, DBI::PurePerl version (if DBI::PurePerl is active) and the
335 version of the SQL engine in use.
336
337 my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:File:");
338 my $f_versions = $dbh->func ("f_versions");
339 print "$f_versions\n";
340 __END__
341 # DBD::File 0.41 using IO::File (1.16)
342 # DBI::DBD::SqlEngine 0.05 using SQL::Statement 1.406
343 # DBI 1.623
344 # OS darwin (12.2.1)
345 # Perl 5.017006 (darwin-thread-multi-ld-2level)
346
347 Called in list context, f_versions will return an array containing each
348 line as single entry.
349
350 Some drivers might use the optional (table name) argument and modify
351 version information related to the table (e.g. DBD::DBM provides
352 storage backend information for the requested table, when it has a
353 table name).
354
356 · This module uses flock () internally but flock is not available on
357 all platforms. On MacOS and Windows 95 there is no locking at all
358 (perhaps not so important on MacOS and Windows 95, as there is only
359 a single user).
360
361 · The module stores details about the handled tables in a private
362 area of the driver handle ($drh). This data area is not shared
363 between different driver instances, so several "DBI->connect ()"
364 calls will cause different table instances and private data areas.
365
366 This data area is filled for the first time when a table is
367 accessed, either via an SQL statement or via "table_info" and is
368 not destroyed until the table is dropped or the driver handle is
369 released. Manual destruction is possible via f_clear_meta.
370
371 The following attributes are preserved in the data area and will
372 evaluated instead of driver globals:
373
374 f_ext
375 f_dir
376 f_dir_search
377 f_lock
378 f_lockfile
379 f_encoding
380 f_schema
381 col_names
382 sql_identifier_case
383
384 The following attributes are preserved in the data area only and
385 cannot be set globally.
386
387 f_file
388
389 The following attributes are preserved in the data area only and
390 are computed when initializing the data area:
391
392 f_fqfn
393 f_fqbn
394 f_fqln
395 table_name
396
397 For DBD::CSV tables this means, once opened "foo.csv" as table
398 named "foo", another table named "foo" accessing the file "foo.txt"
399 cannot be opened. Accessing "foo" will always access the file
400 "foo.csv" in memorized "f_dir", locking "f_lockfile" via memorized
401 "f_lock".
402
403 You can use f_clear_meta or the "f_file" attribute for a specific
404 table to work around this.
405
406 · When used with SQL::Statement and temporary tables e.g.,
407
408 CREATE TEMP TABLE ...
409
410 the table data processing bypasses DBD::File::Table. No file system
411 calls will be made and there are no clashes with existing (file
412 based) tables with the same name. Temporary tables are chosen over
413 file tables, but they will not covered by "table_info".
414
416 This module is currently maintained by
417
418 H.Merijn Brand < h.m.brand at xs4all.nl > and Jens Rehsack < rehsack at
419 googlemail.com >
420
421 The original author is Jochen Wiedmann.
422
424 Copyright (C) 2009-2013 by H.Merijn Brand & Jens Rehsack
425 Copyright (C) 2004-2009 by Jeff Zucker
426 Copyright (C) 1998-2004 by Jochen Wiedmann
427
428 All rights reserved.
429
430 You may freely distribute and/or modify this module under the terms of
431 either the GNU General Public License (GPL) or the Artistic License, as
432 specified in the Perl README file.
433
435 DBI, DBD::DBM, DBD::CSV, Text::CSV, Text::CSV_XS, SQL::Statement, and
436 DBI::SQL::Nano
437
438
439
440perl v5.28.0 2016-11-09 DBD::File(3)