NAME
SPOPS::Import::DBI::Update - Update existing data in a DBI table
SYNOPSIS
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use DBI;
use SPOPS::Import;
{
my $dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:Pg:dbname=test' );
$dbh->{RaiseError} = 1;
my $importer = SPOPS::Import->new( 'dbupdate' );
$importer->db( $dbh );
$importer->table( 'import' );
# Set the update fields individually...
$importer->field( [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ] );
$importer->field_value( [ 'fooval', 'barval', 'bazval' ] );
# ...or all at once
$importer->set_update_data({
foo => 'fooval',
bar => 'barval',
baz => 'bazval',
});
$importer->where( 'name like ?' );
$importer->add_where_params( [ "%foo" ] );
my $status = $importer->run;
foreach my $entry ( @{ $status } ) {
if ( $entry->[0] ) { print "$entry->[1][0]: OK\n" }
else { print "$entry->[1][0]: FAIL ($entry->[2])\n" }
}
$dbh->disconnect;
}
DESCRIPTION
This importer updates existing data in a DBI table.
This may seem out of place in the SPOPS::Import hierarchy, but not if you think of importing in the more abstract manner of manipulating data in the database rather than getting data out of it...
Return from run()
The return value from run()
will be a single arrayref within the status arrayref. As with other importers the first value will be true if the operation succeeded, false if not. The one difference is that on success the second value will be the number of records updated -- this may be '0' if your WHERE clause did not match anything. (The third value in the arrayref will be the error message on failure.)
ADDITIONAL ACTIONS
Methods
set_update_data( \%fields_and_values )
Instead of setting the fields and values with the properties field and field_value, respectively, you can set them all at once with a more natural hash reference.
Properties
field
Arrayref of fields to update
field_value
Arrayref of values to update in the same order as field.
SEE ALSO
SPOPS::Import::DBI::GenericOperation
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004 intes.net, inc.. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHORS
Chris Winters <chris@cwinters.com>