NAME
Mojo::SQLite::Database - Database
SYNOPSIS
use Mojo::SQLite::Database;
my $db = Mojo::SQLite::Database->new(sqlite => $sql, dbh => $dbh);
$db->query('select * from foo')
->hashes->map(sub { $_->{bar} })->join("\n")->say;
DESCRIPTION
Mojo::SQLite::Database is a container for DBD::SQLite database handles used by Mojo::SQLite.
EVENTS
Mojo::SQLite::Database inherits all events from Mojo::EventEmitter and can emit the following new ones.
close
$db->on(close => sub {
my $db = shift;
...
});
Emitted when the database connection gets closed while waiting for notifications.
notification
$db->on(notification => sub {
my ($db, $name, $payload) = @_;
...
});
Emitted when a notification has been received.
ATTRIBUTES
Mojo::SQLite::Database implements the following attributes.
dbh
my $dbh = $db->dbh;
$db = $db->dbh($dbh);
DBD::SQLite database handle used for all queries.
# Use DBI utility methods
my $quoted = $db->dbh->quote_identifier('foo.bar');
notification_poll_interval
This attribute is DEPRECATED.
results_class
my $class = $db->results_class;
$db = $db->results_class('MyApp::Results');
Class to be used by "query", defaults to Mojo::SQLite::Results. Note that this class needs to have already been loaded before "query" is called.
sqlite
my $sql = $db->sqlite;
$db = $db->sqlite(Mojo::SQLite->new);
Mojo::SQLite object this database belongs to.
METHODS
Mojo::SQLite::Database inherits all methods from Mojo::Base and implements the following new ones.
begin
my $tx = $db->begin;
my $tx = $db->begin('exclusive');
Begin transaction and return Mojo::SQLite::Transaction object, which will automatically roll back the transaction unless "commit" in Mojo::SQLite::Transaction has been called before it is destroyed.
# Insert rows in a transaction
eval {
my $tx = $db->begin;
$db->insert('frameworks', {name => 'Catalyst'});
$db->insert('frameworks', {name => 'Mojolicious'});
$tx->commit;
};
say $@ if $@;
A transaction locking behavior of deferred
, immediate
, or exclusive
may optionally be passed; the default in DBD::SQLite is currently immediate
. See "Transaction and Database Locking" in DBD::SQLite for more details.
delete
my $results = $db->delete($table, \%where);
Generate a DELETE
statement with "abstract" in Mojo::SQLite (usually an SQL::Abstract object) and execute it with "query". You can also append a callback for API compatibility with Mojo::Pg; the query is still executed in a blocking manner.
$db->delete(some_table => sub {
my ($db, $err, $results) = @_;
...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->start unless Mojo::IOLoop->is_running;
disconnect
$db->disconnect;
Disconnect "dbh" and prevent it from getting reused.
insert
my $results = $db->insert($table, \@values || \%fieldvals, \%options);
Generate an INSERT
statement with "abstract" in Mojo::SQLite (usually an SQL::Abstract object) and execute it with "query". You can also append a callback for API compatibility with Mojo::Pg; the query is still executed in a blocking manner.
$db->insert(some_table => {foo => 'bar'} => sub {
my ($db, $err, $results) = @_;
...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->start unless Mojo::IOLoop->is_running;
is_listening
This method is DEPRECATED.
listen
This method is DEPRECATED.
notify
This method is DEPRECATED.
ping
my $bool = $db->ping;
Check database connection.
query
my $results = $db->query('select * from foo');
my $results = $db->query('insert into foo values (?, ?, ?)', @values);
my $results = $db->query('select ? as img', {type => SQL_BLOB, value => slurp 'img.jpg'});
my $results = $db->query('select ? as foo', {json => {bar => 'baz'}});
Execute a blocking SQL statement and return a results object based on "results_class" with the query results. The DBD::SQLite statement handle will be automatically reused when it is not active anymore, to increase the performance of future queries. You can also append a callback for API compatibility with Mojo::Pg; the query is still executed in a blocking manner.
$db->query('insert into foo values (?, ?, ?)' => @values => sub {
my ($db, $err, $results) = @_;
...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->start unless Mojo::IOLoop->is_running;
Hash reference arguments containing type
and value
elements will use the specified bind type for the parameter, using types from "DBI Constants" in DBI; see "Blobs" in DBD::SQLite and the subsequent section for more information.
Hash reference arguments containing a value named json
will be encoded to JSON text with "to_json" in Mojo::JSON. To accomplish the reverse, you can use the method "expand" in Mojo::SQLite::Results to decode JSON text fields to Perl values with "from_json" in Mojo::JSON.
# "I ♥ SQLite!"
$db->query('select ? as foo', {json => {bar => 'I ♥ SQLite!'}})
->expand(json => 'foo')->hash->{foo}{bar};
select
my $results = $db->select($source, $fields, $where, $order);
Generate a SELECT
statement with "abstract" in Mojo::SQLite (usually an SQL::Abstract object) and execute it with "query". You can also append a callback for API compatibility with Mojo::Pg; the query is still executed in a blocking manner.
$db->select(some_table => ['foo'] => {bar => 'yada'} => sub {
my ($db, $err, $results) = @_;
...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->start unless Mojo::IOLoop->is_running;
tables
my $tables = $db->tables;
Return table and view names for this database, that are visible to the current user and not internal, as an array reference. Names will be quoted and prefixed by a schema name of "main"
for standard tables, "temp"
for temporary tables, and the appropriate schema name for attached databases.
# Names of all tables
say for @{$db->tables};
unlisten
This method is DEPRECATED.
update
my $results = $db->update($table, \%fieldvals, \%where);
Generate an UPDATE
statement with "abstract" in Mojo::SQLite (usually an SQL::Abstract object) and execute it with "query". You can also append a callback for API compatibility with Mojo::Pg; the query is still executed in a blocking manner.
$db->update(some_table => {foo => 'baz'} => {foo => 'bar'} => sub {
my ($db, $err, $results) = @_;
...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->start unless Mojo::IOLoop->is_running;
BUGS
Report any issues on the public bugtracker.
AUTHOR
Dan Book, dbook@cpan.org
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2015, Dan Book.
This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.