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Always turn off hyphenation; it makes .\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. .if n .ad l .nh .SH "NAME" Tangram::Relational \- Orthogonal Object Persistence in Relational Databases .SH "SYNOPSIS" .IX Header "SYNOPSIS" .Vb 1 \& use Tangram; \& \& $schema = Tangram::Relational\->schema( $hashref ); \& \& Tangram::Relational\->deploy($schema, $dbh); \& \& $storage = Tangram::Relational\->connect( $schema, \& $data_source, $username, $password ); \& \& $storage\->disconnect(); \& \& Tangram::Relational\->retreat($schema, $dbh); .Ve .SH "DESCRIPTION" .IX Header "DESCRIPTION" This is the entry point in the vanilla object-relational persistence backend. Vendor-specific backends should be used when they exist. Currently Mysql, Sybase and Oracle have such backends; see Tangram::mysql, Tangram::Sybase and Tangram::Oracle. .PP More backends could be added in the future; they might implement persistence in \s-1XML\s0 documents, pure object databases, using C database libraries to bypass the need for an \s-1RDBMS,\s0 etc. .SH "CLASS METHODS" .IX Header "CLASS METHODS" .SS "schema" .IX Subsection "schema" .Vb 1 \& $schema = Tangram::Relational\->schema( $hashref ); .Ve .PP Returns a new Schema object. See Tangram::Schema. .SS "deploy" .IX Subsection "deploy" .Vb 3 \& Tangram::Relational\->deploy($schema); \& Tangram::Relational\->deploy($schema, HANDLE); \& Tangram::Relational\->deploy($schema, @dbi_args); .Ve .PP Writes \s-1SQL\s0 statements for preparing a database for use with the given \&\f(CW$schema\fR. .PP Called with a single argument, writes \s-1SQL\s0 statements to \s-1STDOUT.\s0 .PP Called with two arguments, writes \s-1SQL\s0 statements to \s-1HANDLE. HANDLE\s0 may be a \s-1DBI\s0 connection handle or a file handle. .PP Called with more than two arguments, passes all but the first to \&\fIDBI::connect()\fR and writes statements to the resulting \s-1DBI\s0 handle, which is automatically closed. .PP The \s-1SQL\s0 code is only guaranteed to work on newly created databases. .SS "connect" .IX Subsection "connect" .Vb 2 \& $storage = Tangram::Relational\->connect( $schema, \& $data_source, $user, $password, \e%options ) .Ve .PP Connects to a storage and return a handle object. Dies in case of failure. .PP \&\f(CW$schema\fR is a Schema object describing the system of classes stored in the database. .PP \&\f(CW$data_source\fR, \f(CW$user\fR and \f(CW$password\fR are passed directly to \&\fIDBI::connect()\fR. .PP \&\e%options is a reference to a hash containing connection options. See Tangram::Storage for a description of available options. .SS "retreat" .IX Subsection "retreat" .Vb 3 \& Tangram::Relational\->retreat($schema); \& Tangram::Relational\->retreat($schema, HANDLE); \& Tangram::Relational\->retreat($schema, @dbi_args); .Ve .PP Remove the tables created by \fIdeploy()\fR. Only guaranteed to work against a database that was deployed using exactly the same schema. .PP For an explanation of the possible argument lists, see deploy. .SH "WRITING A VENDOR DRIVER" .IX Header "WRITING A VENDOR DRIVER" Like Charles Moore (inventor of Forth) used to say, \*(L"standards are great, everybody should have one!\*(R". .PP Tangram can take advantage of extensions available in some \s-1SQL\s0 dialects. .PP To create a vendor-specific driver, call it \f(CW\*(C`Tangram::Foo\*(C'\fR (where \&\f(CW\*(C`Foo\*(C'\fR is the name of the \s-1DBI\s0 driver, as would be selected with the \&\s-1DBI\s0 connection string \f(CW\*(C`dbi:Foo:\*(C'\fR), and derive \f(CW\*(C`Tangram::Relational\*(C'\fR. .PP For now, the existing back-ends should be used as examples of how to extend Tangram to support different databases or utilise some of their more exotic features.