man DBIx::XMLMessage () - XML Message exchange between DBI data sources
NAME
DBIx::XMLMessage - XML Message exchange between DBI data sources
SYNOPSIS
OUTBOUND MESSAGE
#!/usr/bin/perl
use DBI; use DBIx::XMLMessage;
# Template string my $tpl_str =<< "_EOT_"; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <TEMPLATE NAME='SysLogins' TYPE='XML' VERSION='1.0' TABLE='syslogins'> <KEY NAME='suid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' PARENT_NAME='OBJECT_ID' /> <COLUMN NAME='LoginId' EXPR='suid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> <COLUMN NAME='PasswordDate' EXPR='pwdate' DATATYPE='DATETIME' BLTIN="fix_gmdatetime" /> <CHILD NAME='SysUsers' TABLE='sysusers'> <KEY NAME='suid' PARENT_NAME='LoginId' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> <COLUMN NAME='UserId' EXPR='uid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> <COLUMN NAME='UserName' EXPR='name' /> </CHILD> </TEMPLATE> _EOT_ my $msg = new DBIx::XMLMessage ('TemplateString' => $tpl_str); my $ghash = { 'OBJECT_ID' => [ 1, 2 ] }; my $dbh = DBI->connect('dbi:Sybase:server=x;database=master','sa','secret'); $msg->rexec ($dbh, $ghash);
print "\n\n", $msg->output_xml(0,0); print "\n\n", $msg->output_xml(0,1);
INBOUND MESSAGE
#!/usr/bin/perl
use DBI; use DBIx::XMLMessage;
my $template_xml =<< "_EOD1_"; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <TEMPLATE NAME='SysLogins' TYPE='XML' VERSION='1.0' TABLE='syslogins' ACTION='SAVE'> <KEY NAME='suid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' PARENT_NAME='OBJECT_ID' /> <COLUMN NAME='LoginId' EXPR='suid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> <COLUMN NAME='PasswordDate' EXPR='pwdate' DATATYPE='DATETIME' BLTIN="fix_gmdatetime" /> <CHILD NAME='SysUsers' TABLE='sysusers'> <KEY NAME='suid' PARENT_NAME='LoginId' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> <COLUMN NAME='UserId' EXPR='uid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> <COLUMN NAME='UserName' EXPR='name' /> </CHILD> </TEMPLATE> _EOD1_
my $message_xml =<< "_EOD2_"; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <SysLogins> <LoginId>1</LoginId> <PasswordDate>1999/08/17 08:31</PasswordDate> <SysUsers> <UserId>1</UserId> <UserName>sa</UserName> </SysUsers> </SysLogins> _EOD2_
my $xmlmsg = new DBIx::XMLMessage ('TemplateString' => $template_xml); my $msgtype = $xmlmsg->input_xml($message_xml); my $ghash = { 'OBJECT_ID' => [ 1 ] }; $xmlmsg->populate_objects ($ghash);
my $dbh = DBI->connect('dbi:Sybase:server=x;database=master','sa','secret'); $xmlmsg->rexec ($dbh, $ghash); print $xmlmsg->output_message();
DESCRIPTION
The package maintains simple XML templates that describe object structure.
The package is capable of generating SQL statements based on these templates and executing them against DBI data sources. After executing the SQL, the package formats the data results into XML strings. E.g. the following simple template
<TEMPLATE NAME='SysLogins' TYPE='XML' VERSION='1.0' TABLE='syslogins' ACTION='SAVE'> <KEY NAME='suid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' PARENT_NAME='OBJECT_ID' /> <COLUMN NAME='LoginId' EXPR='suid' DATATYPE='NUMERIC' /> </TEMPLATE>
being executed with key value = 1, will be tranlated into this SQL:
SELECT suid LoginId FROM syslogins where suid = 1
and the result will be formatted into this XML string:
<SysLogins> <LoginId>1<LoginId> </SysLogins>
Inbound messages can be processed according to the same kind of templates and the database is updated accordingly. Templates are capable of defining the SQL operators, plus new SAVE operation which is basically a combination of SELECT and either INSERT or UPDATE depending on whether the record was found by the compound key value or not.
SALES PITCH
This package allows for objects exchange between different databases. They could be from different vendors, as long as they both have DBD drivers. In certain cases it is even possible to exchange objects between databases with different data models. Publishing of databases on the web could potentially be one of the applications as well.
TEMPLATE TAGS
TEMPLATE
This is manadatory top-level tag. It can correspond to a certain table and be processed just like table-level REFERENCE and CHILD attributes described below. Some of TEMPLATE attributes are related to the whole template (e.g. TYPE or VERSION) while others desribe the table ti's based on (e.g. TABLE)
If the TABLE attribute is defined, the generated SQL is going to run against some table. Otherwise a SQL with no table will be generated. This only makes sense for outbound messages and only possible on certain engines, like Sybase. Also, the immediate child columns should contain constants only for apparent reasons.
REFERENCE
REFERENCE is a table-level tag. It's meant to represent a single record from another table that's retrieved by unique key. E.g. if my current table is EMPL then DEPARTMENT would be a REFERENCE since employee can have no more than one departament.
CHILD
This tag meant to represent a number of child records usually retrieved by a foreign key value (probably primary key of the current table). Right now there's no difference in processing between CHILD and REFERENCE, but it may appear in the future releases.
COLUMN
This tag is pretty self-explanatory. Each COLUMN tag will appear on the SELECT, INSERT or UPDATE list of the generated SQL.
KEY
Key represents linkage of this table's records to the parent table. All KEY's will appear on the WHERE clause as AND components. This way of linkage is typical for most of relational systems and considered to be a good style. I guess it shouldn't be much of a restriction anyway. If it gets that, you could try tweak up the WHERE_CLAUSE attribute..
PARAMETER
This tag represents a parameter that will be passsed to a stored procedure. Currently, only Sybase-style stored procedures are supported, i.e.
exec proc_name CW@param_name = 'param_value', ...
Fixes for Oracle, DB2 and Informix are welcome..
TEMPLATE TAG ATTRIBUTES
NAME
Applicable to: All template tags Required for: All template tags
NAME is the only required attribute for all of the template tags. The main purpose of it is to specify the tag name as it will appear in the resulting XML document. Also, depending on the template tag type (COLUMN, PARAMETER and KEY) it may serve as default value for EXPR discussed below. Here's a small example of how it works. If my column is represented in the template like this:
<COLUMN NAME='ObjectId' />
the resulting SQL will contain
SELECT ObjectID, ...
whereas if I have
<COLUMN NAME='ObjectId' EXPR='igObjectId' />
it will generate the following SQL:
SELECT igObjectId ObjectID, ...
I.e. in the latter example, NAME used as an alias and EXPR as a real database column name. The column in the first example has no alias.
ACTION
Applicable to: TEMPLATE, REFERENCE, CHILD Required for: None
Possible values for this attibute are SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, EXEC and SAVE. If action is not provided, it is assumed that t he action should be SELECT. The first 4 values correspond to SQL data management operators (EXEC is vendor-specific and represents execution of a stored procedure). The fifth value, SAVE, is basically a combination of SELECT and either INSERT or UPDATE, depending on whether the record was found by the compound key value or not. This often helps to avoid usage of complicated stored procedures with primary key generation and keep things generic and scalable. Primary key generation issue is addressed separately by using of the GENERATE_PK attribute (see below).
BLTIN
Applicable to: COLUMN Required for: None
Represents a perl built-in function. before invocation of this subroutine the package prepares array CW@_ and makes it visible to the built-in function. The 3 arguments received by the built-in are: CW$self - DBIx::XMLMessage object CW$node - Correspondent DBIx::XMLMessage::COLUMN object. You can use it to obtain other column attributes, e.g. CW$node->{DATATYPE} CW$value - The column value
Meaning of the value depends on direction of the message, i.e. whether the message is inbound or outbound. In case of inbound message, this is the value received by the package from outside world; if the message is inbound then this is the value selected from database. There's one built-in function that comes with the package fix_gmdatetime. It converts date and time to GMT for outbound messages and from GMT to the database date/time for inbound messages. Just add one attribute to your datetime column:
... BLTIN="fix_gmdatetime" ...
CARDINALITY
Applicable to: KEY, PARAMETER, REFERENCE, CHILD Required for: None Possible values: REQUIRED, OPTIONAL Default: REQUIRED
This parameter has different meaning for different element types. Optional KEYs and PARAMETERs allow to proceed execution if the value for it was not found at some point of execution. Optional CHILDs and REFERENCEs will be skipped from execution, and hence from output, if the package failed to collect all the key values.
DATATYPE
Applicable to: KEY, PARAMETER, COLUMN Required for: None Possible values: CHAR, VARCHAR, VARCHAR2, DATE, DATETIME, NUMERIC Default: CHAR
This attribute loosely corresponds to the database column type. The only processing difference in the core package is quoting of the non-numeric datatypes, particularly those containign substrings CHAR, DATE or TIME. The built-in fix_gmdatetime utilizes this attribute more extensively.
DEBUG
Recognized but not currently supported
DEFAULT
Applicable to: PARAMETER, COLUMN Required for: None Possible values: Any string or number
This attribute allows to provide a default value for COLUMNs and PARAMETERS. Please note that default values are not being formatted, so they have to represent the literal value. E.g. if you want to provide a string DEFAULT it would look somewhat like this: ... DEFAULT = 'UNKNOWN'
EXPR
Applicable to: All template tags Required for: None
For COLUMN and KEY this attribute represents the actual database column name or a constant. For PARAMETER
FACE
Applicable to: COLUMN Required for: None Possible values: ATTRIBUTE, TAG Default: TAG
This attribute allows to output certain columns as attributes, as opposed to the default TAG-fasion output. Since it's not supported for inbound messages yet, usage of this feature is not recommended.
GENERATE_PK
Applicable to: COLUMN Required for: None Possible values: HASH, SQL returning one value or name
This attribute allows you to specify how to generate primary key values. You have 2 options here:
1. You can write your own Perl function, put its reference to the global hash under the name of the table for which you intend to generate primary key values and provide the value of 'HASH' as the GENERATE_PK value
2. You can put the generating SQL block/statement into the GENERATE_PK value
HIDDEN
Applicable to: COLUMN
Indicates that the column will be excluded from the output. This attribute only makes sense for outbound messages.
MAXROWS
Currently not supported. In future, intends to limits the number of selected rows.
PARENT_NAME
Applicable to: KEY
Indicates the name of the tag one level up to which this one tag is corresponding. E.g.
... <COLUMN NAME='OBJECT_ID'/> <REFERENCE ...> <KEY NAME='nOrderId' PARENT_NAME='OBJECT_ID'/> </REFERENCE>
This feature is a workaround allowing to have two columns descending from the same parent column at the same level. There was some other prolem it was helping to resolve, but I forgot what it was ;^)
PROC
Applicable to: TEMPLATE, REFERENCE, CHILD
Used in conjunction with ACTION='PROC'. Defines the name of the stored procedure to invoke.
RTRIMTEXT
Currently not supported. The package does automatic right-trimming for all the character data.
TABLE
Name of the table against which the SQL will be run.
TOLERANCE
Applicable to: TEMPLATE, REFERENCE, CHILD Possible values: IGNORE, CREATE, REJECT Default: IGNORE
Allows to adjust package behaviour when SQL execution produces unexpected result columns. E.g. if there's a stored procedure that will return the results for your message, you can omit describing of all the resulting COLUMNS in the template and instead specify ... TOLERANCE='CREATE' Whatever columns are returned by the stored procedure (Sybase & MS SQL) will be added on-the-fly and available for the output.
WHERE_CLAUSE
Additional where clause. Added as an AND component at the end of generated where clause.
METHODS
new
my $xmsg = new DBIx::XMLMessage ( [ _OnError => $err_coderef, ] [ _OnTrace => $trace_coderef, ] [ Handlers => $expat_handlers_hashref, ] [ TemplateString => $xml_template_as_a_string, ] [ TemplateFile => $xml_template_file_name, ] )
You can specify either TemplateString or TemplateFile, but not both. If any of those specified, the template will be parsed.
set_handlers
$xmsg->set_handlers ($expat_handlers_hashref)
Set additional expat handlers, see XML::Parser::Expat. Normally you won't use this. The only case I could think of is processing of encoding..
prepare_template
$xmsg->prepare_template ($template_xml_string)
This method can be invoked if the template was not specified in the 'new' method invocation.
prepare_template_from_file
$xmsg->prepare_template_from_file ($template_file_name)
Same as above, but template is read from file here.
input_xml
$xmsg->input_xml ($inbound_xml_message_content)
Parse an inbound XML message. The values form this message will be used to fill in COLUMNS and PARAMETERS. The structure of this message should comply with template. Uses Tree parsing style.
input_xml_file
$xmsg->input_xml_file ($inbound_xml_message_file_name)
Same as above, but the XML message is read from a file.
populate_objects
$xmsg->populate_objects ($global_hash_ref [, $matching_object [, $tag_name [, $tag_content, [$parameter_index]]]])
This method is trying to stuff the existing template with the inbound message previously parsed by one of the 'input_xml' methods. The only mandatory attribute is global hash reference, which has to contain key values for the topmost tag TEMPLATE.
rexec
$xmsg->rexec ($dbh, $global_hash_ref)
This method is running the created query against a DBI/DBD source and fills in the template with results in order to make them available for subsequent output_message call. In case of INSERT/UPDATE operations only key values will be filled in.
output_message
This method returns a string with query results in XML format suitable for printing or whatever manupulations seem appropriate.
SEE ALSO
XML::Parser XML::Parser::Expat
AUTHORS
Andrei Nossov <andrein@andrein.com>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.