root/branches/release-39/lib/MT/Object.pm @ 2500

Revision 2500, 77.9 kB (checked in by fumiakiy, 18 months ago)

Modernized how sort argument is specified in group_by query. BugId:79977. The legacy way of specifying it is still allowed but discouraged.

  • Property svn:keywords set to Author Date Id Revision
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1# Movable Type (r) Open Source (C) 2001-2008 Six Apart, Ltd.
2# This program is distributed under the terms of the
3# GNU General Public License, version 2.
4#
5# $Id$
6
7package MT::Object;
8
9use strict;
10use base qw( Data::ObjectDriver::BaseObject MT::ErrorHandler );
11
12use MT;
13use MT::Util qw(offset_time_list);
14
15my (@PRE_INIT_PROPS, @PRE_INIT_META);
16
17sub install_pre_init_properties {
18    # Just in case; to prevent any weird recursion
19    local $MT::plugins_installed = 1;
20
21    foreach my $def (@PRE_INIT_PROPS) {
22        my ($class, $props) = @$def;
23        $class->install_properties($props);
24    }
25    @PRE_INIT_PROPS = ();
26
27    foreach my $def (@PRE_INIT_META) {
28        my ($class, $meta) = @$def;
29        $class->install_meta($meta);
30    }
31    @PRE_INIT_META = ();
32}
33
34sub install_properties {
35    my $class = shift;
36    my ($props) = @_;
37
38    if ( ( $class ne 'MT::Config') && ( !$MT::plugins_installed ) ) {
39        # We're too early in the phase of MT's bootstrapping to
40        # be installing properties; we can't query the registry yet
41        # since plugins are not all accounted for. So save this
42        # set of properties to install it later (odds are, the
43        # package has been loaded to afford installing callbacks
44        # or accessing constants and isn't being used to load
45        # actual data.)
46        #
47        # The only exception to this rule is MT::Config; we must
48        # have access to the MT configuration table in order to
49        # bootstrap MT.
50
51        push @PRE_INIT_PROPS, [$class, $props];
52        return;
53    }
54
55    my %meta;
56
57    my $super_props = $class->SUPER::properties();
58    $props->{meta} = 1 if $super_props && $super_props->{meta};
59
60    if ($props->{meta}) {
61        # yank out any meta columns before we start working on column_defs
62        $meta{$_} = delete $props->{column_defs}{$_}
63            for grep { $props->{column_defs}{$_} =~ m/\bmeta\b/ }
64            keys %{ $props->{column_defs} };
65    }
66
67    if ($super_props) {
68        # subclass; merge hash
69        for (qw(primary_key class_column datasource driver audit)) {
70            $props->{$_} = $super_props->{$_}
71                if exists $super_props->{$_} && !(exists $props->{$_});
72        }
73        for my $p (qw(column_defs defaults indexes)) {
74            if (exists $super_props->{$p}) {
75                foreach my $k (keys %{ $super_props->{$p} }) {
76                    if (!exists $props->{$p}{$k}) {
77                        $props->{$p}{$k} = $super_props->{$p}{$k};
78                    }
79                }
80                if ($p eq 'column_defs') {
81                    $class->__parse_defs($props->{column_defs});
82                }
83            }
84        }
85        if ($super_props->{class_type}) {
86            # copy reference of class_to_type/type_to_class hashes
87            $props->{__class_to_type} = $super_props->{__class_to_type};
88            $props->{__type_to_class} = $super_props->{__type_to_class};
89        }
90    }
91
92    # Legacy MT::Object types only define 'columns'; we still support that
93    # but they aren't handled properly with the upgrade system as a result.
94    if (! exists $props->{column_defs}) {
95        map { $props->{column_defs}{$_} = () } @{ $props->{columns} };
96    }
97    $props->{columns} = [ keys %{ $props->{column_defs} } ];
98
99    # Support audit flags
100    if ($props->{audit}) {
101        unless (exists $props->{column_defs}{created_on}) {
102            $props->{column_defs}{created_on} = 'datetime';
103            $props->{column_defs}{created_by} = 'integer';
104            $props->{column_defs}{modified_on} = 'datetime';
105            $props->{column_defs}{modified_by} = 'integer';
106            push @{ $props->{columns} }, qw( created_on created_by modified_on modified_by );
107        }
108    }
109
110    # Classed object types
111    $props->{class_column} ||= 'class' if exists $props->{class_type};
112    if (my $col = $props->{class_column}) {
113        if (!$props->{column_defs}{$col}) {
114            $props->{column_defs}{$col} = 'string(255)';
115            push @{$props->{columns}}, $col;
116            $props->{indexes}{$col} = 1;
117        }
118        if (!$super_props || !$super_props->{class_column}) {
119            $class->add_trigger( pre_search => \&_pre_search_scope_terms_to_class );
120            $class->add_trigger( post_load => \&_post_load_rebless_object );
121        }
122        if (my $type = $props->{class_type}) {
123            $props->{defaults}{$col} = $type;
124            $props->{__class_to_type}{$class} = $type;
125            $props->{__type_to_class}{$type} = $class;
126        }
127    }
128
129    my $type_id;
130    if ($type_id = $props->{class_type}) {
131        if ($type_id ne $props->{datasource}) {
132            $type_id = $props->{datasource} . '.' . $type_id;
133        }
134    } else {
135        $type_id = $props->{datasource};
136    }
137
138    $class->SUPER::install_properties($props);
139
140    # check for any supplemental columns from other components
141    my $more_props = MT->registry('object_types', $type_id);
142    if ($more_props && (ref($more_props) eq 'ARRAY')) {
143        my $cols = {};
144        for my $prop (@$more_props) {
145            next if ref($prop) ne 'HASH';
146            MT::__merge_hash($cols, $prop, 1);
147        }
148        my @classes = grep { !ref($_) } @$more_props;
149        foreach my $isa_class (@classes) {
150            next if UNIVERSAL::isa($class, $isa_class);
151            eval "# line " . __LINE__ . " " . __FILE__ . "\nno warnings 'all';require $isa_class;" or die;
152            no strict 'refs'; ## no critic
153            push @{$class . '::ISA'}, $isa_class;
154        }
155        if (%$cols) {
156            # special case for 'plugin' key...
157            delete $cols->{plugin} if exists $cols->{plugin};
158            for my $name (keys %$cols) {
159                next if exists $props->{column_defs}{$name};
160                if ($cols->{$name} =~ m/\bmeta\b/) {
161                    $meta{$name} = $cols->{$name};
162                    next;
163                }
164
165                $class->install_column($name, $cols->{$name});
166                $props->{indexes}{$name} = 1
167                    if $cols->{$name} =~ m/\bindexed\b/;
168                if ($cols->{$name} =~ m/\bdefault (?:'([^']+?)'|(\d+))\b/) {
169                    $props->{defaults}{$name} = defined $1 ? $1 : $2;
170                }
171            }
172        }
173    }
174
175    my $pk = $props->{primary_key} || '';
176    @{$props->{columns}} = sort { $a eq $pk ? -1 : $b eq $pk ? 1 : $a cmp $b }
177        @{$props->{columns}};
178
179    # Child classes are declared as an array;
180    # convert them to a hashref for easier lookup.
181    if ((ref $props->{child_classes}) eq 'ARRAY') {
182        my $classes = $props->{child_classes};
183        $props->{child_classes} = {};
184        @{$props->{child_classes}}{@$classes} = ();
185    }
186
187    # We're declared as a child of some other class; associate ourselves
188    # with that package (the invoking class should have already use'd it.)
189    if (exists $props->{child_of}) {
190        my $parent_classes = $props->{child_of};
191        if (!ref $parent_classes) {
192            $parent_classes = [ $parent_classes ];
193        }
194        foreach my $pc (@$parent_classes) {
195            my $pp = $pc->properties;
196            $pp->{child_classes} ||= {};
197            $pp->{child_classes}{$class} = ();
198        }
199    }
200
201    # Special handling for 'Taggable' objects; automatic saving
202    # and removal of tags.
203    my @isa;
204    {
205        no strict 'refs';
206        @isa = @{ $class . '::ISA' };
207    }
208    foreach my $isa_pkg ( @isa ) {
209        next unless $isa_pkg =~ /able$/;
210        next if $isa_pkg eq $class;
211        if ($isa_pkg->can('install_properties')) {
212            $isa_pkg->install_properties($class);
213        }
214    }
215
216    # install legacy date translation
217    if (0 < scalar @{ $class->columns_of_type('datetime', 'timestamp') }) {
218        if ($props->{audit}) {
219            $class->add_trigger( pre_save  => \&_assign_audited_fields);
220            $class->add_trigger( post_save => \&_translate_audited_fields );
221        }
222
223        $class->add_trigger( pre_save  => _get_date_translator(\&_ts2db, 1) );
224        $class->add_trigger( post_load => _get_date_translator(\&_db2ts, 0) );
225    }
226
227    if ( exists($props->{cacheable}) && !$props->{cacheable} ) {
228        no warnings 'redefine';
229        no strict 'refs'; ## no critic
230        *{$class . '::driver'} = sub { $_[0]->dbi_driver(@_) };
231    }
232
233    # inherit parent's metadata setup
234    if ($props->{meta}) { # if ($super_props && $super_props->{meta_installed}) {
235        $class->install_meta({ ( %meta ? ( column_defs => \%meta ) : ( columns => [] ) ) });
236        $class->add_trigger( post_remove => \&remove_meta );
237    }
238
239    return $props;
240}
241
242# A post-load trigger for classed objects
243sub _post_load_rebless_object {
244    my $obj = shift;
245    my $props = $obj->properties;
246    if (my $col = $props->{class_column}) {
247        my $type = $obj->column($col);
248        my $pkg = ref($obj);
249        if ($pkg->class_type ne $type) {
250            if (my $class = $props->{__type_to_class}{$type}) {
251                bless $obj, $class;
252            } else {
253                my %models = map { $_ => 1 } MT->models($props->{datasource});
254                if (exists $models{ $props->{datasource} . '.' . $type}) {
255                    $class = MT->model($props->{datasource} . '.' . $type);
256                } elsif (exists $models{$type}) {
257                    $class = MT->model($type);
258                }
259                bless $obj, $class if $class;
260            }
261        }
262    }
263}
264
265# A pre-search trigger for classed objects
266sub _pre_search_scope_terms_to_class {
267    my ($class, $terms, $args) = @_;
268    # scope search terms to class
269
270    $terms ||= {};
271    return if (ref $terms eq 'HASH') && exists($terms->{id});
272
273    my $props = $class->properties;
274    my $col = $props->{class_column}
275        or return;
276    if (ref $terms eq 'HASH') {
277        my $no_class = 0;
278        if ($args->{no_class}) {
279            delete $args->{no_class};
280            $no_class = 1;
281        }
282        if (exists $terms->{$col}) {
283            if ( ( $terms->{$col} eq '*' ) || $no_class ) {
284                # class term is '*', which signifies filtering for all classes.
285                # simply delete the term in this case.
286                delete $terms->{$col} ;
287            } elsif ($terms->{$col} =~ m/^(\w+:)\*$/) {
288                # class term is in form "foo:*"; translate to a sql-compatible
289                # syntax of "like 'foo:%'"
290                $terms->{$col} = \"like '$1%'";
291            }
292            # term has been explicitly given or explictly removed. make
293            # no further changes.
294            return;
295        }
296        $terms->{$col} = $props->{class_type}
297            unless $no_class;
298    }
299    elsif (ref $terms eq 'ARRAY') {
300        if (my @class_terms = grep { ref $_ eq 'HASH' && 1 == scalar keys %$_ && $_->{$col} } @$terms) {
301            # Filter out any unlimiting class terms (class = *).
302            @$terms = grep { ref $_ ne 'HASH' || 1 != scalar keys %$_ || !$_->{$col} || $_->{$col} ne '*' } @$terms;
303
304            # The class column has been explicitly given or removed, so don't
305            # add one.
306            return;
307        }
308        @$terms = ( { $col => $props->{class_type} } => 'AND' => [ @$terms ] );
309    }
310}
311
312sub class_label {
313    my $pkg = shift;
314    return MT->translate($pkg->datasource);
315}
316
317sub class_label_plural {
318    my $pkg = shift;
319    my $label = $pkg->datasource;
320    $label =~ s/y$/ie/;
321    $label .= 's';
322    return MT->translate($label);
323}
324
325sub class_labels {
326    my $pkg = shift;
327    my @all_types = MT->models($pkg->properties->{datasource});
328    my %names;
329    foreach my $type (@all_types) {
330        my $class = $pkg->class_handler($type);
331        $names{$type} = $class->class_label;
332    }
333    return \%names;
334}
335
336# Returns a hashref of asset identifiers mapped to the localized string
337# used to name them. (Ie, image => 'Image').
338sub class_type {
339    my $pkg = shift;
340    if (ref $pkg) {
341        return $pkg->column($pkg->properties->{class_column});
342    } else {
343        return $pkg->properties->{class_type};
344    }
345}
346
347sub class_handler {
348    my $pkg = shift;
349    my $props = $pkg->properties;
350    my ($type) = @_;
351    my $package = $props->{__type_to_class}{$type};
352    unless ($package) {
353        my $ds = $props->{datasource};
354        if (($type eq $ds) || ($type =~ m/\./)) {
355            $package = MT->model($type);
356        } else {
357            $package = MT->model($ds . '.' . $type);
358        }
359    }
360    if ($package) {
361        if (defined *{$package.'::new'}) {
362            return $package;
363        } else {
364            eval "# line " . __LINE__ . " " . __FILE__ . "\nno warnings 'all';use $package;";
365            return $package unless $@;
366            eval "# line " . __LINE__ . " " . __FILE__ . "\nno warnings 'all';use $pkg; $package->new;";
367            return $package unless $@;
368        }
369    }
370    return $pkg;
371}
372
373sub add_class {
374    my $pkg = shift;
375    my ($type, $class) = @_;
376    my $props = $pkg->properties;
377    if ($type =~ m/::/) {
378        ($type, $class) = ($class, $type);
379    }
380
381    if (my $old_class = $props->{__type_to_class}{$type}) {
382        delete $props->{__class_to_type}{$old_class};
383    }
384    $props->{__type_to_class}{$type} = $class;
385    $props->{__class_to_type}{$class} = $type;
386}
387
388# 'meta' metadata column support
389
390sub new {
391    my $class = shift;
392    my $obj = $class->SUPER::new(@_);
393    if ($obj->properties->{meta_installed}) {
394        $obj->init_meta();
395    }
396    return $obj;
397}
398
399sub init_meta {
400    my $obj = shift;
401    require MT::Meta::Proxy;
402    $obj->{__meta} = MT::Meta::Proxy->new($obj);
403}
404
405sub install_meta {
406    my $class = shift;
407    my ($params) = @_;
408    if ( ( $class ne 'MT::Config' ) && (!$MT::plugins_installed) ) {
409        push @PRE_INIT_META, [$class, $params];
410        return;
411    }
412
413    require MT::Meta;
414    my $pkg = ref $class || $class;
415    if (!$pkg->SUPER::properties->{meta_installed}) {
416        $pkg->add_trigger( post_save => \&_post_save_save_metadata );
417        $pkg->add_trigger( post_load => \&_post_load_initialize_metadata );
418    }
419
420    my $props = $class->properties;
421
422    if (!$params->{columns} && !$params->{fields} && !$params->{column_defs}) {
423        return $class->error('No meta fields specified to install_meta');
424    }
425
426    $params->{fields} ||= [];
427    if (my $cols = delete $params->{columns}) {
428        foreach my $col (@$cols) {
429            push @{ $params->{fields} }, {
430                name => $col,
431                type => 'vblob',
432            };
433            # $props->{fields}{$col} = 'vblob';
434        }
435    }
436    if (my $cols = delete $params->{column_defs}) {
437        foreach my $col ( keys %$cols ) {
438            my $type = $cols->{$col};
439            $type =~ s/\s.*//; # take first keyword, ignoring anything after
440            $type .= '_indexed'
441                if $cols->{$col} =~ m/\bindexed\b/;
442            $type = MT::Meta->normalize_type($type);
443
444            push @{ $params->{fields} }, {
445                name => $col,
446                type => $type,
447            };
448            # $props->{fields}{$col} = $type;
449        }
450    }
451
452    $params->{datasource} ||= $class->datasource . '_meta';
453
454    if ($props->{meta_installed} && !@{ $params->{fields} }) {
455        return 1;
456    }
457
458    if (my $fields = MT::Meta->install($pkg, $params)) {
459        # we may have inherited meta fields so lets update with
460        # the fields returned by MT::Meta
461        $props->{fields}->{$_} = $fields->{$_} for keys %$fields;
462    }
463
464    return $props->{meta_installed} = 1;
465}
466
467sub meta_args {
468    my $class = shift;
469    my $id_field = $class->datasource . '_id';
470    return {
471        key         => $class->datasource,
472        column_defs => {
473            $id_field         => 'integer not null',
474            type              => 'string(75) not null',
475            vchar             => 'string(255)',
476            vchar_idx         => 'string(255)',
477            vdatetime         => 'datetime',
478            vdatetime_idx     => 'datetime',
479            vinteger          => 'integer',
480            vinteger_idx      => 'integer',
481            vfloat            => 'float',
482            vfloat_idx        => 'float',
483            vblob             => 'blob',
484            vclob             => 'text',
485        },
486        columns => [ $id_field, qw(
487            type
488            vchar
489            vchar_idx
490            vdatetime
491            vdatetime_idx
492            vinteger
493            vinteger_idx
494            vfloat
495            vfloat_idx
496            vblob
497            vclob
498        ) ],
499        indexes => {
500            $id_field => 1,
501            id_type   => { columns => [ $id_field, 'type' ] },
502            id_type_vchar => { columns => [ $id_field, 'type', 'vchar_idx' ] },
503            id_type_vdt => { columns => [ $id_field, 'type',
504                'vdatetime_idx' ] },
505            id_type_vint => { columns => [ $id_field, 'type',
506                'vinteger_idx' ] },
507            id_type_vflt => { columns => [ $id_field, 'type',
508                'vfloat_idx' ] },
509        },
510        primary_key => [ $id_field, 'type' ],
511    };
512}
513
514sub has_meta {
515    my $obj = shift;
516    return $obj->is_meta_column(@_) if @_;
517    return $obj->properties->{meta_installed} ? 1 : 0;
518}
519
520sub _post_load_initialize_metadata {
521    my $obj = shift;
522    if (defined $obj && $obj->properties->{meta_installed}) {
523        $obj->init_meta();
524        $obj->{__meta}->set_primary_keys($obj);
525    }
526}
527
528sub is_meta_column {
529    my $obj = shift;
530    my ($field) = @_;
531
532    my $props = $obj->properties;
533    return unless $props->{meta_installed};
534
535    my $meta = $obj->meta_pkg;
536    return 1 if $props->{fields}{$field};
537
538    return;
539}
540
541sub meta_pkg {
542    my $class = shift;
543    my $props = $class->properties;
544    return unless $props->{meta}; # this only works for meta-enabled classes
545
546    return $props->{meta_pkg} if $props->{meta_pkg};
547
548    my $meta = ref $class || $class;
549    $meta .= '::Meta';
550    return $props->{meta_pkg} = $meta;
551}
552
553sub has_column {
554    my $obj = shift;
555    return 1 if $obj->SUPER::has_column(@_);
556    return 1 if $obj->is_meta_column(@_);
557    return;
558}
559
560sub _post_save_save_metadata {
561    my $obj = shift;
562    if (defined $obj && exists $obj->{__meta}) {
563        $obj->{__meta}->set_primary_keys($obj);
564        $obj->{__meta}->save;
565    }
566}
567
568sub meta {
569    my $obj = shift;
570    my ( $name, $value ) = @_;
571
572    return !$obj->{__meta} ? undef
573         : 2 == scalar @_  ? $obj->{__meta}->set( $name, $value )
574         : 1 == scalar @_  ? (
575           ref($name) eq 'HASH' ? $obj->{__meta}->set_hash(@_)
576             :                    $obj->{__meta}->get($name) )
577         :                   $obj->{__meta}->get_hash;
578}
579
580sub meta_obj {
581    my $obj = shift;
582    return $obj->{__meta};
583}
584
585sub column_func {
586    my $obj = shift;
587    my ($col) = @_;
588    return if !$col;
589
590    return $obj->SUPER::column_func(@_)
591        if !$obj->is_meta_column($col);
592
593    return sub {
594        my $obj = shift;
595        if (@_) {
596            $obj->{__meta}->set($col, @_);
597        }
598        else {
599            $obj->{__meta}->get($col);
600        }
601    };
602}
603
604sub _ts2db { 
605    return unless $_[0]; 
606    if($_[0] =~ m{ \A \d{4} - }xms) { 
607        return $_[0]; 
608    } 
609    my $ret = sprintf '%04d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d', unpack 'A4A2A2A2A2A2', $_[0]; 
610    return $ret; 
611}
612 
613sub _db2ts { 
614    my $ts = $_[0];
615    $ts =~ s/(?:\+|-)\d{2}$//;
616    $ts =~ tr/\- ://d;
617    return $ts;
618}
619
620sub _get_date_translator {
621    my $translator = shift;
622    my $change = shift;
623    return sub {
624        my $obj = shift;
625        my $dbd = $obj->driver->dbd;
626        FIELD: for my $field (@{$obj->columns_of_type('datetime', 'timestamp')}) {
627            my $value = $obj->column($field);
628            next FIELD if !defined $value;
629            my $new_val = $translator->($value); 
630            if((defined $new_val) && ($new_val ne $value)) {
631                $obj->column($field, $new_val, { no_changed_flag => !$change });
632            }
633        }
634        if ( $obj->has_meta ) {
635            my @meta_columns = MT::Meta->metadata_by_class( ref $obj );
636            my @date_meta = grep {
637                   $_->{type} eq 'vdatetime'
638                || $_->{type} eq 'vdatetime_idx'
639            } @meta_columns;
640            META_FIELD: for my $f (@date_meta) {
641                my $field = $f->{name};
642                my $value = $obj->$field;
643                next META_FIELD if !defined $value;
644                my $new_val = $translator->($value); 
645                if((defined $new_val) && ($new_val ne $value)) {
646                    $obj->$field( $new_val );
647                }
648            }
649        }
650    };
651}
652
653sub _translate_audited_fields {
654    my ($obj, $orig_obj) = @_;
655    my $dbd = $obj->driver->dbd;
656    FIELD: for my $field (qw( created_on modified_on )) {
657        my $value = $orig_obj->column($field);
658        next FIELD if !defined $value;
659        my $new_val = _db2ts($value); 
660        if((defined $new_val) && ($new_val ne $value)) {
661            $orig_obj->column($field, $new_val);
662        }
663    }
664    return;
665}
666
667sub nextprev {
668    my $obj = shift;
669    my $class = ref($obj);
670    my %param = @_;
671    my ($direction, $terms, $args, $by_field)
672        = @param{qw( direction terms args by )};
673    return undef unless ($direction eq 'next' || $direction eq 'previous');
674    my $next = $direction eq 'next';
675
676    if (!$by_field) {
677        return if !$class->properties->{audit};
678        $by_field = 'created_on';
679    }
680
681    # Selecting the adjacent object can be tricky since timestamps
682    # are not necessarily unique for entries. If we find that the
683    # next/previous object has a matching timestamp, keep selecting entries
684    # to select all entries with the same timestamp, then compare them using
685    # id as a secondary sort column.
686
687    my ($id, $ts) = ($obj->id, $obj->$by_field());
688    local @$args{qw( sort range_incl )}
689        = ( [ { column => $by_field, desc => $next ? 'ASC' : 'DESC' },
690            { column => 'id', desc => $next ? 'ASC' : 'DESC' } ],
691            { $by_field => 1 });
692
693    my $sibling = $class->load({
694        $by_field => ($next ? [ $ts, undef ] : [ undef, $ts ]),
695        'id' => $id,
696        %{$terms}
697    }, { not => { 'id' => 1 }, limit => 1, %$args });
698
699    return $sibling;
700}
701
702## Drivers.
703
704sub count          { shift->_proxy('count',          @_) }
705sub exist          { shift->_proxy('exist',          @_) }
706sub count_group_by { shift->_proxy('count_group_by', @_) }
707sub sum_group_by   { shift->_proxy('sum_group_by',   @_) }
708sub avg_group_by   { shift->_proxy('avg_group_by',   @_) }
709sub max_group_by   { shift->_proxy('max_group_by',   @_) }
710sub remove_all     { shift->_proxy('remove_all',     @_) }
711
712sub save {
713    my $obj = shift;
714    my $res = eval {
715        my $dbh = $obj->driver->rw_handle;
716        local $dbh->{RaiseError} = 1;
717        $obj->SUPER::save(@_);
718    };
719    if (my $err = $@) {
720        return $obj->error($err);
721    }
722    return $res;
723}
724
725sub remove {
726    my $obj = shift;
727    my(@args) = @_;
728    if (!ref $obj) {
729        $obj->remove_meta( @args ) if $obj->has_meta;
730        $obj->remove_scores( @args ) if $obj->isa('MT::Scorable');
731        return $obj->driver->direct_remove($obj, @args);
732    } else {
733        return $obj->driver->remove($obj, @args);
734    }
735}
736
737sub load {
738    my $self = shift;
739    if (defined $_[0] && (!ref $_[0] || (ref $_[0] ne 'HASH' && ref $_[0] ne 'ARRAY'))) {
740        return $self->lookup($_[0]);
741    } else {
742        if (wantarray) {
743            ## MT::Object::load returns a list in list context, just like
744            ## a D::OD search.
745            return $self->search(@_);
746        } else {
747            ## MT::Object::load returns the first result in scalar context.
748            my $iter = $self->search(@_);
749            return if !defined $iter;
750            return $iter->();
751        }
752    }
753}
754
755# More or less replacing Data::ObjectDriver::Driver::DBI::search here
756# to provide an 'early-finish' iterator as MT::ObjectDriver had provided.
757
758sub load_iter   {
759    my $class = shift;
760    my($terms, $args) = @_;
761
762    my $driver = $class->driver;
763    my $dbi_driver = $driver;
764
765    while ( $dbi_driver->isa('Data::ObjectDriver::Driver::BaseCache') ) {
766        $dbi_driver = $dbi_driver->fallback;
767    }
768
769    if ($dbi_driver->dbd eq 'MT::ObjectDriver::Driver::DBD::SQLite') {
770        # for SQLite, use search method, since this technique
771        # will cause it to lock the table
772        return scalar $class->search(@_);
773    }
774
775    my $rec = {};
776    my $sth = $dbi_driver->fetch($rec, $class, $terms, $args);
777
778    my $iter = sub {
779        ## This is kind of a hack--we need $driver to stay in scope,
780        ## so that the DESTROY method isn't called. So we include it
781        ## in the scope of the closure.
782        my $d = $dbi_driver;
783        my $d2 = $driver;
784
785        if (@_ && ($_[0] eq 'finish')) {
786            if ($sth) {
787                $sth->finish;
788                $dbi_driver->end_query($sth);
789            }
790            undef $sth;
791            return;
792        }
793
794        unless ($sth->fetch) {
795            $sth->finish;
796            $dbi_driver->end_query($sth);
797            return;
798        }
799        my $obj;
800        $obj = $class->new;
801        $obj->set_values_internal($rec);
802        ## Don't need a duplicate as there's no previous version in memory
803        ## to preserve.
804        $obj->call_trigger('post_load') unless $args->{no_triggers};
805        $driver->cache_object($obj) if $obj && (!$args->{fetchonly});
806        $obj;
807    };
808    return $iter;
809}
810
811## Callbacks
812
813sub _assign_audited_fields {
814    my ($obj, $orig_obj) = @_;
815    if ($obj->properties->{audit}) {
816        my $blog_id;
817        if ($obj->has_column('blog_id')) {
818            $blog_id = $obj->blog_id;
819        }
820        my @ts = offset_time_list(time, $blog_id);
821        my $ts = sprintf '%04d%02d%02d%02d%02d%02d',
822            $ts[5]+1900, $ts[4]+1, @ts[3,2,1,0];
823
824        my $app = MT->instance;
825        if ($app && $app->can('user')) {
826            if (my $user = $app->user) {
827                if (!defined $obj->created_on) {
828                    $obj->created_by($user->id);
829                    $orig_obj->created_by($obj->created_by);
830                }
831            }
832        }
833        unless ($obj->created_on) {
834            $obj->created_on($ts);
835            $orig_obj->created_on($ts);
836            # intentionally not calling modified_by to distinguish
837            $obj->modified_on($ts);
838            $orig_obj->modified_on($ts);
839        }
840    }
841}
842
843sub modified_by {
844    my $obj = shift;
845    my ($user_id) = @_;
846    if ($user_id) {
847        if ($obj->properties->{audit}) {
848            my $res = $obj->SUPER::modified_by($user_id);
849
850            my $blog_id;
851            if ($obj->has_column('blog_id')) {
852                $blog_id = $obj->blog_id;
853            }
854            my @ts = offset_time_list(time, $blog_id);
855            my $ts = sprintf '%04d%02d%02d%02d%02d%02d',
856                $ts[5]+1900, $ts[4]+1, @ts[3,2,1,0];
857            $obj->modified_on($ts);
858            return $res;
859        }
860    }
861    return $obj->SUPER::modified_by(@_);
862}
863
864# D::OD uses Class::Trigger. Map the call_trigger calls to also invoke
865# MT's callbacks (but internal Class::Trigger routines should be invoked
866# first in the case of pre-triggers, and last in the case of post-triggers).
867
868sub call_trigger {
869    my $obj = shift;
870    my $name = shift;
871    my $class = ref $obj || $obj;
872    my $pre_trigger = $name =~ m/^pre_/;
873    $obj->SUPER::call_trigger($name, @_) if $pre_trigger;
874    MT->run_callbacks($class . '::' . $name, $obj, @_);
875    $obj->SUPER::call_trigger($name, @_) unless $pre_trigger;
876}
877
878# Support for MT-based callbacks.
879
880sub add_callback {
881    my $class = shift;
882    my $meth = shift;
883    MT->add_callback($class . '::' . $meth, @_);
884}
885
886## Construction/initialization.
887
888sub init {
889    my $obj = shift;
890    $obj->SUPER::init(@_);
891    $obj->set_defaults();
892    return $obj;
893}
894
895sub set_defaults {
896    my $obj = shift;
897    my $defaults = $obj->properties->{'defaults'};
898    $obj->{'column_values'} = $defaults ? {%$defaults} : {};
899}
900
901sub __properties { }
902
903our $DRIVER;
904sub driver {
905    require MT::ObjectDriverFactory;
906    return $DRIVER ||= MT::ObjectDriverFactory->new;
907}
908
909# ref to the fallback driver for non-cacheable classes
910our $DBI_DRIVER;
911sub dbi_driver {
912    unless ($DBI_DRIVER) {
913        my $driver = driver(@_);
914        while ( $driver->can('fallback') ) {
915            if ($driver->fallback) {
916                $driver = $driver->fallback;
917            } else {
918                last;
919            }
920        }
921        $DBI_DRIVER = $driver;
922    }
923    return $DBI_DRIVER;
924}
925
926sub table_name {
927    my $obj = shift;
928    return $obj->driver->table_for($obj);
929}
930
931sub clone_all {
932    my $obj = shift;
933    my $clone = $obj->SUPER::clone_all();
934    if ($clone->properties->{meta_installed}) {
935        $clone->init_meta();
936        $clone->meta( $obj->meta );
937    }
938    return $clone;
939}
940
941sub clone {
942    my $obj = shift;
943    my($param) = @_;
944    my $clone = $obj->clone_all();
945
946    ## If the caller has listed a set of columns not to copy to the clone,
947    ## delete them from the clone.
948    if ($param && ($param->{Except} || $param->{except})) {
949        for my $col (keys %{ $param->{Except} || $param->{except} }) {
950            $clone->$col(undef);
951        }
952    }
953    return $clone;
954}
955
956sub columns_of_type {
957    my $obj = shift;
958    my(@types) = @_;
959    my $props = $obj->properties;
960    my $cols = $props->{columns};
961    my $col_defs = $obj->column_defs;
962    my @cols;
963    my %types = map { $_ => 1 } @types;
964    for my $col (@$cols) {
965        push @cols, $col
966            if $col_defs->{$col} && exists $types{$col_defs->{$col}{type}};
967    }
968    \@cols;
969}
970
971sub created_on_obj {
972    my $obj = shift;
973    return $obj->column_as_datetime('created_on');
974}
975
976sub column_as_datetime {
977    my $obj = shift;
978    my ($col) = @_;
979    if (my $ts = $obj->column($col)) {
980        my $blog;
981        if ($obj->isa('MT::Blog')) {
982            $blog = $obj;
983        } else {
984            if (my $blog_id = $obj->blog_id) {
985                require MT::Blog;
986                $blog = MT::Blog->lookup($blog_id);
987            }
988        }
989        my($y, $mo, $d, $h, $m, $s) = $ts =~ /(\d\d\d\d)[^\d]?(\d\d)[^\d]?(\d\d)[^\d]?(\d\d)[^\d]?(\d\d)[^\d]?(\d\d)/;
990        require MT::DateTime;
991        my $four_digit_offset;
992        if ($blog) {
993            $four_digit_offset = sprintf('%.02d%.02d', int($blog->server_offset),
994                                        60 * abs($blog->server_offset
995                                                 - int($blog->server_offset)));
996        }
997        return new MT::DateTime(year => $y, month => $mo, day => $d,
998                                hour => $h, minute => $m, second => $s,
999                                time_zone => $four_digit_offset);
1000    }
1001    undef;
1002}
1003
1004sub join_on {
1005    return [ @_ ];
1006}
1007
1008sub remove_meta {
1009    my $obj = shift;
1010    my $mpkg = $obj->meta_pkg or return;
1011    if ( ref $obj ) {
1012        my $id_field = $obj->datasource . '_id';
1013        return $mpkg->remove({ $id_field => $obj->id });
1014    } else {
1015        # static invocation
1016        my ($terms, $args) = @_;
1017        $args = { %$args } if $args; # copy so we can alter
1018        my $meta_id = $obj->datasource . '_id';
1019        my $offset = 0;
1020        $args ||= {};
1021        $args->{fetchonly} = [ 'id' ];
1022        $args->{join} = [ $mpkg, $meta_id ];
1023        $args->{no_triggers} = 1;
1024        $args->{limit} = 50;
1025        while ( $offset >= 0 ) {
1026            $args->{offset} = $offset;
1027            if (my @list = $obj->load( $terms, $args )) {
1028                my @ids = map { $_->id } @list;
1029                $mpkg->driver->direct_remove( $mpkg, { $meta_id => \@ids });
1030                if ( scalar @list == 50 ) {
1031                    $offset += 50;
1032                } else {
1033                    $offset = -1; # break loop
1034                }
1035            } else {
1036                $offset = -1;
1037            }
1038        }
1039        return 1;
1040    }
1041}
1042
1043sub remove_scores {
1044    my $class = shift;
1045    require MT::ObjectScore;
1046    my ($terms, $args) = @_;
1047    $args = { %$args } if $args; # copy so we can alter
1048    my $offset = 0;
1049    $args ||= {};
1050    $args->{fetchonly} = [ 'id' ];
1051    $args->{join} = [ 'MT::ObjectScore', 'object_id', {
1052        object_ds => $class->datasource } ];
1053    $args->{no_triggers} = 1;
1054    $args->{limit} = 50;
1055    while ( $offset >= 0 ) {
1056        $args->{offset} = $offset;
1057        if (my @list = $class->load( $terms, $args )) {
1058            my @ids = map { $_->id } @list;
1059            MT::ObjectScore->driver->direct_remove( 'MT::ObjectScore', {
1060                object_ds => $class->datasource, 'object_id' => \@ids });
1061            if ( scalar @list == 50 ) {
1062                $offset += 50;
1063            } else {
1064                $offset = -1; # break loop
1065            }
1066        } else {
1067            $offset = -1;
1068        }
1069    }
1070    return 1;
1071}
1072
1073sub remove_children {
1074    my $obj = shift;
1075    return 1 unless ref $obj;
1076
1077    my ($param) = @_;
1078    my $child_classes = $obj->properties->{child_classes} || {};
1079    my @classes = keys %$child_classes;
1080    return 1 unless @classes;
1081
1082    $param ||= {};
1083    my $key = $param->{key} || $obj->datasource . '_id';
1084    my $obj_id = $obj->id;
1085    for my $class (@classes) {
1086        eval "# line " . __LINE__ . " " . __FILE__ . "\nno warnings 'all';use $class;";
1087        $class->remove({ $key => $obj_id });
1088    }
1089    1;
1090}
1091
1092sub get_by_key {
1093    my $class = shift;
1094    my ($key) = @_;
1095    my($obj) = $class->search($key);
1096    $obj ||= new $class;
1097    $obj->set_values($key);
1098    return $obj;
1099}
1100
1101sub set_by_key {
1102    my $class = shift;
1103    my ($key, $value) = @_;
1104    my ($obj) = $class->search($key);
1105    unless ($obj) {
1106        $obj = new $class;
1107        $obj->set_values($key);
1108    }
1109    $obj->set_values($value) if $value;
1110    $obj->save or return $class->error($obj->errstr);
1111    return $obj;
1112}
1113
1114sub deflate {
1115    my $obj = shift;
1116    my $data = $obj->SUPER::deflate();
1117    if ($obj->has_meta()) {
1118        $data->{meta} = $obj->{__meta}->deflate_meta();
1119    }
1120    return $data;
1121}
1122
1123sub inflate {
1124    my $class = shift;
1125    my ($data) = @_;
1126    my $obj = $class->SUPER::inflate(@_);
1127    if ($class->has_meta()) {
1128        $obj->{__meta}->inflate_meta($data->{meta});
1129    }
1130    return $obj;
1131}
1132
1133# We override D::OD's set_values method here only allowing the
1134# assignment of a column if the value given is defined. There are
1135# some legacy reasons for doing this, mostly for backward
1136# compatibility.
1137sub set_values {
1138    my $obj = shift;
1139    my ($values) = @_;
1140    for my $col (keys %$values) {
1141        unless ( $obj->has_column($col) ) {
1142            Carp::croak("You tried to set inexistent column $col to value $values->{$col} on " . ref($obj));
1143        }
1144        $obj->$col($values->{$col}) if defined $values->{$col};
1145    }
1146}
1147
1148sub column_def {
1149    my $obj = shift;
1150    my ($name) = @_;
1151    my $defs = $obj->column_defs;
1152    my $def = $defs->{$name};
1153    if (!ref($def)) {
1154        $defs->{$name} = $def = $obj->__parse_def($name, $def);
1155    }
1156    return $def;
1157}
1158
1159sub index_defs {
1160    my $obj = shift;
1161    my $props = $obj->properties;
1162    $props->{indexes};
1163}
1164
1165sub column_defs {
1166    my $obj = shift;
1167    my $props = $obj->properties;
1168    my $defs = $props->{column_defs};
1169    return undef if !$defs;
1170    my ($key) = keys %$defs;
1171    if (!(ref $defs->{$key})) {
1172        $obj->__parse_defs($props->{column_defs});
1173    }
1174    $props->{column_defs};
1175}
1176
1177sub __parse_defs {
1178    my $obj = shift;
1179    my ($defs) = @_;
1180    foreach my $col ( keys %$defs ) {
1181        next if ref($defs->{$col});
1182        $defs->{$col} = $obj->__parse_def($col, $defs->{$col});
1183    }
1184}
1185
1186sub __parse_def {
1187    my $obj = shift;
1188    my ($col, $def) = @_;
1189    return undef if !defined $def;
1190    my $props = $obj->properties;
1191    my %def;
1192    if ($def =~ s/^([^( ]+)\s*//) {
1193        $def{type} = $1;
1194    }
1195    if ($def =~ s/^\((\d+)\)\s*//) {
1196        $def{size} = $1;
1197    }
1198    $def{not_null} = 1 if $def =~ m/\bnot null\b/i;
1199    $def{key} = 1 if $def =~ m/\bprimary key\b/i;
1200    $def{key} = 1 if ($props->{primary_key}) && ($props->{primary_key} eq $col);
1201    $def{auto} = 1 if $def =~ m/\bauto[_ ]increment\b/i;
1202    $def{default} = $props->{defaults}{$col}
1203        if exists $props->{defaults}{$col};
1204    \%def;
1205}
1206
1207sub cache_property {
1208    my $obj = shift;
1209    my $key = shift;
1210    my $code = shift;
1211    if (ref $key eq 'CODE') {
1212        ($key, $code) = ($code, $key);
1213    }
1214    $key ||= (caller(1))[3];
1215
1216    my $r = MT->request;
1217    my $oc = $r->cache('object_cache');
1218    unless ($oc) {
1219        $oc = {};
1220        $r->cache('object_cache', $oc);
1221    }
1222
1223    my $pk = $obj->primary_key;
1224    $pk = join ":", @$pk if ref $pk;
1225    $oc = $oc->{ref($obj). ':' . $pk} ||= {};
1226
1227    if (@_) {
1228        $oc->{$key} = $_[0];
1229    } else {
1230        if ((!exists $oc->{$key}) && $code) {
1231            $oc->{$key} = $code->($obj, @_);
1232        }
1233    }
1234    return exists $oc->{$key} ? $oc->{$key} : undef;
1235}
1236
1237sub clear_cache {
1238    my $obj = shift;
1239    my $oc = MT->request('object_cache') or return;
1240    if (@_) {
1241        $oc = $oc->{"$obj"};
1242        delete $oc->{shift} if $oc;
1243    } else {
1244        delete $oc->{"$obj"};
1245    }
1246}
1247
1248sub to_hash {
1249    my $obj = shift;
1250    my $hash = {};
1251    my $props = $obj->properties;
1252    my $pfx = $obj->datasource;
1253    my $values = $obj->column_values;
1254    foreach (keys %$values) {
1255        $hash->{"${pfx}.$_"} = $values->{$_};
1256    }
1257    if (my $meta = $props->{meta_columns}) {
1258        foreach (keys %$meta) {
1259            $hash->{"${pfx}.$_"} = $obj->meta($_);
1260        }
1261    }
1262    if ($obj->has_column('blog_id')) {
1263        my $blog_id = $obj->blog_id;
1264        require MT::Blog;
1265        if (my $blog = MT::Blog->lookup($blog_id)) {
1266            my $blog_hash = $blog->to_hash;
1267            $hash->{"${pfx}.$_"} = $blog_hash->{$_} foreach keys %$blog_hash;
1268        }
1269    }
1270    $hash;
1271}
1272
1273sub search_by_meta {
1274    my $class = shift;
1275    my($key, $value, $terms, $args) = @_;
1276    $terms ||= {}; $args ||= {};
1277    return unless $class->properties->{meta_installed};
1278    return $class->error("Unknown meta '$key' on $class")
1279        unless $class->is_meta_column($key);
1280
1281    my $meta_rec = MT::Meta->metadata_by_name($class, $key);
1282    my $type_col = $meta_rec->{type};
1283    my $type_id  = $meta_rec->{name};
1284    my $meta_terms = {
1285        $type_col => $value,
1286        type      => $type_id,
1287        %$terms,
1288    };
1289    my $meta_class = $class->meta_pkg;
1290    my $meta_pk = $meta_class->primary_key_tuple;
1291    my @metaobjs = $meta_class->search(
1292        $meta_terms, { %$args, fetchonly => $meta_pk }
1293    );
1294
1295    my $pk = $class->primary_key_tuple;
1296    my $get_pk = sub { 
1297        my $meta = shift;
1298        [ map { $meta->$_ } @$meta_pk ];
1299    };
1300
1301    return unless @metaobjs;
1302    return grep defined, @{ $class->lookup_multi([ map { $get_pk->($_) } @metaobjs ]) };
1303}
1304
1305package MT::Object::Meta;
1306
1307use base qw( Data::ObjectDriver::BaseObject );
1308
1309sub install_properties {
1310    my $class = shift;
1311    my ($props) = @_;
1312    $props->{column_defs}->{$_} ||= 'string'
1313        for @{ $props->{columns} };
1314    $class->SUPER::install_properties(@_);
1315}
1316
1317sub meta_pkg { undef }
1318
1319*table_name = \&MT::Object::table_name;
1320*column_defs = \&MT::Object::column_defs;
1321*column_def = \&MT::Object::column_def;
1322*index_defs = \&MT::Object::index_defs;
1323*__parse_defs = \&MT::Object::__parse_defs;
1324*__parse_def = \&MT::Object::__parse_def;
1325*count = \&MT::Object::count;
1326*columns_of_type = \&MT::Object::columns_of_type;
1327
1328*driver = \&MT::Object::dbi_driver;
1329
1330# TODO: copy this too
1331sub blob_requires_zip {}
1332
13331;
1334__END__
1335
1336=head1 NAME
1337
1338MT::Object - Movable Type base class for database-backed objects
1339
1340=head1 SYNOPSIS
1341
1342Creating an I<MT::Object> subclass:
1343
1344    package MT::Foo;
1345    use strict;
1346
1347    use base 'MT::Object';
1348
1349    __PACKAGE__->install_properties({
1350        columns_defs => {
1351            'id'  => 'integer not null auto_increment',
1352            'foo' => 'string(255)',
1353        },
1354        indexes => {
1355            foo => 1,
1356        },
1357        primary_key => 'id',
1358        datasource => 'foo',
1359    });
1360
1361Using an I<MT::Object> subclass:
1362
1363    use MT;
1364    use MT::Foo;
1365
1366    ## Create an MT object to load the system configuration and
1367    ## initialize an object driver.
1368    my $mt = MT->new;
1369
1370    ## Create an MT::Foo object, fill it with data, and save it;
1371    ## the object is saved using the object driver initialized above.
1372    my $foo = MT::Foo->new;
1373    $foo->foo('bar');
1374    $foo->save
1375        or die $foo->errstr;
1376
1377=head1 DESCRIPTION
1378
1379I<MT::Object> is the base class for all Movable Type objects that will be
1380serialized/stored to some location for later retrieval.
1381
1382Movable Type objects know nothing about how they are stored--they know only
1383of what types of data they consist, the names of those types of data (their
1384columns), etc. The actual storage mechanism is in the L<Data::ObjectDriver>
1385class and its driver subclasses; I<MT::Object> subclasses, on the other hand,
1386are essentially just standard in-memory Perl objects, but with a little extra
1387self-knowledge.
1388
1389This distinction between storage and in-memory representation allows objects
1390to be serialized to disk in many different ways. Adding a new storage method
1391is as simple as writing an object driver--a non-trivial task, to be sure, but
1392one that will not require touching any other Movable Type code.
1393
1394=head1 SUBCLASSING
1395
1396Creating a subclass of I<MT::Object> is very simple; you simply need to
1397define the properties and metadata about the object you are creating. Start
1398by declaring your class, and inheriting from I<MT::Object>:
1399
1400    package MT::Foo;
1401    use strict;
1402
1403    use base 'MT::Object';
1404
1405=item * __PACKAGE__->install_properties($args)
1406
1407Then call the I<install_properties> method on your class name; an easy way
1408to get your class name is to use the special I<__PACKAGE__> variable:
1409
1410    __PACKAGE__->install_properties({
1411        column_defs => {
1412            'id' => 'integer not null auto_increment',
1413            'foo' => 'string(255)',
1414        },
1415        indexes => {
1416            foo => 1,
1417        },
1418        primary_key => 'id',
1419        datasource => 'foo',
1420    });
1421
1422I<install_properties> performs the necessary magic to install the metadata
1423about your new class in the MT system. The method takes one argument, a hash
1424reference containing the metadata about your class. That hash reference can
1425have the following keys:
1426
1427=over 4
1428
1429=item * column_defs
1430
1431The definition of the columns (fields) in your object. Column names are also
1432used for method names for your object, so your column name should not
1433contain any strange characters. (It could also be used as part of the name of
1434the column in a relational database table, so that is another reason to keep
1435column names somewhat sane.)
1436
1437The value for the I<columns> key should be a reference to an hashref
1438containing the key/value pairs that are names of your columns matched with
1439their schema definition.
1440
1441The type declaration of a column is pseudo-SQL. The data types loosely match
1442SQL types, but are vendor-neutral, and each MT::ObjectDriver will map these
1443to appropriate types for the database it services. The format of a column
1444type is as follows:
1445
1446    'column_name' => 'type(size) options'
1447
1448The 'type' part of the declaration can be any one of:
1449
1450=over 4
1451
1452=item * string
1453
1454For storing string data, typically up to 255 characters, but assigned a length identified by '(size)'.
1455
1456=item * integer
1457
1458For storing integers, maybe limited to 32 bits.
1459
1460=item * boolean
1461
1462For storing boolean values (numeric values of 1 or 0).
1463
1464=item * smallint
1465
1466For storing small integers, typically limited to 16 bits.
1467
1468=item * datetime
1469
1470For storing a full date and time value.
1471
1472=item * timestamp
1473
1474For storing a date and time that automatically updates upon save.
1475
1476=item * blob
1477
1478For storing binary data.
1479
1480=item * text
1481
1482For storing text data.
1483
1484=item * float
1485
1486For storing floating point values.
1487
1488=back
1489
1490Note: The physical data storage capacity of these types will vary depending on
1491the driver's implementation.
1492
1493The '(size)' element of the declaration is only valid for the 'string' type.
1494
1495The 'options' element of the declaration is not required, but is used to
1496specify additional attributes of the column. Such as:
1497
1498=over 4
1499
1500=item * not null
1501
1502Specify this option when you wish to constrain the column so that it must contain a defined value. This is only enforced by the database itself, not by the MT::ObjectDriver.
1503
1504=item * auto_increment
1505
1506Specify for integer columns (typically the primary key) to automatically assign a value.
1507
1508=item * primary key
1509
1510Specify for identifying the column as the primary key (only valid for a single column).
1511
1512=item * indexed
1513
1514Identifies that this column should also be individually indexed.
1515
1516=item * meta
1517
1518Declares the column as a meta column, which means it is stored in a separate
1519table that is used for storing metadata. See L<Metadata> for more information.
1520
1521=back
1522
1523=item * indexes
1524
1525Specifies the column indexes on your objects.
1526
1527The value for the I<indexes> key should be a reference to a hash containing
1528column names as keys, and the value C<1> for each key--each key represents
1529a column that should be indexed:
1530
1531    indexes => {
1532        'column_1' => 1,
1533        'column_2' => 1,
1534    },
1535
1536For multi-column indexes, you must declare the individual columns as the
1537value for the index key:
1538
1539    indexes => {
1540        'column_catkey' => {
1541            columns => [ 'column_1', 'column_2' ],
1542        },
1543    },
1544
1545For declaring a unique constraint, add a 'unique' element to this hash:
1546
1547    indexes => {
1548        'column_catkey' => {
1549            columns => [ 'column_1', 'column_2' ],
1550            unique => 1,
1551        },
1552    },
1553
1554=item * audit
1555
1556Automatically adds bookkeeping capabilities to your class--each object will
1557take on four new columns: I<created_on>, I<created_by>, I<modified_on>, and
1558I<modified_by>. The created_on, created_by columns will be populated
1559automatically (if they have not already been assigned at the time of saving
1560the object). Your application is responsible for updating the modified_on,
1561modified_by columns as these may require explicit application-specific
1562assignments (ie, your application may only want them updated during explicit
1563user interaction with the object, as opposed to cases where the object is
1564being changed and saved for mechanical purposes like upgrading a table).
1565
1566=item * datasource
1567
1568The name of the datasource for your class. The datasource is a name uniquely
1569identifying your class--it is used by the object drivers to construct table
1570names, file names, etc. So it should not be specific to any one driver.
1571
1572Please note: the length of the datasource name should be conservative; some
1573drivers place limits on the length of table and column names.
1574
1575=item * meta
1576
1577Specify this property if you wish to support the storage of additional
1578metadata for this class. By doing so, a second table will be declared to
1579MT's registry, one that is designed to hold any metadata associated
1580with your class.
1581
1582=item * class_type
1583
1584If class_type is declared, an additional 'class' column is added to the
1585object properties. This column is then used to differentiate between
1586multiple object types that share the same physical table.
1587
1588Note that if this is used, all searches will be constrained to match
1589the class type of the package.
1590
1591=item * class_column
1592
1593Defines the name of the class column (default is 'class') for storing
1594classed objects (see 'class_type' above).
1595
1596=back
1597
1598=head1 USAGE
1599
1600=head2 System Initialization
1601
1602Before using (loading, saving, removing) an I<MT::Object> class and its
1603objects, you must always initialize the Movable Type system. This is done
1604with the following lines of code:
1605
1606    use MT;
1607    my $mt = MT->new;
1608
1609Constructing a new I<MT> objects loads the system configuration from the
1610F<mt.cfg> configuration file, then initializes the object driver that will
1611be used to manage serialized objects.
1612
1613=head2 Creating a new object
1614
1615To create a new object of an I<MT::Object> class, use the I<new> method:
1616
1617    my $foo = MT::Foo->new;
1618
1619I<new> takes no arguments, and simply initializes a new in-memory object.
1620In fact, you need not ever save this object to disk; it can be used as a
1621purely in-memory object.
1622
1623=head2 Setting and retrieving column values
1624
1625To set the column value of an object, use the name of the column as a method
1626name, and pass in the value for the column:
1627
1628    $foo->foo('bar');
1629
1630The return value of the above call will be C<bar>, the value to which you have
1631set the column.
1632
1633To retrieve the existing value of a column, call the same method, but without
1634an argument:
1635
1636    $foo->foo
1637
1638This returns the value of the I<foo> column from the I<$foo> object.
1639
1640=over 4
1641
1642=item * $obj->init()
1643
1644=back
1645
1646This method is used to initialize the object upon construction.
1647
1648=over 4
1649
1650=item * $obj->set_defaults()
1651
1652=back
1653
1654This method is used by the I<init> method to set the object defaults.
1655
1656=head2 Saving an object
1657
1658To save an object using the object driver, call the I<save> method:
1659
1660=over 4
1661
1662=item * $foo->save();
1663
1664=back
1665
1666On success, I<save> will return some true value; on failure, it will return
1667C<undef>, and you can retrieve the error message by calling the I<errstr>
1668method on the object:
1669
1670    $foo->save
1671        or die "Saving foo failed: ", $foo->errstr;
1672
1673If you are saving objects in a loop, take a look at the
1674L</"Note on object locking">.
1675
1676=head2 Loading an existing object or objects
1677
1678=over 4
1679
1680=item * $obj->load()
1681
1682=item * $obj->load_iter()
1683
1684=back
1685
1686You can load an object from the datastore using the I<load> method. I<load>
1687is by far the most complicated method, because there are many different ways
1688to load an object: by ID, by column value, by using a join with another type
1689of object, etc.
1690
1691In addition, you can load objects either into an array (I<load>), or by using
1692an iterator to step through the objects (I<load_iter>).
1693
1694I<load> has the following general form:
1695
1696    my $object = MT::Foo->load( $id );
1697
1698    my @objects = MT::Foo->load(\%terms, \%arguments);
1699
1700    my @objects = MT::Foo->load(\@terms, \%arguments);
1701
1702I<load_iter> has the following general form:
1703
1704    my $iter = MT::Foo->load_iter(\%terms, \%arguments);
1705
1706    my $iter = MT::Foo->load_iter(\@terms, \%arguments);
1707
1708Both methods share the same parameters; the only difference is the manner in
1709which they return the matching objects.
1710
1711If you call I<load> in scalar context, only the first row of the array
1712I<@objects> will be returned; this works well when you know that your I<load>
1713call can only ever result in one object returned--for example, when you load
1714an object by ID.
1715
1716I<\%terms> should be either:
1717
1718=over 4
1719
1720=item * The numeric ID of an object in the datastore.
1721
1722=item * A reference to a hash.
1723
1724The hash should have keys matching column names and the values are the
1725values for that column.
1726
1727For example, to load an I<MT::Foo> object where the I<foo> column is
1728equal to C<bar>, you could do this:
1729
1730    my @foo = MT::Foo->load({ foo => 'bar' });
1731
1732In addition to a simple scalar, the hash value can be a reference to an array;
1733combined with the I<range> setting in the I<\%arguments> list, you can use
1734this to perform range searches. If the value is a reference, the first element
1735in the array specifies the low end of the range, and the second element the
1736high end.
1737
1738=item * A reference to an array.
1739
1740In this form, the arrayref contains a list of selection terms for more
1741complex selections.
1742
1743    my @foo = MT::Foo->load( [ { foo => 'bar' }
1744        => -or => { foo => 'baz' } ] );
1745
1746The separating operator keywords inbetween terms can be any of C<-or>,
1747C<-and>, C<-or_not>, C<-and_not> (the leading '-' is not required, and the
1748operator itself is case-insensitive).
1749
1750=back
1751
1752Values assigned to terms for selecting data can be either simple or complex
1753in nature. Simple scalar values require an exact match. For instance:
1754
1755    my @foo = MT::Foo->load( { foo => 'bar' });
1756
1757This selects all I<MT::Foo> objects where foo == 'bar'. But you can provide
1758a hashref value to provide more options:
1759
1760    my @foo = MT::Foo->load( { foo => { like => 'bar%' } });
1761
1762This selects all I<MT::Foo> objects where foo starts with 'bar'. Other
1763possibilities include 'not_like', 'not_null', 'not', 'between', '>',
1764'>=', '<', '<=', '!='. Note that 'not' and 'between' both accept an
1765arrayref for their value; 'between' expects a two element array, and
1766'not' will accept an array of 1 or more values which translates to
1767a 'NOT IN (...)' SQL clause.
1768
1769I<\%arguments> should be a reference to a hash containing parameters for the
1770search. The following parameters are allowed:
1771
1772=over 4
1773
1774=item * sort => "column"
1775
1776Sort the resulting objects by the column C<column>; C<column> must be an
1777indexed column (see L</"indexes">, above).
1778
1779Sort may also be specified as an arrayref of multiple columns to sort on.
1780For example:
1781
1782    sort => [
1783        { column => "column_1", desc => "DESC" },
1784        { column => "column_2", }   # default direction is 'ascend'
1785    ]
1786
1787=item * direction => "ascend|descend"
1788
1789To be used together with a scalar I<sort> value; specifies the sort
1790order (ascending or descending). The default is C<ascend>.
1791
1792=item * limit => "N"
1793
1794Rather than loading all of the matching objects (the default), load only
1795C<N> objects.
1796
1797=item * offset => "M"
1798
1799To be used together with I<limit>; rather than returning the first C<N>
1800matches (the default), return matches C<M> through C<N + M>.
1801
1802=item * start_val => "value"
1803
1804To be used together with I<limit> and I<sort>; rather than returning the
1805first C<N> matches, return the first C<N> matches where C<column> (the sort
1806column) is greater than C<value>.
1807
1808=item * range
1809
1810To be used together with an array reference as the value for a column in
1811I<\%terms>; specifies that the specific column should be searched for a range
1812of values, rather than one specific value.
1813
1814The value of I<range> should be a hash reference, where the keys are column
1815names, and the values are all C<1>; each key specifies a column that should
1816be interpreted as a range.
1817
1818    MT::Foo->load( { created_on => [ '20011008000000', undef ] },
1819        { range => { created_on => 1 } } );
1820
1821This selects C<MT::Foo> objects whose created_on date is greater than
18222001-10-08 00:00:00.
1823
1824=item * range_incl
1825
1826Like the 'range' attribute, but defines an inclusive range.
1827
1828=item * join
1829
1830Can be used to select a set of objects based on criteria, or sorted by
1831criteria, from another set of objects. An example is selecting the C<N>
1832entries most recently commented-upon; the sorting is based on I<MT::Comment>
1833objects, but the objects returned are actually I<MT::Entry> objects. Using
1834I<join> in this situation is faster than loading the most recent
1835I<MT::Comment> objects, then loading each of the I<MT::Entry> objects
1836individually.
1837
1838Note that I<join> is not a normal SQL join, in that the objects returned are
1839always of only one type--in the above example, the objects returned are only
1840I<MT::Entry> objects, and cannot include columns from I<MT::Comment> objects.
1841
1842I<join> has the following general syntax:
1843
1844    join => MT::Foo->join_on( JOIN_COLUMN, I<\%terms>, I<\%arguments> )
1845
1846Use the actual MT::Object-descended package name and the join_on static method
1847providing these parameters: I<JOIN_COLUMN> is the column joining the two
1848object tables, I<\%terms> and I<\%arguments> have the same meaning as they do
1849in the outer I<load> or I<load_iter> argument lists: they are used to select
1850the objects with which the join is performed.
1851
1852For example, to select the last 10 most recently commmented-upon entries, you
1853could use the following statement:
1854
1855    my @entries = MT::Entry->load(undef, {
1856        'join' => MT::Comment->join_on( 'entry_id',
1857                    { blog_id => $blog_id },
1858                    { 'sort' => 'created_on',
1859                      direction => 'descend',
1860                      unique => 1,
1861                      limit => 10 } )
1862    });
1863
1864In this statement, the I<unique> setting ensures that the I<MT::Entry>
1865objects returned are unique; if this flag were not given, two copies of the
1866same I<MT::Entry> could be returned, if two comments were made on the same
1867entry.
1868
1869=item * unique
1870
1871Ensures that the objects being returned are unique.
1872
1873This is really only useful when used within a I<join>, because when loading
1874data out of a single object datastore, the objects are always going to be
1875unique.
1876
1877=back
1878
1879=head2 Removing an object
1880
1881=over 4
1882
1883=item * $foo->remove()
1884
1885=back
1886
1887To remove an object from the datastore, call the I<remove> method on an
1888object that you have already loaded using I<load>:
1889
1890    $foo->remove();
1891
1892On success, I<remove> will return some true value; on failure, it will return
1893C<undef>, and you can retrieve the error message by calling the I<errstr>
1894method on the object:
1895
1896    $foo->remove
1897        or die "Removing foo failed: ", $foo->errstr;
1898
1899If you are removing objects in a loop, take a look at the
1900L</"Note on object locking">.
1901
1902=head2 Removing select objects of a particular class
1903
1904Combining the syntax of the load and remove methods, you can use the
1905static version of the remove method to remove particular objects:
1906
1907    MT::Foo->remove({ bar => 'baz' });
1908
1909The terms you specify to remove by should be indexed columns. This
1910method will load the object and remove it, firing the callback operations
1911associated with those operations.
1912
1913=head2 Removing all of the objects of a particular class
1914
1915To quickly remove all of the objects of a particular class, call the
1916I<remove_all> method on the class name in question:
1917
1918=over 4
1919
1920=item * MT::Foo->remove_all();
1921
1922=back
1923
1924On success, I<remove_all> will return some true value; on failure, it will
1925return C<undef>, and you can retrieve the error message by calling the
1926I<errstr> method on the class name:
1927
1928    MT::Foo->remove_all
1929        or die "Removing all foo objects failed: ", MT::Foo->errstr;
1930
1931=head2 Removing all the children of an object
1932
1933=over 4
1934
1935=item * $obj->remove_children([ \%param ])
1936
1937=back
1938
1939If your class has registered 'child_classes' as part of it's properties,
1940then this method may be used to remove objects that are associated with
1941the active object.
1942
1943This method is typically used in an overridden 'remove' method.
1944
1945    sub remove {
1946        my $obj = shift;
1947        $obj->remove_children({ key => 'object_id' });
1948        $obj->SUPER::remove(@_);
1949    }
1950
1951The 'key' parameter specified here lets you identify the field name used by
1952the children classes to relate back to the parent class. If unspecified,
1953C<remove_children> will assume the key to be the datasource name of the
1954current class with an '_id' suffix.
1955
1956=head2 Getting the count of a number of objects
1957
1958To determine how many objects meeting a particular set of conditions exist,
1959use the I<count> method:
1960
1961    my $count = MT::Foo->count({ foo => 'bar' });
1962
1963I<count> takes the same arguments as I<load> and I<load_iter>.
1964
1965=head2 Determining if an object exists in the datastore
1966
1967To check an object for existence in the datastore, use the I<exists> method:
1968
1969=over 4
1970
1971=item * $obj->exists()
1972
1973=back
1974
1975    if ($foo->exists) {
1976        print "Foo $foo already exists!";
1977    }
1978
1979To test for the existence of an unloaded object, use the 'exist' method:
1980
1981=over 4
1982
1983=item * Class->exist( \%terms )
1984
1985=back
1986
1987    if (MT::Foo->exist( { foo => 'bar' })) {
1988        print "Already exists!";
1989    }
1990
1991This is typically faster than issuing a L<count> call.
1992
1993=head2 Counting groups of objects
1994
1995=over 4
1996
1997=item * Class->count_group_by()
1998
1999=back
2000
2001The count_group_by method can be used to retrieve a list of all the
2002distinct values that appear in a given column along with a count of
2003how many objects carry that value. The routine can also be used with
2004more than one column, in which case it retrieves the distinct pairs
2005(or n-tuples) of values in those columns, along with the counts.
2006Yet more powerful, any SQL expression can be used in place of
2007the column names to count how many object produce any given result
2008values when run through those expressions.
2009
2010  $iter = MT::Foo->count_group_by($terms, {%args, group => $group_exprs});
2011
2012C<$terms> and C<%args> pick out a subset of the MT::Foo objects in the
2013usual way. C<$group_expressions> is an array reference containing the
2014SQL expressions for the values you want to group by. A single row will
2015be returned for each distinct tuple of values resulting from the
2016$group_expressions. For example, if $group_expressions were just a
2017single column (e.g. group => ['created_on']) then a single row would
2018be returned for each distinct value of the 'created_on' column. If
2019$group_expressions were multiple columns, a row would be returned for
2020each distinct pair (or n-tuple) of values found in those columns.
2021
2022Each application of the iterator C<$iter> returns a list in the form:
2023
2024  ($count, $group_val1, $group_val2, ...)
2025
2026Where C<$count> is the number of MT::Foo objects for which the group
2027expressions are the values ($group_val1, $group_val2, ...). These
2028values are in the same order as the corresponding group expressions in
2029the $group_exprs argument.
2030
2031In this example, we load up groups of MT::Pip objects, grouped by the
2032pair (cat_id, invoice_id), and print how many pips have that pair of
2033values.
2034
2035    $iter = MT::Pip->count_group_by(undef,
2036                                    {group => ['cat_id',
2037                                               'invoice_id']});
2038    while (($count, $cat, $inv) = $iter->()) {
2039        print "There are $count Pips with " .
2040            "category $cat and invoice $inv\n";
2041    }
2042
2043=head2 Averaging by Group
2044
2045=over 4
2046
2047=item * Class->avg_group_by()
2048
2049=back
2050
2051Like the count_group_by method, you can select groups of averages from
2052a MT::Object store.
2053
2054    my $iter = MT::Foo->avg_group_by($terms, {%args, group => $group_exprs,
2055        avg => 'property_to_average' })
2056
2057=head2 Max by Group
2058
2059=over 4
2060
2061=item * Class->max_group_by()
2062
2063=back
2064
2065Like the count_group_by method, you can select objects from a MT::Object
2066store using a SQL 'MAX' operator.
2067
2068    my $iter = MT::Foo->max_group_by($terms, {%args, group => $group_exprs,
2069        max => 'column_name' })
2070
2071=head2 Sum by Group
2072
2073=over 4
2074
2075=item * Class->sum_group_by()
2076
2077=back
2078
2079Like the count_group_by method, you can select groups of sums from
2080a MT::Object store.
2081
2082    my $iter = MT::Foo->sum_group_by($terms, {%args, group => $group_exprs,
2083        avg => 'property_to_sum' })
2084
2085=head2 Inspecting and Manipulating Object State
2086
2087=over 4
2088
2089=item * $obj->column_values()
2090
2091=back
2092
2093Use C<column_values> and C<set_values> to get and set the fields of an
2094object I<en masse>. The former returns a hash reference mapping column
2095names to their values in this object. For example:
2096
2097    $values = $obj->column_values()
2098
2099=over 4
2100
2101=item * $obj->set_values()
2102
2103=back
2104
2105C<set_values> accepts a similar hash ref, which need not give a value
2106for every field. For example:
2107
2108    $obj->set_values({col1 => $val1, col2 => $val2});
2109
2110is equivalent to
2111
2112    $obj->col1($val1);
2113    $obj->col2($val2);
2114
2115=head2 Other Methods
2116
2117=over 4
2118
2119=item * $obj->clone([\%param])
2120
2121Returns a clone of C<$obj>. That is, a distinct object which has all
2122the same data stored within it. Changing values within one object does
2123not modify the other.
2124
2125An optional C<except> parameter may be provided to exclude particular
2126columns from the cloning operation. For example, the following would
2127clone the elements of the blog except the name attribute.
2128
2129   $blog->clone({ except => { name => 1 } });
2130
2131=item * $obj->clone_all()
2132
2133Similar to the C<clone> method, but also makes a clones the metadata
2134information.
2135
2136=item * $obj->column_names()
2137
2138Returns a list of the names of columns in C<$obj>; includes all those
2139specified to the install_properties method as well as the audit
2140properties (C<created_on>, C<modified_on>, C<created_by>,
2141C<modified_by>), if those were enabled in install_properties.
2142
2143=item * MT::Foo->driver()
2144
2145=item * $obj->driver()
2146
2147Returns the ObjectDriver object that links this object with a database.
2148This is a subclass of L<Data::ObjectDriver>.
2149
2150=item * $obj->dbi_driver()
2151
2152This method is similar to the 'driver' method, but will always return
2153a DBI driver (a subclass of the L<Data::ObjectDriver::Driver::DBI>
2154class) and not a caching driver.
2155
2156=item * $obj->created_on_obj()
2157
2158Returns a MT::DateTime object representing the moment when the
2159object was first saved to the database.
2160
2161=item * $obj->column_as_datetime( $column )
2162
2163Returns a MT::DateTime object for the specified datetime/timestamp
2164column specified.
2165
2166=item * MT::Foo->set_by_key($key_terms, $value_terms)
2167
2168A convenience method that loads whatever object matches the C<$key_terms>
2169argument and sets some or all of its fields according to the
2170C<$value_terms>. For example:
2171
2172   MT::Foo->set_by_key({name => 'Thor'},
2173                       {region => 'Norway', gender => 'Male'});
2174
2175This loads the C<MT::Foo> object having 'name' field equal to 'Thor'
2176and sets the 'region' and 'gender' fields appropriately.
2177
2178More than one term is acceptable in the C<$key_terms> argument. The
2179matching object is the one that matches all of the C<$key_terms>.
2180
2181This method only useful if you know that there is a unique object
2182matching the given key. There need not be a unique constraint on the
2183columns named in the C<$key_hash>; but if not, you should be confident
2184that only one object will match the key.
2185
2186=item * MT::Foo->get_by_key($key_terms)
2187
2188A convenience method that loads whatever object matches the C<$key_terms>
2189argument. If no matching object is found, a new object will be constructed
2190and the C<$key_terms> provided will be assigned to it. So regardless of
2191whether the key exists already, this method will return an object with the
2192key requested. Note, however: if a new object is instantiated it is
2193not automatically saved.
2194
2195    my $thor = MT::Foo->get_by_key({name => 'Thor'});
2196    $thor->region('Norway');
2197    $thor->gender('Male');
2198    $thor->save;
2199
2200The fact that it returns a new object if one isn't found is to help
2201optimize this pattern:
2202
2203    my $obj = MT::Foo->load({key => $value});
2204    if (!$obj) {
2205        $obj = new MT::Foo;
2206        $obj->key($value);
2207    }
2208
2209This is equivalent to:
2210
2211    my $obj = MT::Foo->get_by_key({key => $value});
2212
2213If you don't appreciate the autoinstantiation behavior of this method,
2214just use the C<load> method instead.
2215
2216More than one term is acceptable in the C<$key_terms> argument. The
2217matching object is the one that matches all of the C<$key_terms>.
2218
2219This method only useful if you know that there is a unique object
2220matching the given key. There need not be a unique constraint on the
2221columns named in the C<$key_hash>; but if not, you should be confident
2222that only one object will match the key.
2223
2224=item * $obj->cache_property($key, $code)
2225
2226Caches the provided key (e.g. entry, trackback) with the return value
2227of the given code reference (which is often an object load call) so
2228that the value does not have to be recomputed each time.
2229
2230=item * $obj->clear_cache()
2231
2232Clears any object-level cache data (from the C<cache_property> method)
2233that may existing.
2234
2235=item * $obj->column_def($name)
2236
2237This method returns the value of the given I<$name> C<column_defs>
2238propery.
2239
2240=item * $obj->column_defs()
2241
2242This method returns all the C<column_defs> of the property of the
2243object.
2244
2245=item Class->index_defs()
2246
2247This method returns all the index definitions assigned to this class.
2248This is the 'indexes' member of the properties installed for the class.
2249
2250=item * $obj->to_hash()
2251
2252Returns a hashref containing column and metadata key/value pairs for
2253the object. If the object has a blog relationship, it also populates
2254data from that blog. For example:
2255
2256    my $entry_hash = $entry->to_hash();
2257    # returns: { entry.title => "Title", entry.blog.name => "Foo", ... }
2258
2259=item * Class->join_on( $join_column, \%join_terms, \%join_args )
2260
2261A simple helper method that returns an arrayref of join terms suitable
2262for the C<load> and C<load_iter> methods.
2263
2264=item * $obj->properties()
2265
2266Returns a hashref of the object properties that were declared with the
2267I<install_properties> method.
2268
2269=item * $obj->to_xml()
2270
2271Returns an XML representation of the object.
2272This method is defined in MT/BackupRestore.pm - you must first
2273use MT::BackupRestore to use this method.
2274
2275=item * $obj->restore_parent_ids()
2276
2277TODO - Backup file contains parent objects' ids (foreign keys).  However,
2278when parent objcects are restored, their ids will be changed.  This method
2279is to match the old and new ids of parent objects for children objects to be
2280correctly associated.
2281This method is defined in MT/BackupRestore.pm - you must first
2282use MT::BackupRestore to use this method.
2283
2284=item * $obj->parent_names()
2285
2286TODO - Should be overridden by subclasses to return correct hash
2287whose keys are xml element names of the object's parent objects
2288and values are class names of them.
2289This method is defined in MT/BackupRestore.pm - you must first
2290use MT::BackupRestore to use this method.
2291
2292=item * Class->class_handler($type)
2293
2294Returns the appropriate Perl package name for the given type identifier.
2295For example,
2296
2297    # Yields MT::Asset::Image
2298    MT::Asset->class_handler('asset.image');
2299
2300=item * Class->class_label
2301
2302Provides a descriptive name for the requested class package.
2303This is a localized name, using the currently assigned language.
2304
2305=item * Class->class_label_plural
2306
2307Returns a descriptive pluralized name for the requested class package.
2308This is a localized name, using the currently assigned language.
2309
2310=item * Class->class_labels
2311
2312Returns a hashref of type identifiers to class labels for all subclasses
2313associated with a multiclassed object type. For instance:
2314
2315    # returns { 'asset' => 'Asset', 'asset.video' => 'Video', ... }
2316    my $labels = MT::Asset->class_labels;
2317
2318=item * Class->columns_of_type(@types)
2319
2320Returns an arrayref of column names that are of the requested type.
2321
2322    my @dates = MT::Foo->columns_of_type('datetime', 'timestamp')
2323
2324=item * Class->has_column( $name )
2325
2326Returns a boolean as to whether the column C<$name> is defined for
2327this class.
2328
2329=item * Class->table_name()
2330
2331Returns the database table name (including any prefix) for the class.
2332
2333=item * $obj->column_func( $column )
2334
2335Creates an accessor/mutator method for column C<$column>, returning it as a
2336coderef. This method overrides the one in L<Data::ObjectDriver::BaseObject>,
2337by supporting metadata column as well.
2338
2339=item * $obj->call_trigger( 'trigger_name', @params )
2340
2341Issues a call to any Class::Trigger triggers installed for the given object.
2342Also invokes any MT callbacks that are registered using MT's callback
2343system. "pre" callbacks are invoked prior to triggers; "post" callbacks
2344are invoked after triggers are called.
2345
2346=item * $obj->deflate
2347
2348Returns a minimal representation of the object, including any metadata.
2349See also L<Data::ObjectDriver::BaseObject>.
2350
2351=item * Class->inflate( $deflated )
2352
2353Inflates the deflated representation of the object I<$deflated> into a proper
2354object in the class I<Class>. That is, undoes the operation C<$deflated =
2355$obj-E<gt>deflate()> by returning a new object equivalent to C<$obj>.
2356
2357=item * Class->install_pre_init_properties
2358
2359This static method is used to install any class properties that were
2360registered prior to the bootstrapping of MT plugins.
2361
2362=item * $obj->modified_by
2363
2364A modified getter/setter accessor method for audited classes with a
2365'modified_by', 'modified_on' columns. In the event this method is called
2366to assign a 'modified_by' value, it automatically updates the 'modified_on'
2367column as well.
2368
2369=item * $obj->nextprev( %params )
2370
2371Method to determine adjancent objects, based on a date column and/or id.
2372The C<%params> hash provides the following elements:
2373
2374=over 4
2375
2376=item * direction
2377
2378Either "next" or "previous".
2379
2380=item * terms
2381
2382Any additional terms to supply to the C<load> method.
2383
2384=item * args
2385
2386Any additional arguments to supply to the C<load> method (such as a join).
2387
2388=item * by
2389
2390The column to use to determine the next/previous object. By default for
2391audited classes, this is 'created_on'.
2392
2393=back
2394
2395=back
2396
2397=head1 NOTES
2398
2399=head2 Note on object locking
2400
2401When you read objects from the datastore, the object table is locked with a
2402shared lock; when you write to the datastore, the table is locked with an
2403exclusive lock.
2404
2405Thus, note that saving or removing objects in the same loop where you are
2406loading them from an iterator will not work--the reason is that the datastore
2407maintains a shared lock on the object table while objects are being loaded
2408from the iterator, and thus the attempt to gain an exclusive lock when saving
2409or removing an object will cause deadlock.
2410
2411For example, you cannot do the following:
2412
2413    my $iter = MT::Foo->load_iter({ foo => 'bar' });
2414    while (my $foo = $iter->()) {
2415        $foo->remove;
2416    }
2417
2418Instead you should do either this:
2419
2420    my @foo = MT::Foo->load({ foo => 'bar' });
2421    for my $foo (@foo) {
2422        $foo->remove;
2423    }
2424
2425or this:
2426
2427    my $iter = MT::Foo->load_iter({ foo => 'bar' });
2428    my @to_remove;
2429    while (my $foo = $iter->()) {
2430        push @to_remove, $foo
2431            if SOME CONDITION;
2432    }
2433    for my $foo (@to_remove) {
2434        $foo->remove;
2435    }
2436
2437This last example is useful if you will not be removing every I<MT::Foo>
2438object where I<foo> equals C<bar>, because it saves memory--only the
2439I<MT::Foo> objects that you will be deleting are kept in memory at the same
2440time.
2441
2442=head1 SUBCLASSING
2443
2444It is possible to declare a subclass of an existing MT::Object class,
2445one that shares the same table storage as the parent class. Examples of
2446this include L<MT::Log>, L<MT::Entry>, L<MT::Category>. In these cases,
2447the subclass identifies a 'class_type' property. The parent class must also
2448have a column where this identifier is stored. Upon loading records from the
2449table, the object is reblessed into the appropriate package.
2450
2451=over 4
2452
2453=item Class->add_class( $type_id, $class )
2454
2455This method can be called directly to register a new subclass type
2456and package for the base class.
2457
2458    MT::Foo->add_class( 'foochild' => 'MT::Foo::Subclass' );
2459
2460=back
2461
2462=head1 METADATA
2463
2464The following methods facilitate the storage and management of metadata;
2465available when the 'meta' key is included in the installed properties for
2466the class.
2467
2468=over 4
2469
2470=item * $obj->init_meta()
2471
2472For object classes that have metadata storage, this method will initialize
2473the metadata member.
2474
2475=item * Class->install_meta( \%meta_properties )
2476
2477Called to register metadata properties on a particular class. The
2478C<%meta_properties> may contain an arrayref of 'columns', or a hashref
2479of 'column_defs' (similar to the C<install_properties> method):
2480
2481    MT::Foo->install_meta( { column_defs => {
2482        'metadata1' => 'integer indexed',
2483        'metadata2' => 'string indexed',
2484    } });
2485
2486In this form, the storage type is explicitly declared, so the metadata
2487is stored into the appropriate column (vinteger_idx and vchar_idx
2488respectively).
2489
2490    MT::Foo->install_meta( { columns => [ 'metadata1', 'metadata2' ] } )
2491
2492In this form, the metadata properties store their data into a 'blob'
2493column in the meta table. This type of metadata cannot be used to sort
2494or filter on. This form is supported for backward compatibility and is
2495considered deprecated.
2496
2497=item * $obj->remove_meta()
2498
2499Deletes all related metadata for the given object.
2500
2501=item * Class->search_by_meta( $key, $value, [ \%terms [, \%args ] ] )
2502
2503Returns objects that have a C<$key> metadata value of C<$value>. Further
2504restrictions on the class may be applied through the optional C<%terms>
2505and C<%args> parameters.
2506
2507=item * $obj->meta_obj()
2508
2509Returns the L<MT::Object> class
2510
2511=item * Class->meta_pkg()
2512
2513Returns the Perl package name for storing it's metadata objects.
2514
2515=item * Class->meta_args
2516
2517Returns the source of a Perl package declaration that is loaded to
2518declare and process metadata objects for the C<Class>.
2519
2520=item * Class->has_meta( [ $name ] )
2521
2522Returns a boolean as to whether the class has metadata when called
2523without a parameter, or whether there exists a metadata column
2524of the given C<$name>.
2525
2526=item * Class->is_meta_column( $name )
2527
2528Returns a boolean as to whether the class has a meta column named
2529C<$name>.
2530
2531=back
2532
2533=head1 CALLBACKS
2534
2535=over 4
2536
2537=item * $obj->add_callback()
2538
2539=back
2540
2541Most MT::Object operations can trigger callbacks to plugin code. Some
2542notable uses of this feature are: to be notified when a database record is
2543modified, or to pre- or post-process the data being flowing to the
2544database.
2545
2546To add a callback, invoke the C<add_callback> method of the I<MT::Object>
2547subclass, as follows:
2548
2549   MT::Foo->add_callback( "pre_save", <priority>,
2550                          <plugin object>, \&callback_function);
2551
2552The first argument is the name of the hook point. Any I<MT::Object>
2553subclass has a pre_ and a post_ hook point for each of the following
2554operations:
2555
2556    load
2557    save
2558    update (issued for save on existing objects)
2559    insert (issued for save on new objects)
2560    remove
2561    remove_all
2562    (load_iter operations will call the load callbacks)
2563
2564The second argument, E<lt>priorityE<gt>, is the relative order in
2565which the callback should be called. The value should be between 1 and
256610, inclusive. Callbacks with priority 1 will be called before those
2567with 2, 2 before 3, and so on.
2568
2569Plugins which know they need to run first or last can use the priority
2570values 0 and 11. A callback with priority 0 will run before all
2571others, and if two callbacks try to use that value, an error will
2572result. Likewise priority 11 is exclusive, and runs last.
2573
2574How to remember which callback priorities are special? As you know,
2575most guitar amps have a volume knob that goes from 1 to 10. But, like
2576that of certain rock stars, our amp goes up to 11. A callback with
2577priority 11 is the "loudest" or most powerful callback, as it will be
2578called just before the object is saved to the database (in the case of
2579a 'pre' callback), or just before the object is returned (in the case
2580of a 'post' callback). A callback with priority 0 is the "quietest"
2581callback, as following callbacks can completely overwhelm it. This may
2582be a good choice for your plugin, as you may want your plugin to work
2583well with other plugins. Determining the correct priority is a matter
2584of thinking about your plugin in relation to others, and adjusting the
2585priority based on experience so that users get the best use out of the
2586plugin.
2587
2588The E<lt>plugin objectE<gt> is an object of type MT::Plugin which
2589gives some information about the plugin. This is used to include
2590the plugin's name in any error messages.
2591
2592E<lt>callback functionE<gt> is a code referense for a subroutine that
2593will be called. The arguments to this
2594function vary by operation (see I<MT::Callback> for details),
2595but in each case the first parameter is the I<MT::Callback> object
2596itself:
2597
2598  sub my_callback {
2599      my ($cb, ...) = @_;
2600
2601      if ( <error condition> ) {
2602          return $cb->error("Error message");
2603      }
2604  }
2605
2606Strictly speaking, the return value of a callback is ignored. Calling
2607the error() method of the MT::Callback object (C<$cb> in this case)
2608propagates the error message up to the MT activity log.
2609
2610Another way to handle errors is to call C<die>. If a callback dies,
2611I<MT> will warn the error to the activity log, but will continue
2612processing the MT::Object operation: so other callbacks will still
2613run, and the database operation should still occur.
2614
2615=head2 Any-class Object Callbacks
2616
2617If you add a callback to the MT class with a hook point that begins
2618with C<*::>, such as:
2619
2620    MT->add_callback('*::post_save', 7, $my_plugin, \&code_ref);
2621
2622then it will be called whenever post_save callbacks are called.
2623"Any-class" callbacks are called I<after> all class-specific
2624callbacks. Note that C<add_callback> must be called on the C<MT> class,
2625not on a subclass of C<MT::Object>.
2626
2627=head2 Caveat
2628
2629Be careful how you handle errors. If you transform data as it goes
2630into and out of the database, and it is possible for one of your
2631callbacks to fail, the data may get saved in an undefined state. It
2632may then be difficult or impossible for the user to recover that data.
2633
2634=head1 AUTHOR & COPYRIGHTS
2635
2636Please see the I<MT> manpage for author, copyright, and license information.
2637
2638=cut
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