NAME
    Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema - DBIx::Class::Schema Model Class

SYNOPSIS
    First, prepare your database schema using DBIx::Class, see
    Catalyst::Helper::Model::DBIC::Schema for how to generate a
    DBIx::Class::Schema from your database using the Helper script, and
    DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader::Base.

    A typical usage of the helper script would be:

        script/myapp_create.pl model FilmDB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema::FilmDB \
            create=static dbi:mysql:filmdb dbusername dbpass \
            quote_names=1

    If you are unfamiliar with DBIx::Class, see DBIx::Class::Manual::Intro
    first.

    These examples assume that you already have a schema called
    "MyApp::Schema::FilmDB", which defines some Result classes for tables in
    "MyApp::Schema::FilmDB::Result::Actor" and
    "MyApp::Schema::FilmDB::Result::Film". Either created by the helper
    script (as shown above) or manually.

    The helper also creates a Model in "lib/MyApp/Model/FilmDB.pm", if you
    already have a schema you can create just the Model using:

        script/myapp_create.pl model FilmDB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema::FilmDB
            dbi:mysql:filmdb dbusername dbpass

    The connect_info is optional and will be hardcoded into the Model if
    provided. It's better to configure it in your Catalyst config file,
    which will also override any hardcoded config, see "connect_info" for
    examples.

    Now you have a working Model which accesses your separate DBIC Schema.
    This can be used/accessed in the normal Catalyst manner, via
    "$c->model()":

      my $db_model = $c->model('FilmDB');         # a Catalyst::Model
      my $dbic     = $c->model('FilmDB')->schema; # the actual DBIC object

    There is also a shortcut, which returns a DBIx::Class::ResultSet
    directly, instead of a Catalyst::Model:

      my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB::Actor');

    See DBIx::Class::ResultSet to find out more about which methods can be
    called on ResultSets.

    You can also define your own ResultSet methods to encapsulate the
    database/business logic of your applications. These go into, for
    example, "lib/MyApp/Schema/FilmDB/ResultSet/Actor.pm". The class must
    inherit from DBIx::Class::ResultSet and is automatically loaded.

    Then call your methods like any other DBIx::Class::ResultSet method:

        $c->model('FilmDB::Actor')->SAG_members

  Some examples:
      # to access schema methods directly:
      $c->model('FilmDB')->schema->source(...);

      # to access the source object, resultset, and class:
      $c->model('FilmDB')->source(...);
      $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset(...);
      $c->model('FilmDB')->class(...);

      # For resultsets, there's an even quicker shortcut:
      $c->model('FilmDB::Actor')
      # is the same as $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset('Actor')

      # To get the composed schema for making new connections:
      my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->composed_schema->connect(...);

      # Or the same thing via a convenience shortcut:
      my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->connect(...);

      # or, if your schema works on different storage drivers:
      my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->composed_schema->clone();
      $newconn->storage_type('::LDAP');
      $newconn->connection(...);

      # and again, a convenience shortcut
      my $newconn = $c->model('FilmDB')->clone();
      $newconn->storage_type('::LDAP');
      $newconn->connection(...);

    To set up authentication, see "Setting up DBIC authentication" below.

DESCRIPTION
    This is a Catalyst Model for DBIx::Class::Schema-based Models. See the
    documentation for Catalyst::Helper::Model::DBIC::Schema for information
    on generating these Models via Helper scripts.

    When your Catalyst app starts up, a thin Model layer is created as an
    interface to your DBIC Schema. It should be clearly noted that the model
    object returned by "$c->model('FilmDB')" is NOT itself a DBIC schema or
    resultset object, but merely a wrapper proving methods to access the
    underlying schema.

    In addition to this model class, a shortcut class is generated for each
    source in the schema, allowing easy and direct access to a resultset of
    the corresponding type. These generated classes are even thinner than
    the model class, providing no public methods but simply hooking into
    Catalyst's model() accessor via the ACCEPT_CONTEXT mechanism. The
    complete contents of each generated class is roughly equivalent to the
    following:

      package MyApp::Model::FilmDB::Actor
      sub ACCEPT_CONTEXT {
          my ($self, $c) = @_;
          $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset('Actor');
      }

    In short, there are three techniques available for obtaining a DBIC
    resultset object:

      # the long way
      my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB')->schema->resultset('Actor');

      # using the shortcut method on the model object
      my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB')->resultset('Actor');

      # using the generated class directly
      my $rs = $c->model('FilmDB::Actor');

    In order to add methods to a DBIC resultset, you cannot simply add them
    to the source (row, table) definition class; you must define a separate
    custom resultset class. This is just a matter of making a
    "lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet/Actor.pm" class that inherits from
    DBIx::Class::ResultSet, if you are using "load_namespaces" in
    DBIx::Class::Schema, the default for helper script generated schemas.

    See "Predefined searches" in DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook for
    information on definining your own DBIx::Class::ResultSet classes for
    use with "load_classes" in DBIx::Class::Schema, the old default.

CONFIG PARAMETERS
  schema_class
    This is the classname of your DBIx::Class::Schema Schema. It needs to be
    findable in @INC, but it does not need to be inside the
    "Catalyst::Model::" namespace. This parameter is required.

  connect_info
    This is a hashref or arrayref of connection parameters, which are
    specific to your "storage_type" (see your storage type documentation for
    more details). If you only need one parameter (e.g. the DSN), you can
    just pass a string.

    This is not required if "schema_class" already has connection
    information defined inside itself (which isn't highly recommended, but
    can be done.)

    For DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI, which is the only supported
    "storage_type" in DBIx::Class at the time of this writing, the
    parameters are your dsn, username, password, and connect options
    hashref.

    See "connect_info" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI for a detailed
    explanation of the arguments supported.

    Examples:

      connect_info => {
        dsn => 'dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb',
        user => 'postgres',
        password => ''
      }

      connect_info => {
        dsn => 'dbi:SQLite:dbname=foo.db',
        on_connect_do => [
          'PRAGMA synchronous = OFF',
        ]
      }

      connect_info => {
        dsn => 'dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb',
        user => 'postgres',
        password => '',
        pg_enable_utf8 => 1,
        on_connect_do => [
          'some SQL statement',
          'another SQL statement',
        ],
      }

    Or using Config::General:

        <Model::FilmDB>
            schema_class   MyApp::Schema::FilmDB
            traits Caching
            <connect_info>
                dsn   dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb
                user   postgres
                password ""
                auto_savepoint 1
                quote_names 1
                on_connect_do   some SQL statement
                on_connect_do   another SQL statement
            </connect_info>
            user_defined_schema_accessor foo
        </Model::FilmDB>

    or

        <Model::FilmDB>
            schema_class   MyApp::Schema::FilmDB
            connect_info   dbi:SQLite:dbname=foo.db
        </Model::FilmDB>

    Or using YAML:

      Model::MyDB:
          schema_class: MyDB
          traits: Caching
          connect_info:
              dsn: dbi:Oracle:mydb
              user: mtfnpy
              password: mypass
              LongReadLen: 1000000
              LongTruncOk: 1
              on_connect_call: 'datetime_setup'
              quote_names: 1

    The old arrayref style with hashrefs for DBI then DBIx::Class options is
    also supported:

      connect_info => [
        'dbi:Pg:dbname=mypgdb',
        'postgres',
        '',
        {
          pg_enable_utf8 => 1,
        },
        {
          auto_savepoint => 1,
          on_connect_do => [
            'some SQL statement',
            'another SQL statement',
          ],
        }
      ]

  traits
    Array of Traits to apply to the instance. Traits are Moose::Roles.

    They are relative to the "MyApp::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::", then
    the "Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::" namespaces, unless
    prefixed with "+" in which case they are taken to be a fully qualified
    name. E.g.:

        traits Caching
        traits +MyApp::TraitFor::Model::Foo

    A new instance is created at application time, so any consumed required
    attributes, coercions and modifiers will work.

    Traits are applied at "COMPONENT" in Catalyst::Component time using
    CatalystX::Component::Traits.

    "ref $self" will be an anon class if any traits are applied,
    "$self->_original_class_name" will be the original class.

    When writing a Trait, interesting points to modify are "BUILD", "setup"
    and "ACCEPT_CONTEXT".

    Traits that come with the distribution:

    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Caching
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Replicated
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::SchemaProxy
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::PerRequestSchema

  compose_namespaces
    This model calls "compose_namespace" in DBIx::Class::Schema by default
    to install classes into the model namespaces. You can turn that off by
    setting this attribute to false. Default is true.

  install_model_shortcuts
    If you don't want shortcut models so you can do e.g.
    "$c->model('DB::Book')" set this attribute to false, Default is true.

  storage_type
    Allows the use of a different "storage_type" than what is set in your
    "schema_class" (which in turn defaults to "::DBI" if not set in current
    DBIx::Class). Completely optional, and probably unnecessary for most
    people until other storage backends become available for DBIx::Class.

ATTRIBUTES
    The keys you pass in the model configuration are available as
    attributes.

    Other attributes available:

  connect_info
    Your connect_info args normalized to hashref form (with
    dsn/user/password.) See "connect_info" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI for
    more info on the hashref form of "connect_info".

  model_name
    The model name Catalyst uses to resolve this model, the part after
    "::Model::" or "::M::" in your class name. E.g. if your class name is
    "MyApp::Model::DB" the "model_name" will be "DB".

  _default_cursor_class
    What to reset your "cursor_class" in DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI to if a
    custom one doesn't work out. Defaults to
    DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::Cursor.

ATTRIBUTES FROM MooseX::Traits::Pluggable
  _original_class_name
    The class name of your model before any "traits" are applied. E.g.
    "MyApp::Model::DB".

  _traits
    Unresolved arrayref of traits passed in the config.

  _resolved_traits
    Traits you used resolved to full class names.

CONFIGURING YOUR SCHEMA AND RESULTSETS
    See the documentation for
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::SchemaProxy for instructions on
    how to pass config values from your Catalyst config to your
    DBIx::Class::Schema and/or DBIx::Class::ResultSet classes.

METHODS
  new
    Instantiates the Model based on the above-documented ->config
    parameters. The only required parameter is "schema_class".
    "connect_info" is required in the case that "schema_class" does not
    already have connection information defined for it.

  schema
    Accessor which returns the connected schema being used by the this
    model. There are direct shortcuts on the model class itself for
    schema->resultset, schema->source, and schema->class.

  composed_schema
    Accessor which returns the composed schema, which has no connection
    info, which was used in constructing the "schema". Useful for creating
    new connections based on the same schema/model. There are direct
    shortcuts from the model object for composed_schema->clone and
    composed_schema->connect

    If "compose_namespaces" is not true, "composed_schema" is equivalent to
    "$model->schema_class->clone".

  clone
    Shortcut for ->composed_schema->clone

  connect
    Shortcut for ->composed_schema->connect

  source
    Shortcut for ->schema->source

  class
    Shortcut for ->schema->class

  resultset
    Shortcut for ->schema->resultset

  txn_do
    Shortcut for ->schema->txn_do

  txn_scope_guard
    Shortcut for ->schema->txn_scope_guard

  storage
    Provides an accessor for the connected schema's storage object.

    See DBIx::Class::Storage and DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI.

  setup
    Called at "BUILD" time before configuration, but after "connect_info" is
    set. To do something after configuuration use "after BUILD =>".

    Receives a hashref of args passed to "BUILD".

  ACCEPT_CONTEXT
    Point of extension for doing things at "$c->model" time with context,
    returns the model instance, see "ACCEPT_CONTEXT" in
    Catalyst::Manual::Intro for more information.

ENVIRONMENT
    CMDS_NO_SOURCES
        Set this variable if you will be using schemas with no sources
        (Result classes) to disable the warning. The warning is there
        because having no Result classes is usually a mistake.

Setting up DBIC authentication
    You can set this up with Catalyst::Authentication::Store::DBIx::Class in
    MyApp.pm:

      package MyApp;

      use Catalyst qw/... Authentication .../;

      ...

      __PACKAGE__->config('Plugin::Authentication' =>
                    {
                        default_realm => 'members',
                        members => {
                            credential => {
                                class => 'Password',
                                password_field => 'password',
                                password_type => 'hashed'
                                password_hash_type => 'SHA-256'
                            },
                            store => {
                                class => 'DBIx::Class',
                                user_model => 'DB::User',
                                role_relation => 'roles',
                                role_field => 'rolename',
                            }
                        }
                    });

METHOD PROXYING
    The automatic proxying to the underlying DBIx::Class::Schema has been
    removed as of version 0.34, to enable this feature add "SchemaProxy" to
    "traits".

    See Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::SchemaProxy.

SEE ALSO
    General Catalyst Stuff:

    Catalyst::Manual, Catalyst::Test, Catalyst::Request, Catalyst::Response,
    Catalyst::Helper, Catalyst,

    Stuff related to DBIC and this Model style:

    DBIx::Class, DBIx::Class::Schema, DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader,
    Catalyst::Helper::Model::DBIC::Schema, CatalystX::Component::Traits,
    MooseX::Traits::Pluggable

    Traits:

    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Caching,
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::Replicated,
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::SchemaProxy,
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::PerRequestSchema,
    Catalyst::TraitFor::Model::DBIC::Schema::QueryLog

AUTHOR
    Brandon L Black "blblack at gmail.com"

CONTRIBUTORS
    caelum: Rafael Kitover "rkitover at cpan.org"

    dandv: Dan Dascalescu "dandv at cpan.org"

    bluefeet: Aran Deltac "bluefeet@cpan.org"

    t0m: Tomas Doran "bobtfish@bobtfish.net"

    osfameron: "osfameron@cpan.org"

    ozum: Ozum Eldogan "ozum@ozum.net"

    Pavel I. Shaydo "zwon@trinitum.org"

    SineSwiper: Brendan Byrd <byrd.b@insightcom.com>

COPYRIGHT
    Copyright (c) 2006 - 2010 the Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema "AUTHOR" and
    "CONTRIBUTORS" as listed above.

LICENSE
    This program is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself.