Current Path : /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.8.9/mach/DBI/ |
FreeBSD hs32.drive.ne.jp 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 14 12:18:08 JST 2015 root@hs32.drive.ne.jp:/sys/amd64/compile/hs32 amd64 |
Current File : //usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.8.9/mach/DBI/W32ODBC.pm |
package DBI; # hide this non-DBI package from simple indexers # $Id: W32ODBC.pm 8696 2007-01-24 23:12:38Z timbo $ # # Copyright (c) 1997,1999 Tim Bunce # With many thanks to Patrick Hollins for polishing. # # You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public # License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file. =head1 NAME DBI::W32ODBC - An experimental DBI emulation layer for Win32::ODBC =head1 SYNOPSIS use DBI::W32ODBC; # apart from the line above everything is just the same as with # the real DBI when using a basic driver with few features. =head1 DESCRIPTION This is an experimental pure perl DBI emulation layer for Win32::ODBC If you can improve this code I'd be interested in hearing about it. If you are having trouble using it please respect the fact that it's very experimental. Ideally fix it yourself and send me the details. =head2 Some Things Not Yet Implemented Most attributes including PrintError & RaiseError. type_info and table_info Volunteers welcome! =cut ${'DBI::VERSION'} # hide version from PAUSE indexer = "0.01"; my $Revision = sprintf("12.%06d", q$Revision: 8696 $ =~ /(\d+)/o); sub DBI::W32ODBC::import { } # must trick here since we're called DBI/W32ODBC.pm use Carp; use Win32::ODBC; @ISA = qw(Win32::ODBC); use strict; $DBI::dbi_debug = $ENV{PERL_DBI_DEBUG} || 0; carp "Loaded (W32ODBC) DBI.pm ${'DBI::VERSION'} (debug $DBI::dbi_debug)" if $DBI::dbi_debug; sub connect { my ($class, $dbname, $dbuser, $dbpasswd, $module, $attr) = @_; $dbname .= ";UID=$dbuser" if $dbuser; $dbname .= ";PWD=$dbpasswd" if $dbpasswd; my $h = new Win32::ODBC $dbname; warn "Error connecting to $dbname: ".Win32::ODBC::Error()."\n" unless $h; bless $h, $class if $h; # rebless into our class $h; } sub quote { my ($h, $string) = @_; return "NULL" if !defined $string; $string =~ s/'/''/g; # standard # This hack seems to be required for Access but probably breaks for # other databases when using \r and \n. It would be better if we could # use ODBC options to detect that we're actually using Access. $string =~ s/\r/' & chr\$(13) & '/g; $string =~ s/\n/' & chr\$(10) & '/g; "'$string'"; } sub do { my($h, $statement, $attribs, @params) = @_; Carp::carp "\$h->do() attribs unused" if $attribs; my $new_h = $h->prepare($statement) or return undef; ## pop @{ $h->{'___sths'} }; ## certian death assured $new_h->execute(@params) or return undef; ## my $rows = $new_h->rows; ## $new_h->finish; ## bang bang ($rows == 0) ? "0E0" : $rows; } # --- sub prepare { my ($h, $sql) = @_; ## opens a new connection with every prepare to allow ## multiple, concurrent queries my $new_h = new Win32::ODBC $h->{DSN}; ## return undef if not $new_h; ## bail if no connection bless $new_h; ## shouldn't be sub-classed... $new_h->{'__prepare'} = $sql; ## $new_h->{NAME} = []; ## $new_h->{NUM_OF_FIELDS} = -1; ## push @{ $h->{'___sths'} } ,$new_h; ## save sth in parent for mass destruction return $new_h; ## } sub execute { my ($h) = @_; my $rc = $h->Sql($h->{'__prepare'}); return undef if $rc; my @fields = $h->FieldNames; $h->{NAME} = \@fields; $h->{NUM_OF_FIELDS} = scalar @fields; $h; # return dbh as pseudo sth } sub fetchrow_hashref { ## provide DBI compatibility my $h = shift; my $NAME = shift || "NAME"; my $row = $h->fetchrow_arrayref or return undef; my %hash; @hash{ @{ $h->{$NAME} } } = @$row; return \%hash; } sub fetchrow { my $h = shift; return unless $h->FetchRow(); my $fields_r = $h->{NAME}; return $h->Data(@$fields_r); } sub fetch { my @row = shift->fetchrow; return undef unless @row; return \@row; } *fetchrow_arrayref = \&fetch; ## provide DBI compatibility *fetchrow_array = \&fetchrow; ## provide DBI compatibility sub rows { shift->RowCount; } sub finish { shift->Close; ## uncommented this line } # --- sub commit { shift->Transact(ODBC::SQL_COMMIT); } sub rollback { shift->Transact(ODBC::SQL_ROLLBACK); } sub disconnect { my ($h) = shift; ## this will kill all the statement handles foreach (@{$h->{'___sths'}}) { ## created for a specific connection $_->Close if $_->{DSN}; ## } ## $h->Close; ## } sub err { (shift->Error)[0]; } sub errstr { scalar( shift->Error ); } # --- 1;