Provided by: libcatalyst-manual-perl_5.9012-1_all bug

NAME

       Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 4: Basic CRUD

OVERVIEW

       This is Chapter 4 of 10 for the Catalyst tutorial.

       Tutorial Overview

       1.  Introduction

       2.  Catalyst Basics

       3.  More Catalyst Basics

       4.  04_Basic CRUD

       5.  Authentication

       6.  Authorization

       7.  Debugging

       8.  Testing

       9.  Advanced CRUD

       10. Appendices

DESCRIPTION

       This chapter of the tutorial builds on the fairly primitive application created in Chapter 3 to add basic
       support  for Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) of "Book" objects.  Note that the 'list' function in
       Chapter 3 already implements the Read portion of CRUD (although Read normally refers to reading a  single
       object; you could implement full Read functionality using the techniques introduced below).  This section
       will  focus  on the Create and Delete aspects of CRUD.  More advanced capabilities, including full Update
       functionality, will be addressed in Chapter 9.

       Although this chapter of the tutorial will show you how to build  CRUD  functionality  yourself,  another
       option is to use a "CRUD builder" type of tool to automate the process.  You get less control, but it can
       be    quick    and   easy.    For   example,   see   Catalyst::Plugin::AutoCRUD,   CatalystX::CRUD,   and
       CatalystX::CRUD::YUI.

       Source code for the tutorial in included in the /home/catalyst/Final directory of  the  Tutorial  Virtual
       machine  (one  subdirectory  per  chapter).   There  are  also  instructions  for downloading the code in
       Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro.

FORMLESS SUBMISSION

       Our initial attempt at object creation will utilize the "URL arguments"  feature  of  Catalyst  (we  will
       employ the more common form-based submission in the sections that follow).

   Include a Create Action in the Books Controller
       Edit lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and enter the following method:

           =head2 url_create

           Create a book with the supplied title, rating, and author

           =cut

           sub url_create :Local {
               # In addition to self & context, get the title, rating, &
               # author_id args from the URL.  Note that Catalyst automatically
               # puts extra information after the "/<controller_name>/<action_name/"
               # into @_.  The args are separated  by the '/' char on the URL.
               my ($self, $c, $title, $rating, $author_id) = @_;

               # Call create() on the book model object. Pass the table
               # columns/field values we want to set as hash values
               my $book = $c->model('DB::Book')->create({
                       title  => $title,
                       rating => $rating
                   });

               # Add a record to the join table for this book, mapping to
               # appropriate author
               $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $author_id});
               # Note: Above is a shortcut for this:
               # $book->create_related('book_authors', {author_id => $author_id});

               # Assign the Book object to the stash for display and set template
               $c->stash(book     => $book,
                         template => 'books/create_done.tt2');

               # Disable caching for this page
               $c->response->header('Cache-Control' => 'no-cache');
           }

       Notice that Catalyst takes "extra slash-separated information" from the URL and passes it as arguments in
       @_  (as  long  as  the  number  of  arguments  is  not  "fixed"  using  an attribute like :Args(0)).  The
       "url_create" action then uses a simple call to the DBIC "create" method to add the requested  information
       to  the  database  (with  a  separate  call  to  "add_to_book_authors"  to update the join table).  As do
       virtually all controller methods (at least the ones that directly handle user input), it  then  sets  the
       template that should handle this request.

       Also  note that we are explicitly setting a "no-cache" "Cache-Control" header to force browsers using the
       page  to  get  a  fresh  copy  every  time.   You  could  even  move  this  to   a   "auto"   method   in
       lib/MyApp/Controller/Root.pm  and  it  would  automatically  get  applied  to  every  page  in  the whole
       application via a single line of code (remember from Chapter 3, that every "auto" method gets run in  the
       Controller hierarchy).

   Include a Template for the 'url_create' Action:
       Edit root/src/books/create_done.tt2 and then enter:

           [% # Use the TT Dumper plugin to Data::Dumper variables to the browser   -%]
           [% # Not a good idea for production use, though. :-)  'Indent=1' is      -%]
           [% # optional, but prevents "massive indenting" of deeply nested objects -%]
           [% USE Dumper(Indent=1) -%]

           [% # Set the page title.  META can 'go back' and set values in templates -%]
           [% # that have been processed 'before' this template (here it's updating -%]
           [% # the title in the root/src/wrapper.tt2 wrapper template).  Note that -%]
           [% # META only works on simple/static strings (i.e. there is no variable -%]
           [% # interpolation -- if you need dynamic/interpolated content in your   -%]
           [% # title, set "$c->stash(title => $something)" in the controller).     -%]
           [% META title = 'Book Created' %]

           [% # Output information about the record that was added.  First title.   -%]
           <p>Added book '[% book.title %]'

           [% # Then, output the last name of the first author -%]
           by '[% book.authors.first.last_name %]'

           [% # Then, output the rating for the book that was added -%]
           with a rating of [% book.rating %].</p>

           [% # Provide a link back to the list page.  'c.uri_for' builds -%]
           [% # a full URI; e.g., 'http://localhost:3000/books/list'      -%]
           <p><a href="[% c.uri_for('/books/list') %]">Return to list</a></p>

           [% # Try out the TT Dumper (for development only!) -%]
           <pre>
           Dump of the 'book' variable:
           [% Dumper.dump(book) %]
           </pre>

       The  TT  "USE"  directive allows access to a variety of plugin modules (TT plugins, that is, not Catalyst
       plugins) to add extra functionality to the base TT capabilities.  Here, the  plugin  allows  Data::Dumper
       "pretty  printing"  of  objects  and variables.  Other than that, the rest of the code should be familiar
       from the examples in Chapter 3.

   Try the 'url_create' Feature
       Make sure the development server is running with the "-r" restart option:

           $ DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl -r

       Note that new path for "/books/url_create" appears in the startup debug output.

       Next, use your browser to enter the following URL:

           http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4

       Your browser should display "Added book 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2' by 'Stevens' with a rating of 5." along
       with a dump of the new book model object as it was returned by DBIC.  You should also see  the  following
       DBIC debug messages displayed in the development server log messages if you have DBIC_TRACE set:

           INSERT INTO book (rating, title) VALUES (?, ?): `5', `TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2'
           INSERT INTO book_author (author_id, book_id) VALUES (?, ?): `4', `6'

       The  "INSERT"  statements are obviously adding the book and linking it to the existing record for Richard
       Stevens.   The  "SELECT"  statement  results  from  DBIC  automatically  fetching  the   book   for   the
       "Dumper.dump(book)".

       If  you  then  click  the  "Return  to list" link, you should find that there are now six books shown (if
       necessary, Shift+Reload or Ctrl+Reload your browser at the "/books/list" page).  You should now  see  the
       six DBIC debug messages similar to the following (where N=1-6):

           SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name
               FROM book_author me  JOIN author author
               ON author.id = me.author_id WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): 'N'

CONVERT TO A CHAINED ACTION

       Although  the  example above uses the same "Local" action type for the method that we saw in the previous
       chapter of the tutorial, there is an alternate approach that allows us to be  more  specific  while  also
       paving  the  way  for  more  advanced  capabilities.   Change  the method declaration for "url_create" in
       lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm you entered above to match the following:

           sub url_create :Chained('/') :PathPart('books/url_create') :Args(3) {
               # In addition to self & context, get the title, rating, &
               # author_id args from the URL.  Note that Catalyst automatically
               # puts the first 3 arguments worth of extra information after the
               # "/<controller_name>/<action_name/" into @_ because we specified
               # "Args(3)".  The args are separated  by the '/' char on the URL.
               my ($self, $c, $title, $rating, $author_id) = @_;

               ...

       This converts the method to take advantage of the Chained action/dispatch type. Chaining lets you have  a
       single  URL  automatically dispatch to several controller methods, each of which can have precise control
       over the number of arguments that it will receive.  A chain can essentially be thought  of  having  three
       parts  --  a  beginning, a middle, and an end.  The bullets below summarize the key points behind each of
       these parts of a chain:

       •   Beginning

           •   Use ":Chained('/')" to start a chain

           •   Get arguments through CaptureArgs()

           •   Specify the path to match with PathPart()

       •   Middle

           •   Link to previous part of the chain with :Chained('_name_')

           •   Get arguments through CaptureArgs()

           •   Specify the path to match with PathPart()

       •   End

           •   Link to previous part of the chain with :Chained('_name_')

           •   Do NOT get arguments through "CaptureArgs()," use "Args()" instead to end a chain

           •   Specify the path to match with PathPart()

       In our "url_create" method above, we have combined all three parts into a single method: :Chained('/') to
       start the chain, :PathPart('books/url_create') to specify the base URL to match, and :Args(3) to  capture
       exactly three arguments and to end the chain.

       As we will see shortly, a chain can consist of as many "links" as you wish, with each part capturing some
       arguments  and  doing  some  work along the way.  We will continue to use the Chained action type in this
       chapter of the tutorial and explore slightly more advanced capabilities with the base method  and  delete
       feature  below.   But  Chained  dispatch is capable of far more.  For additional information, see "Action
       types" in Catalyst::Manual::Intro, Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained, and the 2006 Advent calendar entry on
       the subject: <http://www.catalystframework.org/calendar/2006/10>.

   Try the Chained Action
       If you look back at the development server startup logs from your initial  version  of  the  "url_create"
       method  (the  one  using  the ":Local" attribute), you will notice that it produced output similar to the
       following:

           [debug] Loaded Path actions:
           .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
           | Path                                | Private                              |
           +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
           | /                                   | /default                             |
           | /                                   | /index                               |
           | /books                              | /books/index                         |
           | /books/list                         | /books/list                          |
           | /books/url_create                   | /books/url_create                    |
           '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'

       When the development server restarts after our conversion to Chained dispatch, the  debug  output  should
       change to something along the lines of the following:

           [debug] Loaded Path actions:
           .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
           | Path                                | Private                              |
           +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
           | /                                   | /default                             |
           | /                                   | /index                               |
           | /books                              | /books/index                         |
           | /books/list                         | /books/list                          |
           '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'

           [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
           .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
           | Path Spec                           | Private                              |
           +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
           | /books/url_create/*/*/*             | /books/url_create                    |
           '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'

       "url_create"  has  disappeared from the "Loaded Path actions" section but it now shows up under the newly
       created "Loaded Chained actions" section.  And the "/*/*/*" portion clearly  shows  our  requirement  for
       three arguments.

       As with our non-chained version of "url_create", use your browser to enter the following URL:

           http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4

       You  should  see  the  same "Added book 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2' by 'Stevens' with a rating of 5." along
       with a dump of the new book model object.  Click the "Return to list" link,  and  you  should  find  that
       there are now seven books shown (two copies of TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2).

   Refactor to Use a 'base' Method to Start the Chains
       Let's  make  a quick update to our initial Chained action to show a little more of the power of chaining.
       First, open lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm in your editor and add the following method:

           =head2 base

           Can place common logic to start chained dispatch here

           =cut

           sub base :Chained('/') :PathPart('books') :CaptureArgs(0) {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Store the ResultSet in stash so it's available for other methods
               $c->stash(resultset => $c->model('DB::Book'));

               # Print a message to the debug log
               $c->log->debug('*** INSIDE BASE METHOD ***');
           }

       Here we print a log message and store  the  DBIC  ResultSet  in  "$c->stash->{resultset}"  so  that  it's
       automatically  available for other actions that chain off "base".  If your controller always needs a book
       ID as its first argument, you could have the base method capture that argument (with :CaptureArgs(1)) and
       use it to pull the book object with "->find($id)" and leave it in the  stash  for  later  parts  of  your
       chains  to then act upon. Because we have several actions that don't need to retrieve a book (such as the
       "url_create" we are working with now), we will instead add that functionality to a common "object" action
       shortly.

       As for "url_create", let's modify it to first dispatch to "base".  Open up  lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm
       and edit the declaration for "url_create" to match the following:

           sub url_create :Chained('base') :PathPart('url_create') :Args(3) {

       Once  you  save  lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm,  notice  that the development server will restart and our
       "Loaded Chained actions" section will changed slightly:

           [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
           .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
           | Path Spec                           | Private                              |
           +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
           | /books/url_create/*/*/*             | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/url_create                 |
           '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'

       The "Path Spec" is the same, but now it maps to two Private actions  as  we  would  expect.   The  "base"
       method is being triggered by the "/books" part of the URL.  However, the processing then continues to the
       "url_create"  method because this method "chained" off "base" and specified :PathPart('url_create') (note
       that we could have omitted the "PathPart" here because it matches the name of the  method,  but  we  will
       include it to make the logic as explicit as possible).

       Once again, enter the following URL into your browser:

           http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4

       The  same  "Added  book 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2' by 'Stevens' with a rating of 5." message and a dump of
       the new book object should appear.  Also notice the extra "INSIDE  BASE  METHOD"  debug  message  in  the
       development  server  output from the "base" method.  Click the "Return to list" link, and you should find
       that there are now eight books shown.  (You may have a larger number of books if you repeated any of  the
       "create"  actions more than once.  Don't worry about it as long as the number of books is appropriate for
       the number of times you added new books... there should be the original five books added via  myapp01.sql
       plus one additional book for each time you ran one of the url_create variations above.)

MANUALLY BUILDING A CREATE FORM

       Although  the  "url_create" action in the previous step does begin to reveal the power and flexibility of
       both Catalyst and DBIC, it's obviously not a very realistic example of how users should  be  expected  to
       enter  data.   This  section  begins  to  address that concern (but just barely, see Chapter 9 for better
       options for handling web-based forms).

   Add Method to Display The Form
       Edit lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and add the following method:

           =head2 form_create

           Display form to collect information for book to create

           =cut

           sub form_create :Chained('base') :PathPart('form_create') :Args(0) {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Set the TT template to use
               $c->stash(template => 'books/form_create.tt2');
           }

       This action simply invokes a view containing a form to create a book.

   Add a Template for the Form
       Open root/src/books/form_create.tt2 in your editor and enter:

           [% META title = 'Manual Form Book Create' -%]

           <form method="post" action="[% c.uri_for('form_create_do') %]">
           <table>
               <tr><td>Title:</td><td><input type="text" name="title"></td></tr>
               <tr><td>Rating:</td><td><input type="text" name="rating"></td></tr>
               <tr><td>Author ID:</td><td><input type="text" name="author_id"></td></tr>
           </table>
           <input type="submit" name="Submit" value="Submit">
           </form>

       Note that we have specified the target of the form data as "form_create_do", the method  created  in  the
       section that follows.

   Add a Method to Process Form Values and Update Database
       Edit  lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm  and  add  the  following  method to save the form information to the
       database:

           =head2 form_create_do

           Take information from form and add to database

           =cut

           sub form_create_do :Chained('base') :PathPart('form_create_do') :Args(0) {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Retrieve the values from the form
               my $title     = $c->request->params->{title}     || 'N/A';
               my $rating    = $c->request->params->{rating}    || 'N/A';
               my $author_id = $c->request->params->{author_id} || '1';

               # Create the book
               my $book = $c->model('DB::Book')->create({
                       title   => $title,
                       rating  => $rating,
                   });
               # Handle relationship with author
               $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $author_id});
               # Note: Above is a shortcut for this:
               # $book->create_related('book_authors', {author_id => $author_id});

               # Store new model object in stash and set template
               $c->stash(book     => $book,
                         template => 'books/create_done.tt2');
           }

   Test Out The Form
       Notice that the server startup log reflects the two new chained methods that we added:

           [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
           .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
           | Path Spec                           | Private                              |
           +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
           | /books/form_create                  | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/form_create                |
           | /books/form_create_do               | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/form_create_do             |
           | /books/url_create/*/*/*             | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/url_create                 |
           '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'

       Point your browser to <http://localhost:3000/books/form_create> and enter "TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol 3" for
       the title, a rating of 5, and an  author  ID  of  4.   You  should  then  see  the  output  of  the  same
       create_done.tt2 template seen in earlier examples.  Finally, click "Return to list" to view the full list
       of books.

       Note:  Having  the  user enter the primary key ID for the author is obviously crude; we will address this
       concern with a drop-down list and add validation to our forms in Chapter 9.

A SIMPLE DELETE FEATURE

       Turning our attention to the Delete portion of CRUD, this section illustrates some basic techniques  that
       can be used to remove information from the database.

   Include a Delete Link in the List
       Edit  root/src/books/list.tt2  and  update  it  to match the following (two sections have changed: 1) the
       additional '<th>Links</th>' table header, and 2) the five lines for the Delete link near the bottom):

           [% # This is a TT comment. -%]

           [%- # Provide a title -%]
           [% META title = 'Book List' -%]

           [% # Note That the '-' at the beginning or end of TT code  -%]
           [% # "chomps" the whitespace/newline at that end of the    -%]
           [% # output (use View Source in browser to see the effect) -%]

           [% # Some basic HTML with a loop to display books -%]
           <table>
           <tr><th>Title</th><th>Rating</th><th>Author(s)</th><th>Links</th></tr>
           [% # Display each book in a table row %]
           [% FOREACH book IN books -%]
               <tr>
                   <td>[% book.title %]</td>
                   <td>[% book.rating %]</td>
                   <td>
                       [% # NOTE: See Chapter 4 for a better way to do this!                      -%]
                       [% # First initialize a TT variable to hold a list.  Then use a TT FOREACH -%]
                       [% # loop in 'side effect notation' to load just the last names of the     -%]
                       [% # authors into the list. Note that the 'push' TT vmethod doesn't return -%]
                       [% # a value, so nothing will be printed here.  But, if you have something -%]
                       [% # in TT that does return a value and you don't want it printed, you     -%]
                       [% # 1) assign it to a bogus value, or                                     -%]
                       [% # 2) use the CALL keyword to call it and discard the return value.      -%]
                       [% tt_authors = [ ];
                         tt_authors.push(author.last_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
                       [% # Now use a TT 'virtual method' to display the author count in parens   -%]
                       [% # Note the use of the TT filter "| html" to escape dangerous characters -%]
                       ([% tt_authors.size | html %])
                       [% # Use another TT vmethod to join & print the names & comma separators   -%]
                       [% tt_authors.join(', ') | html %]
                   </td>
                   <td>
                       [% # Add a link to delete a book %]
                       <a href="[%
                           c.uri_for(c.controller.action_for('delete'), [book.id]) %]">Delete</a>
                   </td>
               </tr>
           [% END -%]
           </table>

       The additional code is obviously designed to add a new column to the right  side  of  the  table  with  a
       "Delete"  "button"  (for  simplicity,  links will be used instead of full HTML buttons; but, in practice,
       anything that modifies data should be handled with a form sending a POST request).

       Also notice that we are using a more advanced form of "uri_for" than we have seen before.   Here  we  use
       "$c->controller->action_for"  to  automatically  generate  a URI appropriate for that action based on the
       method we want to link to while inserting the "book.id" value into the appropriate place.   Now,  if  you
       ever  change :PathPart('delete') in your controller method to something like :PathPart('kill'), then your
       links will automatically update without any changes to your .tt2 template file.  As long as the  name  of
       your  method  does  not  change (here, "delete"), then your links will still be correct.  There are a few
       shortcuts and options when using action_for():

       •   If   you   are   referring   to   a   method   in   the   current    controller,    you    can    use
           "$self->action_for('_method_name_')".

       •   If  you  are  referring  to a method in a different controller, you need to include that controller's
           name         as         an         argument         to          controller(),          as          in
           "$c->controller('_controller_name_')->action_for('_method_name_')".

       Note:  In  practice  you should never use a GET request to delete a record -- always use POST for actions
       that will modify data.  We are doing it here for illustrative and simplicity purposes only.

   Add a Common Method to Retrieve a Book for the Chain
       As mentioned earlier, since we have a mixture of actions that operate on a single book ID and others that
       do not, we should not have "base" capture the book ID, find the corresponding book in  the  database  and
       save  it  in the stash for later links in the chain.  However, just because that logic does not belong in
       "base" doesn't mean that we can't create another location to centralize the book  lookup  code.   In  our
       case,  we  will  create  a method called "object" that will store the specific book in the stash.  Chains
       that always operate on a single existing book can chain off this method, but methods such as "url_create"
       that don't operate on an existing book can chain directly off base.

       To add the "object" method, edit lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and add the following code:

           =head2 object

           Fetch the specified book object based on the book ID and store
           it in the stash

           =cut

           sub object :Chained('base') :PathPart('id') :CaptureArgs(1) {
               # $id = primary key of book to delete
               my ($self, $c, $id) = @_;

               # Find the book object and store it in the stash
               $c->stash(object => $c->stash->{resultset}->find($id));

               # Make sure the lookup was successful.  You would probably
               # want to do something like this in a real app:
               #   $c->detach('/error_404') if !$c->stash->{object};
               die "Book $id not found!" if !$c->stash->{object};

               # Print a message to the debug log
               $c->log->debug("*** INSIDE OBJECT METHOD for obj id=$id ***");
           }

       Now, any other method that chains off "object" will automatically have the appropriate book  waiting  for
       it in "$c->stash->{object}".

   Add a Delete Action to the Controller
       Open lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm in your editor and add the following method:

           =head2 delete

           Delete a book

           =cut

           sub delete :Chained('object') :PathPart('delete') :Args(0) {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Use the book object saved by 'object' and delete it along
               # with related 'book_author' entries
               $c->stash->{object}->delete;

               # Set a status message to be displayed at the top of the view
               $c->stash->{status_msg} = "Book deleted.";

               # Forward to the list action/method in this controller
               $c->forward('list');
           }

       This  method  first  deletes  the book object saved by the "object" method.  However, it also removes the
       corresponding entry from the "book_author" table with a cascading delete.

       Then, rather than forwarding to a "delete done" page as we did with the earlier create example, it simply
       sets the "status_msg" to display a notification to the user as the normal list view is rendered.

       The "delete" action uses the context "forward" method to return the user to the book list.  The  "detach"
       method could have also been used.  Whereas "forward" returns to the original action once it is completed,
       "detach" does not return.  Other than that, the two are equivalent.

   Try the Delete Feature
       Once  you save the Books controller, the server should automatically restart.  The "delete" method should
       now appear in the "Loaded Chained actions" section of the startup debug output:

           [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
           .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
           | Path Spec                           | Private                              |
           +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
           | /books/id/*/delete                  | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | -> /books/object (1)                 |
           |                                     | => /books/delete                     |
           | /books/form_create                  | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/form_create                |
           | /books/form_create_do               | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/form_create_do             |
           | /books/url_create/*/*/*             | /books/base (0)                      |
           |                                     | => /books/url_create                 |
           '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'

       Then point your browser to <http://localhost:3000/books/list> and click the "Delete"  link  next  to  the
       first  "TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2".  A green "Book deleted" status message should display at the top of the
       page, along with a list of the eight remaining books.  You will also see the cascading  delete  operation
       via the DBIC_TRACE output:

           SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating FROM book me WHERE ( ( me.id = ? ) ): '6'
           DELETE FROM book WHERE ( id = ? ): '6'

       If you get the error "file error - books/delete.tt2: not found" then you probably forgot to uncomment the
       template line in "sub list" at the end of chapter 3.

   Fixing a Dangerous URL
       Note  the  URL  in  your  browser  once  you have performed the deletion in the prior step -- it is still
       referencing the delete action:

           http://localhost:3000/books/id/6/delete

       What if the user were to press reload with this URL still active?  In this case the redundant  delete  is
       harmless  (although  it  does generate an exception screen, it doesn't perform any undesirable actions on
       the application or database), but in other cases this could clearly lead to trouble.

       We  can  improve  the  logic  by  converting   to   a   redirect.    Unlike   "$c->forward('list'))"   or
       "$c->detach('list'))"  that  perform  a server-side alteration in the flow of processing, a redirect is a
       client-side mechanism that causes the browser to issue an entirely new request.  As a result, the URL  in
       the browser is updated to match the destination of the redirection URL.

       To convert the forward used in the previous section to a redirect, open lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and
       edit the existing "sub delete" method to match:

           =head2 delete

           Delete a book

           =cut

           sub delete :Chained('object') :PathPart('delete') :Args(0) {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Use the book object saved by 'object' and delete it along
               # with related 'book_author' entries
               $c->stash->{object}->delete;

               # Set a status message to be displayed at the top of the view
               $c->stash->{status_msg} = "Book deleted.";

               # Redirect the user back to the list page.  Note the use
               # of $self->action_for as earlier in this section (BasicCRUD)
               $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list')));
           }

   Try the Delete and Redirect Logic
       Point  your browser to <http://localhost:3000/books/list> (don't just hit "Refresh" in your browser since
       we left the URL in an invalid state in the previous section!) and delete the first copy of the  remaining
       two    "TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2"    books.   The   URL   in   your   browser   should   return   to   the
       <http://localhost:3000/books/list> URL, so that is  an  improvement,  but  notice  that  no  green  "Book
       deleted"  status  message  is  displayed.  Because  the  stash  is reset on every request (and a redirect
       involves a second request), the "status_msg" is cleared before it can be displayed.

   Using 'uri_for' to Pass Query Parameters
       There are several ways to pass information across a redirect. One option is to use the "flash"  technique
       that  we  will  see  in  Chapter 5 of this tutorial; however, here we will pass the information via query
       parameters on the redirect itself.  Open  lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm  and  update  the  existing  "sub
       delete" method to match the following:

           =head2 delete

           Delete a book

           =cut

           sub delete :Chained('object') :PathPart('delete') :Args(0) {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Use the book object saved by 'object' and delete it along
               # with related 'book_author' entries
               $c->stash->{object}->delete;

               # Redirect the user back to the list page with status msg as an arg
               $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list'),
                   {status_msg => "Book deleted."}));
           }

       This  modification simply leverages the ability of "uri_for" to include an arbitrary number of name/value
       pairs in a hash reference.  Next, we need to update root/src/wrapper.tt2  to  handle  "status_msg"  as  a
       query parameter:

           ...
           <div id="content">
               [%# Status and error messages %]
               <span class="message">[%
                   status_msg || c.request.params.status_msg | html %]</span>
               <span class="error">[% error_msg %]</span>
               [%# This is where TT will stick all of your template's contents. -%]
               [% content %]
           </div><!-- end content -->
           ...

       Although  the  sample  above  only shows the "content" div, leave the rest of the file intact -- the only
       change we  made  to  the  wrapper.tt2  was  to  add  ""||  c.request.params.status_msg""  to  the  "<span
       class="message">"  line.   Note  that  we definitely want the ""| html"" TT filter here since it would be
       easy for users to modify the message on the URL and possibly inject harmful code into the application  if
       we left that off.

   Try the Delete and Redirect With Query Param Logic
       Point  your browser to <http://localhost:3000/books/list> (you should now be able to safely hit "refresh"
       in your browser). Then delete the remaining copy of "TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2". The green  "Book  deleted"
       status message should return.  But notice that you can now hit the "Reload" button in your browser and it
       just  redisplays  the  book  list  (and  it  correctly  shows  it  without  the "Book deleted" message on
       redisplay).

       NOTE: Be sure to check out Authentication where we use an improved technique that  is  better  suited  to
       your real world applications.

EXPLORING THE POWER OF DBIC

       In  this  section  we  will  explore some additional capabilities offered by DBIx::Class.  Although these
       features have relatively little to do with Catalyst per se,  you  will  almost  certainly  want  to  take
       advantage of them in your applications.

   Add Datetime Columns to Our Existing Books Table
       Let's  add two columns to our existing "books" table to track when each book was added and when each book
       is updated:

           $ sqlite3 myapp.db
           sqlite> ALTER TABLE book ADD created TIMESTAMP;
           sqlite> ALTER TABLE book ADD updated TIMESTAMP;
           sqlite> UPDATE book SET created = DATETIME('NOW'), updated = DATETIME('NOW');
           sqlite> SELECT * FROM book;
           1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           4|Perl Cookbook|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           5|Designing with Web Standards|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           9|TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol 3|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           sqlite> .quit
           $

       Here are the commands without the surrounding sqlite3 prompt and output in case you want to cut and paste
       them as a single block (but still start sqlite3 before you paste these in):

           ALTER TABLE book ADD created TIMESTAMP;
           ALTER TABLE book ADD updated TIMESTAMP;
           UPDATE book SET created = DATETIME('NOW'), updated = DATETIME('NOW');
           SELECT * FROM book;

       This will modify the "books" table to include the two new fields  and  populate  those  fields  with  the
       current time.

   Update DBIx::Class to Automatically Handle the Datetime Columns
       Next, we should re-run the DBIC helper to update the Result Classes with the new fields:

           $ script/myapp_create.pl model DB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema \
               create=static components=TimeStamp dbi:SQLite:myapp.db \
               on_connect_do="PRAGMA foreign_keys = ON"
            exists "/home/catalyst/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model"
            exists "/home/catalyst/dev/MyApp/script/../t"
           Dumping manual schema for MyApp::Schema to directory /home/catalyst/dev/MyApp/script/../lib ...
           Schema dump completed.
            exists "/home/catalyst/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm"

       Notice  that we modified our use of the helper slightly: we told it to include the DBIx::Class::TimeStamp
       in the "load_components" line of the Result Classes.

       If you open lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Book.pm in  your  editor  you  should  see  that  the  "created"  and
       "updated"  fields  are  now  included  in  the  call  to  add_columns().  However,  also  notice that the
       "many_to_many" relationships we manually added below the ""# DO NOT MODIFY..."" line  were  automatically
       preserved.

       While  we  lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Book.pm open, let's update it with some additional information to have
       DBIC automatically handle the updating of these two fields for us.  Insert  the  following  code  at  the
       bottom  of  the  file  (it  must be below the ""# DO NOT MODIFY...""  line and above the "1;" on the last
       line):

           #
           # Enable automatic date handling
           #
           __PACKAGE__->add_columns(
               "created",
               { data_type => 'timestamp', set_on_create => 1 },
               "updated",
               { data_type => 'timestamp', set_on_create => 1, set_on_update => 1 },
           );

       This will override the definition for these fields that Schema::Loader placed at the  top  of  the  file.
       The  "set_on_create"  and  "set_on_update"  options  will  cause  DBIx::Class to automatically update the
       timestamps in these columns whenever a row is created or modified.

       Note that adding the lines above will cause the development server to automatically restart  if  you  are
       running  it  with the "-r" option.  In other words, the development server is smart enough to restart not
       only for code under the MyApp/Controller/, MyApp/Model/, and  MyApp/View/  directories,  but  also  under
       other  directions such as our "external DBIC model" in MyApp/Schema/.  However, also note that it's smart
       enough to not restart when you edit your ".tt2" files under root/.

       Then enter the following URL into your web browser:

           http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4

       You should get the same "Book Created" screen we saw earlier.   However,  if  you  now  use  the  sqlite3
       command-line  tool  to dump the "books" table, you will see that the new book we added has an appropriate
       date and time entered for it (see the last line in the listing below):

           $ sqlite3 myapp.db "select * from book"
           1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           4|Perl Cookbook|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           5|Designing with Web Standards|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           9|TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol 3|5|2010-02-16 04:15:45|2010-02-16 04:15:45
           10|TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2|5|2010-02-16 04:18:42|2010-02-16 04:18:42

       Notice in the debug log that the SQL DBIC generated has changed to incorporate the datetime logic:

           INSERT INTO book ( created, rating, title, updated ) VALUES ( ?, ?, ?, ? ):
           '2010-02-16 04:18:42', '5', 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2', '2010-02-16 04:18:42'
           INSERT INTO book_author ( author_id, book_id ) VALUES ( ?, ? ): '4', '10'

   Create a ResultSet Class
       An often overlooked but extremely powerful features of DBIC is that it allows  you  to  supply  your  own
       subclasses of DBIx::Class::ResultSet.  This can be used to pull complex and unsightly "query code" out of
       your  controllers and encapsulate it in a method of your ResultSet Class.  These "canned queries" in your
       ResultSet Class can then be invoked via a single call, resulting in  much  cleaner  and  easier  to  read
       controller code (or View code, if that's where you want to call it).

       To illustrate the concept with a fairly simple example, let's create a method that returns books added in
       the last 10 minutes.  Start by making a directory where DBIx::Class will look for our ResultSet Class:

           $ mkdir lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet

       Then open lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet/Book.pm and enter the following:

           package MyApp::Schema::ResultSet::Book;

           use strict;
           use warnings;
           use base 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet';

           =head2 created_after

           A predefined search for recently added books

           =cut

           sub created_after {
               my ($self, $datetime) = @_;

               my $date_str = $self->result_source->schema->storage
                                     ->datetime_parser->format_datetime($datetime);

               return $self->search({
                   created => { '>' => $date_str }
               });
           }

           1;

       Then add the following method to the lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm:

           =head2 list_recent

           List recently created books

           =cut

           sub list_recent :Chained('base') :PathPart('list_recent') :Args(1) {
               my ($self, $c, $mins) = @_;

               # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
               # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template, but only
               # retrieve books created within the last $min number of minutes
               $c->stash(books => [$c->model('DB::Book')
                                       ->created_after(DateTime->now->subtract(minutes => $mins))]);

               # Set the TT template to use.  You will almost always want to do this
               # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
               # your controllers).
               $c->stash(template => 'books/list.tt2');
           }

       Now   try  different  values  for  the  "minutes"  argument  (the  final  number  value)  using  the  URL
       "http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent/_#_" in your browser. For example, this  would  list  all  books
       added in the last fifteen minutes:

           http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent/15

       Depending on how recently you added books, you might want to try a higher or lower value for the minutes.

   Chaining ResultSets
       One  of the most helpful and powerful features in DBIx::Class is that it allows you to "chain together" a
       series of queries (note that this has nothing to do with the "Chained Dispatch" for Catalyst that we were
       discussing earlier).  Because each ResultSet method returns another ResultSet, you can  take  an  initial
       query  and immediately feed that into a second query (and so on for as many queries you need).  Note that
       no matter how many ResultSets you chain together, the database itself will not be hit  until  you  use  a
       method  that attempts to access the data. And, because this technique carries over to the ResultSet Class
       feature we implemented in the  previous  section  for  our  "canned  search",  we  can  combine  the  two
       capabilities.   For example, let's add an action to our "Books" controller that lists books that are both
       recent and have "TCP" in the title.  Open up lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and add the following method:

           =head2 list_recent_tcp

           List recently created books

           =cut

           sub list_recent_tcp :Chained('base') :PathPart('list_recent_tcp') :Args(1) {
               my ($self, $c, $mins) = @_;

               # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
               # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template, but only
               # retrieve books created within the last $min number of minutes
               # AND that have 'TCP' in the title
               $c->stash(books => [
                       $c->model('DB::Book')
                           ->created_after(DateTime->now->subtract(minutes => $mins))
                           ->search({title => {'like', '%TCP%'}})
                   ]);

               # Set the TT template to use.  You will almost always want to do this
               # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
               # your controllers).
               $c->stash(template => 'books/list.tt2');
           }

       To try this out, enter the following URL into your browser:

           http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent_tcp/100

       And you should get a list of books added in the last 100 minutes that contain the  string  "TCP"  in  the
       title.   However,  if  you  look  at  all books within the last 100 minutes, you should get a longer list
       (again, you might have to adjust the number of minutes depending on how recently you added books to  your
       database):

           http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent/100

       Take  a  look at the DBIC_TRACE output in the development server log for the first URL and you should see
       something similar to the following:

           SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating, me.created, me.updated FROM book me
           WHERE ( ( title LIKE ? AND created > ? ) ): '%TCP%', '2010-02-16 02:49:32'

       However, let's not pollute our controller code with this raw "TCP"  query  --  it  would  be  cleaner  to
       encapsulate    that    code    in    a   method   on   our   ResultSet   Class.    To   do   this,   open
       lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet/Book.pm and add the following method:

           =head2 title_like

           A predefined search for books with a 'LIKE' search in the string

           =cut

           sub title_like {
               my ($self, $title_str) = @_;

               return $self->search({
                   title => { 'like' => "%$title_str%" }
               });
           }

       We defined the  search  string  as  $title_str  to  make  the  method  more  flexible.   Now  update  the
       "list_recent_tcp"  method  in  lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm to match the following (we have replaced the
       "->search" line with the "->title_like" line shown here -- the rest of the method should be the same):

           =head2 list_recent_tcp

           List recently created books

           =cut

           sub list_recent_tcp :Chained('base') :PathPart('list_recent_tcp') :Args(1) {
               my ($self, $c, $mins) = @_;

               # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
               # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template, but only
               # retrieve books created within the last $min number of minutes
               # AND that have 'TCP' in the title
               $c->stash(books => [
                       $c->model('DB::Book')
                           ->created_after(DateTime->now->subtract(minutes => $mins))
                           ->title_like('TCP')
                   ]);

               # Set the TT template to use.  You will almost always want to do this
               # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
               # your controllers).
               $c->stash(template => 'books/list.tt2');
           }

       Try out the "list_recent_tcp" and "list_recent" URLs as we did above.  They should work  just  the  same,
       but our code is obviously cleaner and more modular, while also being more flexible at the same time.

   Adding Methods to Result Classes
       In  the  previous two sections we saw a good example of how we could use DBIx::Class ResultSet Classes to
       clean up our code for an entire query (for example,  our  "canned  searches"  that  filtered  the  entire
       query).   We  can  do  a  similar  improvement  when  working  with individual rows as well.  Whereas the
       ResultSet construct is used in DBIC to correspond to an entire query, the Result Class construct is  used
       to  represent a row.  Therefore, we can add row-specific "helper methods" to our Result Classes stored in
       lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/. For example,  open  lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Author.pm  and  add  the  following
       method (as always, it must be above the closing ""1;""):

           #
           # Row-level helper methods
           #
           sub full_name {
               my ($self) = @_;

               return $self->first_name . ' ' . $self->last_name;
           }

       This  will allow us to conveniently retrieve both the first and last name for an author in one shot.  Now
       open root/src/books/list.tt2 and change the definition of "tt_authors" from this:

           ...
             [% tt_authors = [ ];
                tt_authors.push(author.last_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
           ...

       to:

           ...
             [% tt_authors = [ ];
                tt_authors.push(author.full_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
           ...

       (Only "author.last_name" was changed to "author.full_name" -- the rest of  the  file  should  remain  the
       same.)

       Now go to the standard book list URL:

           http://localhost:3000/books/list

       The  "Author(s)"  column  will  now contain both the first and last name.  And, because the concatenation
       logic was encapsulated inside our Result Class, it keeps the code inside our TT template nice  and  clean
       (remember,  we  want  the  templates  to  be  as  close to pure HTML markup as possible). Obviously, this
       capability becomes even more useful as you use it to remove even more complicated row-specific logic from
       your templates!

   Moving Complicated View Code to the Model
       The previous section illustrated how we could use a Result Class method to print the full  names  of  the
       authors  without  adding  any  extra  code to our view, but it still left us with a fairly ugly mess (see
       root/src/books/list.tt2):

           ...
           <td>
               [% # NOTE: See Chapter 4 for a better way to do this!                      -%]
               [% # First initialize a TT variable to hold a list.  Then use a TT FOREACH -%]
               [% # loop in 'side effect notation' to load just the last names of the     -%]
               [% # authors into the list. Note that the 'push' TT vmethod does not print -%]
               [% # a value, so nothing will be printed here.  But, if you have something -%]
               [% # in TT that does return a method and you don't want it printed, you    -%]
               [% # can: 1) assign it to a bogus value, or 2) use the CALL keyword to     -%]
               [% # call it and discard the return value.                                 -%]
               [% tt_authors = [ ];
                  tt_authors.push(author.full_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
               [% # Now use a TT 'virtual method' to display the author count in parens   -%]
               [% # Note the use of the TT filter "| html" to escape dangerous characters -%]
               ([% tt_authors.size | html %])
               [% # Use another TT vmethod to join & print the names & comma separators   -%]
               [% tt_authors.join(', ') | html %]
           </td>
           ...

       Let's combine some of the techniques used earlier in this section to clean this up.  First, let's  add  a
       method   to   our   Book   Result   Class   to   return   the   number  of  authors  for  a  book.   Open
       lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Book.pm and add the following method:

           =head2 author_count

           Return the number of authors for the current book

           =cut

           sub author_count {
               my ($self) = @_;

               # Use the 'many_to_many' relationship to fetch all of the authors for the current
               # and the 'count' method in DBIx::Class::ResultSet to get a SQL COUNT
               return $self->authors->count;
           }

       Next,  let's  add   a   method   to   return   a   list   of   authors   for   a   book   to   the   same
       lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Book.pm file:

           =head2 author_list

           Return a comma-separated list of authors for the current book

           =cut

           sub author_list {
               my ($self) = @_;

               # Loop through all authors for the current book, calling all the 'full_name'
               # Result Class method for each
               my @names;
               foreach my $author ($self->authors) {
                   push(@names, $author->full_name);
               }

               return join(', ', @names);
           }

       This  method  loops  through  each  author,  using  the  "full_name"  Result  Class  method  we  added to
       lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Author.pm in the prior section.

       Using these two methods, we can simplify our  TT  code.   Open  root/src/books/list.tt2  and  update  the
       "Author(s)" table cell to match the following:

           ...
           <td>
               [% # Print count and author list using Result Class methods -%]
               ([% book.author_count | html %]) [% book.author_list | html %]
           </td>
           ...

       Although  most  of  the code we removed comprised comments, the overall effect is dramatic... because our
       view code is so simple, we don't need huge comments to clue people in to the gist of our code.  The  view
       code  is now self-documenting and readable enough that you could probably get by with no comments at all.
       All of the "complex" work is being done in our Result Class methods (and, because we have broken the code
       into nice, modular chunks, the Result Class code is hardly something you would call complex).

       As we saw in this section, always strive to keep your view AND controller code as simple as  possible  by
       pulling  code  out  into your model objects.  Because DBIx::Class can be easily extended in so many ways,
       it's an excellent to way accomplish this objective.  It will make your code  cleaner,  easier  to  write,
       less error-prone, and easier to debug and maintain.

       Before  you  conclude  this  section,  hit  Refresh in your browser... the output should be the same even
       though the backend code has been trimmed down.

       You can jump to the next chapter of the tutorial here: Authentication

AUTHOR

       Kennedy Clark, "hkclark@gmail.com"

       Feel free to contact the author for any errors or suggestions, but the best way to report issues  is  via
       the CPAN RT Bug system at <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Catalyst-Manual>.

       Copyright  2006-2011,  Kennedy  Clark, under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike License Version
       3.0 (<https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).

perl v5.38.2                                       2024-02-09             Catalyst::Manua...l::04_BasicCRUD(3pm)