Provided by: libdbd-mariadb-perl_1.22-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       DBD::MariaDB - MariaDB and MySQL driver for the Perl5 Database Interface (DBI)

SYNOPSIS

         use DBI;

         my $dsn = "DBI:MariaDB:database=$database;host=$hostname;port=$port";
         my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password);

         my $sth = $dbh->prepare(
             'SELECT id, first_name, last_name FROM authors WHERE last_name = ?'
         ) or die 'prepare statement failed: ' . $dbh->errstr();
         $sth->execute('Eggers') or die 'execution failed: ' . $dbh->errstr();
         print $sth->rows() . " rows found.\n";
         while (my $ref = $sth->fetchrow_hashref()) {
             print "Found a row: id = $ref->{'id'}, fn = $ref->{'first_name'}\n";
         }

EXAMPLE

         #!/usr/bin/perl

         use strict;
         use warnings;
         use DBI;

         # Connect to the database.
         my $dbh = DBI->connect('DBI:MariaDB:database=test;host=localhost',
                                'joe', q(joe's password),
                                { RaiseError => 1, PrintError => 0 });

         # Drop table 'foo'. This may fail, if 'foo' doesn't exist
         # Thus we put an eval around it.
         eval {
             $dbh->do('DROP TABLE foo');
         } or do {
             print 'Dropping foo failed: ' . $dbh->errstr() . "\n";
         };

         # Create a new table 'foo'. This must not fail, thus we don't
         # catch errors.
         $dbh->do('CREATE TABLE foo (id INTEGER, name VARCHAR(20))');

         # INSERT some data into 'foo' using placeholders
         $dbh->do('INSERT INTO foo VALUES (?, ?)', undef, 2, 'Jochen');

         # now retrieve data from the table.
         my $sth = $dbh->prepare('SELECT * FROM foo');
         $sth->execute();
         while (my $ref = $sth->fetchrow_hashref()) {
             print "Found a row: id = $ref->{'id'}, name = $ref->{'name'}\n";
         }

         # Disconnect from the database.
         $dbh->disconnect();

DESCRIPTION

       DBD::MariaDB is the Perl5 Database Interface driver for MariaDB and MySQL databases. In other words:
       DBD::MariaDB is an interface between the Perl programming language and the MariaDB/MySQL programming API
       that comes with the MariaDB/MySQL relational database management system. Most functions provided by this
       programming API are supported. Some rarely used functions are missing, mainly because no-one ever
       requested them. :-)

       In what follows we first discuss the use of DBD::MariaDB, because this is what you will need the most.
       For installation, see the separate document DBD::MariaDB::INSTALL. See "EXAMPLE" for a simple example
       above.

       From perl you activate the interface with the statement

         use DBI;

       After that you can connect to multiple MariaDB and MySQL database servers and send multiple queries to
       any of them via a simple object oriented interface. Two types of objects are available: database handles
       and statement handles. Perl returns a database handle to the connect method like so:

         my $dbh = DBI->connect("DBI:MariaDB:database=$db;host=$host",
                                $user, $password,
                                { RaiseError => 1, PrintError => 0 });

       Once you have connected to a database, you can execute SQL statements with:

         $dbh->do('INSERT INTO foo VALUES (?, ?)', undef, $number, $name);

       See DBI do method for details. See also the bind_param method in DBI. See "DATABASE HANDLES" below for
       more details on database handles.

       If you want to retrieve results, you need to create a so-called statement handle with:

         my $sth = $dbh->prepare('SELECT * FROM ' . $dbh->quote_identifier($table));
         $sth->execute();

       This statement handle can be used for multiple things. First of all you can retrieve a row of data:

         my $row = $sth->fetchrow_hashref();

       If your table has columns "ID" and "NAME", then $row will be hash ref with keys "ID" and "NAME". See
       "STATEMENT HANDLES" below for more details on statement handles.

       But now for a more formal approach:

   Class Methods
       connect
             use DBI;

             my $dsn = "DBI:MariaDB:$database";
             my $dsn = "DBI:MariaDB:database=$database;host=$hostname";
             my $dsn = "DBI:MariaDB:database=$database;host=$hostname;port=$port";
             my $dsn = "DBI:MariaDB:database=$database;mariadb_socket=$socket";

             my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password);

           The database is not a required attribute, but please note that MariaDB and MySQL has no such thing as
           a default database. If you don't specify the database at connection time your active database will be
           null and you'd need to prefix your tables with the database name; i.e. "SELECT * FROM mydb.mytable".

           This  is  similar  to  the  behavior  of  the "mariadb" or "mysql" command line client. Also, "SELECT
           DATABASE()" will return the current database active for the handle.

           host
           port
               The host, if not specified or specified as empty string or "localhost", will default to a MariaDB
               or MySQL server running on the local machine using the default for the UNIX socket. To connect to
               a MariaDB or MySQL server on the local machine via TCP, you must specify the loopback IP  address
               127.0.0.1 as the host.

               Should  the  MariaDB or MySQL server be running on a non-standard port number, you may explicitly
               state the "port number" to connect to in the host argument, by concatenating the  "hostname"  and
               "port number" together separated by a colon (":") character or by using the port argument.

               To  connect  to a MariaDB or MySQL server on localhost using TCP/IP, you must specify the host as
               127.0.0.1 with the optional port, e.g. 3306.

               When connecting to a MariaDB or MySQL Server with IPv6, a bracketed IPv6 address should be  used.
               Example DSN:

                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:;host=[1a12:2800:6f2:85::f20:8cf];port=3306';

           mariadb_client_found_rows
               Enables (logical true value) or disables (logical false value) the flag "CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS" while
               connecting  to  the  MariaDB  or  MySQL  server.  This  has  a  somewhat  funny  effect.  Without
               mariadb_client_found_rows, if you perform a query like

                 UPDATE t SET id = 1 WHERE id = 1;

               then the MariaDB or MySQL engine will always  return  0,  because  no  rows  have  changed.  With
               mariadb_client_found_rows  however,  it will return the number of rows that have an id 1, as some
               people are expecting. At least for compatibility to other engines.

               By default mariadb_client_found_rows is enabled.

           mariadb_compression
               If your DSN contains the option "mariadb_compression=1", then the  communication  between  client
               and server will be compressed.

           mariadb_connect_timeout
               If  your  DSN contains the option "mariadb_connect_timeout=##", the connect request to the server
               will timeout if it has not been successful after the given number of seconds.  Zero  value  means
               infinite timeout.

           mariadb_write_timeout
               If  your  DSN  contains  the option "mariadb_write_timeout=##", the write operation to the server
               will timeout if it has not been successful after the given number of seconds.  Zero  value  means
               infinite timeout.

           mariadb_read_timeout
               If  your DSN contains the option "mariadb_read_timeout=##", the read operation to the server will
               timeout if it has not been successful after  the  given  number  of  seconds.  Zero  value  means
               infinite timeout.

           mariadb_init_command
               If your DSN contains the option "mariadb_init_command=SQL", then this "SQL" statement is executed
               when  connecting  to the MariaDB or MySQL server. It is automatically re-executed if reconnection
               occurs.

           mariadb_skip_secure_auth
               This option is for older MySQL databases that don't have secure auth set.

           mariadb_read_default_file
           mariadb_read_default_group
               These options can be used to read a  config  file  like  /etc/my.cnf  or  ~/.my.cnf.  By  default
               MariaDB's  and  MySQL's  C client library doesn't use any config files unlike the client programs
               (mysql, mysqladmin, ...) that do, but  outside  of  the  C  client  library.  Thus  you  need  to
               explicitly request reading a config file, as in

                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:test;mariadb_read_default_file=/home/joe/my.cnf';
                 my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password);

               The  option  mariadb_read_default_group  can  be  used to specify the default group in the config
               file: Usually this is the "client" group, but see the following example:

                 [client]
                 host=localhost

                 [perl]
                 host=perlhost

               (Note the order of the entries! The example  won't  work,  if  you  reverse  the  "[client]"  and
               "[perl]" sections!)

               If  you  read  this  config  file, then you'll be typically connected to "localhost". However, by
               using

                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:test;mariadb_read_default_group=perl;'
                         . 'mariadb_read_default_file=/home/joe/my.cnf';
                 my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password);

               you'll be connected to "perlhost". Note that if you specify a default group and do not specify  a
               file,  then  the  default  config files will all be read. See the documentation of the C function
               mysql_options() for details.

           mariadb_socket
               It is possible to choose the Unix socket that is used for connecting to the server. This is done,
               for example, with

                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:database=test;'
                         . 'mariadb_socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock';

               Usually there's no need for this option, unless you are using another  location  for  the  socket
               than that built into the client.

           mariadb_ssl
               A  true  value  turns on the "CLIENT_SSL" flag when connecting to the MariaDB or MySQL server and
               enforce SSL encryption. A false value (which is default) disable SSL encryption with the  MariaDB
               or MySQL server.

               When  enabling SSL encryption you should set also other SSL options, at least mariadb_ssl_ca_file
               or mariadb_ssl_ca_path.

                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:database=test;host=hostname;port=3306;'
                         . 'mariadb_ssl=1;mariadb_ssl_verify_server_cert=1;'
                         . 'mariadb_ssl_ca_file=/path/to/ca_cert.pem';

               This means that your communication with the server will be encrypted.

           mariadb_ssl_ca_file
               The path to a file in PEM format that contains a list of trusted SSL certificate authorities.

               When set MariaDB or MySQL server certificate is checked that it is signed by some CA  certificate
               in the list. Common Name value is not verified unless mariadb_ssl_verify_server_cert is enabled.

           mariadb_ssl_ca_path
               The  path  to  a  directory  that  contains trusted SSL certificate authority certificates in PEM
               format.

               When set MariaDB or MySQL server certificate is checked that it is signed by some CA  certificate
               in the list. Common Name value is not verified unless mariadb_ssl_verify_server_cert is enabled.

               Please  note that this option is supported only if your MariaDB or MySQL client was compiled with
               OpenSSL library, and not with default yaSSL library.

           mariadb_ssl_verify_server_cert
               Checks the server's Common Name value in the certificate that the server sends to the client. The
               client verifies that name against the host name the client uses for connecting to the server, and
               the connection fails if there is a mismatch. For encrypted connections, this option helps prevent
               man-in-the-middle attacks.

               Verification of the host name is disabled by default.

           mariadb_ssl_client_key
               The name of the SSL key file in PEM format to use for establishing a secure connection.

           mariadb_ssl_client_cert
               The name of the SSL certificate file in PEM format to use for establishing a secure connection.

           mariadb_ssl_cipher
               A list of permissible ciphers to use for connection encryption. If  no  cipher  in  the  list  is
               supported, encrypted connections will not work.

                 mariadb_ssl_cipher=AES128-SHA
                 mariadb_ssl_cipher=DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:AES128-SHA

           mariadb_ssl_optional
               Setting  mariadb_ssl_optional  to  true  disables strict SSL enforcement and makes SSL connection
               optional. This option opens security hole for man-in-the-middle attacks. Default value  is  false
               which means that mariadb_ssl set to true enforces SSL encryption.

               Due   to   The   BACKRONYM   <http://backronym.fail/>   and   The  Riddle  <https://riddle.link/>
               vulnerabilities in libmariadb and libmysqlclient libraries, enforcement of SSL encryption was not
               possible and therefore "mariadb_ssl_optional=1" was effectively set  for  old  DBD::mysql  driver
               prior DBD::MariaDB fork was created. DBD::MariaDB with "mariadb_ssl=1" could refuse connection to
               MariaDB  or MySQL server if underlying libmariadb or libmysqlclient library is vulnerable. Option
               mariadb_ssl_optional can be used to make SSL connection vulnerable.

           mariadb_local_infile
               The "LOCAL" capability for "LOAD DATA" may be disabled in the MariaDB or MySQL client library  by
               default.  If  your  DSN  contains  the option "mariadb_local_infile=1", "LOAD DATA LOCAL" will be
               enabled. However, this option is ineffective if the server has also been configured  to  disallow
               "LOCAL".

           mariadb_multi_statements
               Support  for  multiple  statements  separated  by  a semicolon (";") may be enabled by using this
               option. Enabling this option may cause problems  if  server-side  prepared  statements  are  also
               enabled.

           mariadb_server_prepare
               This option is used to enable server side prepared statements. By default prepared statements are
               not  used  and  placeholder replacement is done by DBD::MariaDB prior to sending SQL statement to
               MariaDB or MySQL server.

               This default behavior may change in the future.

               To  use  server  side  prepared  statements,  all  you  need  to   do   is   set   the   variable
               mariadb_server_prepare in the connect:

                 my $dbh = DBI->connect(
                     'DBI:MariaDB:database=test;host=localhost;mariadb_server_prepare=1',
                     'user',
                     'password',
                     { RaiseError => 1, PrintError => 0 },
                 );

               or:

                 my $dbh = DBI->connect(
                     'DBI:MariaDB:database=test;host=localhost',
                     'user',
                     'password',
                     { RaiseError => 1, PrintError => 0, mariadb_server_prepare => 1 },
                 );

               There  are  many  benefits  to  using server side prepare statements, mostly if you are using SQL
               statements with placeholders or performing many inserts  because  of  that  fact  that  a  single
               statement is prepared to accept multiple insert values.

               Please  note  that MariaDB or MySQL server cannot prepare or execute some prepared statements. In
               this case DBD::MariaDB fallbacks to normal non-prepared statement and tries again.

           mariadb_server_prepare_disable_fallback
               This option disable fallback to normal non-prepared statement when MariaDB or MySQL  server  does
               not support execution of current statement as prepared.

               Useful  when  you  want  to  be  sure  that  the statement is going to be executed as server side
               prepared. Error message and code in case of failure is propagated back to DBI.

               This default behavior may change in the future.

           mariadb_embedded_options
               The option mariadb_embedded_options can be used to pass command  line  options  to  the  embedded
               server.  When  you  want  to  start  and  connect  embedded server, use "host=embedded" in dsn as
               connection parameter.

               Example:

                 use DBI;
                 my $datadir = '/var/lib/mysql/';
                 my $langdir = '/usr/share/mysql/english';
                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:host=embedded;database=test;'
                         . "mariadb_embedded_options=--datadir=$datadir,--language=$langdir";
                 my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, undef, undef);

               This would start embedded server with language directory $langdir,  database  directory  $datadir
               and  connects  to  database  "test".  Embedded server does not have to be supported by configured
               MariaDB or MySQL library. In that case "DBI->connect()" returns an error.

           mariadb_embedded_groups
               The option mariadb_embedded_groups can be used to specify the groups in the config file  (my.cnf)
               which  will  be  used  to  get  options  for the embedded server. If not specified "[server]" and
               "[embedded]" groups will be used.

               Example:

                 my $dsn = 'DBI:MariaDB:host=embedded;database=test;'
                         . 'mariadb_embedded_groups=embedded_server,common';

           mariadb_conn_attrs
               The option mariadb_conn_attrs is a hash of attribute names and values which can be used  to  send
               custom   connection   attributes   to  the  server.  Some  attributes  like  "_os",  "_platform",
               "_client_name" and "_client_version" are added by libmariadb or libmysqlclient.

               You can then later read these attributes from the performance schema tables which  can  be  quite
               helpful  for  profiling your database or creating statistics.  You'll have to use both server and
               client at least in version MariaDB 10.0.5 or MySQL 5.6 to leverage this feature.  It  is  a  good
               idea to provides additional "program_name" attribute.

                 my $dbh= DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password, {
                     AutoCommit => 0,
                     mariadb_conn_attrs => {
                         program_name => $0,
                         foo => 'bar',
                         wiz => 'bang'
                     },
                 });

               Now  you  can  select the results from the performance schema tables. You can do this in the same
               session, but also afterwards. It can be very useful to answer questions like  which  script  sent
               this query?

                 my $results = $dbh->selectall_hashref(
                     'SELECT * FROM performance_schema.session_connect_attrs',
                     'ATTR_NAME'
                 );

               This returns:

                 $result = {
                     '_client_name' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => 'libmysql',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => '_client_name',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '1',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     '_client_version' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => '5.6.24',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => '_client_version',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '7',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     '_os' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => 'osx10.8',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => '_os',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '0',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     '_pid' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => '59860',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => '_pid',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '2',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     '_platform' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => 'x86_64',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => '_platform',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '4',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     'foo' => {
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => 'foo',
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => 'bar',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '6',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     'program_name' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => './foo.pl',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => 'program_name',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '5',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                     'wiz' => {
                         'ATTR_VALUE'       => 'bang',
                         'ATTR_NAME'        => 'wiz',
                         'ORDINAL_POSITION' => '3',
                         'PROCESSLIST_ID'   => '3',
                     },
                 };

       data_sources
             use DBI;
             my @dsns = DBI->data_sources('MariaDB', {
                 host => $hostname,
                 port => $port,
                 user => $username,
                 password => $password,
                 ...
             });

           Returns  a list of all databases in dsn format suitable for connect method, managed by the MariaDB or
           MySQL server. It accepts all attributes from connect method.

DATABASE HANDLES

       The DBD::MariaDB driver supports the following attributes of database handles (read only):

         my $errno = $dbh->{'mariadb_errno'};
         my $error = $dbh->{'mariadb_error'};
         my $hostinfo = $dbh->{'mariadb_hostinfo'};
         my $info = $dbh->{'mariadb_info'};
         my $insertid = $dbh->{'mariadb_insertid'};
         my $protoinfo = $dbh->{'mariadb_protoinfo'};
         my $serverinfo = $dbh->{'mariadb_serverinfo'};
         my $ssl_cipher = $dbh->{'mariadb_ssl_cipher'};
         my $stat = $dbh->{'mariadb_stat'};
         my $thread_id = $dbh->{'mariadb_thread_id'};

       These correspond to mysql_errno(), mysql_error(), mysql_get_host_info(), mysql_info(), mysql_insert_id(),
       mysql_get_proto_info(),     mysql_get_server_info(),     mysql_stat(),     mysql_get_ssl_cipher()     and
       mysql_thread_id() respectively.

       Portable  DBI  applications  should  not  use  them.  Instead  they  should  use  standard  DBI  methods:
       "$dbh->err()"       and       "$dbh->errstr()"       for       error       number       and       string,
       "$dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_SERVER_NAME})"          for          server          host          name,
       "$dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_DBMS_NAME})" and "$dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_DBMS_VER})" for server
       database name and version, "$dbh->last_insert_id()" or "$sth->last_insert_id()" for insert id.

       mariadb_clientinfo
       mariadb_clientversion
         List information of the MariaDB or MySQL client library that DBD::MariaDB was built against:

           print "$dbh->{mariadb_clientinfo}\n";

           5.2.0-MariaDB

           print "$dbh->{mariadb_clientversion}\n";

           50200

         Portable  DBI  applications  should  not  be  interested  in  version  of  underlying  client  library.
         DBD::MariaDB  is  there  to  hide  any  possible incompatibility and works correctly with any available
         version.

       mariadb_serverversion
           print "$dbh->{mariadb_serverversion}\n";

           50200

         Portable   DBI    applications    should    use    "$dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_DBMS_NAME})"    and
         "$dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_DBMS_VER})" for server database name and version instead.

       mariadb_ssl_cipher
         Returns  the SSL encryption cipher used for the given connection to the server.  In case SSL encryption
         was not enabled with mariadb_ssl or was not established returns "undef".

           my $ssl_cipher = $dbh->{mariadb_ssl_cipher};
           if (defined $ssl_cipher) {
               print "Connection with server is encrypted with cipher: $ssl_cipher\n";
           } else {
               print "Connection with server is not encrypted\n";
           }

       mariadb_dbd_stats
           my $info_hashref = $dbh->{mariadb_dbd_stats};

         DBD::MariaDB keeps track of some statistics in the mariadb_dbd_stats attribute. The following stats are
         being maintained:

         auto_reconnects_ok
                 The number of times that DBD::MariaDB successfully reconnected to the MariaDB or MySQL server.

         auto_reconnects_failed
                 The number of times that DBD::MariaDB tried to reconnect to MariaDB or MySQL but failed.

       The DBD::MariaDB driver also supports the following attributes of database handles (read/write):

       mariadb_auto_reconnect
           This attribute determines whether DBD::MariaDB will  automatically  reconnect  to  MariaDB  or  MySQL
           server  if the connection be lost. This feature defaults to off.  Setting mariadb_auto_reconnect to 1
           is not advised if "LOCK TABLES" is used because if DBD::MariaDB reconnect to MariaDB or MySQL  server
           all  table  locks  will  be  lost.  This attribute is ignored when AutoCommit is turned off, and when
           AutoCommit is turned off, DBD::MariaDB will not automatically reconnect to the server.

           It is also possible to set the default value of the mariadb_auto_reconnect attribute for the $dbh  by
           passing it in the "\%attr" hash for "DBI->connect".

             $dbh->{mariadb_auto_reconnect} = 1;

           or

             my $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password, {
                 mariadb_auto_reconnect => 1,
             });

           Note  that  if  you  are using a module or framework that performs reconnections for you (for example
           DBIx::Connector in fixup mode), this value must be set to 0.

       mariadb_use_result
           This attribute forces the driver to use mysql_use_result() rather than  mysql_store_result()  library
           function.  The  former  is  faster  and  less  memory  consuming, but tends to block other processes.
           mysql_store_result() is the default due to that fact storing the result  is  expected  behavior  with
           most applications.

           It is possible to set the default value of the mariadb_use_result attribute for the $dbh via the DSN:

             my $dbh = DBI->connect('DBI:MariaDB:test;mariadb_use_result=1', $user, $pass);

           You can also set it after creation of the database handle:

             $dbh->{mariadb_use_result} = 0; # disable
             $dbh->{mariadb_use_result} = 1; # enable

           You  can also set or unset the mariadb_use_result setting on your statement handle, when creating the
           statement handle or after it has been created. See "STATEMENT HANDLES".

       mariadb_bind_type_guessing
           This attribute causes the driver (emulated prepare statements) to attempt to guess if a  value  being
           bound  is a numeric value, and if so, doesn't quote the value. This was created by Dragonchild and is
           one way to deal with the performance issue of using quotes  in  a  statement  that  is  inserting  or
           updating a large numeric value.

           CAVEAT:  Even  though  you  can  insert  an  integer value into a character column, if this column is
           indexed, if you query that column with the integer value not being quoted, it will not use the index:

             MariaDB [test]> explain select * from test where value0 = '3' \G
             *************************** 1. row ***************************
                        id: 1
               select_type: SIMPLE
                     table: test
                      type: ref
             possible_keys: value0
                       key: value0
                   key_len: 13
                       ref: const
                      rows: 1
                     Extra: Using index condition
             1 row in set (0.00 sec)

             MariaDB [test]> explain select * from test where value0 = 3
                 -> \G
             *************************** 1. row ***************************
                        id: 1
               select_type: SIMPLE
                     table: test
                      type: ALL
             possible_keys: value0
                       key: NULL
                   key_len: NULL
                       ref: NULL
                      rows: 6
                     Extra: Using where
             1 row in set (0.00 sec)

           See bug: <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=43822>

           mariadb_bind_type_guessing can be turned on via

           - through DSN

             my $dbh = DBI->connect('DBI:MariaDB:test', 'username', 'pass', {
                 mariadb_bind_type_guessing => 1
             });

           - OR after handle creation

             $dbh->{mariadb_bind_type_guessing} = 1;

       mariadb_bind_comment_placeholders
           This attribute causes the driver  (emulated  prepare  statements)  will  cause  any  placeholders  in
           comments  to be bound. This is not correct prepared statement behavior, but some developers have come
           to depend on this behavior.

       mariadb_no_autocommit_cmd
           This attribute causes the driver to not issue "SET  AUTOCOMMIT"  either  through  explicit  or  using
           mysql_autocommit(). This is particularly useful in the case of using MySQL Proxy.

           See the bug report: <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=46308>

           mariadb_no_autocommit_cmd can be turned on when creating the database handle:

             my $dbh = DBI->connect('DBI:MariaDB:test', 'username', 'pass', {
                 mariadb_no_autocommit_cmd => 1
             });

           or using an existing database handle:

             $dbh->{mariadb_no_autocommit_cmd} = 1;

       mariadb_max_allowed_packet
           This  attribute controls the maximum size of one packet, any generated or intermediate string and any
           bind parameter. Default value depends on client MariaDB/MySQL library and should be 1GB.

             $dbh->{mariadb_max_allowed_packet} = 32*1024*1024; # limit max size to 32MB

       Documentation for some DBD::MariaDB methods of database handles:

       ping
         This can be used to send a ping to the server. See DBI ping.

           my $rc = $dbh->ping();

       get_info
         This method can be used to retrieve information about MariaDB or MySQL server.  See DBI get_info.  Some
         useful  information:  "SQL_DBMS_NAME"  returns  server  database  name,  either  "MariaDB"  or "MySQL".
         "SQL_DBMS_VER" returns server database version and "SQL_SERVER_NAME" returns server host name.

           use DBI::Const::GetInfoType;

           print $dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_DBMS_NAME});

           MariaDB

           print $dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_DBMS_VER});

           10.01.2600

           print $dbh->get_info($GetInfoType{SQL_SERVER_NAME});

           Localhost via UNIX socket

STATEMENT HANDLES

       The statement handles of DBD::MariaDB support a number of attributes. You  access  these  by  using,  for
       example,

         my $numFields = $sth->{NUM_OF_FIELDS};

       Note,  that  most  attributes  are  valid only after a successful execute. An "undef" value will returned
       otherwise. The most important exception is the mariadb_use_result attribute.

       To set the mariadb_use_result attribute on statement handle $sth, use either of the following:

         my $sth = $dbh->prepare($sql, { mariadb_use_result => 1});

       or

         my $sth = $dbh->prepare($sql);
         $sth->{mariadb_use_result} = 1;

       Column dependent attributes, for example NAME, the column names, are returned as a reference to an array.
       The array indices are corresponding to the indices  of  the  arrays  returned  by  fetchrow  and  similar
       methods. For example the following code will print a header of table names together with all rows:

         my $sth = $dbh->prepare('SELECT * FROM t')
             or die 'Error: ' . $dbh->errstr() . "\n";

         $sth->execute()
             or die 'Error: ' . $sth->errstr() . "\n";

         my $names = $sth->{NAME};
         my $numFields = $sth->{'NUM_OF_FIELDS'} - 1;
         for my $i ( 0..$numFields ) {
             printf('%s%s', $i ? ',' : '', $$names[$i]);
         }
         print "\n";
         while (my $ref = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref()) {
             for my $i ( 0..$numFields ) {
                 printf('%s%s', $i ? ',' : '', $$ref[$i]);
             }
             print "\n";
         }

       For  portable  applications  you  should  restrict  yourself to attributes with capitalized or mixed case
       names. Lower case attribute names are private to DBD::MariaDB. The attribute list includes:

       ChopBlanks
           This attribute determines whether a fetchrow will chop preceding and trailing blanks off  the  column
           values. Chopping blanks does not have impact on the mariadb_max_length attribute.

       mariadb_insertid
           If  the  statement  you executed performs an "INSERT", and there is an "AUTO_INCREMENT" column in the
           table you inserted in, this attribute holds the value stored into  the  "AUTO_INCREMENT"  column,  if
           that value is automatically generated, by storing "NULL" or 0 or was specified as an explicit value.

           Typically,  you'd access the value via "$sth->{mariadb_insertid}". The value can also be accessed via
           "$dbh->{mariadb_insertid}" but this can easily produce incorrect results in case one database  handle
           is shared.

           Portable  DBI  applications  should  not  use  mariadb_insertid.  Instead  they should use DBI method
           "$dbh->last_insert_id()" or statement  DBI  method  "$sth->last_insert_id()".  Statement  method  was
           introduced in DBI version 1.642, but DBD::MariaDB implements it also for older DBI versions.

       mariadb_is_blob
           Reference  to an array of boolean values; Logical true value indicates, that the respective column is
           a blob.

       mariadb_is_key
           Reference to an array of boolean values; Logical true value indicates, that the respective column  is
           a key.

       mariadb_is_num
           Reference  to  an  array  of boolean values; Logical true value indicates, that the respective column
           contains numeric values.

       mariadb_is_pri_key
           Reference to an array of boolean values; Logical true value indicates, that the respective column  is
           a primary key.

       mariadb_is_auto_increment
           Reference  to  an array of boolean values; Logical true value indicates that the respective column is
           an "AUTO_INCREMENT" column.

       mariadb_length
       mariadb_max_length
           A reference to an array of maximum column sizes. The mariadb_max_length  is  the  maximum  physically
           present in the result table, mariadb_length gives the theoretically possible maximum.

           For  string  orientated variable types (char, varchar, text and similar types) both attributes return
           value in bytes. If you are interested in number of characters  then  instead  of  mariadb_length  use
           "COLUMN_SIZE"  via  standard DBI method column_info and instead of mariadb_max_length issue SQL query
           "SELECT MAX(CHAR_LENGTH(...))". Example:

             my $ci_sth = $dbh->column_info(undef, undef, $table, $column);
             my $ci_ref = $ci_sth->fetchall_arrayref({});
             my $mariadb_char_length = $ci_ref->[0]->{COLUMN_SIZE};

             my $mariadb_char_max_length = $dbh->selectrow_array(sprintf(
                                               'SELECT MAX(CHAR_LENGTH(%s)) FROM %s',
                                               $dbh->quote_identifier($column),
                                               $dbh->quote_identifier($table),
                                           ));

       NAME
           A reference to an array of column names.

       NULLABLE
           A reference to an array of boolean values; Logical true value indicates that this column may  contain
           "NULL"'s.

       NUM_OF_FIELDS
           Number  of fields returned by a "SELECT" statement. You may use this for checking whether a statement
           returned a result: A zero value  indicates  a  non-"SELECT"  statement  like  "INSERT",  "DELETE"  or
           "UPDATE".

       mariadb_table
           A reference to an array of table names, useful in a "JOIN" result.

       TYPE
           A  reference  to  an  array  of column types. The engine's native column types are mapped to portable
           types like DBI::SQL_INTEGER() or DBI::SQL_VARCHAR(), as good as possible. Not all native types have a
           meaningful equivalent. If you need the native column types, use mariadb_type. See below.

       mariadb_type
           A reference to an array of MySQL's native column types,  for  example  DBD::MariaDB::TYPE_SHORT()  or
           DBD::MariaDB::TYPE_STRING().   Use   the   TYPE   attribute,   if   you   want  portable  types  like
           DBI::SQL_SMALLINT() or DBI::SQL_VARCHAR().

       mariadb_type_name
           Similar to mariadb_type, but type names and not numbers are returned. Whenever possible, the ANSI SQL
           name is preferred.

       mariadb_warning_count
           The number of warnings generated during execution of the SQL statement. This attribute  is  available
           on both statement handles and database handles.

UNICODE SUPPORT

       All  string  orientated  variable  types  (char,  varchar, text and similar types) are represented by the
       DBD::MariaDB as Unicode strings according to the standard Perl Unicode model. It means that Perl  scalars
       contain  Unicode  code points and not UTF-8 bytes. Internally the DBD::MariaDB uses the MySQL's "utf8mb4"
       charset for the network communication with MariaDB and MySQL servers.  It  automatically  transforms  the
       network MySQL's "utf8mb4" charset to the Unicode Perl scalars and vice-versa.

       MySQL's  "utf8mb4"  charset  for  the  network  communication  is  configured by "MYSQL_SET_CHARSET_NAME"
       libmariadb/libmysqlclient C library API which is a requirement  to  have  working  quote  method  and  an
       emulated client side placeholders replacement.

       Do  not  try  to change network charset (e.g. via SQL command "SET NAMES" manually) to anything different
       then UTF-8 as it would confuse underlying C library and DBD::MariaDB would misbehave (e.g. would lead  to
       broken/insecure quote method or an emulated client side placeholders replacement).

       Using  a  non-UTF-8  charset  for  a  column,  table  or database is fine because MariaDB or MySQL server
       automatically transforms the storage charset to the charset used by  the  network  protocol  ("utf8mb4").
       Note  that  when  DBD::MariaDB  is  connecting  to  the MariaDB or MySQL server it calls SQL command "SET
       character_set_server = 'utf8mb4'" to ensure that the default charset for new databases  would  be  UTF-8.
       Beware that a default charset for new tables is set from a database charset.

       In  the  case  MySQL  server  does  not  support  MySQL's  "utf8mb4"  charset for a network protocol then
       DBD::MariaDB would try to use MySQL's "utf8" charset which is a subset of UTF-8  encoding  restricted  to
       the 3 byte UTF-8 sequences.  Support for MySQL's "utf8mb4" charset was introduced in MySQL server version
       5.5.3.

   Working with binary data
       Perl scalars do not distinguish between binary byte orientated buffers and Unicode orientated strings. In
       Perl  it  is  always up to the caller and the callee to define in its API if functions and methods expect
       byte buffers or Unicode strings. It is not possible (or  rather  Perl  application  should  not  try)  to
       distinguish if Perl scalar contains a byte buffer or Unicode string.

       When  fetching  data  from  MariaDB and MySQL servers, DBD::MariaDB treats all fields marked with MySQL's
       charset "utf8mb4" (and also "utf8") as Unicode  strings.  Everything  else  is  treated  as  binary  byte
       oriented  buffers.   Therefore,  the  only  difference  is that UTF-8 fields are automatically decoded to
       Unicode. Binary blob fields remain untouched and corresponding Perl scalars would contain  just  ordinals
       0..255 (classic sequence of bytes). Unicode string scalars would contain sequence of Unicode code points.

       There  is a small problem with input data, more preciously with SQL statements and their bind parameters.
       By definition a SQL statement is a string and therefore it is expected and handled by DBD::MariaDB  as  a
       Unicode string (not byte oriented buffer). There is no way to treat a SQL statement as a binary, but this
       is  not a problem. All SQL commands are encoded in ASCII and all ASCII characters are invariants in UTF-8
       (have the same representation as a sequence of Unicode code points and also when UTF-8 encoded in a  byte
       buffer).  For  the remaining part of a SQL statement, placeholders with bind parameters can and should be
       used.

   Binary parameters
       Unfortunately, neither MariaDB nor MySQL server provide any type information for prepared SQL statements;
       therefore, DBD::MariaDB has absolutely no way to know if a particular bind parameter  for  a  placeholder
       should  be  treated  as  Unicode  string  or  as  byte  oriented  buffer.  So Perl applications which use
       DBD::MariaDB must provide information about the correct type.

       Moreover, DBI API for do, execute and all select* methods binds all  parameters  as  "SQL_VARCHAR"  type.
       Currently  it is an API limitation which does not allow one to specify the bind type. Varchar is a string
       and so DBD::MariaDB treats all of them as Unicode strings.

       The only way how to specify a type in DBI is via the bind_param method. Its third argument takes  "SQL_*"
       constant which defines a type for the passed bind parameter.

       Following  type  constants  are  treated  as binary by DBD::MariaDB: "SQL_BIT", "SQL_BLOB", "SQL_BINARY",
       "SQL_VARBINARY", "SQL_LONGVARBINARY".

       This approach of handling binary data was implemented in DBD::MariaDB because it  does  not  violate  how
       Perl's  Unicode  model  is  working, follows exactly DBI API documentation, and, more importantly, is how
       other DBI drivers (including DBD::Pg and DBD::SQLite) in their recent versions work.  This  ensures  good
       compatibility for Perl applications which use multiple database backends and several DBI drivers.

       Please  note  that the old DBD::mysql driver in version 4.041 works differently and has completely broken
       Unicode support.

       To illustrate the usage, see the following example:

         # Prepare statement
         my $sth = $dbh->prepare(
             'INSERT INTO users (id, name, picture) VALUES (?, ?, ?)'
         );

         # Bind number, 7-bit ASCII values are always in Unicode and binary context
         $sth->bind_param(1, 10);

         # Bind name, may contains Unicode character, in this case U+00E9
         $sth->bind_param(2, "Andr\x{E9}");

         # Bind picture, it is a sequence of binary bytes, not Unicode code points
         $sth->bind_param(3, "\x{D8}\x{A0}\x{39}\x{F8}", DBI::SQL_BINARY);

         # Execute statement with bind parameters
         $sth->execute();

       Explanation: In this case number 10 and name  "Andr\x{E9}"  would  be  automatically  encoded  from  Perl
       Unicode  string  scalars  to MySQL's "utf8mb4" network charset and picture would not be touched as it was
       bound with the "DBI::SQL_BINARY" type. Note that 7-bit ASCII values are invariants in  UTF-8,  they  have
       the  same  representations  in  UTF-8,  so  both  the  encoding and decoding operations are just identity
       functions.

       This is the preferred and safe way how to work with binary data.  It  is  also  supported  by  other  DBI
       drivers, including DBD::Pg and DBD::SQLite (see above).

       In DBD::MariaDB, there's another specific way how to create a SQL statement with binary data: to call the
       quote  method  while  specifying  a binary type. This method takes a bind parameter and properly quotes +
       escapes it. For binary types it converts argument to MySQL's HEX syntax ("X'...'") which is a pure  7-bit
       ASCII and therefore invariant for UTF-8. See the following example:

         my $param1 = 10;
         my $param2 = "Andr\x{E9}";
         my $param3 = "\x{D8}\x{A0}\x{39}\x{F8}";
         my $query = 'INSERT INTO users (id, name, picture) VALUES (' .
                       $dbh->quote($param1) . ' ,' .
                       $dbh->quote($param2) . ' ,' .
                       $dbh->quote($param3, DBI::SQL_BINARY) .
                     ')';
         $dbh->do($query);

       The first two parameters are quoted and escaped for a later UTF-8 encoding (to MySQL's "utf8mb4" charset)
       and the third parameter is quoted and escaped as a binary buffer to MySQL's HEX syntax for binary blobs.

       This  method  is  not  recommended,  because quoting, escaping and similar methods can easily get written
       incorrectly and lead to SQL injections and other security problems.

TRANSACTION SUPPORT

       The transaction support works as follows:

       •   By default AutoCommit mode is on, following the DBI specifications.

       •   If you execute

             $dbh->{AutoCommit} = 0;

           or

             $dbh->{AutoCommit} = 1;

           then the driver will set the MariaDB or MySQL server variable autocommit to  0  or  1,  respectively.
           Switching from 0 to 1 will also issue a "COMMIT", following the DBI specifications.

       •   The methods

             $dbh->rollback();
             $dbh->commit();

           will  issue  the  commands "ROLLBACK" and "COMMIT", respectively. A "ROLLBACK" will also be issued if
           AutoCommit mode is off and the database handles DESTROY method is called. Again,  this  is  following
           the DBI specifications.

       Given the above, you should note the following:

       •   You  should  never  change  the  server  variable  AutoCommit manually, unless you are ignoring DBI's
           transaction support.

       •   Switching AutoCommit mode from on to off or vice versa may fail. You should always check  for  errors
           when changing AutoCommit mode. The suggested way of doing so is using the DBI flag RaiseError. If you
           don't like RaiseError, you have to use code like the following:

             $dbh->{AutoCommit} = 0;
             if ($dbh->{AutoCommit}) {
                 # An error occurred!
             }

       •   If  you  detect  an  error  while changing the AutoCommit mode, you should no longer use the database
           handle. In other words, you should disconnect and reconnect again, because the  transaction  mode  is
           unpredictable.  Alternatively you may verify the transaction mode by checking the value of the server
           variable autocommit. However, such behaviour isn't portable.

       •   DBD::MariaDB  has a reconnect feature that handles the so-called MySQL morning bug: If the server has
           disconnected, most probably due to a timeout, then by default the driver will reconnect  and  attempt
           to  execute the same SQL statement again. However, this behaviour is disabled when AutoCommit is off:
           Otherwise the transaction state would be completely unpredictable after a reconnect.

       •   The reconnect feature of DBD::MariaDB can be toggled by using the  mariadb_auto_reconnect  attribute.
           This  behaviour should be turned off in code that uses LOCK TABLE because if the database server time
           out and DBD::MariaDB reconnect, table locks will be lost without any indication of such loss.

MULTIPLE RESULT SETS

       DBD::MariaDB supports multiple result sets, thanks to Guy Harrison!

       The basic usage of multiple result sets is

         do {
             while (my @row = $sth->fetchrow_array()) {
                 do stuff;
             }
         } while ($sth->more_results);

       An example would be:

         $dbh->do('drop procedure if exists someproc')
             or print $DBI::errstr;

         $dbh->do('create procedure someproc() deterministic
             begin
                 declare a,b,c,d int;
                 set a=1;
                 set b=2;
                 set c=3;
                 set d=4;
                 select a, b, c, d;
                 select d, c, b, a;
                 select b, a, c, d;
                 select c, b, d, a;
             end'
         ) or die "$DBI::err: $DBI::errstr";

         my $sth = $dbh->prepare('call someproc()')
             or die "$DBI::err: $DBI::errstr";

         $sth->execute()
             or die "$DBI::err: $DBI::errstr";

         my $i=0;
         do {
             print "\nRowset ".++$i."\n---------------------------------------\n\n";
             foreach my $colno (0..$sth->{NUM_OF_FIELDS}-1) {
                 print $sth->{NAME}->[$colno]."\t";
             }
             print "\n";
             while (my @row = $sth->fetchrow_array())  {
                 foreach $field (0..$#row) {
                     print $row[$field]."\t";
                 }
                 print "\n";
             }
         } while ($sth->more_results);

   Issues with multiple result sets
       Please be aware there could be issues if your result sets are jagged, meaning the number  of  columns  of
       your results vary. Varying numbers of columns could result in your script crashing.

MULTITHREADING

       The  multithreading  capabilities  of  DBD::MariaDB  depend completely on the underlying C libraries. The
       modules are working with handle data only, no global variables  are  accessed  or  (to  the  best  of  my
       knowledge)  thread  unsafe  functions  are  called. Thus DBD::MariaDB is believed to be completely thread
       safe, if the C libraries are thread safe and you don't share handles among threads.

       The obvious question is: Are the C libraries thread safe? In the case of MySQL the answer is  yes,  since
       MySQL  5.5  it  is.  Older  versions  C  library needs to be compiled with "--with-thread-safe-client" or
       "--enable-thread-safe-client" configure options.

ASYNCHRONOUS QUERIES

       You can make a single asynchronous query per MySQL connection; this allows you to submit  a  long-running
       query  to  the server and have an event loop inform you when it's ready. An asynchronous query is started
       by either setting the mariadb_async attribute to a true value in the do method, or in the prepare method.
       Statements created with mariadb_async set to true in prepare always run their queries asynchronously when
       execute  is  called.  The  driver  also  offers   three   additional   methods:   mariadb_async_result(),
       mariadb_async_ready(),  and  mariadb_sockfd().  mariadb_async_result()  returns  what do or execute would
       have; that is, the number of rows affected. mariadb_async_ready() returns true if  mariadb_async_result()
       will  not  block,  and  zero  otherwise.  They  both  return  "undef" if that handle was not created with
       mariadb_async set to true or if an asynchronous query was not started yet. mariadb_sockfd()  returns  the
       file descriptor number for the MySQL connection; you can use this in an event loop.

       Here's an example of how to use the asynchronous query interface:

         use feature 'say';
         $dbh->do('SELECT SLEEP(10)', { mariadb_async => 1 });
         until($dbh->mariadb_async_ready()) {
             say 'not ready yet!';
             sleep 1;
         }
         my $rows = $dbh->mariadb_async_result();

INSTALLATION

       See DBD::MariaDB::INSTALL.

AUTHORS

       Originally,  there was a non-DBI driver, Mysql, which was much like PHP drivers such as mysql and mysqli.
       The Mysql module was originally written by Andreas König (koenig@kulturbox.de) who still,  to  this  day,
       contributes  patches  to  DBD::mysql. An emulated version of Mysql was provided to DBD::mysql from Jochen
       Wiedmann, but eventually deprecated as it was another bundle of code to maintain.

       The first incarnation of DBD::mysql was developed by Alligator Descartes, who was also aided and  abetted
       by Gary Shea, Andreas König and Tim Bunce.

       The current incarnation of DBD::mysql was written by Jochen Wiedmann, then numerous changes and bug-fixes
       were  added  by  Rudy  Lippan.  Next, prepared statement support was added by Patrick Galbraith and Alexy
       Stroganov (who also solely added embedded server support).

       Since 2004 DBD::mysql has been maintained by Patrick Galbraith (patg@patg.net), and since 2013  with  the
       great  help  of  Michiel  Beijen  (michiel.beijen@gmail.com),  along  with  the  entire community of Perl
       developers who keep sending patches to help continue improving DBD::mysql.

       In 2018 unreleased version 4.042_01 of DBD::mysql was forked and DBD::MariaDB was  created  to  fix  long
       standing  Unicode  bugs and MariaDB support. Currently it is developed in GoodData and maintained by Pali
       (pali@cpan.org).

CONTRIBUTIONS

       Anyone who desires to contribute to this project is encouraged to do so.  Currently, the source code  for
       this project can be found at Github:

       <https://github.com/gooddata/DBD-MariaDB>

       Either fork this repository and produce a branch with your changeset that the maintainer can merge to his
       tree,  or  create  a  diff  with  git.  The  maintainer  is more than glad to take contributions from the
       community as many features and fixes from DBD::MariaDB have come from the community.

COPYRIGHT

       This module is

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 2018 GoodData Corporation

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 2015-2017 Pali Rohár

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 2004-2017 Patrick Galbraith

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 2013-2017 Michiel Beijen

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 2004-2007 Alexey Stroganov

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 2003-2005 Rudolf Lippan

       •   Large Portions Copyright (c) 1997-2003 Jochen Wiedmann, with code portions

       •   Copyright (c)1994-1997 their original authors

LICENSE

       This  module  is   released   under   the   same   license   as   Perl   itself.   See   Perl   Licensing
       <https://dev.perl.org/licenses/> for details.

MAILING LIST SUPPORT

       This module is maintained and supported on a mailing list, dbi-users.

       To subscribe to this list, send an email to

       "dbi-users-subscribe@perl.org" <mailto:dbi-users-subscribe@perl.org>

       Mailing list archives are at

       <http://groups.google.com/group/perl.dbi.users?hl=en&lr=>

ADDITIONAL DBI INFORMATION

       Additional information on the DBI project can be found on the World Wide Web at the following URL:

       <http://dbi.perl.org>

       where  documentation,  pointers  to  the mailing lists and mailing list archives and pointers to the most
       current versions of the modules can be used.

       Information on the DBI interface itself can be gained by typing:

         perldoc DBI

       Information on DBD::MariaDB specifically can be gained by typing:

         perldoc DBD::MariaDB

       (this will display the document you're currently reading)

BUG REPORTING, ENHANCEMENT/FEATURE REQUESTS

       Please report bugs, including all the information needed  such  as  DBD::MariaDB  version,  MariaDB/MySQL
       version, OS type/version, etc to this link:

       <https://github.com/gooddata/DBD-MariaDB/issues>

       In  past for DBD::mysql, MySQL/Sun/Oracle responded to bugs and assisted in fixing bugs which many thanks
       should be given for their help! This driver is outside the realm of the numerous components they support,
       and the maintainer and community solely support DBD::mysql and DBD::MariaDB.

perl v5.40.1                                       2025-03-19                                  DBD::MariaDB(3pm)