DBIx::Class::SQLMaker:UseriContributed)DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects(3)NAMEDBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects - SQL::Abstract::Limit-like
functionality for DBIx::Class::SQLMaker
DESCRIPTION
This module replicates a lot of the functionality originally found in
SQL::Abstract::Limit. While simple limits would work as-is, the more
complex dialects that require e.g. subqueries could not be reliably
implemented without taking full advantage of the metadata locked within
DBIx::Class::ResultSource classes. After reimplementation of close to
80% of the SQL::Abstract::Limit functionality it was deemed more
practical to simply make an independent DBIx::Class-specific limit-
dialect provider.
SQL LIMIT DIALECTS
Note that the actual implementations listed below never use "*"
literally. Instead proper re-aliasing of selectors and order criteria
is done, so that the limit dialect are safe to use on joined resultsets
with clashing column names.
Currently the provided dialects are:
LimitOffset
SELECT ... LIMIT $limit OFFSET $offset
Supported by PostgreSQL and SQLite
LimitXY
SELECT ... LIMIT $offset $limit
Supported by MySQL and any SQL::Statement based DBD
RowNumberOver
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT *, ROW_NUMBER() OVER( ORDER BY ... ) AS RNO__ROW__INDEX FROM (
SELECT ...
)
) WHERE RNO__ROW__INDEX BETWEEN ($offset+1) AND ($limit+$offset)
ANSI standard Limit/Offset implementation. Supported by DB2 and MSSQL
>= 2005.
SkipFirst
SELECT SKIP $offset FIRST $limit * FROM ...
Suported by Informix, almost like LimitOffset. According to
SQL::Abstract::Limit "... SKIP $offset LIMIT $limit ..." is also
supported.
FirstSkip
SELECT FIRST $limit SKIP $offset * FROM ...
Supported by Firebird/Interbase, reverse of SkipFirst. According to
SQL::Abstract::Limit "... ROWS $limit TO $offset ..." is also
supported.
RowNum
Depending on the resultset attributes one of:
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT *, ROWNUM rownum__index FROM (
SELECT ...
) WHERE ROWNUM <= ($limit+$offset)
) WHERE rownum__index >= ($offset+1)
or
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT *, ROWNUM rownum__index FROM (
SELECT ...
)
) WHERE rownum__index BETWEEN ($offset+1) AND ($limit+$offset)
or
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT ...
) WHERE ROWNUM <= ($limit+1)
Supported by Oracle.
Top
SELECT * FROM
SELECT TOP $limit FROM (
SELECT TOP $limit FROM (
SELECT TOP ($limit+$offset) ...
) ORDER BY $reversed_original_order
) ORDER BY $original_order
Unreliable Top-based implementation, supported by MSSQL < 2005.
CAVEAT
Due to its implementation, this limit dialect returns incorrect results
when $limit+$offset > total amount of rows in the resultset.
FetchFirst
SELECT * FROM
(
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT * FROM ...
) ORDER BY $reversed_original_order
FETCH FIRST $limit ROWS ONLY
) ORDER BY $original_order
FETCH FIRST $limit ROWS ONLY
)
Unreliable FetchFirst-based implementation, supported by IBM DB2 <=
V5R3.
CAVEAT
Due to its implementation, this limit dialect returns incorrect results
when $limit+$offset > total amount of rows in the resultset.
RowCountOrGenericSubQ
This is not exactly a limit dialect, but more of a proxy for Sybase
ASE. If no $offset is supplied the limit is simply performed as:
SET ROWCOUNT $limit
SELECT ...
SET ROWCOUNT 0
Otherwise we fall back to "GenericSubQ"
GenericSubQ
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT ...
)
WHERE (
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM $original_table cnt WHERE cnt.id < $original_table.id
) BETWEEN $offset AND ($offset+$rows-1)
This is the most evil limit "dialect" (more of a hack) for really
stupid databases. It works by ordering the set by some unique column,
and calculating the amount of rows that have a less-er value (thus
emulating a "RowNum"-like index). Of course this implies the set can
only be ordered by a single unique column. Also note that this
technique can be and often is excruciatingly slow.
Currently used by Sybase ASE, due to lack of any other option.
AUTHORS
See "CONTRIBUTORS" in DBIx::Class.
LICENSE
You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.22012-DBIx::Class::SQLMaker::LimitDialects(3)