Ace(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Ace(3)NAMEAce - Object-Oriented Access to ACEDB Databases
SYNOPSIS
use Ace;
# open a remote database connection
$db = Ace->connect(-host => 'beta.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr',
-port => 20000100);
# open a local database connection
$local = Ace->connect(-path=>'~acedb/my_ace');
# simple queries
$sequence = $db->fetch(Sequence => 'D12345');
$count = $db->count(Sequence => 'D*');
@sequences = $db->fetch(Sequence => 'D*');
$i = $db->fetch_many(Sequence=>'*'); # fetch a cursor
while ($obj = $i->next) {
print $obj->asTable;
}
# complex queries
$query = <<END;
find Annotation Ready_for_submission ; follow gene ;
follow derived_sequence ; >DNA
END
@ready_dnas= $db->fetch(-query=>$query);
$ready = $db->fetch_many(-query=>$query);
while ($obj = $ready->next) {
# do something with obj
}
# database cut and paste
$sequence = $db->fetch(Sequence => 'D12345');
$local_db->put($sequence);
@sequences = $db->fetch(Sequence => 'D*');
$local_db->put(@sequences);
# Get errors
print Ace->error;
print $db->error;
DESCRIPTION
AcePerl provides an interface to the ACEDB object-oriented database.
Both read and write access is provided, and ACE objects are returned as
similarly-structured Perl objects. Multiple databases can be opened
simultaneously.
You will interact with several Perl classes: Ace, Ace::Object,
Ace::Iterator, Ace::Model. Ace is the database accessor, and can be
used to open both remote Ace databases (running aceserver or
gifaceserver), and local ones.
Ace::Object is the superclass for all objects returned from the
database. Ace and Ace::Object are linked: if you retrieve an
Ace::Object from a particular database, it will store a reference to
the database and use it to fetch any subobjects contained within it.
You may make changes to the Ace::Object and have those changes written
into the database. You may also create Ace::Objects from scratch and
store them in the database.
Ace::Iterator is a utility class that acts as a database cursor for
long-running ACEDB queries. Ace::Model provides object-oriented access
to ACEDB's schema.
Internally, Ace uses the Ace::Local class for access to local databases
and Ace::AceDB for access to remote databases. Ordinarily you will not
need to interact directly with either of these classes.
CREATING NEW DATABASE CONNECTIONSconnect()-- multiple argument form
# remote database
$db = Ace->connect(-host => 'beta.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr',
-port => 20000100);
# local (non-server) database
$db = Ace->connect(-path => '/usr/local/acedb);
Use Ace::connect() to establish a connection to a networked or local
AceDB database. To establish a connection to an AceDB server, use the
-host and/or -port arguments. For a local server, use the -port
argument. The database must be up and running on the indicated host
and port prior to connecting to an AceDB server. The full syntax is as
follows:
$db = Ace->connect(-host => $host,
-port => $port,
-path => $database_path,
-program => $local_connection_program
-classmapper => $object_class,
-timeout => $timeout,
-query_timeout => $query_timeout
-cache => {cache parameters},
);
The connect() method uses a named argument calling style, and
recognizes the following arguments:
-host, -port
These arguments point to the host and port of an AceDB server.
AcePerl will use its internal compiled code to establish a
connection to the server unless explicitly overridden with the
-program argument.
-path
This argument indicates the path of an AceDB directory on the local
system. It should point to the directory that contains the wspec
subdirectory. User name interpolations (~acedb) are OK.
-user
Name of user to log in as (when using socket server only). If not
provided, will attempt an anonymous login.
-pass
Password to log in with (when using socket server).
-url
An Acedb URL that combines the server type, host, port, user and
password in a single string. See the connect() method's "single
argument form" description.
-cache
AcePerl can use the Cache::SizeAwareFileCache module to cache
objects to disk. This can result in dramatically increased
performance in environments such as web servers in which the same
Acedb objects are frequently reused. To activate this mechanism,
the Cache::SizeAwareFileCache module must be installed, and you
must pass the -cache argument during the connect() call.
The value of -cache is a hash reference containing the arguments to
be passed to Cache::SizeAwareFileCache. For example:
-cache => {
cache_root => '/usr/tmp/acedb',
cache_depth => 4,
default_expires_in => '1 hour'
}
If not otherwise specified, the following cache parameters are
assumed:
Parameter Default Value
----------------------
namespace Server URL (e.g. sace://localhost:2005)
cache_root /tmp/FileCache (dependent on system temp directory)
default_expires_in 1 day
auto_purge_interval 12 hours
By default, the cache is not size limited (the "max_size" property
is set to $NO_MAX_SIZE). To adjust the size you may consider
calling the Ace object's cache() method to retrieve the physical
cache and then calling the cache object's limit_size($max_size)
method from time to time. See Cache::SizeAwareFileCache for more
details.
-program
By default AcePerl will use its internal compiled code calls to
establish a connection to Ace servers, and will launch a tace
subprocess to communicate with local Ace databases. The -program
argument allows you to customize this behavior by forcing AcePerl
to use a local program to communicate with the database. This
argument should point to an executable on your system. You may use
either a complete path or a bare command name, in which case the
PATH environment variable will be consulted. For example, you
could force AcePerl to use the aceclient program to connect to the
remote host by connecting this way:
$db = Ace->connect(-host => 'beta.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr',
-port => 20000100,
-program=>'aceclient');
-classmapper
The optional -classmapper argument (alias -class) points to the
class you would like to return from database queries. It is
provided for your use if you subclass Ace::Object. For example, if
you have created a subclass of Ace::Object called
Ace::Object::Graphics, you can have the database return this
subclass by default by connecting this way:
$db = Ace->connect(-host => 'beta.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr',
-port => 20000100,
-class=>'Ace::Object::Graphics');
The value of -class can be a hash reference consisting of AceDB
class names as keys and Perl class names as values. If a class
name does not exist in the hash, a key named _DEFAULT_ will be
looked for. If that does not exist, then Ace will default to
Ace::Object.
The value of -class can also be an object or a classname that
implements a class_for() method. This method will receive three
arguments containing the AceDB class name, object ID and database
handle. It should return a string indicating the perl class to
create.
-timeout
If no response from the server is received within $timeout seconds,
the call will return an undefined value. Internally timeout sets
an alarm and temporarily intercepts the ALRM signal. You should be
aware of this if you use ALRM for your own purposes.
NOTE: this feature is temporarily disabled (as of version 1.40)
because it is generating unpredictable results when used with
Apache/mod_perl.
-query_timeout
If any query takes longer than $query_timeout seconds, will return
an undefined value. This value can only be set at connect time,
and cannot be changed once set.
If arguments are omitted, they will default to the following values:
-host localhost
-port 200005;
-path no default
-program tace
-class Ace::Object
-timeout 25
-query_timeout 120
If you prefer to use a more Smalltalk-like message-passing syntax, you
can open a connection this way too:
$db = connect Ace -host=>'beta.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr',-port=>20000100;
The return value is an Ace handle to use to access the database, or
undef if the connection fails. If the connection fails, an error
message can be retrieved by calling Ace->error.
You may check the status of a connection at any time with ping(). It
will return a true value if the database is still connected. Note that
Ace will timeout clients that have been inactive for any length of
time. Long-running clients should attempt to reestablish their
connection if ping() returns false.
$db->ping() || die "not connected";
You may perform low-level calls using the Ace client C API by calling
db(). This fetches an Ace::AceDB object. See THE LOW LEVEL C API for
details on using this object.
$low_level = $db->db();
connect()-- single argument form
$db = Ace->connect('sace://stein.cshl.org:1880')
Ace->connect() also accepts a single argument form using a URL-type
syntax. The general syntax is:
protocol://hostname:port/path
The :port and /path parts are protocol-dependent as described above.
Protocols:
sace://hostname:port
Connect to a socket server at the indicated hostname and port.
Example:
sace://stein.cshl.org:1880
If not provided, the port defaults to 2005.
rpcace://hostname:port
Connect to an RPC server at the indicated hostname and RPC service
number. Example:
rpcace://stein.cshl.org:400000
If not provided, the port defaults to 200005
tace:/path/to/database
Open up the local database at /path/to/database using tace.
Example:
tace:/~acedb/elegans
/path/to/database
Same as the previous.
close() Method
You can explicitly close a database by calling its close() method:
$db->close();
This is not ordinarily necessary because the database will be
automatically close when it -- and all objects retrieved from it -- go
out of scope.
reopen() Method
The ACeDB socket server can time out. The reopen() method will ping
the server and if it is not answering will reopen the connection. If
the database is live (or could be resurrected), this method returns
true.
RETRIEVING ACEDB OBJECTS
Once you have established a connection and have an Ace databaes handle,
several methods can be used to query the ACE database to retrieve
objects. You can then explore the objects, retrieve specific fields
from them, or update them using the Ace::Object methods. Please see
Ace::Object.
fetch() method
$count = $db->fetch($class,$name_pattern);
$object = $db->fetch($class,$name);
@objects = $db->fetch($class,$name_pattern,[$count,$offset]);
@objects = $db->fetch(-name=>$name_pattern,
-class=>$class
-count=>$count,
-offset=>$offset,
-fill=>$fill,
-filltag=>$tag,
-total=>\$total);
@objects = $db->fetch(-query=>$query);
Ace::fetch() retrieves objects from the database based on their class
and name. You may retrieve a single object by requesting its name, or
a group of objects by fetching a name pattern. A pattern contains one
or more wildcard characters, where "*" stands for zero or more
characters, and "?" stands for any single character.
This method behaves differently depending on whether it is called in a
scalar or a list context, and whether it is asked to search for a name
pattern or a simple name.
When called with a class and a simple name, it returns the object
referenced by that time, or undef, if no such object exists. In an
array context, it will return an empty list.
When called with a class and a name pattern in a list context, fetch()
returns the list of objects that match the name. When called with a
pattern in a scalar context, fetch() returns the number of objects that
match without actually retrieving them from the database. Thus, it is
similar to count().
In the examples below, the first line of code will fetch the Sequence
object whose database ID is D12345. The second line will retrieve all
objects matching the pattern D1234*. The third line will return the
count of objects that match the same pattern.
$object = $db->fetch(Sequence => 'D12345');
@objects = $db->fetch(Sequence => 'D1234*');
$cnt = $db->fetch(Sequence =>'D1234*');
A variety of communications and database errors may occur while
processing the request. When this happens, undef or an empty list will
be returned, and a string describing the error can be retrieved by
calling Ace->error.
When retrieving database objects, it is possible to retrieve a "filled"
or an "unfilled" object. A filled object contains the entire contents
of the object, including all tags and subtags. In the case of certain
Sequence objects, this may be a significant amount of data. Unfilled
objects consist just of the object name. They are filled in from the
database a little bit at a time as tags are requested. By default,
fetch() returns the unfilled object. This is usually a performance
win, but if you know in advance that you will be needing the full
contents of the retrieved object (for example, to display them in a
tree browser) it can be more efficient to fetch them in filled mode.
You do this by calling fetch() with the argument of -fill set to a true
value.
The -filltag argument, if provided, asks the database to fill in the
subtree anchored at the indicated tag. This will improve performance
for frequently-accessed subtrees. For example:
@objects = $db->fetch(-name => 'D123*',
-class => 'Sequence',
-filltag => 'Visible');
This will fetch all Sequences named D123* and fill in their Visible
trees in a single operation.
Other arguments in the named parameter calling form are -count, to
retrieve a certain maximum number of objects, and -offset, to retrieve
objects beginning at the indicated offset into the list. If you want
to limit the number of objects returned, but wish to learn how many
objects might have been retrieved, pass a reference to a scalar
variable in the -total argument. This will return the object count.
This example shows how to fetch 100 Sequence objects, starting at
Sequence number 500:
@some_sequences = $db->fetch('Sequence','*',100,500);
The next example uses the named argument form to fetch 100 Sequence
objects starting at Sequence number 500, and leave the total number of
Sequences in $total:
@some_sequences = $db->fetch(-class => 'Sequence',
-count => 100,
-offset => 500,
-total => \$total);
Notice that if you leave out the -name argument the "*" wildcard is
assumed.
You may also pass an arbitrary Ace query string with the -query
argument. This will supersede any name and class you provide.
Example:
@ready_dnas= $db->fetch(-query=>
'find Annotation Ready_for_submission ; follow gene ;
follow derived_sequence ; >DNA');
If your request is likely to retrieve very many objects, fetch() many
consume a lot of memory, even if -fill is false. Consider using
fetch_many() instead (see below). Also see the get() method, which is
equivalent to the simple two-argument form of fetch().
get() method
$object = $db->get($class,$name [,$fill]);
The get() method will return one and only one AceDB object
identified by its class and name. The optional $fill argument can
be used to control how much data is retrieved from the database. If
$fill is absent or undefined, then the method will return a
lightweight "stub" object that is filled with information as
requested in a lazy fashion. If $fill is the number "1" then the
retrieved object contains all the relevant information contained
within the database. Any other true value of $fill will be treated
as a tag name: the returned object will be prefilled with the
subtree to the right of that tag.
Examples:
# return lightweight stub for Author object "Sulston JE."
$author = $db->get(Author=>'Sulston JE');
# return heavyweight object
$author = $db->get(Author=>'Sulston JE',1);
# return object containing the Address subtree
$author = $db->get(Author=>'Sulston JE','Address');
The get() method is equivalent to this form of the fetch() method:
$object = $db->fetch($class=>$name);
aql() method
$count = $db->aql($aql_query);
@objects = $db->aql($aql_query);
Ace::aql() will perform an AQL query on the database. In a scalar
context it returns the number of rows returned. In an array context it
returns a list of rows. Each row is an anonymous array containing the
columns returned by the query as an Ace::Object.
If an AQL error is encountered, will return undef or an empty list and
set Ace->error to the error message.
Note that this routine is not optimized -- there is no iterator
defined. All results are returned synchronously, leading to large
memory consumption for certain queries.
put() method
$cnt = $db->put($obj1,$obj2,$obj3);
This method will put the list of objects into the database, overwriting
like-named objects if they are already there. This can be used to copy
an object from one database to another, provided that the models are
compatible.
The method returns the count of objects successfully written into the
database. In case of an error, processing will stop at the last object
successfully written and an error message will be placed in
Ace->error();
parse() method
$object = $db->parse('data to parse');
This will parse the Ace tags contained within the "data to parse"
string, convert it into an object in the databse, and return the
resulting Ace::Object. In case of a parse error, the undefined value
will be returned and a (hopefully informative) description of the error
will be returned by Ace->error().
For example:
$author = $db->parse(<<END);
Author : "Glimitz JR"
Full_name "Jonathan R. Glimitz"
Mail "128 Boylston Street"
Mail "Boston, MA"
Mail "USA"
Laboratory GM
END
This method can also be used to parse several objects, but only the
last object successfully parsed will be returned.
parse_longtext() method
$object = $db->parse($title,$text);
This will parse the long text (which may contain carriage returns and
other funny characters) and place it into the database with the given
title. In case of a parse error, the undefined value will be returned
and a (hopefully informative) description of the error will be returned
by Ace->error(); otherwise, a LongText object will be returned.
For example:
$author = $db->parse_longtext('A Novel Inhibitory Domain',<<END);
We have discovered a novel inhibitory domain that inhibits
many classes of proteases, including metallothioproteins.
This inhibitory domain appears in three different gene families studied
to date...
END
parse_file() method
@objects = $db->parse_file('/path/to/file');
@objects = $db->parse_file('/path/to/file',1);
This will call parse() to parse each of the objects found in the
indicated .ace file, returning the list of objects successfully loaded
into the database.
By default, parsing will stop at the first object that causes a parse
error. If you wish to forge on after an error, pass a true value as
the second argument to this method.
Any parse error messages are accumulated in Ace->error().
new() method
$object = $db->new($class => $name);
This method creates a new object in the database of type $class and
name $name. If successful, it returns the newly-created object.
Otherwise it returns undef and sets $db->error().
$name may contain sprintf()-style patterns. If one of the patterns is
%d (or a variant), Acedb uses a class-specific unique numbering to
return a unique name. For example:
$paper = $db->new(Paper => 'wgb%06d');
The object is created in the database atomically. There is no chance
to rollback as there is in Ace::Object's object editing methods.
See also the Ace::Object->add() and replace() methods.
list() method
@objects = $db->list(class,pattern,[count,offset]);
@objects = $db->list(-class=>$class,
-name=>$name_pattern,
-count=>$count,
-offset=>$offset);
This is a deprecated method. Use fetch() instead.
count() method
$count = $db->count($class,$pattern);
$count = $db->count(-query=>$query);
This function queries the database for a list of objects matching the
specified class and pattern, and returns the object count. For large
sets of objects this is much more time and memory effective than
fetching the entire list.
The class and name pattern are the same as the list() method above.
You may also provide a -query argument to instead specify an arbitrary
ACE query such as "find Author COUNT Paper > 80". See find() below.
find() method
@objects = $db->find($query_string);
@objects = $db->find(-query => $query_string,
-offset=> $offset,
-count => $count
-fill => $fill);
This allows you to pass arbitrary Ace query strings to the server and
retrieve all objects that are returned as a result. For example, this
code fragment retrieves all papers written by Jean and Danielle
Thierry-Mieg.
@papers = $db->find('author IS "Thierry-Mieg *" ; >Paper');
You can find the full query syntax reference guide plus multiple
examples at http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/index.html#query.
In the named parameter calling form, -count, -offset, and -fill have
the same meanings as in fetch().
fetch_many() method
$obj = $db->fetch_many($class,$pattern);
$obj = $db->fetch_many(-class=>$class,
-name =>$pattern,
-fill =>$filled,
-chunksize=>$chunksize);
$obj = $db->fetch_many(-query=>$query);
If you expect to retrieve many objects, you can fetch an iterator
across the data set. This is friendly both in terms of network
bandwidth and memory consumption. It is simple to use:
$i = $db->fetch_many(Sequence,'*'); # all sequences!!!!
while ($obj = $i->next) {
print $obj->asTable;
}
The iterator will return undef when it has finished iterating, and
cannot be used again. You can have multiple iterators open at once and
they will operate independently of each other.
Like fetch(), fetch_many() takes an optional -fill (or -filled)
argument which retrieves the entire object rather than just its name.
This is efficient on a network with high latency if you expect to be
touching many parts of the object (rather than just retrieving the
value of a few tags).
fetch_many() retrieves objects from the database in groups of a certain
maximum size, 40 by default. This can be tuned using the optional
-chunksize argument. Chunksize is only a hint to the database. It may
return fewer objects per transaction, particularly if the objects are
large.
You may provide raw Ace query string with the -query argument. If
present the -name and -class arguments will be ignored.
find_many() method
This is an alias for fetch_many(). It is now deprecated.
keyset() method
@objects = $db->keyset($keyset_name);
This method returns all objects in a named keyset. Wildcard characters
are accepted, in which case all keysets that match the pattern will be
retrieved and merged into a single list of unique objects.
grep() method
@objects = $db->grep($grep_string);
$count = $db->grep($grep_string);
@objects = $db->grep(-pattern => $grep_string,
-offset=> $offset,
-count => $count,
-fill => $fill,
-filltag => $filltag,
-total => \$total,
-long => 1,
);
This performs a "grep" on the database, returning all object names or
text that contain the indicated grep pattern. In a scalar context this
call will return the number of matching objects. In an array context,
the list of matching objects are retrieved. There is also a named-
parameter form of the call, which allows you to specify the number of
objects to retrieve, the offset from the beginning of the list to
retrieve from, whether the retrieved objects should be filled
initially. You can use -total to discover the total number of objects
that match, while only retrieving a portion of the list.
By default, grep uses a fast search that only examines class names and
lexiques. By providing a true value to the -long parameter, you can
search inside LongText and other places that are not usually touched
on, at the expense of much more CPU time.
Due to "not listable" objects that may match during grep, the list of
objects one can retrieve may not always match the count.
model() method
$model = $db->model('Author');
This will return an Ace::Model object corresponding to the indicated
class.
new() method
$obj = $db->new($class,$name);
$obj = $db->new(-class=>$class,
-name=>$name);
Create a new object in the database with the indicated class and name
and return a pointer to it. Will return undef if the object already
exists in the database. The object isn't actually written into the
database until you call Ace::Object::commit().
raw_query() method
$r = $db->raw_query('Model');
Send a command to the database and return its unprocessed output. This
method is necessary to gain access to features that are not yet
implemented in this module, such as model browsing and complex queries.
classes() method
@classes = $db->classes();
@all_classes = $db->classes(1);
This method returns a list of all the object classes known to the
server. In a list context it returns an array of class names. In a
scalar context, it the number of classes defined in the database.
Ordinarily classes() will return only those classes that are exposed to
the user interface for browsing, the so-called "visible" classes. Pass
a true argument to the call to retrieve non-visible classes as well.
class_count() method
%classes = $db->class_count()
This returns a hash in which the keys are the class names and the
values are the total number of objects in that class. All classes are
returned, including invisible ones. Use this method if you need to
count all classes simultaneously. If you only want to count one or two
classes, it may be more efficient to call count($class_name) instead.
This method transiently uses a lot of memory. It should not be used
with Ace 4.5 servers, as they contain a memory leak in the counting
routine.
status() method
%status = $db->status;
$status = $db->status;
Returns various bits of status information from the server. In an
array context, returns a hash of hashes. In a scalar context, returns
a reference to a hash of hashes. Keys and subkeys are as follows
code
program name of acedb binary
version version of acedb binary
build build date of acedb binary in format Jan 25 2003 16:21:24
database
title name of the database
version version of the database
dbformat database format version number
directory directory in which the database is stored
session session number
user user under which server is running
write whether the server has write access
address global address - not known if this is useful
resources
classes number of classes defined
keys number of keys defined
memory amount of memory used by acedb objects (bytes)
For example, to get the program version:
my $version = $db->status->{code}{version};
title() method
my $title = $db->title
Returns the version of the current database, equivalent to
$db->status->{database}{title};
version() method
my $version = $db->version;
Returns the version of the current database, equivalent to
$db->status->{database}{version};
date_style() method
$style = $db->date_style();
$style = $db->date_style('ace');
$style = $db->date_style('java');
For historical reasons, AceDB can display dates using either of two
different formats. The first format, which I call "ace" style, puts
the year first, as in "1997-10-01". The second format, which I call
"java" style, puts the day first, as in "01 Oct 1997 00:00:00" (this is
also the style recommended for Internet dates). The default is to use
the latter notation.
date_style() can be used to set or retrieve the current style. Called
with no arguments, it returns the current style, which will be one of
"ace" or "java." Called with an argument, it will set the style to one
or the other.
timestamps() method
$timestamps_on = $db->timestamps();
$db->timestamps(1);
Whenever a data object is updated, AceDB records the time and date of
the update, and the user ID it was running under. Ordinarily, the
retrieval of timestamp information is suppressed to conserve memory and
bandwidth. To turn on timestamps, call the timestamps() method with a
true value. You can retrieve the current value of the setting by
calling the method with no arguments.
Note that activating timestamps disables some of the speed
optimizations in AcePerl. Thus they should only be activated if you
really need the information.
auto_save()
Sets or queries the auto_save variable. If true, the "save" command
will be issued automatically before the connection to the database is
severed. The default is true.
Examples:
$db->auto_save(1);
$flag = $db->auto_save;
error() method
Ace->error;
This returns the last error message. Like UNIX errno, this variable is
not reset between calls, so its contents are only valid after a method
call has returned a result value indicating a failure.
For your convenience, you can call error() in any of several ways:
print Ace->error();
print $db->error(); # $db is an Ace database handle
print $obj->error(); # $object is an Ace::Object
There's also a global named $Ace::Error that you are free to use.
datetime() and date()
$datetime = Ace->datetime($time);
$today = Ace->datetime();
$date = Ace->date($time);
$today = Ace->date([$time]);
These convenience functions convert the UNIX timestamp given by $time
(seconds since the epoch) into a datetime string in the format that
ACEDB requires. date() will truncate the time portion.
If not provided, $time defaults to localtime().
OTHER METHODSdebug()
$debug_level = Ace->debug([$new_level])
This class method gets or sets the debug level. Higher integers
increase verbosity. 0 or undef turns off debug messages.
name2db()
$db = Ace->name2db($name [,$database])
This class method associates a database URL with an Ace database
object. This is used internally by the Ace::Object class in order to
discover what database they "belong" to.
cache()
Get or set the Cache::SizeAwareFileCache object, if one has been
created.
memory_cache_fetch()
$obj = $db->memory_cache_fetch($class,$name)
Given an object class and name return a copy of the object from the in-
memory cache. The object will only be cached if a copy of the object
already exists in memory space. This is ordinarily called internally.
memory_cache_store($obj)
Store an object into the memory cache. This is ordinarily called
internally.
memory_cache_delete($obj)
Delete an object from the memory cache. This is ordinarily called
internally.
memory_cache_clear()
Completely clears the memory cache.
file_cache_fetch()
$obj = $db->file_cache_fetch($class,$name)
Given an object class and name return a copy of the object from the
file cache. This is ordinarily called internally.
file_cache_store($obj)
Store an object into the file cache. This is ordinarily called
internally.
file_cache_delete($obj)
Delete an object from the file cache. This is ordinarily called
internally.
THE LOW LEVEL C API
Internally Ace.pm makes C-language calls to libace to send query
strings to the server and to retrieve the results. The class that
exports the low-level calls is named Ace::AceDB.
The following methods are available in Ace::AceDB:
new($host,$port,$query_timeout)
Connect to the host $host at port $port. Queries will time out
after $query_timeout seconds. If timeout is not specified, it
defaults to 120 (two minutes).
If successful, this call returns an Ace::AceDB connection object.
Otherwise, it returns undef. Example:
$acedb = Ace::AceDB->new('localhost',200005,5)
|| die "Couldn't connect";
The Ace::AceDB object can also be accessed from the high-level Ace
interface by calling the ACE::db() method:
$db = Ace->new(-host=>'localhost',-port=>200005);
$acedb = $db->db();
query($request)
Send the query string $request to the server and return a true
value if successful. You must then call read() repeatedly in order
to fetch the query result.
read()
Read the result from the last query sent to the server and return
it as a string. ACE may return the result in pieces, breaking
between whole objects. You may need to read repeatedly in order to
fetch the entire result. Canonical example:
$acedb->query("find Sequence D*");
die "Got an error ",$acedb->error() if $acedb->status == STATUS_ERROR;
while ($acedb->status == STATUS_PENDING) {
$result .= $acedb->read;
}
status()
Return the status code from the last operation. Status codes are
exported by default when you use Ace.pm. The status codes you may
see are:
STATUS_WAITING The server is waiting for a query.
STATUS_PENDING A query has been sent and Ace is waiting for
you to read() the result.
STATUS_ERROR A communications or syntax error has occurred
error()
Returns a more detailed error code supplied by the Ace server.
Check this value when STATUS_ERROR has been returned. These
constants are also exported by default. Possible values:
ACE_INVALID
ACE_OUTOFCONTEXT
ACE_SYNTAXERROR
ACE_UNRECOGNIZED
Please see the ace client library documentation for a full
description of these error codes and their significance.
encore()
This method may return true after you have performed one or more
read() operations, and indicates that there is more data to read.
You will not ordinarily have to call this method.
BUGS
1. The ACE model should be consulted prior to updating the database.
2. There is no automatic recovery from connection errors.
3. Debugging has only one level of verbosity, despite the best of
intentions.
4. Performance is poor when fetching big objects, because of many
object references that must be created. This could be improved.
5. When called in an array context at("tag[0]") should return the
current tag's entire column. It returns the current subtree instead.
6. There is no way to add comments to objects.
7. When timestamps are active, many optimizations are disabled.
8. Item number eight is still missing.
SEE ALSO
Ace::Object, Ace::Local, Ace::Model,
Ace::Sequence,Ace::Sequence::Multi.
AUTHOR
Lincoln Stein <lstein@cshl.org> with extensive help from Jean Thierry-
Mieg <mieg@kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr>
Copyright (c) 1997-1998 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself. See DISCLAIMER.txt for
disclaimers of warranty.
POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
below:
Around line 1194:
'=item' outside of any '=over'
Around line 1224:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head2'
perl v5.14.1 2008-11-11 Ace(3)