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# -*- Mode: perl; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-
#
# The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public
# License Version 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file
# except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
# the License at http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/
#
# Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS
# IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or
# implied. See the License for the specific language governing
# rights and limitations under the License.
#
# The Original Code is the Bugzilla Bug Tracking System.
#
# The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Netscape Communications
# Corporation. Portions created by Netscape are
# Copyright (C) 1998 Netscape Communications Corporation. All
# Rights Reserved.
#
# Contributor(s): Terry Weissman <terry@mozilla.org>
#                 Dan Mosedale <dmose@mozilla.org>
#                 Jacob Steenhagen <jake@bugzilla.org>
#                 Bradley Baetz <bbaetz@student.usyd.edu.au>
#                 Christopher Aillon <christopher@aillon.com>
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#                 Tomas Kopal <Tomas.Kopal@altap.cz>
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#                 Max Kanat-Alexander <mkanat@bugzilla.org>
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#                 Lance Larsh <lance.larsh@oracle.com>
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package Bugzilla::DB;

use strict;

use DBI;

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# Inherit the DB class from DBI::db.
use base qw(DBI::db);
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use Bugzilla::Constants;
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use Bugzilla::Install::Requirements;
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use Bugzilla::Install::Util qw(vers_cmp install_string);
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use Bugzilla::Install::Localconfig;
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use Bugzilla::Util;
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use Bugzilla::Error;
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use Bugzilla::DB::Schema;
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use List::Util qw(max);
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use Storable qw(dclone);
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#####################################################################
# Constants
#####################################################################

use constant BLOB_TYPE => DBI::SQL_BLOB;
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use constant ISOLATION_LEVEL => 'REPEATABLE READ';
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# Set default values for what used to be the enum types.  These values
# are no longer stored in localconfig.  If we are upgrading from a
# Bugzilla with enums to a Bugzilla without enums, we use the
# enum values.
#
# The values that you see here are ONLY DEFAULTS. They are only used
# the FIRST time you run checksetup.pl, IF you are NOT upgrading from a
# Bugzilla with enums. After that, they are either controlled through
# the Bugzilla UI or through the DB.
use constant ENUM_DEFAULTS => {
    bug_severity  => ['blocker', 'critical', 'major', 'normal',
                      'minor', 'trivial', 'enhancement'],
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    priority     => ["Highest", "High", "Normal", "Low", "Lowest", "---"],
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    op_sys       => ["All","Windows","Mac OS","Linux","Other"],
    rep_platform => ["All","PC","Macintosh","Other"],
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    bug_status   => ["UNCONFIRMED","CONFIRMED","IN_PROGRESS","RESOLVED",
                     "VERIFIED"],
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    resolution   => ["","FIXED","INVALID","WONTFIX", "DUPLICATE","WORKSFORME"],
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};

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# The character that means "OR" in a boolean fulltext search. If empty,
# the database doesn't support OR searches in fulltext searches.
# Used by Bugzilla::Bug::possible_duplicates.
use constant FULLTEXT_OR => '';

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# These are used in regular expressions to mean "the start or end of a word".
#
# We don't use [[:<:]] and [[:>:]], even though they mean
# "start and end of a word" and are supported by both MySQL and PostgreSQL,
# because they don't work if your search starts or ends with a non-alphanumeric
# character, and there's a fair chance somebody will want to use the "word"
# search to search flags for something like "review+".
#
# We do use [:almum:] because it is supported by at least MySQL and
# PostgreSQL, and hopefully will get us as much Unicode support as possible,
# depending on how well the regexp engines of the various databases support
# Unicode.
use constant WORD_START => '(^|[^[:alnum:]])';
use constant WORD_END   => '($|[^[:alnum:]])';

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#####################################################################
# Overridden Superclass Methods 
#####################################################################

sub quote {
    my $self = shift;
    my $retval = $self->SUPER::quote(@_);
    trick_taint($retval) if defined $retval;
    return $retval;
}

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#####################################################################
# Connection Methods
#####################################################################

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sub connect_shadow {
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    my $params = Bugzilla->params;
    die "Tried to connect to non-existent shadowdb" 
        unless $params->{'shadowdb'};
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    # Instead of just passing in a new hashref, we locally modify the
    # values of "localconfig", because some drivers access it while
    # connecting.
    my %connect_params = %{ Bugzilla->localconfig };
    $connect_params{db_host} = $params->{'shadowdbhost'};
    $connect_params{db_name} = $params->{'shadowdb'};
    $connect_params{db_port} = $params->{'shadowdbport'};
    $connect_params{db_sock} = $params->{'shadowdbsock'};

    return _connect(\%connect_params);
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}

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sub connect_main {
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    my $lc = Bugzilla->localconfig;
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    return _connect(Bugzilla->localconfig); 
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}

sub _connect {
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    my ($params) = @_;
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    my $driver = $params->{db_driver};
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    my $pkg_module = DB_MODULE->{lc($driver)}->{db};
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    # do the actual import
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    eval ("require $pkg_module")
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        || die ("'$driver' is not a valid choice for \$db_driver in "
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                . " localconfig: " . $@);
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    # instantiate the correct DB specific module
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    my $dbh = $pkg_module->new($params);
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    return $dbh;
}

sub _handle_error {
    require Carp;

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    # Cut down the error string to a reasonable size
    $_[0] = substr($_[0], 0, 2000) . ' ... ' . substr($_[0], -2000)
        if length($_[0]) > 4000;
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    $_[0] = Carp::longmess($_[0]);
    return 0; # Now let DBI handle raising the error
}

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sub bz_check_requirements {
    my ($output) = @_;

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    my $lc = Bugzilla->localconfig;
    my $db = DB_MODULE->{lc($lc->{db_driver})};
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    # Only certain values are allowed for $db_driver.
    if (!defined $db) {
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        die "$lc->{db_driver} is not a valid choice for \$db_driver in"
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            . bz_locations()->{'localconfig'};
    }

    # Check the existence and version of the DBD that we need.
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    my $dbd = $db->{dbd};
    _bz_check_dbd($db, $output);

    # We don't try to connect to the actual database if $db_check is
    # disabled.
    unless ($lc->{db_check}) {
        print "\n" if $output;
        return;
    }

    # And now check the version of the database server itself.
    my $dbh = _get_no_db_connection();
    $dbh->bz_check_server_version($db, $output);

    print "\n" if $output;
}

sub _bz_check_dbd {
    my ($db, $output) = @_;

    my $dbd = $db->{dbd};
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    unless (have_vers($dbd, $output)) {
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        my $sql_server = $db->{name};
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        my $command = install_command($dbd);
        my $root    = ROOT_USER;
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        my $dbd_mod = $dbd->{module};
        my $dbd_ver = $dbd->{version};
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        die <<EOT;
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For $sql_server, Bugzilla requires that perl's $dbd_mod $dbd_ver or later be
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installed. To install this module, run the following command (as $root):

    $command

EOT
    }
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}
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sub bz_check_server_version {
    my ($self, $db, $output) = @_;
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    my $sql_vers = $self->bz_server_version;
    $self->disconnect;
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    my $sql_want = $db->{db_version};
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    my $version_ok = vers_cmp($sql_vers, $sql_want) > -1 ? 1 : 0;
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    my $sql_server = $db->{name};
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    if ($output) {
        Bugzilla::Install::Requirements::_checking_for({
            package => $sql_server, wanted => $sql_want,
            found   => $sql_vers, ok => $version_ok });
    }

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    # Check what version of the database server is installed and let
    # the user know if the version is too old to be used with Bugzilla.
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    if (!$version_ok) {
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        die <<EOT;
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Your $sql_server v$sql_vers is too old. Bugzilla requires version
$sql_want or later of $sql_server. Please download and install a
newer version.

EOT
    }
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    # This is used by subclasses.
    return $sql_vers;
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}

# Note that this function requires that localconfig exist and
# be valid.
sub bz_create_database {
    my $dbh;
    # See if we can connect to the actual Bugzilla database.
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    my $conn_success = eval { $dbh = connect_main() };
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    my $db_name = Bugzilla->localconfig->{db_name};
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    if (!$conn_success) {
        $dbh = _get_no_db_connection();
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        print "Creating database $db_name...\n";
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        # Try to create the DB, and if we fail print a friendly error.
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        my $success  = eval {
            my @sql = $dbh->_bz_schema->get_create_database_sql($db_name);
            # This ends with 1 because this particular do doesn't always
            # return something.
            $dbh->do($_) foreach @sql; 1;
        };
        if (!$success) {
            my $error = $dbh->errstr || $@;
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            chomp($error);
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            die "The '$db_name' database could not be created.",
                " The error returned was:\n\n    $error\n\n",
                _bz_connect_error_reasons();
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        }
    }

    $dbh->disconnect;
}

# A helper for bz_create_database and bz_check_requirements.
sub _get_no_db_connection {
    my ($sql_server) = @_;
    my $dbh;
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    my %connect_params = %{ Bugzilla->localconfig };
    $connect_params{db_name} = '';
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    my $conn_success = eval {
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        $dbh = _connect(\%connect_params);
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    };
    if (!$conn_success) {
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        my $driver = $connect_params{db_driver};
        my $sql_server = DB_MODULE->{lc($driver)}->{name};
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        # Can't use $dbh->errstr because $dbh is undef.
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        my $error = $DBI::errstr || $@;
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        chomp($error);
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        die "There was an error connecting to $sql_server:\n\n",
            "    $error\n\n", _bz_connect_error_reasons(), "\n";
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    }
    return $dbh;    
}

# Just a helper because we have to re-use this text.
# We don't use this in db_new because it gives away the database
# username, and db_new errors can show up on CGIs.
sub _bz_connect_error_reasons {
    my $lc_file = bz_locations()->{'localconfig'};
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    my $lc      = Bugzilla->localconfig;
    my $db      = DB_MODULE->{lc($lc->{db_driver})};
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    my $server  = $db->{name};

return <<EOT;
This might have several reasons:

* $server is not running.
* $server is running, but there is a problem either in the
  server configuration or the database access rights. Read the Bugzilla
  Guide in the doc directory. The section about database configuration
  should help.
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* Your password for the '$lc->{db_user}' user, specified in \$db_pass, is 
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  incorrect, in '$lc_file'.
* There is a subtle problem with Perl, DBI, or $server. Make
  sure all settings in '$lc_file' are correct. If all else fails, set
  '\$db_check' to 0.

EOT
}

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# List of abstract methods we are checking the derived class implements
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our @_abstract_methods = qw(new sql_regexp sql_not_regexp sql_limit sql_to_days
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                            sql_date_format sql_date_math bz_explain
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                            sql_group_concat);
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# This overridden import method will check implementation of inherited classes
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# for missing implementation of abstract methods
# See http://perlmonks.thepen.com/44265.html
sub import {
    my $pkg = shift;

    # do not check this module
    if ($pkg ne __PACKAGE__) {
        # make sure all abstract methods are implemented
        foreach my $meth (@_abstract_methods) {
            $pkg->can($meth)
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                or die("Class $pkg does not define method $meth");
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        }
    }

    # Now we want to call our superclass implementation.
    # If our superclass is Exporter, which is using caller() to find
    # a namespace to populate, we need to adjust for this extra call.
    # All this can go when we stop using deprecated functions.
    my $is_exporter = $pkg->isa('Exporter');
    $Exporter::ExportLevel++ if $is_exporter;
    $pkg->SUPER::import(@_);
    $Exporter::ExportLevel-- if $is_exporter;
}

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sub sql_istrcmp {
    my ($self, $left, $right, $op) = @_;
    $op ||= "=";

    return $self->sql_istring($left) . " $op " . $self->sql_istring($right);
}

sub sql_istring {
    my ($self, $string) = @_;

    return "LOWER($string)";
}

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sub sql_iposition {
    my ($self, $fragment, $text) = @_;
    $fragment = $self->sql_istring($fragment);
    $text = $self->sql_istring($text);
    return $self->sql_position($fragment, $text);
}

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sub sql_position {
    my ($self, $fragment, $text) = @_;

    return "POSITION($fragment IN $text)";
}

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sub sql_group_by {
    my ($self, $needed_columns, $optional_columns) = @_;

    my $expression = "GROUP BY $needed_columns";
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    $expression .= ", " . $optional_columns if $optional_columns;
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    return $expression;
}
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sub sql_string_concat {
    my ($self, @params) = @_;
    
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    return '(' . join(' || ', @params) . ')';
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}

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sub sql_string_until {
    my ($self, $string, $substring) = @_;
    return "SUBSTRING($string FROM 1 FOR " .
                      $self->sql_position($substring, $string) . " - 1)";
}

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sub sql_in {
    my ($self, $column_name, $in_list_ref) = @_;
    return " $column_name IN (" . join(',', @$in_list_ref) . ") ";
}

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sub sql_fulltext_search {
    my ($self, $column, $text) = @_;

    # This is as close as we can get to doing full text search using
    # standard ANSI SQL, without real full text search support. DB specific
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    # modules should override this, as this will be always much slower.
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    # make the string lowercase to do case insensitive search
    my $lower_text = lc($text);

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    # split the text we're searching for into separate words. As a hack
    # to allow quicksearch to work, if the field starts and ends with
    # a double-quote, then we don't split it into words. We can't use
    # Text::ParseWords here because it gets very confused by unbalanced
    # quotes, which breaks searches like "don't try this" (because of the
    # unbalanced single-quote in "don't").
    my @words;
    if ($lower_text =~ /^"/ and $lower_text =~ /"$/) {
        $lower_text =~ s/^"//;
        $lower_text =~ s/"$//;
        @words = ($lower_text);
    }
    else {
        @words = split(/\s+/, $lower_text);
    }
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    # surround the words with wildcards and SQL quotes so we can use them
    # in LIKE search clauses
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    @words = map($self->quote("\%$_\%"), @words);
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    # untaint words, since they are safe to use now that we've quoted them
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    trick_taint($_) foreach @words;
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    # turn the words into a set of LIKE search clauses
    @words = map("LOWER($column) LIKE $_", @words);

    # search for occurrences of all specified words in the column
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    return join (" AND ", @words), "CASE WHEN (" . join(" AND ", @words) . ") THEN 1 ELSE 0 END";
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}

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#####################################################################
# General Info Methods
#####################################################################

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# XXX - Needs to be documented.
sub bz_server_version {
    my ($self) = @_;
    return $self->get_info(18); # SQL_DBMS_VER
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}

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sub bz_last_key {
    my ($self, $table, $column) = @_;

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    return $self->last_insert_id(Bugzilla->localconfig->{db_name}, undef, 
                                 $table, $column);
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}

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sub bz_check_regexp {
    my ($self, $pattern) = @_;

    eval { $self->do("SELECT " . $self->sql_regexp($self->quote("a"), $pattern, 1)) };

    $@ && ThrowUserError('illegal_regexp', 
        { value => $pattern, dberror => $self->errstr }); 
}

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#####################################################################
# Database Setup
#####################################################################

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

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    # If we haven't ever stored a serialized schema,
    # set up the bz_schema table and store it.
    $self->_bz_init_schema_storage();
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    # We don't use bz_table_list here, because that uses _bz_real_schema.
    # We actually want the table list from the ABSTRACT_SCHEMA in
    # Bugzilla::DB::Schema.
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    my @desired_tables = $self->_bz_schema->get_table_list();
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    my $bugs_exists = $self->bz_table_info('bugs');
    if (!$bugs_exists) {
        print install_string('db_table_setup'), "\n";
    }
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    foreach my $table_name (@desired_tables) {
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        $self->bz_add_table($table_name, { silently => !$bugs_exists });
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    }
}

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# This really just exists to get overridden in Bugzilla::DB::Mysql.
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sub bz_enum_initial_values {
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    return ENUM_DEFAULTS;
}

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

    my $any_severities = $self->selectrow_array(
        'SELECT 1 FROM bug_severity ' . $self->sql_limit(1));
    print install_string('db_enum_setup'), "\n  " if !$any_severities;
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    my $enum_values = $self->bz_enum_initial_values();
    while (my ($table, $values) = each %$enum_values) {
        $self->_bz_populate_enum_table($table, $values);
    }
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    print "\n" if !$any_severities;
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}

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

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    # profiles_activity was the first table to get foreign keys,
    # so if it doesn't have them, then we're setting up FKs
    # for the first time, and should be quieter about it.
    my $activity_fk = $self->bz_fk_info('profiles_activity', 'userid');
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    my $any_fks = $activity_fk && $activity_fk->{created};
    if (!$any_fks) {
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        print get_text('install_fk_setup'), "\n";
    }

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    my @tables = $self->bz_table_list();
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    foreach my $table (@tables) {
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        my @columns = $self->bz_table_columns($table);
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        my %add_fks;
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        foreach my $column (@columns) {
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            # First we check for any FKs that have created => 0,
            # in the _bz_real_schema. This also picks up FKs with
            # created => 1, but bz_add_fks will ignore those.
            my $fk = $self->bz_fk_info($table, $column);
            # Then we check the abstract schema to see if there
            # should be an FK on this column, but one wasn't set in the
            # _bz_real_schema for some reason. We do this to handle
            # various problems caused by upgrading from versions
            # prior to 4.2, and also to handle problems caused
            # by enabling an extension pre-4.2, disabling it for
            # the 4.2 upgrade, and then re-enabling it later.
            if (!$fk) {
                my $standard_def = 
                    $self->_bz_schema->get_column_abstract($table, $column);
                if (exists $standard_def->{REFERENCES}) {
                    $fk = dclone($standard_def->{REFERENCES});
                }
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            }
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            $add_fks{$column} = $fk if $fk;
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        }
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        $self->bz_add_fks($table, \%add_fks, { silently => !$any_fks });
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    }
}

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# This is used by contrib/bzdbcopy.pl, mostly.
sub bz_drop_foreign_keys {
    my ($self) = @_;

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    my @tables = $self->bz_table_list();
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    foreach my $table (@tables) {
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        my @columns = $self->bz_table_columns($table);
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        foreach my $column (@columns) {
            $self->bz_drop_fk($table, $column);
        }
    }
}

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#####################################################################
# Schema Modification Methods
#####################################################################

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sub bz_add_column {
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    my ($self, $table, $name, $new_def, $init_value) = @_;
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    # You can't add a NOT NULL column to a table with
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    # no DEFAULT statement, unless you have an init_value.
    # SERIAL types are an exception, though, because they can
    # auto-populate.
    if ( $new_def->{NOTNULL} && !exists $new_def->{DEFAULT} 
         && !defined $init_value && $new_def->{TYPE} !~ /SERIAL/)
    {
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        ThrowCodeError('column_not_null_without_default',
                       { name => "$table.$name" });
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    }

    my $current_def = $self->bz_column_info($table, $name);

    if (!$current_def) {
        my @statements = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_add_column_ddl(
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            $table, $name, $new_def, 
            defined $init_value ? $self->quote($init_value) : undef);
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        print get_text('install_column_add',
                       { column => $name, table => $table }) . "\n"
            if Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE;
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        foreach my $sql (@statements) {
            $self->do($sql);
        }
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        # To make things easier for callers, if they don't specify
        # a REFERENCES item, we pull it from the _bz_schema if the
        # column exists there and has a REFERENCES item.
        # bz_setup_foreign_keys will then add this FK at the end of
        # Install::DB.
        my $col_abstract = 
            $self->_bz_schema->get_column_abstract($table, $name);
        if (exists $col_abstract->{REFERENCES}) {
            my $new_fk = dclone($col_abstract->{REFERENCES});
            $new_fk->{created} = 0;
            $new_def->{REFERENCES} = $new_fk;
        }
        
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        $self->_bz_real_schema->set_column($table, $name, $new_def);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

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sub bz_add_fk {
    my ($self, $table, $column, $def) = @_;
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    $self->bz_add_fks($table, { $column => $def });
}

sub bz_add_fks {
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    my ($self, $table, $column_fks, $options) = @_;
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    my %add_these;
    foreach my $column (keys %$column_fks) {
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        my $current_fk = $self->bz_fk_info($table, $column);
        next if ($current_fk and $current_fk->{created});
        my $new_fk = $column_fks->{$column};
        $self->_check_references($table, $column, $new_fk);
        $add_these{$column} = $new_fk;
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        if (Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE 
            and !$options->{silently}) 
        {
            print get_text('install_fk_add',
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                           { table => $table, column => $column, 
                             fk    => $new_fk }), "\n";
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        }
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    }

    return if !scalar(keys %add_these);

    my @sql = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_add_fks_sql($table, \%add_these);
    $self->do($_) foreach @sql;

    foreach my $column (keys %add_these) {
648 649 650
        my $fk_def = $add_these{$column};
        $fk_def->{created} = 1;
        $self->_bz_real_schema->set_fk($table, $column, $fk_def);
651
    }
652 653

    $self->_bz_store_real_schema();
654 655
}

656
sub bz_alter_column {
657
    my ($self, $table, $name, $new_def, $set_nulls_to) = @_;
658 659 660 661

    my $current_def = $self->bz_column_info($table, $name);

    if (!$self->_bz_schema->columns_equal($current_def, $new_def)) {
662 663 664 665 666 667
        # You can't change a column to be NOT NULL if you have no DEFAULT
        # and no value for $set_nulls_to, if there are any NULL values 
        # in that column.
        if ($new_def->{NOTNULL} && 
            !exists $new_def->{DEFAULT} && !defined $set_nulls_to)
        {
668 669 670
            # Check for NULLs
            my $any_nulls = $self->selectrow_array(
                "SELECT 1 FROM $table WHERE $name IS NULL");
671 672
            ThrowCodeError('column_not_null_no_default_alter', 
                           { name => "$table.$name" }) if ($any_nulls);
673
        }
674 675
        # Preserve foreign key definitions in the Schema object when altering
        # types.
676 677
        if (my $fk = $self->bz_fk_info($table, $name)) {
            $new_def->{REFERENCES} = $fk;
678
        }
679 680
        $self->bz_alter_column_raw($table, $name, $new_def, $current_def,
                                   $set_nulls_to);
681 682 683 684 685
        $self->_bz_real_schema->set_column($table, $name, $new_def);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

686

687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703
# bz_alter_column_raw($table, $name, $new_def, $current_def)
#
# Description: A helper function for bz_alter_column.
#              Alters a column in the database
#              without updating any Schema object. Generally
#              should only be called by bz_alter_column.
#              Used when either: (1) You don't yet have a Schema
#              object but you need to alter a column, for some reason.
#              (2) You need to alter a column for some database-specific
#              reason.
# Params:      $table   - The name of the table the column is on.
#              $name    - The name of the column you're changing.
#              $new_def - The abstract definition that you are changing
#                         this column to.
#              $current_def - (optional) The current definition of the
#                             column. Will be used in the output message,
#                             if given.
704 705
#              $set_nulls_to - The same as the param of the same name
#                              from bz_alter_column.
706 707 708
# Returns:     nothing
#
sub bz_alter_column_raw {
709
    my ($self, $table, $name, $new_def, $current_def, $set_nulls_to) = @_;
710
    my @statements = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_alter_column_ddl(
711 712
        $table, $name, $new_def,
        defined $set_nulls_to ? $self->quote($set_nulls_to) : undef);
713
    my $new_ddl = $self->_bz_schema->get_type_ddl($new_def);
714 715
    print "Updating column $name in table $table ...\n";
    if (defined $current_def) {
716
        my $old_ddl = $self->_bz_schema->get_type_ddl($current_def);
717 718 719 720 721 722
        print "Old: $old_ddl\n";
    }
    print "New: $new_ddl\n";
    $self->do($_) foreach (@statements);
}

723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731
sub bz_alter_fk {
    my ($self, $table, $column, $fk_def) = @_;
    my $current_fk = $self->bz_fk_info($table, $column);
    ThrowCodeError('column_alter_nonexistent_fk',
                   { table => $table, column => $column }) if !$current_fk;
    $self->bz_drop_fk($table, $column);
    $self->bz_add_fk($table, $column, $fk_def);
}

732 733 734 735 736 737
sub bz_add_index {
    my ($self, $table, $name, $definition) = @_;

    my $index_exists = $self->bz_index_info($table, $name);

    if (!$index_exists) {
738
        $self->bz_add_index_raw($table, $name, $definition);
739 740 741 742 743
        $self->_bz_real_schema->set_index($table, $name, $definition);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767
# bz_add_index_raw($table, $name, $silent)
#
# Description: A helper function for bz_add_index.
#              Adds an index to the database
#              without updating any Schema object. Generally
#              should only be called by bz_add_index.
#              Used when you don't yet have a Schema
#              object but you need to add an index, for some reason.
# Params:      $table  - The name of the table the index is on.
#              $name   - The name of the index you're adding.
#              $definition - The abstract index definition, in hashref
#                            or arrayref format.
#              $silent - (optional) If specified and true, don't output
#                        any message about this change.
# Returns:     nothing
#
sub bz_add_index_raw {
    my ($self, $table, $name, $definition, $silent) = @_;
    my @statements = $self->_bz_schema->get_add_index_ddl(
        $table, $name, $definition);
    print "Adding new index '$name' to the $table table ...\n" unless $silent;
    $self->do($_) foreach (@statements);
}

768
sub bz_add_table {
769
    my ($self, $name, $options) = @_;
770 771 772 773

    my $table_exists = $self->bz_table_info($name);

    if (!$table_exists) {
774
        $self->_bz_add_table_raw($name, $options);
775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782
        my $table_def = dclone($self->_bz_schema->get_table_abstract($name));

        my %fields = @{$table_def->{FIELDS}};
        foreach my $col (keys %fields) {
            # Foreign Key references have to be added by Install::DB after
            # initial table creation, because column names have changed
            # over history and it's impossible to keep track of that info
            # in ABSTRACT_SCHEMA.
783 784 785
            next unless exists $fields{$col}->{REFERENCES};
            $fields{$col}->{REFERENCES}->{created} =
                $self->_bz_real_schema->FK_ON_CREATE;
786
        }
787
        
788
        $self->_bz_real_schema->add_table($name, $table_def);
789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

# _bz_add_table_raw($name) - Private
#
# Description: A helper function for bz_add_table.
#              Creates a table in the database without
#              updating any Schema object. Generally
#              should only be called by bz_add_table and by
#              _bz_init_schema_storage. Used when you don't
#              yet have a Schema object but you need to
#              add a table, for some reason.
# Params:      $name - The name of the table you're creating. 
#                  The definition for the table is pulled from 
#                  _bz_schema.
# Returns:     nothing
#
sub _bz_add_table_raw {
808
    my ($self, $name, $options) = @_;
809
    my @statements = $self->_bz_schema->get_table_ddl($name);
810 811 812 813 814
    if (Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE
        and !$options->{silently})
    {
        print install_string('db_table_new', { table => $name }), "\n";
    }
815 816 817
    $self->do($_) foreach (@statements);
}

818
sub _bz_add_field_table {
819
    my ($self, $name, $schema_ref) = @_;
820 821
    # We do nothing if the table already exists.
    return if $self->bz_table_info($name);
822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829

    # Copy this so that we're not modifying the passed reference.
    # (This avoids modifying a constant in Bugzilla::DB::Schema.)
    my %table_schema = %$schema_ref;
    my %indexes = @{ $table_schema{INDEXES} };
    my %fixed_indexes;
    foreach my $key (keys %indexes) {
        $fixed_indexes{$name . "_" . $key} = $indexes{$key};
830
    }
831 832 833
    # INDEXES is supposed to be an arrayref, so we have to convert back.
    my @indexes_array = %fixed_indexes;
    $table_schema{INDEXES} = \@indexes_array;
834
    # We add this to the abstract schema so that bz_add_table can find it.
835
    $self->_bz_schema->add_table($name, \%table_schema);
836 837 838
    $self->bz_add_table($name);
}

839 840 841 842
sub bz_add_field_tables {
    my ($self, $field) = @_;
    
    $self->_bz_add_field_table($field->name,
843
                               $self->_bz_schema->FIELD_TABLE_SCHEMA, $field->type);
844 845 846
    if ($field->type == FIELD_TYPE_MULTI_SELECT) {
        my $ms_table = "bug_" . $field->name;
        $self->_bz_add_field_table($ms_table,
847
            $self->_bz_schema->MULTI_SELECT_VALUE_TABLE);
848

849 850 851 852 853
        $self->bz_add_fks($ms_table, 
            { bug_id => {TABLE => 'bugs', COLUMN => 'bug_id',
                         DELETE => 'CASCADE'},

              value  => {TABLE  => $field->name, COLUMN => 'value'} });
854 855 856
    }
}

857 858 859 860 861 862 863
sub bz_drop_field_tables {
    my ($self, $field) = @_;
    if ($field->type == FIELD_TYPE_MULTI_SELECT) {
        $self->bz_drop_table('bug_' . $field->name);
    }
    $self->bz_drop_table($field->name);
}
864

865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872
sub bz_drop_column {
    my ($self, $table, $column) = @_;

    my $current_def = $self->bz_column_info($table, $column);

    if ($current_def) {
        my @statements = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_drop_column_ddl(
            $table, $column);
873 874 875
        print get_text('install_column_drop', 
                       { table => $table, column => $column }) . "\n"
            if Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE;
876
        foreach my $sql (@statements) {
877 878 879 880
            # Because this is a deletion, we don't want to die hard if
            # we fail because of some local customization. If something
            # is already gone, that's fine with us!
            eval { $self->do($sql); } or warn "Failed SQL: [$sql] Error: $@";
881 882 883 884 885 886
        }
        $self->_bz_real_schema->delete_column($table, $column);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

887 888 889
sub bz_drop_fk {
    my ($self, $table, $column) = @_;

890 891
    my $fk_def = $self->bz_fk_info($table, $column);
    if ($fk_def and $fk_def->{created}) {
892
        print get_text('install_fk_drop',
893
                       { table => $table, column => $column, fk => $fk_def })
894
            . "\n" if Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE;
895
        my @statements = 
896
            $self->_bz_real_schema->get_drop_fk_sql($table, $column, $fk_def);
897 898 899 900 901 902
        foreach my $sql (@statements) {
            # Because this is a deletion, we don't want to die hard if
            # we fail because of some local customization. If something
            # is already gone, that's fine with us!
            eval { $self->do($sql); } or warn "Failed SQL: [$sql] Error: $@";
        }
903 904 905 906 907 908
        # Under normal circumstances, we don't permanently drop the fk--
        # we want checksetup to re-create it again later. The only
        # time that FKs get permanently dropped is if the column gets
        # dropped.
        $fk_def->{created} = 0;
        $self->_bz_real_schema->set_fk($table, $column, $fk_def);
909 910 911 912 913
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }

}

914
sub bz_get_related_fks {
915 916
    my ($self, $table, $column) = @_;
    my @tables = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_table_list();
917
    my @related;
918 919 920
    foreach my $check_table (@tables) {
        my @columns = $self->bz_table_columns($check_table);
        foreach my $check_column (@columns) {
921
            my $fk = $self->bz_fk_info($check_table, $check_column);
922 923 924 925
            if ($fk 
                and (($fk->{TABLE} eq $table and $fk->{COLUMN} eq $column)
                     or ($check_column eq $column and $check_table eq $table)))
            {
926
                push(@related, [$check_table, $check_column, $fk]);
927 928 929 930
            }
        } # foreach $column
    } # foreach $table

931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941
    return \@related;
}

sub bz_drop_related_fks {
    my $self = shift;
    my $related = $self->bz_get_related_fks(@_);
    foreach my $item (@$related) {
        my ($table, $column) = @$item;
        $self->bz_drop_fk($table, $column);
    }
    return $related;
942 943
}

944 945 946 947 948 949
sub bz_drop_index {
    my ($self, $table, $name) = @_;

    my $index_exists = $self->bz_index_info($table, $name);

    if ($index_exists) {
950 951 952 953
        # We cannot delete an index used by a FK.
        foreach my $column (@{$index_exists->{FIELDS}}) {
            $self->bz_drop_related_fks($table, $column);
        }
954
        $self->bz_drop_index_raw($table, $name);
955 956 957 958 959
        $self->_bz_real_schema->delete_index($table, $name);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;        
    }
}

960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980
# bz_drop_index_raw($table, $name, $silent)
#
# Description: A helper function for bz_drop_index.
#              Drops an index from the database
#              without updating any Schema object. Generally
#              should only be called by bz_drop_index.
#              Used when either: (1) You don't yet have a Schema 
#              object but you need to drop an index, for some reason.
#              (2) You need to drop an index that somehow got into the
#              database but doesn't exist in Schema.
# Params:      $table  - The name of the table the index is on.
#              $name   - The name of the index you're dropping.
#              $silent - (optional) If specified and true, don't output
#                        any message about this change.
# Returns:     nothing
#
sub bz_drop_index_raw {
    my ($self, $table, $name, $silent) = @_;
    my @statements = $self->_bz_schema->get_drop_index_ddl(
        $table, $name);
    print "Removing index '$name' from the $table table...\n" unless $silent;
981 982 983 984 985 986
    foreach my $sql (@statements) {
        # Because this is a deletion, we don't want to die hard if
        # we fail because of some local customization. If something
        # is already gone, that's fine with us!
        eval { $self->do($sql) } or warn "Failed SQL: [$sql] Error: $@";
    }
987 988
}

989 990 991 992 993 994 995
sub bz_drop_table {
    my ($self, $name) = @_;

    my $table_exists = $self->bz_table_info($name);

    if ($table_exists) {
        my @statements = $self->_bz_schema->get_drop_table_ddl($name);
996 997
        print get_text('install_table_drop', { name => $name }) . "\n"
            if Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE;
998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003
        foreach my $sql (@statements) {
            # Because this is a deletion, we don't want to die hard if
            # we fail because of some local customization. If something
            # is already gone, that's fine with us!
            eval { $self->do($sql); } or warn "Failed SQL: [$sql] Error: $@";
        }
1004 1005 1006 1007 1008
        $self->_bz_real_schema->delete_table($name);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016
sub bz_fk_info {
    my ($self, $table, $column) = @_;
    my $col_info = $self->bz_column_info($table, $column);
    return undef if !$col_info;
    my $fk = $col_info->{REFERENCES};
    return $fk;
}

1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023
sub bz_rename_column {
    my ($self, $table, $old_name, $new_name) = @_;

    my $old_col_exists  = $self->bz_column_info($table, $old_name);

    if ($old_col_exists) {
        my $already_renamed = $self->bz_column_info($table, $new_name);
1024
            ThrowCodeError('db_rename_conflict',
1025 1026
                           { old => "$table.$old_name", 
                             new => "$table.$new_name" }) if $already_renamed;
1027 1028
        my @statements = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_rename_column_ddl(
            $table, $old_name, $new_name);
1029 1030 1031 1032 1033

        print get_text('install_column_rename', 
                       { old => "$table.$old_name", new => "$table.$new_name" })
               . "\n" if Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE;

1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041
        foreach my $sql (@statements) {
            $self->do($sql);
        }
        $self->_bz_real_schema->rename_column($table, $old_name, $new_name);
        $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
    }
}

1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058
sub bz_rename_table {
    my ($self, $old_name, $new_name) = @_;
    my $old_table = $self->bz_table_info($old_name);
    return if !$old_table;

    my $new = $self->bz_table_info($new_name);
    ThrowCodeError('db_rename_conflict', { old => $old_name,
                                           new => $new_name }) if $new;
    my @sql = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_rename_table_sql($old_name, $new_name);
    print get_text('install_table_rename', 
                   { old => $old_name, new => $new_name }) . "\n"
        if Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE;
    $self->do($_) foreach @sql;
    $self->_bz_real_schema->rename_table($old_name, $new_name);
    $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
}

1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068
sub bz_set_next_serial_value {
    my ($self, $table, $column, $value) = @_;
    if (!$value) {
        $value = $self->selectrow_array("SELECT MAX($column) FROM $table") || 0;
        $value++;
    }
    my @sql = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_set_serial_sql($table, $column, $value);
    $self->do($_) foreach @sql;
}

1069 1070 1071 1072
#####################################################################
# Schema Information Methods
#####################################################################

1073 1074 1075
sub _bz_schema {
    my ($self) = @_;
    return $self->{private_bz_schema} if exists $self->{private_bz_schema};
1076 1077 1078
    my @module_parts = split('::', ref $self);
    my $module_name  = pop @module_parts;
    $self->{private_bz_schema} = Bugzilla::DB::Schema->new($module_name);
1079 1080 1081
    return $self->{private_bz_schema};
}

1082 1083 1084 1085
# _bz_get_initial_schema()
#
# Description: A protected method, intended for use only by Bugzilla::DB
#              and subclasses. Used to get the initial Schema that will
1086
#              be written to disk for _bz_init_schema_storage. You probably
1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096
#              want to use _bz_schema or _bz_real_schema instead of this
#              method.
# Params:      none
# Returns:     A Schema object that can be serialized and written to disk
#              for _bz_init_schema_storage.
sub _bz_get_initial_schema {
    my ($self) = @_;
    return $self->_bz_schema->get_empty_schema();
}

1097 1098
sub bz_column_info {
    my ($self, $table, $column) = @_;
1099 1100 1101 1102
    my $def = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_column_abstract($table, $column);
    # We dclone it so callers can't modify the Schema.
    $def = dclone($def) if defined $def;
    return $def;
1103 1104 1105 1106
}

sub bz_index_info {
    my ($self, $table, $index) = @_;
1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112
    my $index_def =
        $self->_bz_real_schema->get_index_abstract($table, $index);
    if (ref($index_def) eq 'ARRAY') {
        $index_def = {FIELDS => $index_def, TYPE => ''};
    }
    return $index_def;
1113 1114
}

1115 1116 1117 1118 1119
sub bz_table_info {
    my ($self, $table) = @_;
    return $self->_bz_real_schema->get_table_abstract($table);
}

1120

1121 1122
sub bz_table_columns {
    my ($self, $table) = @_;
1123
    return $self->_bz_real_schema->get_table_columns($table);
1124 1125
}

1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136
sub bz_table_indexes {
    my ($self, $table) = @_;
    my $indexes = $self->_bz_real_schema->get_table_indexes_abstract($table);
    my %return_indexes;
    # We do this so that they're always hashes.
    foreach my $name (keys %$indexes) {
        $return_indexes{$name} = $self->bz_index_info($table, $name);
    }
    return \%return_indexes;
}

1137 1138 1139 1140 1141
sub bz_table_list {
    my ($self) = @_;
    return $self->_bz_real_schema->get_table_list();
}

1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172 1173 1174
#####################################################################
# Protected "Real Database" Schema Information Methods
#####################################################################

# Only Bugzilla::DB and subclasses should use these methods.
# If you need a method that does the same thing as one of these
# methods, use the version without _real on the end.

# bz_table_columns_real($table)
#
# Description: Returns a list of columns on a given table
#              as the table actually is, on the disk.
# Params:      $table - Name of the table.
# Returns:     An array of column names.
#
sub bz_table_columns_real {
    my ($self, $table) = @_;
    my $sth = $self->column_info(undef, undef, $table, '%');
    return @{ $self->selectcol_arrayref($sth, {Columns => [4]}) };
}

# bz_table_list_real()
#
# Description: Gets a list of tables in the current
#              database, directly from the disk.
# Params:      none
# Returns:     An array containing table names.
sub bz_table_list_real {
    my ($self) = @_;
    my $table_sth = $self->table_info(undef, undef, undef, "TABLE");
    return @{$self->selectcol_arrayref($table_sth, { Columns => [3] })};
}

1175 1176 1177
#####################################################################
# Transaction Methods
#####################################################################
1178

1179 1180 1181 1182
sub bz_in_transaction {
    return $_[0]->{private_bz_transaction_count} ? 1 : 0;
}

1183 1184 1185
sub bz_start_transaction {
    my ($self) = @_;

1186 1187
    if ($self->bz_in_transaction) {
        $self->{private_bz_transaction_count}++;
1188 1189 1190
    } else {
        # Turn AutoCommit off and start a new transaction
        $self->begin_work();
1191 1192 1193 1194 1195
        # REPEATABLE READ means "We work on a snapshot of the DB that
        # is created when we execute our first SQL statement." It's
        # what we need in Bugzilla to be safe, for what we do.
        # Different DBs have different defaults for their isolation
        # level, so we just set it here manually.
1196 1197 1198 1199
        if ($self->ISOLATION_LEVEL) {
            $self->do('SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL ' 
                      . $self->ISOLATION_LEVEL);
        }
1200
        $self->{private_bz_transaction_count} = 1;
1201 1202 1203 1204 1205
    }
}

sub bz_commit_transaction {
    my ($self) = @_;
1206 1207 1208 1209
    
    if ($self->{private_bz_transaction_count} > 1) {
        $self->{private_bz_transaction_count}--;
    } elsif ($self->bz_in_transaction) {
1210
        $self->commit();
1211 1212 1213
        $self->{private_bz_transaction_count} = 0;
    } else {
       ThrowCodeError('not_in_transaction');
1214 1215 1216 1217 1218 1219
    }
}

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

1220 1221 1222
    # Unlike start and commit, if we rollback at any point it happens
    # instantly, even if we're in a nested transaction.
    if (!$self->bz_in_transaction) {
1223 1224 1225
        ThrowCodeError("not_in_transaction");
    } else {
        $self->rollback();
1226
        $self->{private_bz_transaction_count} = 0;
1227 1228 1229
    }
}

1230 1231 1232 1233
#####################################################################
# Subclass Helpers
#####################################################################

1234
sub db_new {
1235 1236 1237
    my ($class, $params) = @_;
    my ($dsn, $user, $pass, $override_attrs) = 
        @$params{qw(dsn user pass attrs)};
1238 1239

    # set up default attributes used to connect to the database
1240 1241 1242 1243 1244 1245 1246 1247 1248 1249 1250 1251 1252 1253 1254 1255 1256 1257 1258
    # (may be overridden by DB driver implementations)
    my $attributes = { RaiseError => 0,
                       AutoCommit => 1,
                       PrintError => 0,
                       ShowErrorStatement => 1,
                       HandleError => \&_handle_error,
                       TaintIn => 1,
                       FetchHashKeyName => 'NAME',  
                       # Note: NAME_lc causes crash on ActiveState Perl
                       # 5.8.4 (see Bug 253696)
                       # XXX - This will likely cause problems in DB
                       # back ends that twiddle column case (Oracle?)
                     };

    if ($override_attrs) {
        foreach my $key (keys %$override_attrs) {
            $attributes->{$key} = $override_attrs->{$key};
        }
    }
1259 1260

    # connect using our known info to the specified db
1261 1262 1263
    my $self = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $pass, $attributes)
        or die "\nCan't connect to the database.\nError: $DBI::errstr\n"
        . "  Is your database installed and up and running?\n  Do you have"
1264
        . " the correct username and password selected in localconfig?\n\n";
1265 1266 1267 1268

    # RaiseError was only set to 0 so that we could catch the 
    # above "die" condition.
    $self->{RaiseError} = 1;
1269 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274

    bless ($self, $class);

    return $self;
}

1275 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 1291 1292 1293 1294 1295 1296 1297
#####################################################################
# Private Methods
#####################################################################

=begin private

=head1 PRIVATE METHODS

These methods really are private. Do not override them in subclasses.

=over 4

=item C<_init_bz_schema_storage>

 Description: Initializes the bz_schema table if it contains nothing.
 Params:      none
 Returns:     nothing

=cut

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

1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318
    my $table_size;
    eval {
        $table_size = 
            $self->selectrow_array("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM bz_schema");
    };

    if (!$table_size) {
        my $init_schema = $self->_bz_get_initial_schema;
        my $store_me = $init_schema->serialize_abstract();
        my $schema_version = $init_schema->SCHEMA_VERSION;

        # If table_size is not defined, then we hit an error reading the
        # bz_schema table, which means it probably doesn't exist yet. So,
        # we have to create it. If we failed above for some other reason,
        # we'll see the failure here.
        # However, we must create the table after we do get_initial_schema,
        # because some versions of get_initial_schema read that the table
        # exists and then add it to the Schema, where other versions don't.
        if (!defined $table_size) {
            $self->_bz_add_table_raw('bz_schema');
        }
1319

1320
        print install_string('db_schema_init'), "\n";
1321 1322 1323
        my $sth = $self->prepare("INSERT INTO bz_schema "
                                 ." (schema_data, version) VALUES (?,?)");
        $sth->bind_param(1, $store_me, $self->BLOB_TYPE);
1324
        $sth->bind_param(2, $schema_version);
1325
        $sth->execute();
1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333

        # And now we have to update the on-disk schema to hold the bz_schema
        # table, if the bz_schema table didn't exist when we were called.
        if (!defined $table_size) {
            $self->_bz_real_schema->add_table('bz_schema',
                $self->_bz_schema->get_table_abstract('bz_schema'));
            $self->_bz_store_real_schema;
        }
1334 1335 1336 1337 1338 1339 1340 1341
    } 
    # Sanity check
    elsif ($table_size > 1) {
        # We tell them to delete the newer one. Better to have checksetup
        # run migration code too many times than to have it not run the
        # correct migration code at all.
        die "Attempted to initialize the schema but there are already "
            . " $table_size copies of it stored.\nThis should never happen.\n"
1342 1343
            . " Compare the rows of the bz_schema table and delete the "
            . "newer one(s).";
1344 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353
    }
}

=item C<_bz_real_schema()>

 Description: Returns a Schema object representing the database
              that is being used in the current installation.
 Params:      none
 Returns:     A C<Bugzilla::DB::Schema> object representing the database
              as it exists on the disk.
1354

1355
=cut
1356

1357 1358 1359 1360 1361 1362 1363
sub _bz_real_schema {
    my ($self) = @_;
    return $self->{private_real_schema} if exists $self->{private_real_schema};

    my ($data, $version) = $self->selectrow_array(
        "SELECT schema_data, version FROM bz_schema");

1364 1365
    (die "_bz_real_schema tried to read the bz_schema table but it's empty!")
        if !$data;
1366 1367

    $self->{private_real_schema} = 
1368
        $self->_bz_schema->deserialize_abstract($data, $version);
1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377 1378 1379 1380 1381 1382

    return $self->{private_real_schema};
}

=item C<_bz_store_real_schema()>

 Description: Stores the _bz_real_schema structures in the database
              for later recovery. Call this function whenever you make
              a change to the _bz_real_schema.
 Params:      none
 Returns:     nothing

 Precondition: $self->{_bz_real_schema} must exist.

1383 1384 1385 1386
=back

=end private

1387
=cut
1388

1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401
sub _bz_store_real_schema {
    my ($self) = @_;

    # Make sure that there's a schema to update
    my $table_size = $self->selectrow_array("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM bz_schema");

    die "Attempted to update the bz_schema table but there's nothing "
        . "there to update. Run checksetup." unless $table_size;

    # We want to store the current object, not one
    # that we read from the database. So we use the actual hash
    # member instead of the subroutine call. If the hash
    # member is not defined, we will (and should) fail.
1402 1403 1404
    my $update_schema = $self->{private_real_schema};
    my $store_me = $update_schema->serialize_abstract();
    my $schema_version = $update_schema->SCHEMA_VERSION;
1405 1406 1407
    my $sth = $self->prepare("UPDATE bz_schema 
                                 SET schema_data = ?, version = ?");
    $sth->bind_param(1, $store_me, $self->BLOB_TYPE);
1408
    $sth->bind_param(2, $schema_version);
1409
    $sth->execute();
1410 1411
}

1412 1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422
# For bz_populate_enum_tables
sub _bz_populate_enum_table {
    my ($self, $table, $valuelist) = @_;

    my $sql_table = $self->quote_identifier($table);

    # Check if there are any table entries
    my $table_size = $self->selectrow_array("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM $sql_table");

    # If the table is empty...
    if (!$table_size) {
1423
        print " $table";
1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432 1433 1434
        my $insert = $self->prepare(
            "INSERT INTO $sql_table (value,sortkey) VALUES (?,?)");
        my $sortorder = 0;
        my $maxlen    = max(map(length($_), @$valuelist)) + 2;
        foreach my $value (@$valuelist) {
            $sortorder += 100;
            $insert->execute($value, $sortorder);
        }
    }
}

1435 1436 1437
# This is used before adding a foreign key to a column, to make sure
# that the database won't fail adding the key.
sub _check_references {
1438 1439 1440
    my ($self, $table, $column, $fk) = @_;
    my $foreign_table = $fk->{TABLE};
    my $foreign_column = $fk->{COLUMN};
1441

1442 1443 1444 1445
    # We use table aliases because sometimes we join a table to itself,
    # and we can't use the same table name on both sides of the join.
    # We also can't use the words "table" or "foreign" because those are
    # reserved words.
1446
    my $bad_values = $self->selectcol_arrayref(
1447 1448 1449 1450 1451
        "SELECT DISTINCT tabl.$column 
           FROM $table AS tabl LEFT JOIN $foreign_table AS forn
                ON tabl.$column = forn.$foreign_column
          WHERE forn.$foreign_column IS NULL
                AND tabl.$column IS NOT NULL");
1452 1453

    if (@$bad_values) {
1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480
        my $delete_action = $fk->{DELETE} || '';
        if ($delete_action eq 'CASCADE') {
            $self->do("DELETE FROM $table WHERE $column IN (" 
                      . join(',', ('?') x @$bad_values)  . ")",
                      undef, @$bad_values);
            if (Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE) {
                print "\n", get_text('install_fk_invalid_fixed',
                    { table => $table, column => $column,
                      foreign_table => $foreign_table,
                      foreign_column => $foreign_column,
                      'values' => $bad_values, action => 'delete' }), "\n";
            }
        }
        elsif ($delete_action eq 'SET NULL') {
            $self->do("UPDATE $table SET $column = NULL
                        WHERE $column IN ("
                      . join(',', ('?') x @$bad_values)  . ")",
                      undef, @$bad_values);
            if (Bugzilla->usage_mode == USAGE_MODE_CMDLINE) {
                print "\n", get_text('install_fk_invalid_fixed',
                    { table => $table, column => $column,
                      foreign_table => $foreign_table, 
                      foreign_column => $foreign_column,
                      'values' => $bad_values, action => 'null' }), "\n";
            }
        }
        else {
1481
            die "\n", get_text('install_fk_invalid',
1482 1483 1484 1485 1486
                { table => $table, column => $column,
                  foreign_table => $foreign_table,
                  foreign_column => $foreign_column,
                 'values' => $bad_values }), "\n";
        }
1487 1488 1489
    }
}

1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499
1;

__END__

=head1 NAME

Bugzilla::DB - Database access routines, using L<DBI>

=head1 SYNOPSIS

1500 1501 1502
  # Obtain db handle
  use Bugzilla::DB;
  my $dbh = Bugzilla->dbh;
1503

1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511
  # prepare a query using DB methods
  my $sth = $dbh->prepare("SELECT " .
                          $dbh->sql_date_format("creation_ts", "%Y%m%d") .
                          " FROM bugs WHERE bug_status != 'RESOLVED' " .
                          $dbh->sql_limit(1));

  # Execute the query
  $sth->execute;
1512

1513 1514
  # Get the results
  my @result = $sth->fetchrow_array;
1515

1516
  # Schema Modification
1517
  $dbh->bz_add_column($table, $name, \%definition, $init_value);
1518
  $dbh->bz_add_index($table, $name, $definition);
1519
  $dbh->bz_add_table($name);
1520
  $dbh->bz_drop_index($table, $name);
1521
  $dbh->bz_drop_table($name);
1522
  $dbh->bz_alter_column($table, $name, \%new_def, $set_nulls_to);
1523 1524
  $dbh->bz_drop_column($table, $column);
  $dbh->bz_rename_column($table, $old_name, $new_name);
1525

1526
  # Schema Information
1527 1528 1529
  my $column = $dbh->bz_column_info($table, $column);
  my $index  = $dbh->bz_index_info($table, $index);

1530 1531
=head1 DESCRIPTION

1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539
Functions in this module allows creation of a database handle to connect
to the Bugzilla database. This should never be done directly; all users
should use the L<Bugzilla> module to access the current C<dbh> instead.

This module also contains methods extending the returned handle with
functionality which is different between databases allowing for easy
customization for particular database via inheritance. These methods
should be always preffered over hard-coding SQL commands.
1540

1541 1542 1543 1544 1545
=head1 CONSTANTS

Subclasses of Bugzilla::DB are required to define certain constants. These
constants are required to be subroutines or "use constant" variables.

1546
=over
1547

1548 1549 1550 1551 1552
=item C<BLOB_TYPE>

The C<\%attr> argument that must be passed to bind_param in order to 
correctly escape a C<LONGBLOB> type.

1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560
=item C<ISOLATION_LEVEL>

The argument that this database should send to 
C<SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL> when starting a transaction. If you
override this in a subclass, the isolation level you choose should
be as strict as or more strict than the default isolation level defined in
L<Bugzilla::DB>.

1561 1562 1563
=back


1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569
=head1 CONNECTION

A new database handle to the required database can be created using this
module. This is normally done by the L<Bugzilla> module, and so these routines
should not be called from anywhere else.

1570 1571
=head2 Functions

1572
=over
1573 1574 1575

=item C<connect_main>

1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597
=over

=item B<Description>

Function to connect to the main database, returning a new database handle.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$no_db_name> (optional) - If true, connect to the database
server, but don't connect to a specific database. This is only used 
when creating a database. After you create the database, you should 
re-create a new Bugzilla::DB object without using this parameter. 

=back

=item B<Returns>

New instance of the DB class

=back
1598 1599 1600

=item C<connect_shadow>

1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626 1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633 1634
=over

=item B<Description>

Function to connect to the shadow database, returning a new database handle.
This routine C<die>s if no shadow database is configured.

=item B<Params> (none)

=item B<Returns>

A new instance of the DB class

=back

=item C<bz_check_requirements>

=over

=item B<Description>

Checks to make sure that you have the correct DBD and database version 
installed for the database that Bugzilla will be using. Prints a message 
and exits if you don't pass the requirements.

If C<$db_check> is false (from F<localconfig>), we won't check the 
database version.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$output> - C<true> if the function should display informational 
output about what it's doing, such as versions found.
1635

1636 1637 1638 1639 1640
=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back
1641 1642


1643
=item C<bz_create_database>
1644

1645
=over
1646

1647
=item B<Description>
1648

1649 1650 1651
Creates an empty database with the name C<$db_name>, if that database 
doesn't already exist. Prints an error message and exits if we can't 
create the database.
1652

1653
=item B<Params> (none)
1654

1655 1656 1657
=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back
1658

1659 1660
=item C<_connect>

1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692
=over

=item B<Description>

Internal function, creates and returns a new, connected instance of the 
correct DB class.  This routine C<die>s if no driver is specified.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$driver> - name of the database driver to use

=item C<$host> - host running the database we are connecting to

=item C<$dbname> - name of the database to connect to

=item C<$port> - port the database is listening on

=item C<$sock> - socket the database is listening on

=item C<$user> - username used to log in to the database

=item C<$pass> - password used to log in to the database

=back

=item B<Returns>

A new instance of the DB class

=back
1693 1694 1695

=item C<_handle_error>

1696 1697
Function passed to the DBI::connect call for error handling. It shortens the 
error for printing.
1698 1699 1700

=item C<import>

1701 1702 1703
Overrides the standard import method to check that derived class
implements all required abstract methods. Also calls original implementation 
in its super class.
1704 1705 1706

=back

1707
=head1 ABSTRACT METHODS
1708

1709
Note: Methods which can be implemented generically for all DBs are implemented in
1710
this module. If needed, they can be overridden with DB specific code.
1711 1712 1713 1714
Methods which do not have standard implementation are abstract and must
be implemented for all supported databases separately.
To avoid confusion with standard DBI methods, all methods returning string with
formatted SQL command have prefix C<sql_>. All other methods have prefix C<bz_>.
1715

1716 1717 1718
=head2 Constructor

=over
1719

1720 1721
=item C<new>

1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765
=over

=item B<Description>

Constructor.  Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific 
code.

=item B<Params>

=over 

=item C<$user> - username used to log in to the database

=item C<$pass> - password used to log in to the database

=item C<$host> - host running the database we are connecting to

=item C<$dbname> - name of the database to connect to

=item C<$port> - port the database is listening on

=item C<$sock> - socket the database is listening on

=back

=item B<Returns>

A new instance of the DB class

=item B<Note>

The constructor should create a DSN from the parameters provided and
then call C<db_new()> method of its super class to create a new
class instance. See L<db_new> description in this module. As per
DBI documentation, all class variables must be prefixed with
"private_". See L<DBI>.

=back

=back

=head2 SQL Generation

=over
1766 1767 1768

=item C<sql_regexp>

1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786
=over

=item B<Description>

Outputs SQL regular expression operator for POSIX regex
searches (case insensitive) in format suitable for a given
database.

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$expr> - SQL expression for the text to be searched (scalar)

=item C<$pattern> - the regular expression to search for (scalar)

1787 1788 1789 1790 1791
=item C<$nocheck> - true if the pattern should not be tested; false otherwise (boolean)

=item C<$real_pattern> - the real regular expression to search for.
This argument is used when C<$pattern> is a placeholder ('?').

1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798
=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for regular expression search (e.g. REGEXP) (scalar)

=back
1799 1800 1801

=item C<sql_not_regexp>

1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813
=over

=item B<Description>

Outputs SQL regular expression operator for negative POSIX
regex searches (case insensitive) in format suitable for a given
database.

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

1814
Same as L</sql_regexp>.
1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for negative regular expression search (e.g. NOT REGEXP) 
(scalar)

=back
1822 1823 1824

=item C<sql_limit>

1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839
=over

=item B<Description>

Returns SQL syntax for limiting results to some number of rows
with optional offset if not starting from the begining.

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$limit> - number of rows to return from query (scalar)

1840
=item C<$offset> - number of rows to skip before counting (scalar)
1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for limiting number of rows returned from query
with optional offset (e.g. LIMIT 1, 1) (scalar)

=back
1850

1851 1852
=item C<sql_from_days>

1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873
=over

=item B<Description>

Outputs SQL syntax for converting Julian days to date.

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$days> - days to convert to date

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for returning Julian days in dates. (scalar)

=back
1874

1875 1876
=item C<sql_to_days>

1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897
=over

=item B<Description>

Outputs SQL syntax for converting date to Julian days.

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$date> - date to convert to days

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for returning date fields in Julian days. (scalar)

=back
1898 1899 1900

=item C<sql_date_format>

1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926
=over

=item B<Description>

Outputs SQL syntax for formatting dates.

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$date> - date or name of date type column (scalar)

=item C<$format> - format string for date output (scalar)
(C<%Y> = year, four digits, C<%y> = year, two digits, C<%m> = month,
C<%d> = day, C<%a> = weekday name, 3 letters, C<%H> = hour 00-23,
C<%i> = minute, C<%s> = second)

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for date formatting (scalar)

=back
1927

1928
=item C<sql_date_math>
1929

1930 1931 1932 1933
=over

=item B<Description>

1934
Outputs proper SQL syntax for adding some amount of time to a date.
1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941

Abstract method, should be overridden by database specific code.

=item B<Params>

=over

1942
=item C<$date>
1943

1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957
C<string> The date being added to or subtracted from.

=item C<$operator>

C<string> Either C<-> or C<+>, depending on whether you're subtracting
or adding.

=item C<$interval>

C<integer> The time interval you're adding or subtracting (e.g. C<30>)

=item C<$units> 

C<string> the units the interval is in (e.g. 'MINUTE')
1958 1959 1960 1961 1962

=back

=item B<Returns>

1963
Formatted SQL for adding or subtracting a date and some amount of time (scalar)
1964 1965

=back
1966

1967 1968
=item C<sql_position>

1969 1970 1971 1972
=over

=item B<Description>

1973
Outputs proper SQL syntax determining position of a substring
1974 1975 1976
(fragment) withing a string (text). Note: if the substring or
text are string constants, they must be properly quoted (e.g. "'pattern'").

1977 1978 1979
It searches for the string in a case-sensitive manner. If you want to do
a case-insensitive search, use L</sql_iposition>.

1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$fragment> - the string fragment we are searching for (scalar)

=item C<$text> - the text to search (scalar)

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for substring search (scalar)

=back
1995

1996 1997 1998 1999
=item C<sql_iposition>

Just like L</sql_position>, but case-insensitive.

2000 2001
=item C<sql_group_by>

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
=over

=item B<Description>

Outputs proper SQL syntax for grouping the result of a query.

For ANSI SQL databases, we need to group by all columns we are
querying for (except for columns used in aggregate functions).
Some databases require (or even allow) to specify only one
or few columns if the result is uniquely defined. For those
databases, the default implementation needs to be overloaded.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$needed_columns> - string with comma separated list of columns
we need to group by to get expected result (scalar)

=item C<$optional_columns> - string with comma separated list of all
other columns we are querying for, but which are not in the required list.

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for row grouping (scalar)

=back
2031

2032 2033
=item C<sql_string_concat>

2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053
=over

=item B<Description>

Returns SQL syntax for concatenating multiple strings (constants
or values from table columns) together.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<@params> - array of column names or strings to concatenate

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for concatenating specified strings

=back
2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072

=item C<sql_string_until>

=over

=item B<Description>

Returns SQL for truncating a string at the first occurrence of a certain
substring.

=item B<Params>

Note that both parameters need to be sql-quoted.

=item C<$string> The string we're truncating

=item C<$substring> The substring we're truncating at.

=back
2073 2074 2075

=item C<sql_fulltext_search>

2076 2077 2078 2079
=over

=item B<Description>

2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089
Returns one or two SQL expressions for performing a full text search for
specified text on a given column.

If one value is returned, it is a numeric expression that indicates
a match with a positive value and a non-match with zero. In this case,
the DB must support casting numeric expresions to booleans.

If two values are returned, then the first value is a boolean expression
that indicates the presence of a match, and the second value is a numeric
expression that can be used for ranking.
2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 2101 2102 2103 2104 2105 2106 2107 2108 2109 2110 2111

There is a ANSI SQL version of this method implemented using LIKE operator,
but it's not a real full text search. DB specific modules should override 
this, as this generic implementation will be always much slower. This 
generic implementation returns 'relevance' as 0 for no match, or 1 for a 
match.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$column> - name of column to search (scalar)

=item C<$text> - text to search for (scalar)

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for full text search

=back
2112

2113 2114
=item C<sql_istrcmp>

2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122 2123 2124 2125 2126 2127 2128 2129 2130 2131 2132 2133 2134 2135 2136 2137 2138 2139 2140 2141 2142 2143 2144 2145 2146 2147
=over

=item B<Description>

Returns SQL for a case-insensitive string comparison.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$left> - What should be on the left-hand-side of the operation.

=item C<$right> - What should be on the right-hand-side of the operation.

=item C<$op> (optional) - What the operation is. Should be a  valid ANSI 
SQL comparison operator, such as C<=>, C<E<lt>>, C<LIKE>, etc. Defaults 
to C<=> if not specified.

=back

=item B<Returns>

A SQL statement that will run the comparison in a case-insensitive fashion.

=item B<Note>

Uses L</sql_istring>, so it has the same performance concerns.
Try to avoid using this function unless absolutely necessary.

Subclass Implementors: Override sql_istring instead of this
function, most of the time (this function uses sql_istring).

=back
2148 2149 2150

=item C<sql_istring>

2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165 2166 2167 2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176
=over

=item B<Description>

Returns SQL syntax "preparing" a string or text column for case-insensitive 
comparison.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$string> - string to convert (scalar)

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL making the string case insensitive.

=item B<Note>

The default implementation simply calls LOWER on the parameter.
If this is used to search on a text column with index, the index
will not be usually used unless it was created as LOWER(column).

=back
2177

2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 2186 2187 2188 2189 2190 2191 2192 2193 2194 2195 2196 2197 2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203
=item C<sql_in>

=over

=item B<Description>

Returns SQL syntax for the C<IN ()> operator. 

Only necessary where an C<IN> clause can have more than 1000 items.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$column_name> - Column name (e.g. C<bug_id>)

=item C<$in_list_ref> - an arrayref containing values for C<IN ()>

=back

=item B<Returns>

Formatted SQL for the C<IN> operator.

=back

2204 2205 2206
=back


2207 2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216
=head1 IMPLEMENTED METHODS

These methods are implemented in Bugzilla::DB, and only need
to be implemented in subclasses if you need to override them for 
database-compatibility reasons.

=head2 General Information Methods

These methods return information about data in the database.

2217
=over
2218

2219 2220
=item C<bz_last_key>

2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228 2229 2230 2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241 2242 2243 2244 2245 2246 2247 2248 2249
=over

=item B<Description>

Returns the last serial number, usually from a previous INSERT.

Must be executed directly following the relevant INSERT.
This base implementation uses L<DBI/last_insert_id>. If the
DBD supports it, it is the preffered way to obtain the last
serial index. If it is not supported, the DB-specific code
needs to override this function.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - name of table containing serial column (scalar)

=item C<$column> - name of column containing serial data type (scalar)

=back

=item B<Returns>

Last inserted ID (scalar)

=back

=back
2250

2251 2252 2253 2254 2255
=head2 Database Setup Methods

These methods are used by the Bugzilla installation programs to set up
the database.

2256 2257 2258 2259 2260 2261 2262
=over

=item C<bz_populate_enum_tables>

=over

=item B<Description>
2263

2264 2265 2266 2267
For an upgrade or an initial installation, populates the tables that hold 
the legal values for the old "enum" fields: C<bug_severity>, 
C<resolution>, etc. Prints out information if it inserts anything into the
DB.
2268

2269
=item B<Params> (none)
2270

2271
=item B<Returns> (nothing)
2272

2273
=back
2274 2275 2276 2277

=back


2278 2279
=head2 Schema Modification Methods

2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285
These methods modify the current Bugzilla Schema.

Where a parameter says "Abstract index/column definition", it returns/takes
information in the formats defined for indexes and columns in
C<Bugzilla::DB::Schema::ABSTRACT_SCHEMA>.

2286
=over
2287

2288
=item C<bz_add_column>
2289

2290
=over
2291

2292
=item B<Description>
2293

2294 2295 2296 2297
Adds a new column to a table in the database. Prints out a brief statement 
that it did so, to stdout. Note that you cannot add a NOT NULL column that 
has no default -- the database won't know what to set all the NULL
values to.
2298

2299
=item B<Params>
2300

2301
=over
2302

2303
=item C<$table> - the table where the column is being added
2304

2305
=item C<$name> - the name of the new column
2306

2307
=item C<\%definition> - Abstract column definition for the new column
2308

2309 2310
=item C<$init_value> (optional) - An initial value to set the column
to. Required if your column is NOT NULL and has no DEFAULT set.
2311

2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359 2360 2361 2362 2363 2364 2365 2366 2367 2368
=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

=item C<bz_add_index>

=over

=item B<Description>

Adds a new index to a table in the database. Prints out a brief statement 
that it did so, to stdout. If the index already exists, we will do nothing.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - The table the new index is on.

=item C<$name>  - A name for the new index.

=item C<$definition> - An abstract index definition. Either a hashref 
or an arrayref.

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

=item C<bz_add_table>

=over

=item B<Description>

Creates a new table in the database, based on the definition for that 
table in the abstract schema.

Note that unlike the other 'add' functions, this does not take a 
definition, but always creates the table as it exists in
L<Bugzilla::DB::Schema/ABSTRACT_SCHEMA>.

If a table with that name already exists, then this function returns 
silently.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$name> - The name of the table you want to create.

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)
2369

2370 2371
=back

2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431 2432 2433 2434 2435 2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450 2451 2452 2453 2454 2455 2456 2457 2458 2459 2460 2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472 2473 2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482 2483 2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494 2495 2496 2497 2498
=item C<bz_drop_index>

=over

=item B<Description>

Removes an index from the database. Prints out a brief statement that it 
did so, to stdout. If the index doesn't exist, we do nothing.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - The table that the index is on.

=item C<$name> - The name of the index that you want to drop.

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

=item C<bz_drop_table>

=over

=item B<Description>

Drops a table from the database. If the table doesn't exist, we just 
return silently.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$name> - The name of the table to drop.

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

=item C<bz_alter_column>

=over

=item B<Description>

Changes the data type of a column in a table. Prints out the changes 
being made to stdout. If the new type is the same as the old type, 
the function returns without changing anything.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - the table where the column is

=item C<$name> - the name of the column you want to change

=item C<\%new_def> - An abstract column definition for the new 
data type of the columm

=item C<$set_nulls_to> (Optional) - If you are changing the column
to be NOT NULL, you probably also want to set any existing NULL columns 
to a particular value. Specify that value here. B<NOTE>: The value should 
not already be SQL-quoted.

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

=item C<bz_drop_column>

=over

=item B<Description>

Removes a column from a database table. If the column doesn't exist, we 
return without doing anything. If we do anything, we print a short 
message to C<stdout> about the change.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - The table where the column is

=item C<$column> - The name of the column you want to drop

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

=item C<bz_rename_column>

=over

=item B<Description>

Renames a column in a database table. If the C<$old_name> column 
doesn't exist, we return without doing anything. If C<$old_name> 
and C<$new_name> both already exist in the table specified, we fail.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - The name of the table containing the column 
that you want to rename

=item C<$old_name> - The current name of the column that you want to rename

=item C<$new_name> - The new name of the column

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

2499 2500 2501 2502 2503 2504 2505 2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511 2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523
=item C<bz_rename_table>

=over

=item B<Description>

Renames a table in the database. Does nothing if the table doesn't exist.

Throws an error if the old table exists and there is already a table 
with the new name.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$old_name> - The current name of the table.

=item C<$new_name> - What you're renaming the table to.

=back

=item B<Returns> (nothing)

=back

2524
=back
2525

2526 2527
=head2 Schema Information Methods

2528 2529 2530 2531
These methods return information about the current Bugzilla database
schema, as it currently exists on the disk. 

Where a parameter says "Abstract index/column definition", it returns/takes
2532 2533
information in the formats defined for indexes and columns for
L<Bugzilla::DB::Schema/ABSTRACT_SCHEMA>.
2534

2535 2536 2537 2538 2539
=over

=item C<bz_column_info>

=over
2540

2541
=item B<Description>
2542

2543
Get abstract column definition.
2544

2545
=item B<Params>
2546

2547 2548 2549 2550 2551
=over

=item C<$table> - The name of the table the column is in.

=item C<$column> - The name of the column.
2552 2553 2554

=back

2555
=item B<Returns>
2556

2557 2558
An abstract column definition for that column. If the table or column 
does not exist, we return C<undef>.
2559

2560
=back
2561

2562
=item C<bz_index_info>
2563

2564
=over
2565

2566 2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588
=item B<Description>

Get abstract index definition.

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$table> - The table the index is on.

=item C<$index> - The name of the index.

=back

=item B<Returns>

An abstract index definition for that index, always in hashref format. 
The hashref will always contain the C<TYPE> element, but it will
be an empty string if it's just a normal index.

If the index does not exist, we return C<undef>.

=back
2589

2590 2591 2592
=back


2593 2594 2595 2596 2597
=head2 Transaction Methods

These methods deal with the starting and stopping of transactions 
in the database.

2598
=over
2599

2600 2601 2602 2603 2604
=item C<bz_in_transaction>

Returns C<1> if we are currently in the middle of an uncommitted transaction,
C<0> otherwise.

2605 2606
=item C<bz_start_transaction>

2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616
Starts a transaction.

It is OK to call C<bz_start_transaction> when you are already inside of
a transaction. However, you must call L</bz_commit_transaction> as many
times as you called C<bz_start_transaction>, in order for your transaction
to actually commit.

Bugzilla uses C<REPEATABLE READ> transactions.

Returns nothing and takes no parameters.
2617 2618 2619

=item C<bz_commit_transaction>

2620 2621
Ends a transaction, commiting all changes. Returns nothing and takes
no parameters.
2622 2623 2624

=item C<bz_rollback_transaction>

2625 2626
Ends a transaction, rolling back all changes. Returns nothing and takes 
no parameters.
2627

2628 2629 2630
=back


2631 2632 2633 2634 2635
=head1 SUBCLASS HELPERS

Methods in this class are intended to be used by subclasses to help them
with their functions.

2636
=over
2637

2638 2639
=item C<db_new>

2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655
=over

=item B<Description>

Constructor

=item B<Params>

=over

=item C<$dsn> - database connection string

=item C<$user> - username used to log in to the database

=item C<$pass> - password used to log in to the database

2656 2657 2658
=item C<\%override_attrs> - set of attributes for DB connection (optional).
You only have to set attributes that you want to be different from
the default attributes set inside of C<db_new>.
2659 2660 2661 2662 2663 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671

=back

=item B<Returns>

A new instance of the DB class

=item B<Note>

The name of this constructor is not C<new>, as that would make
our check for implementation of C<new> by derived class useless.

=back
2672

2673
=back
2674

2675

2676 2677 2678 2679
=head1 SEE ALSO

L<DBI>

2680
L<Bugzilla::Constants/DB_MODULE>