DBI::Shell.3pm

Langue: en

Version: 2008-02-14 (mandriva - 01/05/08)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

DBI::Shell - Interactive command shell for the DBI

SYNOPSIS

   perl -MDBI::Shell -e shell [<DBI data source> [<user> [<password>]]]
 
 

or

   dbish [<DBI data source> [<user> [<password>]]]
   dbish --debug [<DBI data source> [<user> [<password>]]]
   dbish --batch [<DBI data source> [<user> [<password>]]] < batch file
 
 

DESCRIPTION

The DBI::Shell module (and dbish command, if installed) provide a simple but effective command line interface for the Perl DBI module.

DBI::Shell is very new, very experimental and very subject to change. Your mileage will vary. Interfaces will change with each release.

TO DO

Proper docs - but not yet, too much is changing.

``source file'' command to read command file. Allow to nest via stack of command file handles. Add command log facility to create batch files.

Commands:

Use Data::ShowTable if available.

Define DBI::Shell plug-in semantics.         Implement import/export as plug-in module

Clarify meaning of batch mode

Completion hooks

Set/Get DBI handle attributes

Portability

Emulate popular command shell modes (Oracle, Ingres etc)?

ARGUMENTS

debug
dbish --debug  enable debug messages
batch
dbish --batch < batch_file

COMMANDS

Many commands - few documented, yet!
help
   help
 
 
chistory
   chistory          (display history of all commands entered)
   chistory | YourPager (display history with paging)
 
 
clear
   clear             (Clears the current command buffer)
 
 
commit
   commit            (commit changes to the database)
 
 
connect
   connect           (pick from available drivers and sources)
   connect dbi:Oracle (pick source from based on driver)
   connect dbi:YourDriver:YourSource i.e. dbi:Oracle:mysid
 
 

Use this option to change userid or password.

count
         count table1 [...]
 
 

Run a select count(*) from table on each table listed with this command.

current
   current            (Display current statement in the buffer)
 
 
do
   do                 (execute the current (non-select) statement)
 
         dbish> create table foo ( mykey integer )
         dbish> /do
 
         dbish> truncate table OldTable /do (Oracle truncate)
 
 
drivers
   drivers            (Display available DBI drivers)
 
 
edit
   edit               (Edit current statement in an external editor)
 
 

Editor is defined using the environment variable $VISUAL or $EDITOR or default is vi. Use option editor=new editor to change in the current session.

To read a file from the operating system invoke the editor (edit) and read the file into the editor buffer.

exit
   exit              (Exits the shell)
 
 
get
         get                     Retrieve a previous command to the current buffer.
 
         get 1                   Retrieve the 1 command executed into the current 
                                         buffer.
 
         get -1         Retrieve the second to last command executed into
                                         the current buffer.
 
 
go
   go                (Execute the current statement)
 
 

Run (execute) the statement in the current buffer. This is the default action if the statement ends with /

         dbish> select * from user_views/
 
         dbish> select table_name from user_tables
         dbish> where table_name like 'DSP%'
         dbish> /
 
         dbish> select table_name from all_tables/ | more
 
 
history
   history            (Display combined command and result history)
   history | more
 
 
load
   load file name    (read contains of file into the current buffer)
 
 

The contains of the file is loaded as the current buffer.

option
   option [option1[=value]] [option2 ...]
   option            (Displays the current options)
   option   MyOption (Displays the value, if exists, of MyOption)
   option   MyOption=4 (defines and/or sets value for MyOption)
 
 
perl
   perl               (Evaluate the current statement as perl code)
 
 
quit
   quit               (quit shell.  Same as exit)
 
 
redo
   redo               (Re-execute the previously executed statement)
 
 
rhistory
   rhistory           (Display result history)
 
 
rollback
   rollback           (rollback changes to the database)
 
 

For this to be useful, turn the autocommit off. option autocommit=0

run
   run file name      (load and execute a file.)
 
 

This commands load the file (may include full path) and executes. The file is loaded (replaces) the current buffer. Only 1 statement per file is allowed (at this time).

save
   save file name    (write contains of current buffer to file.)
 
 

The contains of the current buffer is written to file. Currently, this command will overwrite a file if it exists.

spool
   spool file name  (Starts sending all output to file name)
   spool on         (Starts sending all output to on.lst)
   spool off        (Stops sending output)
   spool            (Displays the status of spooling)
 
 

When spooling, everything seen in the command window is written to a file (except some of the prompts).

table_info
   table_info         (display all tables that exist in current database)
   table_info | more  (for paging)
 
 
trace
   trace              (set DBI trace level for current database)
 
 

Adjust the trace level for DBI 0 - 4. 0 off. 4 lots of information. Useful for determining what is really happening in DBI. See DBI.

type_info
   type_info          (display data types supported by current server)
 
 

CONFIGURATION

The configuration file (~/.dbish_config by default, overridden by $DBISH_CONFIG) is eval'd as perl code and should return a hash ref containing the configuration items. Notable keys include
options
The value is another hashref containing the options and their values. Type "/option" at the prompt to get a list of acceptable options.
plug-ins
Plugins to load. This is a rather complex data structure which is recursively walked to determine which plugins should be loaded. At the top level, there are the phases "pre-init", "post-init", "pre-connect", and "post-connect". At lower levels plugins can be selected by the name of the database driver, and individual options can be set. Finally, at some point an arrayref containing the package names of the plugins to load must be found.

Since the config file can contain arbitrary perl code, it can do anything which can be done in perl. One rather useful hack is to call binmode to set the encoding for standard input and output.

Example

     binmode STDIN,  ":utf8";
     binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
 
     {
         options => {
             format => 'partbox',
         },
         'plug-ins' => {
             'pre-init' => [
                 'DBI::Shell::Timing',
                 'DBI::Shell::Spool',
             ],
         },
     };
 
 

This config file first sets the :utf8 layer for input and output to match the terminal (if you don't use UTF-8, you could use :encoding() here), and then returns the hashref with the configuration items: The format is set 'partbox', and the the two plugins 'DBI::Shell::Timing' and 'DBI::Shell::Spool' are loaded.

ENVIRONMENT

DBISH_TMP
Where to write temporary files.
DBISH_CONFIG
Which configuration file used. Unset to not read any additional configurations.

AUTHORS and ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The DBI::Shell has a long lineage.

It started life around 1994-1997 as the pmsql script written by Andreas Ko.nig. Jochen Wiedmann picked it up and ran with it (adding much along the way) as dbimon, bundled with his DBD::mSQL driver modules. In 1998, around the time I wanted to bundle a shell with the DBI, Adam Marks was working on a dbish modeled after the Sybase sqsh utility.

Wanting to start from a cleaner slate than the feature-full but complex dbimon, I worked with Adam to create a fairly open modular and very configurable DBI::Shell module. Along the way Tom Lowery chipped in ideas and patches. As we go further along more useful code and concepts from Jochen's dbimon is bound to find it's way back in.

The DBI::Shell module is Copyright (c) 1998 Tim Bunce. England. All rights reserved. Portions are Copyright by Jochen Wiedmann, Adam Marks and Tom Lowery.

You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.