package DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::ODBC::Microsoft_SQL_Server; use strict; use warnings; use base qw/DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI/; sub _prep_for_execute { my $self = shift; my ($op, $extra_bind, $ident, $args) = @_; my ($sql, $bind) = $self->SUPER::_prep_for_execute(@_); $sql .= ';SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY()' if $op eq 'insert'; return ($sql, $bind); } sub insert { my ($self, $source, $to_insert) = @_; my $bind_attributes = $self->source_bind_attributes($source); my (undef, $sth) = $self->_execute( 'insert' => [], $source, $bind_attributes, $to_insert); $self->{_scope_identity} = $sth->fetchrow_array; return $to_insert; } sub last_insert_id { shift->{_scope_identity} } sub sqlt_type { 'SQLServer' } sub _sql_maker_opts { my ( $self, $opts ) = @_; if ( $opts ) { $self->{_sql_maker_opts} = { %$opts }; } return { limit_dialect => 'Top', %{$self->{_sql_maker_opts}||{}} }; } sub build_datetime_parser { my $self = shift; my $type = "DateTime::Format::Strptime"; eval "use ${type}"; $self->throw_exception("Couldn't load ${type}: $@") if $@; return $type->new( pattern => '%F %T' ); } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::ODBC::Microsoft_SQL_Server - Support specific to Microsoft SQL Server over ODBC =head1 DESCRIPTION This class implements support specific to Microsoft SQL Server over ODBC, including auto-increment primary keys and SQL::Abstract::Limit dialect. It is loaded automatically by by DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::ODBC when it detects a MSSQL back-end. =head1 IMPLEMENTATION NOTES Microsoft SQL Server supports three methods of retrieving the IDENTITY value for inserted row: IDENT_CURRENT, @@IDENTITY, and SCOPE_IDENTITY(). SCOPE_IDENTITY is used here because it is the safest. However, it must be called is the same execute statement, not just the same connection. So, this implementation appends a SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY() statement onto each INSERT to accommodate that requirement. =head1 METHODS =head2 insert =head2 last_insert_id =head2 sqlt_type =head2 build_datetime_parser The resulting parser handles the MSSQL C type, but is almost certainly not sufficient for the other MSSQL 2008 date/time types. =head1 AUTHORS Marc Mims C<< >> =head1 LICENSE You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut