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=head1 NAME

Tangram::Relational - Orthogonal Object Persistence in Relational Databases

=head1 SYNOPSIS

   use Tangram;

   $schema = Tangram::Relational->schema( $hashref );

   Tangram::Relational->deploy($schema, $dbh);

   $storage = Tangram::Relational->connect( $schema,
      $data_source, $username, $password );

   $storage->disconnect();

   Tangram::Relational->retreat($schema, $dbh);

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This is the entry point in the vanilla object-relational persistence
backend. Vendor-specific backends should be used when they
exist. Currently Mysql, Sybase and Oracle have such backends; see
L<Tangram::mysql>, L<Tangram::Sybase> and L<Tangram::Oracle>.

More backends could be added in the future; they might implement
persistence in XML documents, pure object databases, using C database
libraries to bypass the need for an RDBMS, etc.

=head1 CLASS METHODS

=head2 schema

   $schema = Tangram::Relational->schema( $hashref );

Returns a new Schema object. See L<Tangram::Schema>. 

=head2 deploy

   Tangram::Relational->deploy($schema);
   Tangram::Relational->deploy($schema, HANDLE);
   Tangram::Relational->deploy($schema, @dbi_args);

Writes SQL statements for preparing a database for use with the given
$schema.

Called with a single argument, writes SQL statements to STDOUT.

Called with two arguments, writes SQL statements to HANDLE. HANDLE may
be a DBI connection handle or a file handle.

Called with more than two arguments, passes all but the first to
DBI::connect() and writes statements to the resulting DBI handle,
which is automatically closed.

The SQL code is only guaranteed to work on newly created databases.

=head2 connect

   $storage = Tangram::Relational->connect( $schema,
      $data_source, $user, $password, \%options )

Connects to a storage and return a handle object. Dies in case of
failure.

$schema is a Schema object describing the system of
classes stored in the database.

$data_source, $user and $password are passed directly to
DBI::connect().

\%options is a reference to a hash containing connection options. See
L<Tangram::Storage> for a description of available options.

=head2 retreat

   Tangram::Relational->retreat($schema);
   Tangram::Relational->retreat($schema, HANDLE);
   Tangram::Relational->retreat($schema, @dbi_args);

Remove the tables created by deploy(). Only guaranteed to work against
a database that was deployed using exactly the same schema.

For an explanation of the possible argument lists, see L<deploy>.

=head1 WRITING A VENDOR DRIVER

Like Charles Moore (inventor of Forth) used to say, "standards are
great, everybody should have one!".

Tangram can take advantage of extensions available in some SQL
dialects.

To create a vendor-specific driver, call it C<Tangram::Foo> (where
C<Foo> is the name of the DBI driver, as would be selected with the
DBI connection string C<dbi:Foo:>), and derive C<Tangram::Relational>.

For now, the existing back-ends should be used as examples of how to
extend Tangram to support different databases or utilise some of their
more exotic features.

=cut