SYNOPSIS
dbicdump <configuration_file>
dbicdump [-I <lib-path>] [-o <loader_option>=<value> ] \
<schema_class> <connect_info>
Examples:
$ dbicdump schema.conf $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ MyApp::Schema dbi:SQLite:./foo.db $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ MyApp::Schema dbi:SQLite:./foo.db '{ quote_char => "\"" }' $ dbicdump -Ilib -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ -o preserve_case=1 \ MyApp::Schema dbi:mysql:database=foo user pass \ '{ quote_char => "`" }' $ dbicdump -o dump_directory=./lib \ -o components='["InflateColumn::DateTime"]' \ MyApp::Schema 'dbi:mysql:database=foo;host=domain.tld;port=3306' \ user pass
On Windows that would be:
$ dbicdump -o dump_directory=.\lib ^ -o components="[q{InflateColumn::DateTime}]" ^ -o preserve_case=1 ^ MyApp::Schema dbi:mysql:database=foo user pass ^ "{ quote_char => q{`} }"
Configuration files must have schema_class and connect_info sections, an example of a general config file is as follows:
schema_class MyApp::Schema lib /extra/perl/libs # connection string <connect_info> dsn dbi:mysql:example user root pass secret </connect_info> # dbic loader options <loader_options> dump_directory ./lib components InflateColumn::DateTime components TimeStamp </loader_options>
Using a config file requires Config::Any installed.
The optional "lib" key is equivalent to the "-I" option.
DESCRIPTION
Dbicdump generates a DBIx::Class schema using ``make_schema_at'' in DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader and dumps it to disk.You can pass any DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader::Base constructor option using "-o <option>=<value>". For convenience, option names will have "-" replaced with "_" and values that look like references or quote-like operators will be "eval"-ed before being passed to the constructor.
The "dump_directory" option defaults to the current directory if not specified.
AUTHORS
See ``AUTHORS'' in DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader.LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.