SYNOPSIS
use RDF::Redland;
my $storage=new RDF::Redland::Storage("hashes", "test", "new='yes',hash-type='memory'");
my $model=new RDF::Redland::Model($storage, "");
...
DESCRIPTION
This class initialises the Redland RDF classes.See the main classes for full detail: RDF::Redland::Node, RDF::Redland::BlankNode, RDF::Redland::URINode, RDF::Redland::LiteralNode, RDF::Redland::XMLLiteralNode, RDF::Redland::URI, RDF::Redland::Statement, RDF::Redland::Model, RDF::Redland::Storage, RDF::Redland::Parser, RDF::Redland::Query, RDF::Redland::QueryResults, RDF::Redland::Iterator, RDF::Redland::Stream and RDF::Redland::RSS.
STATIC METHODS
- set_log_handler SUB
-
Set SUB as the subroutine to be called on any Redland error, warning
or log message. The subroutine must have the followign signature:
sub handler ($$$$$$$$$) { my($code, $level, $facility, $message, $line, $column, $byte, $file, $uri)=@_; # int error code # int log level # int facility causing the error (parsing, serializing, ...) # string error message # int line number (<0 if not relevant) # int column number (<0 if not relevant) # int byte number (<0 if not relevant) # string file name or undef # string URI or undef # ...do something with the information ... }; RDF::Redland::set_log_handler(\&handler);
- reset_log_handler
- Reset redland to use the default logging handler, typically printing the message to stdout or stderr and exiting on a fatal error.
- set_error_handler SUB
-
The method set_log_handler is much more flexible than this and includes
this functionality.
Set SUB as the subroutine to be called on a Redland error with the error message as the single argument. For example:
RDF::Redland::set_error_handler(sub { my $msg=shift; # Do something with $msg });
The default if this is not set, is to run die $msg
- set_warning_handler SUB
-
The method set_log_handler is much more flexible than this and includes
this functionality.
Set SUB as the subroutine to be called on a Redland warning with the warning message as the single argument. For example:
RDF::Redland::set_warning_handler(sub { my $msg=shift; # Do something with $msg });
The default if this is not set, is to run warn $msg