=head1 NAME Coro::Mysql - let other threads run while doing mysql requests =head1 SYNOPSIS use Coro::Mysql; my $DBH = Coro::Mysql::unblock DBI->connect (...); =head1 DESCRIPTION (Note that in this manual, "thread" refers to real threads as implemented by the Coro module, not to the built-in windows process emulation which unfortunately is also called "threads") This module "patches" DBD::mysql database handles so that they do not block the whole process, but only the thread that they are used in. This can be used to make parallel sql requests using Coro, or to do other stuff while mysql is rumbling in the background. =head2 CAVEAT Note that this module must be linked against exactly the same F library as DBD::mysql, otherwise it will not work. Also, while this module makes database handles non-blocking, you still cannot run multiple requests in parallel on the same database handle. If you want to run multiple queries in parallel, you have to create multiple database connections, one for each thread that runs queries. Not doing so can corrupt your data - use a Coro::Semaphore when in doubt. If you make sure that you never run two or more requests in parallel, you can freely share the database handles between threads, of course. Also, this module uses a number of "unclean" techniques (patching an internal libmysql structure for one thing) and was hacked within a few hours on a long flight to Malaysia. It does, however, check whether it indeed got the structure layout correct, so you should expect perl exceptions or early crashes as opposed to data corruption when something goes wrong during patching. =head2 SPEED This module is implemented in XS, and as long as mysqld replies quickly enough, it adds no overhead to the standard libmysql communication routines (which are very badly written, btw.). For very fast queries ("select 0"), this module can add noticable overhead (around 15%) as it tries to switch to other coroutines when mysqld doesn't deliver the data instantly. For most types of queries, there will be no overhead, especially on multicore systems where your perl process can do other things while mysqld does its stuff. =head2 LIMITATIONS This module only supports "standard" mysql connection handles - this means unix domain or TCP sockets, and excludes SSL/TLS connections, named pipes (windows) and shared memory (also windows). No support for these connection types is planned, either. =head1 FUNCTIONS Coro::Mysql offers a single user-accessible function: =over 4 =cut package Coro::Mysql; use strict qw(vars subs); no warnings; use Scalar::Util (); use Carp qw(croak); use Guard; use Coro::Handle (); # we need this extra indirection, as Coro doesn't support # calling SLF-like functions via call_sv. sub readable { &Coro::Handle::FH::readable } sub writable { &Coro::Handle::FH::writable } BEGIN { our $VERSION = '1.0'; require XSLoader; XSLoader::load Coro::Mysql::, $VERSION; } =item $DBH = Coro::Mysql::unblock $DBH This function takes a DBI database handles and "patches" it so it becomes compatible to Coro threads. After that, it returns the patched handle - you should always use the newly returned database handle. It is safe to call this function on any database handle (or just about any value), but it will only do anything to L handles, others are returned unchanged. That means it is harmless when applied to database handles of other databases. =cut sub unblock { my ($DBH) = @_; if ($DBH->{Driver}{Name} eq "mysql") { my $sock = $DBH->{sock}; open my $fh, "+>&" . $DBH->{sockfd} or croak "Coro::Mysql unable to clone mysql fd"; $fh = Coro::Handle::unblock $fh; _patch $sock, $DBH->{sockfd}, $fh, tied ${$fh}; } $DBH } 1; =back =head1 USAGE EXAMPLE This example uses L and L to implement a function C, that connects to a database, uses C on the resulting handle and then makes sure that C<$PApp::SQL::DBH> is set to the (per-thread) database handle when the given thread is running (it does not restore any previous value of $PApp::SQL::DBH, however): use Coro; use Coro::Mysql; use PApp::SQL; sub with_db($$$&) { my ($database, $user, $pass, $cb) = @_; my $dbh = Coro::Mysql::unblock DBI->connect ($database, $user, $pass) or die $DBI::errstr; Coro::on_enter { $PApp::SQL::DBH = $dbh }; $cb->(); } This function makes it possible to easily use L with L, without worrying about database handles. # now start 10 threads doing stuff async { with_db "DBI:mysql:test", "", "", sub { sql_exec "update table set col = 5 where id = 7"; my $st = sql_exec \my ($id, $name), "select id, name from table where name like ?", "a%"; while ($st->fetch) { ... } my $id = sql_insertid sql_exec "insert into table values (1,2,3)"; # etc. }; } for 1..10; =head1 SEE ALSO L, L (a user friendly but efficient wrapper around DBI). =head1 AUTHOR Marc Lehmann http://home.schmorp.de/ =cut