DBrb 0.1.0 → 0.1.1

Sign up to get free protection for your applications and to get access to all the features.
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+
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+ * Wed Feb 7 16:25:46 CET 2007
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+
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+ added Rakefile, CHANGELOG, moved SAMPLE to 'examples'
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+ GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
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+ Version 2, June 1991
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+
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+ Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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+ 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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+ Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
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+ Preamble
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+ The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
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+ GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
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+ TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
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+ 0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
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+ Foundation.
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+
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+
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+ NO WARRANTY
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+
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+ 11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
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+ FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
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+ OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
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+ PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
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+ TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
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+ PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
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+ REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
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+
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+ 12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
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+ WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
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+ REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
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+ INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
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+ TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
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+ YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER
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+ PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
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+ POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
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+
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+ END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
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+
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+ How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
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+
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+ If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
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+ possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
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+ free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
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+ To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
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+ the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
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+ <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
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+ Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
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+ This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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+ the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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+
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+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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+ GNU General Public License for more details.
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+
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+ Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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+
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+ Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
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+
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+ If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
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+ when it starts in an interactive mode:
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+
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+ Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
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+ Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
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+ This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
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+ under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
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+
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+ The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
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+ parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
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+ be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
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+ mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
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+
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+ You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
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+ school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
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+ necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
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+
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+ Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
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+ `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
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+
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+ <signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
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+ Ty Coon, President of Vice
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+
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+ This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
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+ proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
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+ consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
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+ library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
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+ Public License instead of this License.
Binary file
Binary file
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+ Ruby is copyrighted free software by Tim Becker <tim@kuriositaet.de>.
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+ You can redistribute it and/or modify it under either the terms of the GPL
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+ (see COPYING.txt file), or the conditions below:
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+
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+ 1. You may make and give away verbatim copies of the source form of the
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+ software without restriction, provided that you duplicate all of the
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+ original copyright notices and associated disclaimers.
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+
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+ 2. You may modify your copy of the software in any way, provided that
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+ you do at least ONE of the following:
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+
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+ a) place your modifications in the Public Domain or otherwise
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+ make them Freely Available, such as by posting said
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+ modifications to Usenet or an equivalent medium, or by allowing
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+ the author to include your modifications in the software.
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+
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+ b) use the modified software only within your corporation or
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+ organization.
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+
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+ c) rename any non-standard executables so the names do not conflict
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+ with standard executables, which must also be provided.
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+
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+ d) make other distribution arrangements with the author.
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+
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+ 3. You may distribute the software in object code or executable
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+ form, provided that you do at least ONE of the following:
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+
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+ a) distribute the executables and library files of the software,
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+ together with instructions (in the manual page or equivalent)
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+ on where to get the original distribution.
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+
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+ b) accompany the distribution with the machine-readable source of
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+ the software.
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+
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+ c) give non-standard executables non-standard names, with
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+ instructions on where to get the original software distribution.
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+
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+ d) make other distribution arrangements with the author.
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+
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+ 4. You may modify and include the part of the software into any other
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+ software (possibly commercial). But some files in the distribution
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+ are not written by the author, so that they are not under this terms.
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+
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+ They are gc.c(partly), utils.c(partly), regex.[ch], st.[ch] and some
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+ files under the ./missing directory. See each file for the copying
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+ condition.
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+
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+ 5. The scripts and library files supplied as input to or produced as
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+ output from the software do not automatically fall under the
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+ copyright of the software, but belong to whomever generated them,
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+ and may be sold commercially, and may be aggregated with this
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+ software.
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+
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+ 6. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
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+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
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+ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
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+ PURPOSE.
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+
data/README ADDED
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+ DBrb is a Ruby library for database access based on DBI.
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+
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+ |-- README : this file
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+ |-- DBrb-0.1.0.gem : GEM for DBrb
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+ |-- dbrb.gemspec : spec used to generate the GEM
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+ |-- lib
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+ | `-- DB.rb : file containing the actual library
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+ `-- tests
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+ `-- DbrbTest.rb : unit tests
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+
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+
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+
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+ INSTALLING
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+
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+ Either run (possibly as root):
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+
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+ gem install DBrb
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+
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+ or just make sure the the `DB.rb` file is in your $LOAD_PATH.
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+
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+
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+
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+ FURTHER INFORMATION
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+
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+ run `rdoc` from the main distribution directory. And see:
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+ http://www.kuriositaet.de/ruby/dbrb/
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+
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+
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+
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+ LICENSE
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+
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+ Copyright (c) 2006 by Tim Becker (tim@kuriositaet.de)
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+ DBrb is released under the same license as Ruby.
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+ see: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+ require "rake/rdoctask"
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+ require "rake/gempackagetask"
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+ require "rake/testtask"
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+ require "rake/clean"
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+ require "rubygems"
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+
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+ # Specifies the default task to execute. This is often the "test" task
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+ # and we'll change things around as soon as we have some tests.
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+
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+ task :default => [:rdoc]
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+
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+ # The directory to generate +rdoc+ in.
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+ RDOC_DIR="doc/html"
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+
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+ # This global variable contains files that will be erased by the `clean` task.
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+ # The `clean` task itself is automatically generated by requiring `rake/clean`.
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+
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+ CLEAN << RDOC_DIR << "pkg"
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+
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+
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+ # This is the task that generates the +rdoc+ documentation from the
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+ # source files. Instantiating Rake::RDocTask automatically generates a
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+ # task called `rdoc`.
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+
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+ Rake::RDocTask.new do |rd|
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+ # Options for documenation generation are specified inside of
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+ # this block. For example the following line specifies that the
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+ # content of the README file should be the main page of the
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+ # documenation.
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+ rd.main = "README"
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+
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+ # The following line specifies all the files to extract
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+ # documenation from.
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+ rd.rdoc_files.include( "README", "AUTHORS", "LICENSE.txt", "COPYING.txt", "TODO",
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+ "CHANGELOG", "bin/**/*", "lib/**/*.rb",
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+ "examples/**/*rb","test/**/*.rb", "doc/*.rdoc")
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+ # This one specifies the output directory ...
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+ rd.rdoc_dir = "doc/html"
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+
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+ # Or the HTML title of the generated documentation set.
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+ rd.title = "DBrb: Quick'N'Dirty DB Access"
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+
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+ # These are options specifiying how source code inlined in the
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+ # documentation should be formatted.
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+
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+ rd.options = ["--line-numbers", "--inline-source"]
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+
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+ # Check:
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+ # `rdoc --help` for more rdoc options
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+ # the {rdoc documenation home}[http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib/libdoc/rdoc/rdoc/index.html]
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+ # or the documentation for the +Rake::RDocTask+ task[http://rake.rubyforge.org/classes/Rake/RDocTask.html]
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+ end
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+
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+ # The GemPackageTask facilitates getting all your files collected
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+ # together into gem archives. You can also use it to generate tarball
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+ # and zip archives.
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+
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+ # First you'll need to assemble a gemspec
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+
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+ PROJECT_NAME = "DBrb"
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+ PKG_VERSION = "0.1.1"
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+ PKG_FILES = FileList['lib/**/*.rb', 'bin/**/*', 'examples/**/*', '[A-Z]*', 'test/**/*'].to_a
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+
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+ spec = Gem::Specification.new do |s|
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+ s.platform = Gem::Platform::RUBY
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+ s.summary = "DBrb: Quick'N'Dirty DB Access."
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+ s.author = "Tim Becker"
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+ s.email = "tim@kuriositaet.de"
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+ s.homepage = "http://www.kuriositaet.de/ruby/dbrb"
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+ s.name = PROJECT_NAME
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+ s.version = PKG_VERSION
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+ s.files = PKG_FILES
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+ s.requirements << "none"
74
+ s.require_path = 'lib'
75
+ s.description = <<-ENDEND
76
+ DBrb is a database access layer meant to be easier and more consistant
77
+ to use than ruby DBI. Currently, and for the forseeable future it's
78
+ implemented as a wrapper to the DBI lib.
79
+ ENDEND
80
+ s.autorequire = 'DB.rb'
81
+ s.has_rdoc = true
82
+ s.requirements << "DBI"
83
+
84
+ end
85
+
86
+ # Adding a new GemPackageTask adds a task named `package`, which generates
87
+ # packages as gems, tarball and zip archives.
88
+ Rake::GemPackageTask.new(spec) do |pkg|
89
+ pkg.need_zip = true
90
+ pkg.need_tar_gz = true
91
+ end
92
+
93
+
94
+ # This task is used to demonstrate how to upload files to Rubyforge.
95
+ # Calling `upload_page` creates a current version of the +rdoc+
96
+ # documentation and uploads it to the Rubyforge homepage of the project,
97
+ # assuming it's hosted there and naming conventions haven't changed.
98
+ #
99
+ # This task uses `sh` to call the `scp` binary, which is plattform
100
+ # dependant and may not be installed on your computer if you're using
101
+ # Windows. I'm currently not aware of any pure ruby way to do scp
102
+ # transfers.
103
+
104
+ RubyForgeUser="a2800276"
105
+ RubyForgeProject=PROJECT_NAME
106
+
107
+ desc "Upload the web pages to the web."
108
+ task :upload_pages => ["rdoc"] do
109
+ if RubyForgeProject then
110
+ path = "/var/www/gforge-projects/#{RubyForgeProject}"
111
+ sh "scp -r doc/html/* #{RubyForgeUser}@rubyforge.org:#{path}"
112
+ sh "scp doc/images/*.png #{RubyForgeUser}@rubyforge.org:#{path}/images"
113
+ end
114
+ end
115
+
116
+ # This task will run the unit tests provided in files called
117
+ # `test/test*.rb`. The task itself can be run with a call to `rake test`
118
+
119
+ Rake::TestTask.new do |t|
120
+ t.libs << "test"
121
+ t.libs << "lib"
122
+ t.test_files = FileList['test/*.rb']
123
+ t.verbose = true
124
+ end
125
+
126
+
127
+
data/lib/DB.rb CHANGED
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Released under the same terms as Ruby
6
6
  # (http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt)
7
- #
7
+ # or the LICENSE.txt file included in this distribution.
8
8
  #
9
9
  # see DBrb for documentation.
10
10
 
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ class DBrb
95
95
  # puts "Hello #{firstname}!"
96
96
  # end
97
97
 
98
- def sql(stmt, *args, &block) #:yields: row
98
+ def sql(stmt, *args, &block) #:yields: row if block_given?
99
99
  #optional args and an optional block
100
100
  _sql_internal(stmt,false,*args, &block)
101
101
  end
@@ -103,9 +103,14 @@ class DBrb
103
103
  # Similar to the sql method. This method is meant for `INSERT`
104
104
  # and `UPDATE` statements and returns the RPC (row processed
105
105
  # count), i.e. the number of rows affected by the statement.
106
- #
106
+ #
107
+ # It's possible to pass a SELECT statement to this method,
108
+ # (optionally passing in a block) and hoping that the returned
109
+ # value indicated the number of selected rows, but that doesn't
110
+ # always work. (Mysql work, Postgres doesn't, others: don't
111
+ # know.)
107
112
 
108
- def sql_count (stmt, *args, &block)
113
+ def sql_count (stmt, *args, &block) #:yields: row if block_given?
109
114
  _sql_internal(stmt,true,*args,&block)
110
115
  end
111
116
 
metadata CHANGED
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
1
1
  --- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
2
- rubygems_version: 0.8.11
2
+ rubygems_version: 0.9.0
3
3
  specification_version: 1
4
4
  name: DBrb
5
5
  version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
6
- version: 0.1.0
7
- date: 2006-05-14 00:00:00 +02:00
8
- summary: Easier access to databases.
6
+ version: 0.1.1
7
+ date: 2007-02-07 00:00:00 +01:00
8
+ summary: "DBrb: Quick'N'Dirty DB Access."
9
9
  require_paths:
10
10
  - lib
11
11
  email: tim@kuriositaet.de
@@ -25,11 +25,18 @@ required_ruby_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version::Requirement
25
25
  platform: ruby
26
26
  signing_key:
27
27
  cert_chain:
28
+ post_install_message:
28
29
  authors:
29
30
  - Tim Becker
30
31
  files:
31
- - tests/DbrbTest.rb
32
32
  - lib/DB.rb
33
+ - CHANGELOG
34
+ - COPYING.txt
35
+ - DBrb-0.1.0.gem
36
+ - DBrb-0.1.0.tgz
37
+ - LICENSE.txt
38
+ - Rakefile
39
+ - README
33
40
  test_files: []
34
41
 
35
42
  rdoc_options: []
@@ -41,6 +48,7 @@ executables: []
41
48
  extensions: []
42
49
 
43
50
  requirements:
51
+ - none
44
52
  - DBI
45
53
  dependencies: []
46
54
 
@@ -1,204 +0,0 @@
1
-
2
-
3
- require 'DB'
4
- require 'test/unit'
5
-
6
- # Since each test needs to be executed for several different database
7
- # engines, DBrbTest maintains an array of instances, each connected to
8
- # one of the backends. the `test_...` methods iterate over the
9
- # connections and call the actual test methods, which are named like the
10
- # `test_...` methods without the `test_` part, with each DBrb instance.
11
- # E.g. test_create_test_table calls `create_test_table` once with each
12
- # connection.
13
-
14
- class DbrbTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
15
-
16
- # These are the DB logins to test. I'm currently using a
17
- # postgres server, with DB, user and pwd all set to `test`. In
18
- # case you'd like to test other databases, just add the
19
- # necessary connection parameters.
20
-
21
- @@credentials = [
22
- ['DBI:PG:test', 'test', 'test'],
23
- ['DBI:Mysql:test;socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock;database=test', 'test', 'test'] # there must be a better way.
24
- ]
25
-
26
- def setup
27
- @time = Time.new
28
- @connections = []
29
- @@credentials.each { |cred|
30
- @connections.push DBrb.new(*cred)
31
- }
32
- end
33
-
34
- def teardown
35
- @connections.each {|conn|
36
- conn.close
37
- }
38
- end
39
-
40
- # Each test case follows the same scheme: the same tests are
41
- # executed for each database and wrapped in a
42
- # `assert_nothing_raised` assertion that fails in case of
43
- # database exceptions.
44
-
45
- def each_ok
46
- @connections.each {|conn|
47
- assert_nothing_raised {
48
- yield conn
49
- }
50
- }
51
- end
52
-
53
- #Set up the example table for the tests.
54
- def test_a_create_test_table
55
- each_ok { |conn|
56
- # This should be as generic as possible to
57
- # accomodate different DB's
58
- conn.sql "
59
- CREATE TABLE test_table (
60
- col_vc VARCHAR(50),
61
- col_num NUMERIC,
62
- col_bool BOOLEAN,
63
- col_double DOUBLE PRECISION,
64
- col_int INTEGER,
65
- col_date DATE,
66
- col_time TIME,
67
- col_timestamp TIMESTAMP
68
- )"
69
- }
70
- end
71
-
72
-
73
-
74
- def test_b_insert_values
75
- each_ok {|con|
76
- %w{zero one two three four five six seven eight
77
- nine ten}.each_with_index {|num, i|
78
- con.sql("INSERT INTO test_table
79
- VALUES (?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?)",
80
- num, i, i%2==0,"#{i}.#{i}".to_f,i, @time, @time, @time)
81
- }
82
- }
83
- end
84
-
85
-
86
-
87
- def test_c_select_values
88
- each_ok { |db|
89
-
90
- tst = SelectTest.new db, self
91
- tst.do "one", "SELECT col_vc FROM test_table WHERE col_num=?", 1
92
- tst.do "2", "SELECT col_num FROM test_table WHERE col_vc=?", "two"
93
- # postgres: 0 mysql: false
94
- #tst.do 0, "SELECT col_bool FROM test_table WHERE col_vc=?", "three"
95
-
96
- #postgres 4.4 mysql "4.4"
97
- #tst.do 4.4, "SELECT col_double FROM test_table WHERE col_vc=?", "four"
98
- tst.do 5, "SELECT col_int FROM test_table WHERE col_vc=?", "five"
99
- tst.do ["six",6],"SELECT col_vc, col_int FROM test_table WHERE col_double=?", 6.6
100
- }
101
- end
102
-
103
- # Date handling seems to be very implementation specific...
104
- def test_c_select_date
105
- each_ok { |db|
106
- date = db.sql("SELECT col_date FROM test_table LIMIT 1")
107
-
108
- assert_equal(@time.year, date.year, db.to_s)
109
- assert_equal(@time.mon, date.month, db.to_s)
110
- assert_equal(@time.day, date.day, db.to_s)
111
-
112
- time = db.sql("SELECT col_time FROM test_table LIMIT 1")
113
-
114
- if time.class != DBI::Time
115
- # postgres driver doesn't return DBI::Time
116
- puts "\nWarning, #{db} returning '#{time.class}' instead of DBI::TIME"
117
- assert_equal(@time.strftime("%H:%M:%S"), time, db)
118
- else
119
- assert_equal(@time.hour, time.hour, db)
120
- assert_equal(@time.min, time.min,db)
121
- assert_equal(@time.sec, time.sec,db)
122
- end
123
-
124
- timestamp = db.sql("SELECT col_timestamp FROM test_table LIMIT 1")
125
-
126
- if timestamp.class != DBI::Timestamp
127
- # mysql driver doesn't return DBI::Timestamp...
128
- puts "\nWarning, #{db} returning '#{timestamp.class}' instead of DBI::TIMESTAMP"
129
- assert_equal(@time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), timestamp, db.to_s)
130
- else
131
- assert_equal(@time.year, timestamp.year, db.to_s)
132
- assert_equal(@time.mon, timestamp.month, db.to_s)
133
- assert_equal(@time.day, timestamp.day, db.to_s)
134
- assert_equal(@time.hour, timestamp.hour, db.to_s)
135
- assert_equal(@time.min, timestamp.min, db.to_s)
136
- assert_equal(@time.sec, timestamp.sec, db.to_s)
137
- end
138
- }
139
- end
140
-
141
- def test_c_select_with_block
142
- each_ok { |db|
143
- comp_arr = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
144
-
145
- arr = []
146
- db.sql "SELECT col_int FROM test_table ORDER BY col_int" do |i|
147
- arr.push i
148
- end
149
- assert_equal comp_arr, arr
150
-
151
- arr=[]
152
-
153
- db.sql "SELECT col_int, col_date FROM test_table ORDER BY col_int" do |row|
154
- arr.push row.col_int
155
- end
156
- assert_equal comp_arr, arr
157
- }
158
- end
159
-
160
-
161
- def test_d_update_values
162
- each_ok do |db|
163
- db.sql "UPDATE test_table SET col_int = col_int+1"
164
- comp_arr = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]
165
-
166
- arr = []
167
- db.sql "SELECT col_int FROM test_table ORDER BY col_int" do |i|
168
- arr.push i
169
- end
170
- assert_equal comp_arr, arr
171
- end
172
- end
173
-
174
- def test_e_count
175
- each_ok do |db|
176
- c = db.sql_count "UPDATE test_table SET col_int = col_int+2"
177
- assert_equal(11, c, db)
178
-
179
- c = db.sql_count "SELECT * FROM test_table" do |row|
180
- arr=row
181
- end
182
-
183
- assert(c==0||c==11, db)
184
- end
185
- end
186
-
187
- #Drop the test table
188
- def test_z_drop_test_table
189
- each_ok {|con|
190
- con.sql "DROP TABLE test_table"
191
- }
192
- end
193
-
194
- end
195
-
196
- class SelectTest
197
- def initialize db, tcase
198
- @db=db
199
- @tcase=tcase
200
- end
201
- def do val, sql, *args
202
- @tcase.assert_equal(val, @db.sql(sql, *args), @db.to_s)
203
- end
204
- end