{-# LANGUAGE DeriveDataTypeable, DeriveFunctor, GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving #-} ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- | -- Module: Database.PostgreSQL.Simple.Types -- Copyright: (c) 2011 MailRank, Inc. -- (c) 2011-2012 Leon P Smith -- License: BSD3 -- Maintainer: Leon P Smith -- Stability: experimental -- -- Basic types. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ module Database.PostgreSQL.Simple.Types ( Null(..) , Default(..) , Only(..) , In(..) , Binary(..) , Identifier(..) , QualifiedIdentifier(..) , Query(..) , Oid(..) , (:.)(..) , Savepoint(..) , PGArray(..) , Values(..) ) where import Blaze.ByteString.Builder (toByteString) import Control.Arrow (first) import Data.ByteString (ByteString) import Data.Hashable (Hashable(hashWithSalt)) import Data.Monoid (Monoid(..)) import Data.String (IsString(..)) import Data.Typeable (Typeable) import qualified Blaze.ByteString.Builder.Char.Utf8 as Utf8 import qualified Data.ByteString as B import Data.Text (Text) import qualified Data.Text as T import Database.PostgreSQL.LibPQ (Oid(..)) -- | A placeholder for the SQL @NULL@ value. data Null = Null deriving (Read, Show, Typeable) instance Eq Null where _ == _ = False _ /= _ = False -- | A placeholder for the PostgreSQL @DEFAULT@ value. data Default = Default deriving (Read, Show, Typeable) -- | A query string. This type is intended to make it difficult to -- construct a SQL query by concatenating string fragments, as that is -- an extremely common way to accidentally introduce SQL injection -- vulnerabilities into an application. -- -- This type is an instance of 'IsString', so the easiest way to -- construct a query is to enable the @OverloadedStrings@ language -- extension and then simply write the query in double quotes. -- -- > {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} -- > -- > import Database.PostgreSQL.Simple -- > -- > q :: Query -- > q = "select ?" -- -- The underlying type is a 'ByteString', and literal Haskell strings -- that contain Unicode characters will be correctly transformed to -- UTF-8. newtype Query = Query { fromQuery :: ByteString } deriving (Eq, Ord, Typeable) instance Show Query where show = show . fromQuery instance Read Query where readsPrec i = fmap (first Query) . readsPrec i instance IsString Query where fromString = Query . toByteString . Utf8.fromString instance Monoid Query where mempty = Query B.empty mappend (Query a) (Query b) = Query (B.append a b) {-# INLINE mappend #-} mconcat xs = Query (B.concat (map fromQuery xs)) -- | A single-value \"collection\". -- -- This is useful if you need to supply a single parameter to a SQL -- query, or extract a single column from a SQL result. -- -- Parameter example: -- -- @query c \"select x from scores where x > ?\" ('Only' (42::Int))@ -- -- Result example: -- -- @xs <- query_ c \"select id from users\" --forM_ xs $ \\('Only' id) -> {- ... -}@ newtype Only a = Only { fromOnly :: a } deriving (Eq, Ord, Read, Show, Typeable, Functor) -- | Wrap a list of values for use in an @IN@ clause. Replaces a -- single \"@?@\" character with a parenthesized list of rendered -- values. -- -- Example: -- -- > query c "select * from whatever where id in ?" (Only (In [3,4,5])) newtype In a = In a deriving (Eq, Ord, Read, Show, Typeable, Functor) -- | Wrap binary data for use as a @bytea@ value. newtype Binary a = Binary {fromBinary :: a} deriving (Eq, Ord, Read, Show, Typeable, Functor) -- | Wrap text for use as sql identifier, i.e. a table or column name. newtype Identifier = Identifier {fromIdentifier :: Text} deriving (Eq, Ord, Read, Show, Typeable, IsString) instance Hashable Identifier where hashWithSalt i (Identifier t) = hashWithSalt i t -- | Wrap text for use as (maybe) qualified identifier, i.e. a table -- with schema, or column with table. data QualifiedIdentifier = QualifiedIdentifier (Maybe Text) Text deriving (Eq, Ord, Read, Show, Typeable) instance Hashable QualifiedIdentifier where hashWithSalt i (QualifiedIdentifier q t) = hashWithSalt i (q, t) -- | @\"foo.bar\"@ will get turned into -- @QualifiedIdentifier (Just \"foo\") \"bar\"@, while @\"foo\"@ will get -- turned into @QualifiedIdentifier Nothing \"foo\"@. Note this instance -- is for convenience, and does not match postgres syntax. It -- only examines the first period character, and thus cannot be used if the -- qualifying identifier contains a period for example. instance IsString QualifiedIdentifier where fromString str = let (x,y) = T.break (== '.') (fromString str) in if T.null y then QualifiedIdentifier Nothing x else QualifiedIdentifier (Just x) (T.tail y) -- | Wrap a list for use as a PostgreSQL array. newtype PGArray a = PGArray {fromPGArray :: [a]} deriving (Eq, Ord, Read, Show, Typeable, Functor) -- | A composite type to parse your custom data structures without -- having to define dummy newtype wrappers every time. -- -- -- > instance FromRow MyData where ... -- -- > instance FromRow MyData2 where ... -- -- -- then I can do the following for free: -- -- @ -- res <- query' c "..." -- forM res $ \\(MyData{..} :. MyData2{..}) -> do -- .... -- @ data h :. t = h :. t deriving (Eq,Ord,Show,Read,Typeable) infixr 3 :. newtype Savepoint = Savepoint Query deriving (Eq, Ord, Show, Read, Typeable) -- | Represents a @VALUES@ table literal, usable as an alternative -- to @executeMany@ and @returning@. The main advantage is that -- you can parametrize more than just a single @VALUES@ expression. -- For example, here's a query to insert a thing into one table -- and some attributes of that thing into another, returning the -- new id generated by the database: -- -- -- > query c [sql| -- > WITH new_thing AS ( -- > INSERT INTO thing (name) VALUES (?) RETURNING id -- > ), new_attributes AS ( -- > INSERT INTO thing_attributes -- > SELECT new_thing.id, attrs.* -- > FROM new_thing JOIN ? attrs -- > ) SELECT * FROM new_thing -- > |] ("foo", Values [ "int4", "text" ] -- > [ ( 1 , "hello" ) -- > , ( 2 , "world" ) ]) -- -- (Note this example uses writable common table expressions, -- which were added in PostgreSQL 9.1) -- -- The second parameter gets expanded into the following SQL syntax: -- -- > (VALUES (1::"int4",'hello'::"text"),(2,'world')) -- -- When the list of attributes is empty, the second parameter expands to: -- -- > (VALUES (null::"int4",null::"text") LIMIT 0) -- -- By contrast, @executeMany@ and @returning@ don't issue the query -- in the empty case, and simply return @0@ and @[]@ respectively. -- This behavior is usually correct given their intended use cases, -- but would certainly be wrong in the example above. -- -- The first argument is a list of postgresql type names. Because this -- is turned into a properly quoted identifier, the type name is case -- sensitive and must be as it appears in the @pg_type@ table. Thus, -- you must write @timestamptz@ instead of @timestamp with time zone@, -- @int4@ instead of @integer@, @_int8@ instead of @bigint[]@, etcetera. -- -- You may omit the type names, however, if you do so the list -- of values must be non-empty, and postgresql must be able to infer -- the types of the columns from the surrounding context. If the first -- condition is not met, postgresql-simple will throw an exception -- without issuing the query. In the second case, the postgres server -- will return an error which will be turned into a @SqlError@ exception. -- -- See for -- more information. data Values a = Values [QualifiedIdentifier] [a] deriving (Eq, Ord, Show, Read, Typeable)