libdbix-class-perl 0.08250-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

libdbix-class-perl (0.08250-2) unstable; urgency=medium


  * Team upload

  * add patch adapting tests to DBD::SQLite 1.40
    Closes: #735024 -- FTBFS: test failures
  * add patch fixing POD error about trailing whitespace in a link
  * Declare conformance with Policy 3.9.5

 -- Damyan Ivanov <email address hidden>  Tue, 14 Jan 2014 16:25:33 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Perl Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Perl Group
Architectures:
all
Section:
perl
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release universe perl

Builds

Trusty: [FULLYBUILT] i386

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
libdbix-class-perl_0.08250-2.dsc 3.5 KiB 879bab8f58b7bb6be16f27c11bd0c82756cdc2f09586de63823e7eda6fc79f96
libdbix-class-perl_0.08250.orig.tar.gz 758.1 KiB a6a925fb3b8e2b00420981681f82d5eba98327b643ce4289bb89d14986dc585b
libdbix-class-perl_0.08250-2.debian.tar.gz 13.5 KiB 9d3a1ec2d863703802b9a5ac46f73348dc5b19d70a972043b5bee8eccb3eab1a

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libdbix-class-perl: extensible and flexible object <-> relational mapper

 DBIx::Class is an SQL to OO mapper with an object API inspired by Class::DBI
 (and a compatibility layer as a springboard for porting) and a resultset API
 that allows abstract encapsulation of database operations. It aims to make
 representing queries in your code as perl-ish as possible while still
 providing access to as many of the capabilities of the database as possible,
 including retrieving related records from multiple tables in a single query,
 JOIN, LEFT JOIN, COUNT, DISTINCT, GROUP BY and HAVING support.
 .
 DBIx::Class can handle multi-column primary and foreign keys, complex queries
 and database-level paging, and does its best to only query the database in
 order to return something you've directly asked for. If a resultset is used
 as an iterator it only fetches rows off the statement handle as requested
 in order to minimise memory usage. It has auto-increment support for SQLite,
 MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, SQL Server and DB2 and is known to be used in
 production on at least the first four, and is fork- and thread-safe out of
 the box (although your DBD may not be).