DBD::CSV(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation DBD::CSV(3)
NAME
DBD::CSV - DBI driver for CSV files
SYNOPSIS
use DBI;
# See "Creating database handle" below
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", undef, undef, {
f_ext => ".csv/r",
RaiseError => 1,
}) or die "Cannot connect: $DBI::errstr";
# Simple statements
$dbh->do ("CREATE TABLE foo (id INTEGER, name CHAR (10))");
# Selecting
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ("select * from foo");
$sth->execute;
$sth->bind_columns (\my ($id, $name));
while ($sth->fetch) {
print "id: $id, name: $name\n";
}
# Updates
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ("UPDATE foo SET name = ? WHERE id = ?");
$sth->execute ("DBI rocks!", 1);
$sth->finish;
$dbh->disconnect;
DESCRIPTION
The DBD::CSV module is yet another driver for the DBI (Database
independent interface for Perl). This one is based on the SQL "engine"
SQL::Statement and the abstract DBI driver DBD::File and implements
access to so-called CSV files (Comma Separated Values). Such files are
often used for exporting MS Access and MS Excel data.
See DBI for details on DBI, SQL::Statement for details on SQL::Statement
and DBD::File for details on the base class DBD::File.
Prerequisites
The only system dependent feature that DBD::File uses, is the "flock ()"
function. Thus the module should run (in theory) on any system with a
working "flock ()", in particular on all Unix machines and on Windows NT.
Under Windows 95 and MacOS the use of "flock ()" is disabled, thus the
module should still be usable.
Unlike other DBI drivers, you don't need an external SQL engine or a
running server. All you need are the following Perl modules, available
from any CPAN mirror, for example
http://search.cpan.org/
DBI A recent version of the DBI (Database independent interface for
Perl). See below why.
DBD::File
This is the base class for DBD::CSV, and it is part of the DBI
distribution. As DBD::CSV requires a matching version of DBD::File
which is (partly) developed by the same team that maintains DBD::CSV.
See META.json or Makefile.PL for the minimum versions.
SQL::Statement
A simple SQL engine. This module defines all of the SQL syntax for
DBD::CSV, new SQL support is added with each release so you should
look for updates to SQL::Statement regularly.
It is possible to run "DBD::CSV" without this module if you define
the environment variable $DBI_SQL_NANO to 1. This will reduce the SQL
support a lot though. See DBI::SQL::Nano for more details. Note that
the test suite does only test in this mode in the development
environment.
Text::CSV_XS
This module is used to read and write rows in a CSV file.
Installation
Installing this module (and the prerequisites from above) is quite
simple. The simplest way is to install the bundle:
$ cpan Bundle::DBD::CSV
Alternatively, you can name them all
$ cpan Text::CSV_XS DBI DBD::CSV
or even trust "cpan" to resolve all dependencies for you:
$ cpan DBD::CSV
If you cannot, for whatever reason, use cpan, fetch all modules from
CPAN, and build with a sequence like:
gzip -d < DBD-CSV-0.40.tgz | tar xf -
(this is for Unix users, Windows users would prefer WinZip or something
similar) and then enter the following:
cd DBD-CSV-0.40
perl Makefile.PL
make test
If any tests fail, let us know. Otherwise go on with
make install UNINST=1
Note that you almost definitely need root or administrator permissions.
If you don't have them, read the ExtUtils::MakeMaker man page for details
on installing in your own directories. ExtUtils::MakeMaker.
Supported SQL Syntax
All SQL processing for DBD::CSV is done by SQL::Statement. See
SQL::Statement for more specific information about its feature set.
Features include joins, aliases, built-in and user-defined functions, and
more. See SQL::Statement::Syntax for a description of the SQL syntax
supported in DBD::CSV.
Table- and column-names are case insensitive unless quoted. Column names
will be sanitized unless "raw_header" is true.
Using DBD::CSV with DBI
For most things, DBD-CSV operates the same as any DBI driver. See DBI
for detailed usage.
Creating a database handle (connect)
Creating a database handle usually implies connecting to a database
server. Thus this command reads
use DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", "", "", {
f_dir => "/home/user/folder",
});
The directory tells the driver where it should create or open tables
(a.k.a. files). It defaults to the current directory, so the following
are equivalent:
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:");
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", undef, undef, { f_dir => "." });
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:f_dir=.");
We were told, that VMS might - for whatever reason - require:
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:f_dir=");
The preferred way of passing the arguments is by driver attributes:
# specify most possible flags via driver flags
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", undef, undef, {
f_schema => undef,
f_dir => "data",
f_dir_search => [],
f_ext => ".csv/r",
f_lock => 2,
f_encoding => "utf8",
csv_eol => "\r\n",
csv_sep_char => ",",
csv_quote_char => '"',
csv_escape_char => '"',
csv_class => "Text::CSV_XS",
csv_null => 1,
csv_bom => 0,
csv_tables => {
syspwd => {
sep_char => ":",
quote_char => undef,
escape_char => undef,
file => "/etc/passwd",
col_names => [qw( login password
uid gid realname
directory shell )],
},
},
RaiseError => 1,
PrintError => 1,
FetchHashKeyName => "NAME_lc",
}) or die $DBI::errstr;
but you may set these attributes in the DSN as well, separated by
semicolons. Pay attention to the semi-colon for "csv_sep_char" (as seen
in many CSV exports from MS Excel) is being escaped in below example, as
is would otherwise be seen as attribute separator:
$dbh = DBI->connect (
"dbi:CSV:f_dir=$ENV{HOME}/csvdb;f_ext=.csv;f_lock=2;" .
"f_encoding=utf8;csv_eol=\n;csv_sep_char=\\;;" .
"csv_quote_char=\";csv_escape_char=\\;csv_class=Text::CSV_XS;" .
"csv_null=1") or die $DBI::errstr;
Using attributes in the DSN is easier to use when the DSN is derived from
an outside source (environment variable, database entry, or configure
file), whereas specifying entries in the attribute hash is easier to read
and to maintain.
The default value for "csv_binary" is 1 (True).
The default value for "csv_auto_diag" is <1>. Note that this might cause
trouble on perl versions older than 5.8.9, so up to and including perl
version 5.8.8 it might be required to use ";csv_auto_diag=0" inside the
"DSN" or "csv_auto_diag =" 0> inside the attributes.
Creating and dropping tables
You can create and drop tables with commands like the following:
$dbh->do ("CREATE TABLE $table (id INTEGER, name CHAR (64))");
$dbh->do ("DROP TABLE $table");
Note that currently only the column names will be stored and no other
data. Thus all other information including column type (INTEGER or CHAR
(x), for example), column attributes (NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY, ...) will
silently be discarded. This may change in a later release.
A drop just removes the file without any warning.
See DBI for more details.
Table names cannot be arbitrary, due to restrictions of the SQL syntax.
I recommend that table names are valid SQL identifiers: The first
character is alphabetic, followed by an arbitrary number of alphanumeric
characters. If you want to use other files, the file names must start
with "/", "./" or "../" and they must not contain white space.
Inserting, fetching and modifying data
The following examples insert some data in a table and fetch it back:
First, an example where the column data is concatenated in the SQL
string:
$dbh->do ("INSERT INTO $table VALUES (1, ".
$dbh->quote ("foobar") . ")");
Note the use of the quote method for escaping the word "foobar". Any
string must be escaped, even if it does not contain binary data.
Next, an example using parameters:
$dbh->do ("INSERT INTO $table VALUES (?, ?)", undef, 2,
"It's a string!");
Note that you don't need to quote column data passed as parameters. This
version is particularly well designed for loops. Whenever performance is
an issue, I recommend using this method.
You might wonder about the "undef". Don't wonder, just take it as it is.
:-) It's an attribute argument that I have never used and will be passed
to the prepare method as the second argument.
To retrieve data, you can use the following:
my $query = "SELECT * FROM $table WHERE id > 1 ORDER BY id";
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ($query);
$sth->execute ();
while (my $row = $sth->fetchrow_hashref) {
print "Found result row: id = ", $row->{id},
", name = ", $row->{name};
}
$sth->finish ();
Again, column binding works: The same example again.
my $sth = $dbh->prepare (qq;
SELECT * FROM $table WHERE id > 1 ORDER BY id;
;);
$sth->execute;
my ($id, $name);
$sth->bind_columns (undef, \$id, \$name);
while ($sth->fetch) {
print "Found result row: id = $id, name = $name\n";
}
$sth->finish;
Of course you can even use input parameters. Here's the same example for
the third time:
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ("SELECT * FROM $table WHERE id = ?");
$sth->bind_columns (undef, \$id, \$name);
for (my $i = 1; $i <= 2; $i++) {
$sth->execute ($id);
if ($sth->fetch) {
print "Found result row: id = $id, name = $name\n";
}
$sth->finish;
}
See DBI for details on these methods. See SQL::Statement for details on
the WHERE clause.
Data rows are modified with the UPDATE statement:
$dbh->do ("UPDATE $table SET id = 3 WHERE id = 1");
Likewise you use the DELETE statement for removing rows:
$dbh->do ("DELETE FROM $table WHERE id > 1");
Error handling
In the above examples we have never cared about return codes. Of course,
this is not recommended. Instead we should have written (for example):
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ("SELECT * FROM $table WHERE id = ?") or
die "prepare: " . $dbh->errstr ();
$sth->bind_columns (undef, \$id, \$name) or
die "bind_columns: " . $dbh->errstr ();
for (my $i = 1; $i <= 2; $i++) {
$sth->execute ($id) or
die "execute: " . $dbh->errstr ();
$sth->fetch and
print "Found result row: id = $id, name = $name\n";
}
$sth->finish ($id) or die "finish: " . $dbh->errstr ();
Obviously this is tedious. Fortunately we have DBI's RaiseError
attribute:
$dbh->{RaiseError} = 1;
$@ = "";
eval {
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ("SELECT * FROM $table WHERE id = ?");
$sth->bind_columns (undef, \$id, \$name);
for (my $i = 1; $i <= 2; $i++) {
$sth->execute ($id);
$sth->fetch and
print "Found result row: id = $id, name = $name\n";
}
$sth->finish ($id);
};
$@ and die "SQL database error: $@";
This is not only shorter, it even works when using DBI methods within
subroutines.
DBI database handle attributes
Metadata
The following attributes are handled by DBI itself and not by DBD::File,
thus they all work as expected:
Active
ActiveKids
CachedKids
CompatMode (Not used)
InactiveDestroy
Kids
PrintError
RaiseError
Warn (Not used)
The following DBI attributes are handled by DBD::File:
AutoCommit
Always on
ChopBlanks
Works
NUM_OF_FIELDS
Valid after "$sth->execute"
NUM_OF_PARAMS
Valid after "$sth->prepare"
NAME
NAME_lc
NAME_uc
Valid after "$sth->execute"; undef for Non-Select statements.
NULLABLE
Not really working. Always returns an array ref of one's, as DBD::CSV
does not verify input data. Valid after "$sth->execute"; undef for
non-Select statements.
These attributes and methods are not supported:
bind_param_inout
CursorName
LongReadLen
LongTruncOk
DBD-CSV specific database handle attributes
In addition to the DBI attributes, you can use the following dbh
attributes:
DBD::File attributes
f_dir
This attribute is used for setting the directory where CSV files are
opened. Usually you set it in the dbh and it defaults to the current
directory ("."). However, it may be overridden in statement handles.
f_dir_search
This attribute optionally defines a list of extra directories to
search when opening existing tables. It should be an anonymous list
or an array reference listing all folders where tables could be
found.
my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", "", "", {
f_dir => "data",
f_dir_search => [ "ref/data", "ref/old" ],
f_ext => ".csv/r",
}) or die $DBI::errstr;
f_ext
This attribute is used for setting the file extension.
f_schema
This attribute allows you to set the database schema name. The
default is to use the owner of "f_dir". "undef" is allowed, but not
in the DSN part.
my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", "", "", {
f_schema => undef,
f_dir => "data",
f_ext => ".csv/r",
}) or die $DBI::errstr;
f_encoding
This attribute allows you to set the encoding of the data. With CSV,
it is not possible to set (and remember) the encoding on a column
basis, but DBD::File now allows the encoding to be set on the
underlying file. If this attribute is not set, or undef is passed,
the file will be seen as binary.
f_lock
With this attribute you can specify a locking mode to be used (if
locking is supported at all) for opening tables. By default, tables
are opened with a shared lock for reading, and with an exclusive lock
for writing. The supported modes are:
0 Force no locking at all.
1 Only shared locks will be used.
2 Only exclusive locks will be used.
But see "KNOWN BUGS" in DBD::File.
DBD::CSV specific attributes
csv_class
The attribute csv_class controls the CSV parsing engine. This
defaults to "Text::CSV_XS", but "Text::CSV" can be used in some
cases, too. Please be aware that "Text::CSV" does not care about any
edge case as "Text::CSV_XS" does and that "Text::CSV" is probably
about 100 times slower than "Text::CSV_XS".
In order to use the specified class other than "Text::CSV_XS", it
needs to be loaded before use. "DBD::CSV" does not "require"/"use"
the specified class itself.
Text::CSV_XS specific attributes
csv_eol
csv_sep_char
csv_quote_char
csv_escape_char
csv_csv
The attributes csv_eol, csv_sep_char, csv_quote_char and
csv_escape_char are corresponding to the respective attributes of the
csv_class (usually Text::CSV_CS) object. You may want to set these
attributes if you have unusual CSV files like /etc/passwd or MS Excel
generated CSV files with a semicolon as separator. Defaults are
"\015\012"", ",", """ and """, respectively.
The csv_eol attribute defines the end-of-line pattern, which is
better known as a record separator pattern since it separates
records. The default is windows-style end-of-lines "\015\012" for
output (writing) and unset for input (reading), so if on unix you may
want to set this to newline ("\n") like this:
$dbh->{csv_eol} = "\n";
It is also possible to use multi-character patterns as record
separators. For example this file uses newlines as field separators
(sep_char) and the pattern "\n__ENDREC__\n" as the record separators
(eol):
name
city
__ENDREC__
joe
seattle
__ENDREC__
sue
portland
__ENDREC__
To handle this file, you'd do this:
$dbh->{eol} = "\n__ENDREC__\n" ,
$dbh->{sep_char} = "\n"
The attributes are used to create an instance of the class csv_class,
by default Text::CSV_XS. Alternatively you may pass an instance as
csv_csv, the latter takes precedence. Note that the binary attribute
must be set to a true value in that case.
Additionally you may overwrite these attributes on a per-table base
in the csv_tables attribute.
csv_null
With this option set, all new statement handles will set
"always_quote" and "blank_is_undef" in the CSV parser and writer, so
it knows how to distinguish between the empty string and "undef" or
"NULL". You cannot reset it with a false value. You can pass it to
connect, or set it later:
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", "", "", { csv_null => 1 });
$dbh->{csv_null} = 1;
csv_bom
With this option set, the CSV parser will try to detect BOM (Byte
Order Mark) in the header line. This requires Text::CSV_XS version
1.22 or higher.
$dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", "", "", { csv_bom => 1 });
$dbh->{csv_bom} = 1;
csv_tables
This hash ref is used for storing table dependent metadata. For any
table it contains an element with the table name as key and another
hash ref with the following attributes:
o All valid attributes to the CSV parsing module. Any of them can
optionally be prefixed with "csv_".
o All attributes valid to DBD::File
If you pass it "f_file" or its alias "file", "f_ext" has no effect,
but "f_dir" and "f_encoding" still have.
csv_tables => {
syspwd => { # Table name
csv_sep_char => ":", # Text::CSV_XS
quote_char => undef, # Text::CSV_XS
escape_char => undef, # Text::CSV_XS
f_dir => "/etc", # DBD::File
f_file => "passwd", # DBD::File
col_names => # DBD::File
[qw( login password uid gid realname directory shell )],
},
},
csv_*
All other attributes that start with "csv_" and are not described
above will be passed to "Text::CSV_XS" (without the "csv_" prefix).
These extra options are only likely to be useful for reading (select)
handles. Examples:
$dbh->{csv_allow_whitespace} = 1;
$dbh->{csv_allow_loose_quotes} = 1;
$dbh->{csv_allow_loose_escapes} = 1;
See the "Text::CSV_XS" documentation for the full list and the
documentation.
Driver specific attributes
f_file
The name of the file used for the table; defaults to
"$dbh->{f_dir}/$table"
eol
sep_char
quote_char
escape_char
class
csv These correspond to the attributes csv_eol, csv_sep_char,
csv_quote_char, csv_escape_char, csv_class and csv_csv. The
difference is that they work on a per-table basis.
col_names
skip_first_row
By default DBD::CSV assumes that column names are stored in the first
row of the CSV file and sanitizes them (see "raw_header" below). If
this is not the case, you can supply an array ref of table names with
the col_names attribute. In that case the attribute skip_first_row
will be set to FALSE.
If you supply an empty array ref, the driver will read the first row
for you, count the number of columns and create column names like
"col0", "col1", ...
Note that column names that match reserved SQL words will cause
unwanted and sometimes confusing errors. If your CSV has headers that
match reserved words, you will require these two attributes.
If "test.csv" looks like
select,from
1,2
the select query would result in "select select, from from test;",
which obviously is illegal SQL.
raw_header
Due to the SQL standard, field names cannot contain special
characters like a dot (".") or a space (" ") unless the column names
are quoted. Following the approach of mdb_tools, all these tokens
are translated to an underscore ("_") when reading the first line of
the CSV file, so all field names are 'sanitized'. If you do not want
this to happen, set "raw_header" to a true value and the entries in
the first line of the CSV data will be used verbatim for column
headers and field names. DBD::CSV cannot guarantee that any part in
the toolchain will work if field names have those characters, and the
chances are high that the SQL statements will fail.
Currently, the sanitizing of headers is as simple as
s/\W/_/g;
Note that headers (column names) might be folded in other parts of
the code stack, specifically SQL::Statement, whose docs mention:
Wildcards are expanded to lower cased identifiers. This might
confuse some people, but it was easier to implement.
That means that in
my $sth = $dbh->prepare ("select * from foo");
$sth->execute;
while (my $row = $sth->fetchrow_hashref) {
say for keys %$row;
}
all keys will show as all lower case, regardless of the original
header.
It's strongly recommended to check the attributes supported by "Metadata"
in DBD::File.
Example: Suppose you want to use /etc/passwd as a CSV file. :-) There
simplest way is:
use DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:", undef, undef, {
f_dir => "/etc",
csv_sep_char => ":",
csv_quote_char => undef,
csv_escape_char => undef,
});
$dbh->{csv_tables}{passwd} = {
col_names => [qw( login password uid gid realname
directory shell )];
};
$sth = $dbh->prepare ("SELECT * FROM passwd");
Another possibility where you leave all the defaults as they are and
override them on a per table basis:
require DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:");
$dbh->{csv_tables}{passwd} = {
eol => "\n",
sep_char => ":",
quote_char => undef,
escape_char => undef,
f_file => "/etc/passwd",
col_names => [qw( login password uid gid
realname directory shell )],
};
$sth = $dbh->prepare ("SELECT * FROM passwd");
Driver private methods
These methods are inherited from DBD::File:
data_sources
The "data_sources" method returns a list of sub-directories of the
current directory in the form "dbi:CSV:directory=$dirname".
If you want to read the sub-directories of another directory, use
my $drh = DBI->install_driver ("CSV");
my @list = $drh->data_sources (f_dir => "/usr/local/csv_data");
list_tables
This method returns a list of file-names inside $dbh->{directory}.
Example:
my $dbh = DBI->connect ("dbi:CSV:directory=/usr/local/csv_data");
my @list = $dbh->func ("list_tables");
Note that the list includes all files contained in the directory,
even those that have non-valid table names, from the view of SQL. See
"Creating and dropping tables" above.
KNOWN ISSUES
o The module is using flock () internally. However, this function is
not available on some platforms. Use of flock () is disabled on MacOS
and Windows 95: There's no locking at all (perhaps not so important
on these operating systems, as they are for single users anyways).
TODO
Tests
Aim for a full 100% code coverage
- eol Make tests for different record separators.
- csv_xs Test with a variety of combinations for
sep_char, quote_char, and escape_char testing
- quoting $dbh->do ("drop table $_") for DBI-tables ();
- errors Make sure that all documented exceptions are tested.
. write to write-protected file
. read from badly formatted csv
. pass bad arguments to csv parser while fetching
Add tests that specifically test DBD::File functionality where that
is useful.
RT Attack all open DBD::CSV bugs in RT
CPAN::Forum
Attack all items in http://www.cpanforum.com/dist/DBD-CSV
Documentation
Expand on error-handling, and document all possible errors. Use
Text::CSV_XS::error_diag () wherever possible.
Debugging
Implement and document dbd_verbose.
Data dictionary
Investigate the possibility to store the data dictionary in a file
like .sys$columns that can store the field attributes (type, key,
nullable).
Examples
Make more real-life examples from the docs in examples/
SEE ALSO
DBI(3), Text::CSV_XS(3), SQL::Statement(3), DBI::SQL::Nano(3)
For help on the use of DBD::CSV, see the DBI users mailing list:
http://lists.cpan.org/showlist.cgi?name=dbi-users
For general information on DBI see
http://dbi.perl.org/ and http://faq.dbi-support.com/
AUTHORS and MAINTAINERS
This module is currently maintained by
H.Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>
in close cooperation with and help from
Jens Rehsack <sno@NetBSD.org>
The original author is Jochen Wiedmann. Previous maintainer was Jeff
Zucker
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2009-2023 by H.Merijn Brand Copyright (C) 2004-2009 by Jeff
Zucker Copyright (C) 1998-2004 by Jochen Wiedmann
All rights reserved.
You may distribute this module under the terms of either the GNU General
Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README
file.
perl v5.34.1 2023-01-06 DBD::CSV(3)
dbd-csv 0.600.0 - Generated Mon Jan 9 16:20:57 CST 2023
