package MooseX::TransactionalMethods; use Moose (); use Moose::Exporter; use aliased 'MooseX::Meta::Method::Transactional'; use Sub::Name; our $VERSION = 0.009; Moose::Exporter->setup_import_methods ( with_meta => [ 'transactional' ], also => [ 'Moose' ], ); my $method_metaclass = Moose::Meta::Class->create_anon_class ( superclasses => ['Moose::Meta::Method'], roles => [ Transactional ], cache => 1, ); sub transactional { my $meta = shift; my ($name, $schema, $code); if (ref($_[1]) eq 'CODE') { ($name, $code) = @_; } else { ($name, $schema, $code) = @_; } my $m = $method_metaclass->name->wrap ( subname(join('::',$meta->name,$name),$code), package_name => $meta->name, name => $name, $schema ? (schema => $schema) : () ); $meta->add_method($name, $m); } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME MooseX::TransactionalMethods - Syntax sugar for transactional methods =head1 SYNOPSIS package Foo::Bar; use MooseX::TransactionalMethods; # includes Moose has schema => (is => 'ro'); transactional foo => sub { # this is going to happen inside a transaction }; =head1 DESCRIPTION This method exports the "transactional" declarator that will enclose the method in a txn_do call. =head1 DECLARATOR =over =item transactional $name => $code When you declare with only the name and the coderef, the wrapper will call 'schema' on your class to fetch the schema object on which it will call txn_do to enclose your coderef. =item transactional $name => $schema, $code When you declare sending the schema object, it will store it in the method metaclass and use it directly without any calls to this object. NOTE THAT MIXING DECLARTIONS WITH SCHEMA AND WITHOUT SCHEMA WILL LEAD TO PAINFULL CONFUSION SINCE THE WRAPPING IS SPECIFIC TO THAT CLASS AND THE BEHAVIOR IS NOT MODIFIED WHEN YOU OVERRIDE THE METHOD. PREFER USING THE DYNAMIC DECLARATOR WHEN POSSIBLE. =back =head1 AUTHORS Daniel Ruoso Edaniel@ruoso.comE With help from rafl and doy from #moose. =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright 2010 by Daniel Ruoso et al This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut