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author | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2010-09-23 13:37:38 +0200 |
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committer | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2010-09-23 13:37:38 +0200 |
commit | 1c6d5d4b6aea06554d6d3342262b8d551bf816fd (patch) | |
tree | 217b44c01466eefda361987781faba6b19ed109b /hello/README | |
parent | 01c9e7c9cc51ad1795de6c556d196d46b931402b (diff) |
README files for the examples
Diffstat (limited to 'hello/README')
-rw-r--r-- | hello/README | 52 |
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/hello/README b/hello/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000..97a15b4 --- /dev/null +++ b/hello/README @@ -0,0 +1,52 @@ +This is a "Hello World" example that shows how to use ODB to perform basic +database operations, such as making objects persistent, loading, updating +and deleting persistent objects, as well as querying the database for +objects matching a certain criteria. + +The example consists of the following files: + +person.hxx + Header file defining the 'person' persistent class. + +person-odb.hxx +person-odb.ixx +person-odb.cxx +person.sql + The first three files contain the database support code and the last file + contains the database schema for the person.hxx header. + + These files are generated by the ODB compiler from person.hxx using the + following command line: + + odb -d <database> --generate-query --generate-schema person.hxx + + Where <database> stands for the database system we are using, for example, + 'mysql'. + +database.hxx + Contains the create_database() function which instantiates the concrete + database class corresponding to the database system we are using. + +driver.cxx + Driver for the example. It includes the person.hxx and person-odb.hxx + headers to gain access to the 'person' class and the database support + code for this class. It also includes database.hxx for the + create_database() function declaration. + + In main() the driver first calls create_database() to obtain the database + instance. Then it executes a number of database transactions on persistent + objects. + +To run the example we first need to create the database schema. Using MySQL +as an example, this can be achieved with the following command: + +mysql --user=odb_test --database=odb_test < person.sql + +Here we use 'odb_test' as the database login and also 'odb_test' as the +database name. + +Once the database schema is ready, we can run the example (using MySQL as +the database): + +./driver --user odb_test --database odb_test + |