From: Mike Taylor Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2002 11:30:02 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Add RPN structure documentation to SimpleServer.pm's POD. X-Git-Tag: release.0.0.8.lau~37 X-Git-Url: http://sru.miketaylor.org.uk/cgi-bin?a=commitdiff_plain;h=398e2d2769ff83b45a4a2cdc1b4a5a61a9196724;p=simpleserver-moved-to-github.git Add RPN structure documentation to SimpleServer.pm's POD. Add README to MANIFEST. --- diff --git a/MANIFEST b/MANIFEST index d58eab7..3213c2f 100644 --- a/MANIFEST +++ b/MANIFEST @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ MANIFEST MANIFEST.SKIP Makefile.PL OID.pm +README SimpleServer.pm SimpleServer.xs grs_test.pl diff --git a/SimpleServer.pm b/SimpleServer.pm index d6546e7..5a8e32d 100644 --- a/SimpleServer.pm +++ b/SimpleServer.pm @@ -26,7 +26,11 @@ ## ## $Log: SimpleServer.pm,v $ -## Revision 1.13 2002-03-06 11:02:04 mike +## Revision 1.14 2002-03-06 11:30:02 mike +## Add RPN structure documentation to SimpleServer.pm's POD. +## Add README to MANIFEST. +## +## Revision 1.13 2002/03/06 11:02:04 mike ## Added simple README file, derived from POD comments in SimpleServer.pm ## Fixed my (Mike Taylor's) email address ## @@ -306,8 +310,7 @@ mous hash. The structure is the following: DATABASES => ["xxx"], ## Reference to a list of data- ## bases to search QUERY => "query", ## The query expression - RPN => $obj, ## Blessed reference int the package - ## Net::Z3950::APDU::Query + RPN => $obj, ## Reference to a Net::Z3950::APDU::Query ## Response parameters: @@ -352,10 +355,133 @@ it is perfectly legal to not accept boolean operators, but you SHOULD try to return good error codes if you run into something you can't or won't support. -The RPN member is a blessed reference into the package Net::Z3950::APDU::Query. -By means of an augmented type of coding, you can easily construct a -parser of the incoming RPN. Take a look at samples/render-search.pl for -a sample implementation of such an augmented parser technique. +A more convenient alternative to the QUERY member may be the RPN +member, which is a reference to a Net::Z3950::APDU::Query object +representing the RPN query tree. The structure of that object is +supposed to be self-documenting, but here's a brief summary of what +you get: + +=over 4 + +=item * + +C is a hash with two fields: + +Z<> + +=over 4 + +=item C + +Optional. If present, it is a reference to a +C. This is a string of dot-separated integers +representing the OID of the query's top-level attribute set. + +=item C + +Mandatory: a refererence to the RPN tree itself. + +=back + +=item * + +Each node of the tree is an object of one of the following types: + +Z<> + +=over 4 + +=item C + +=item C + +=item C + +These three classes are all arrays of two elements, each of which is a +node of one of the above types. + +=item C + +See below for details. + +=back + +(I guess I should make a superclass C and make +all of these subclasses of it. Not done that yet, but will do soon.) + +=back + +=over 4 + +=item * + +C is a hash with two fields: + +Z<> + +=over 4 + +=item C + +A string containing the search term itself. + +=item C + +A reference to a C object. + +=back + +=item * + +C is an array of references to +C objects. (Note the plural/singular +distinction.) + +=item * + +C is a hash with three elements: + +Z<> + +=over 4 + +=item C + +Optional. If present, it is dot-separated OID string, as above. + +=item C + +An integer indicating the type of the attribute - for example, under +the BIB-1 attribute set, type 1 indicates a ``use'' attribute, type 2 +a ``relation'' attribute, etc. + +=item C + +An integer indicating the value of the attribute - for example, under +BIB-1, if the attribute type is 1, then value 4 indictates a title +search and 7 indictates an ISBN search; but if the attribute type is +2, then value 4 indicates a ``greater than or equal'' search, and 102 +indicates a relevance match. + +=back + +=back + +Note that, at the moment, none of these classes have any methods at +all: the blessing into classes is largely just a documentation thing +so that, for example, if you do + + { use Data::Dumper; print Dumper($args->{RPN}) } + +you get something fairly human-readable. But of course, the type +distinction between the three different kinds of boolean node is +important. + +By adding your own methods to these classes (building what I call +``augmented classes''), you can easily build code that walks the tree +of the incoming RPN. Take a look at C for a +sample implementation of such an augmented classes technique. + =head2 Present handler