On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 02:17:37PM -0500, John Scoles wrote:
> Thomas Porschberg Wrote
>
> >Thanks for your reply !
>
> >On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 10:09:08AM -0500, John Scoles wrote:
> > Yes there is a newer Makfile.pl You might want to try that.
>
> >I used a newer one. But the same result. Comp
Robert Loomans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > That's what it does right now. The tests don't depend on SQLite2
> > per-se, just a DSN that points to a DBI driver that supports transactions
> > (eg; pretty much everything except MySQL ;-)
> Errr MySQL supports transactions just fine at least
At 7:26 PM -0800 1/10/06, Tyler MacDonald wrote:
Another option that occured to me while I was loading the dishwasher
was bundling SQLite2 (or something like it) in my t/ directory. Sure, it
will consume a bit of extra bandwidth when the package is downloaded, but it
won't leave the bloat
Ted Behling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sorry for replying to my own e-mail, but I had another thought. What
> about just failing gracefully if SQLite2 isn't available? If it's
> installed, it gets used; if not, a warning is shown and the dependent
> tests are skipped.
That's what it do
Sorry for replying to my own e-mail, but I had another thought. What about
just failing gracefully if SQLite2 isn't available? If it's installed, it gets
used; if not, a warning is shown and the dependent tests are skipped.
-Original Message-
From: Ted Behling
Sent: Tuesday, January
I haven't used this module myself, but perhaps create two test suites: "make
test" tests everything you can test without burdensome external dependencies,
and "make testsql" either depends specifically SQLite2 or using a user-provided
DSN. The users who want to put more effort into testing can
DBIx::Transaction currently only depends on DBI, but for it's unit
tests to run you need a DBI driver available. If SQLite2 is available, it
gives you a nice default DSN to test DBIx::Transaction in a completely
self-contained environment.
The problem I'm facing is that smoke teste
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 01:14:35PM -0500, Jeffrey Seger wrote:
> I can attest that there is no max number of rows set, or at least if there
> is, it's way higher than 35k. I have pulled hundreds of thousands of rows
> from an informix database using DBI with no limit found yet. However, what
> yo
> Yes there is a newer Makfile.pl You might want to try that.
>
> One other quick suggestion id to set
>
> NLS_LANG=WE8ISO8859P15
>
> This is the the value I have used sucessfully in the past.
Presumably you mean
NLS_LANG=.WE8ISO8859P15
The leading "." is required (to skip the language and t
Thomas Porschberg Wrote
>Thanks for your reply !
>On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 10:09:08AM -0500, John Scoles wrote:
> Yes there is a newer Makfile.pl You might want to try that.
>I used a newer one. But the same result. Compilation is ok,
>but the tests fail.
>
> One other quick suggestion id to set
Thanks for your reply !
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 10:09:08AM -0500, John Scoles wrote:
> Yes there is a newer Makfile.pl You might want to try that.
I used a newer one. But the same result. Compilation is ok,
but the tests fail.
>
> One other quick suggestion id to set
>
> NLS_LANG=WE8ISO8859P15
I have seen similar when there is a space in a path someplace.
Could that be it?
Check to ensure you do not have a space in you Perl dir.
""Christopher T. Brown"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I am running the install DBD-Oracle command on my WIN machine with the
>
Have you tried only using the / character or even not using them at all?
C:\PPM i c:/temp/DBD_Oracle-1-872-1136408691
Or
Cd c:\ppm
Ppm i DBD_Oracle-1-872-1136408691
Works fine on XP SP2.
-M
> -Original Message-
> From: Christopher T. Brown [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, Ja
Actually the full error is:
I am running the install DBD-Oracle command on my WIN machine with the
following error:
Can't remove directory C:\TEMP/DBD_Oracle-1-872-1136408691: Permission denied
at C:/Perl/site/lib/PPM/Repository.pm line 247
Can't figure out where the '/' is coming from.
I wa
I am running the install DBD-Oracle command on my WIN machine with the
following error: Can't remove directory C:TEMP/DBD_Oracle-1-872-1136408691:
Permission denied at C:/Perl/site/lib/PPM/Repository.pm line 247 I was able to
install other packages. Any ideas.
Thanks
--
--
I can attest that there is no max number of rows set, or at least if there
is, it's way higher than 35k. I have pulled hundreds of thousands of rows
from an informix database using DBI with no limit found yet. However, what
you are doing with those rows matters greatly. If you are throwing them
I do not think there is any maximum # of rows. As I have have use queries
with it well over 35k rows. It would be dependant on the size of fields in
each row and the amount of memory you have.
In this case I think you query is simply running out of memory.
Try using a cursor in your SQL or use
On 1/10/06, Elton Hughes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have run into a problem I have not seen before. I need to select
> all of the rows in a table and I am getting the following error:
>
> # upd_wia_test.pl
> Today's date: 1/10/2006
> Running 'execute' done
> Running 'fetch' Out of me
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 12:47:54PM +0100, Peter J. Holzer wrote:
> or selectall_arrayhashref?
>
> Anyway, I rather frequently find that the "most natural" way to
> represent a query result is an array of hashes: Each row is hashref, but
> the the rows are in an array(ref) so that the order is pre
Hello All,
I have run into a problem I have not seen before. I need to select
all of the rows in a table and I am getting the following error:
# upd_wia_test.pl
Today's date: 1/10/2006
Running 'execute' done
Running 'fetch' Out of memory!
Issuing rollback() for database handle being
"Claire Lee" wrote
>I didn't recompile. What I did was just use the script to try to
>connect. Do I need to recompile? How do I do it? Thanks.
>Jing
There are a number of tutorials on the web for this. If you tell me what
sort of operating system you are using I might be able to point you in the
Yes there is a newer Makfile.pl You might want to try that.
One other quick suggestion id to set
NLS_LANG=WE8ISO8859P15
This is the the value I have used sucessfully in the past.
"Thomas Porschberg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi,
>
> I have 10g client install
Peter J. Holzer wrote:
or selectall_arrayhashref?
Anyway, I rather frequently find that the "most natural" way to
represent a query result is an array of hashes: Each row is hashref, but
the the rows are in an array(ref) so that the order is preserved, and
the columns can be accessed by name
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
> Anyway, I rather frequently find that the "most natural" way to
> represent a query result is an array of hashes: Each row is hashref, but
> the the rows are in an array(ref) so that the order is preserved, and
> the columns can be accessed by name
Hi,
I have 10g client installed under linux,
DBI version 1.50, DBD::Oracle module 1.16.
The make runs fine for DBD::Oracle but the "make test"
failed.
t/10general.DBI connect('','/@',...)
failed: ERROR OCIEnvNlsCreate (check ORACLE_HOME and NLS settings etc.) at
t/10general.t line
"Peter J. Holzer" wrote
>or selectall_arrayhashref?
>Anyway, I rather frequently find that the "most natural" way to
>represent a query result is an array of hashes: Each row is hashref, but
>the the rows are in an array(ref) so that the order is preserved, and
>the columns can be accessed by nam
I would have to agree most likly cause is the required packages are either
not installed on your web server or were insatlled and you webserver does
not have permission to read them.
"Tim Bunce" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> - Forwarded message from yuehua wu <[
This may be a very obvious question did you recompile your DBI:ODBC at the
same time?
"Claire Lee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I have a script that connects to ms sql server with
> DBI::ODBC. But this code works only for DBI 1.37
> version, not for version 1.48. I
or selectall_arrayhashref?
Anyway, I rather frequently find that the "most natural" way to
represent a query result is an array of hashes: Each row is hashref, but
the the rows are in an array(ref) so that the order is preserved, and
the columns can be accessed by name.
Proposed use:
my $emp =
29 matches
Mail list logo