-# $Id: ZOOM.pod,v 1.6 2005-11-16 16:39:25 mike Exp $
+# $Id: ZOOM.pod,v 1.9 2005-11-17 15:31:06 mike Exp $
use strict;
use warnings;
$conn = new ZOOM::Connection("indexdata.dk:210/gils");
print("server is '", $conn->option("serverImplementationName"), "'\n");
$conn->option(preferredRecordSyntax => "usmarc");
- $conn->option_binary(iconBlob => "foo\0bar");
- $rs = $conn->search_pqf('@attr 1=4 mineral');/usr/local/src/mike/records/acc-ounts/cheques-
+ $rs = $conn->search_pqf('@attr 1=4 mineral');
$ss = $conn->scan('@attr 1=1003 a');
if ($conn->errcode() != 0) {
die("somthing went wrong: " . $conn->errmsg())
Support for SRU will follow in the fullness of time.
-=head4 create()
+If an error occurs, an exception is thrown. This may indicate a
+networking problem (e.g. the host is not found or unreachable), or a
+protocol-level problem (e.g. a Z39.50 server rejected the Init
+request).
+
+=head4 create() / connect()
+
+ $options = new ZOOM::Options();
+ $options->option(implementationName => "my client");
+ $conn = create ZOOM::Connection($options)
+ $conn->connect($host, 0);
-=head4 connect()
+The usual Connection constructor, C<new()> brings a new object into
+existence and forges the connection to the server all in one
+operation, which is often what you want. For applications that need
+more control, however, these two method separate the two steps,
+allowing additional steps in between such as the setting of options.
+
+C<create()> creates and returns a new Connection object, which is
+I<not> connected to any server. It may be passed an options block, of
+type C<ZOOM::Options> (see below), into which options may be set
+before or after the creation of the Connection. The connection to the
+server may then be forged by the C<connect()> method, the arguments of
+which are the same as those of the C<new()> constructor.
=head4 error_x() / errcode() / errmsg() / addinfo() / diagset()
+ ($errcode, $errmsg, $addinfo, $diagset) = $conn->error_x();
+ $errcode = $conn->errcode();
+ $errmsg = $conn->errmsg();
+ $addinfo = $conn->addinfo();
+ $diagset = $conn->diagset();
+
+These methods may be used to obtain information about the last error
+to have occurred on a connection - although typically they will not
+been used, as the same information is available through the
+C<ZOOM::Exception> that is thrown when the error occurs. The
+C<errcode()>,
+C<errmsg()>,
+C<addinfo()>
+and
+C<diagset()>
+methods each return one element of the diagnostic, and
+C<error_x()>
+returns all four at once.
+
+See the C<ZOOM::Exception> for the interpretation of these elements.
+
=head4 option() / option_binary()
+ print("server is '", $conn->option("serverImplementationName"), "'\n");
+ $conn->option(preferredRecordSyntax => "usmarc");
+ $conn->option_binary(iconBlob => "foo\0bar");
+ die if length($conn->option_binary("iconBlob") != 7);
+
+Objects of the Connection, ResultSet, ScanSet and Package classes
+carry with them a set of named options which affect their behaviour in
+certain ways. See the ZOOM-C options documentation for details:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item *
+
+Connection options are listed at
+http://indexdata.com/yaz/doc/zoom.tkl#zoom.connections
+
+=item *
+
+ResultSet options are listed at
+http://indexdata.com/yaz/doc/zoom.resultsets.tkl
+I<### move this obvservation down to the appropriate place>
+
+=item *
+
+ScanSet options are listed at
+http://indexdata.com/yaz/doc/zoom.scan.tkl
+I<### move this obvservation down to the appropriate place>
+
+=item *
+
+Package options are listed at
+http://indexdata.com/yaz/doc/zoom.ext.html
+I<### move this obvservation down to the appropriate place>
+
+=back
+
+These options are set and fetched using the C<option()> method, which
+may be called with either one or two arguments. In the two-argument
+form, the option named by the first argument is set to the value of
+the second argument, and its old value is returned. In the
+one-argument form, the value of the specified option is returned.
+
+For historical reasons, option values are not binary-clean, so that a
+value containing a NUL byte will be returned in truncated form. The
+C<option_binary()> method behaves identically to C<option()> except
+that it is binary-clean, so that values containing NUL bytes are set
+and returned correctly.
+
=head4 search() / search_pqf()
+ $rs = $conn->search(new ZOOM::Query::CQL('title=dinosaur'));
+ # The next two lines are equivalent
+ $rs = $conn->search(new ZOOM::Query::PQF('@attr 1=4 dinosaur'));
+ $rs = $conn->search_pqf('@attr 1=4 dinosaur');
+
+The principal purpose of a search-and-retrieve protocol is searching
+(and, er, retrieval), so the principal method used on a Connection
+object is C<search()>. It accepts a single argument, a C<ZOOM::Query>
+object (or, more precisely, an object of a subclass of this class);
+and it creates and returns a new ResultSet object representing the set
+of records resulting from the search.
+
+Since queries using PQF (Prefix Query Format) are so common, we make
+them a special case by providing a C<search_prefix()> method. This is
+identical to C<search()> except that it accepts a string containing
+the query rather than an object, thereby obviating the need to create
+a C<ZOOM::Query::PQF> object. See the documentation of that class for
+information about PQF.
+
=head4 scan()
+Many Z39.50 servers allow you to browse their indexes to find terms to
+search for. This is done using the C<scan> method, which creates and
+returns a new ScanSet object representing the set of terms resulting
+from the scan.
+
+C<scan()> takes a single argument, but it has to work hard: it
+specifies both what index to scan for terms, and where in the index to
+start scanning. What's more, the specification of what index to scan
+includes multiple facets, such as what database fields it's an index
+of (author, subject, title, etc.) and whether to scan for whole fields
+or single words (e.g. the title ``I<The Empire Strikes Back>'', or the
+four words ``Back'', ``Empire'', ``Strikes'' and ``The'', interleaved
+with words from other titles in the same index.
+
+All of this is done by using a single term from the PQF query as the
+C<scan()> argument. (At present, only PQF is supported, although
+there is no reason in principle why CQL and other query syntaxes
+should not be supported in future). The attributes associated with
+the term indicate which index is to be used, and the term itself
+indicates the point in the index at which to start the scan. For
+example, if the argument is C<@attr 1=4 fish>, then
+
+=over 4
+
+=item @attr 1=4
+
+This is the BIB-1 attribute with type 1 (meaning access-point, which
+specifies an index), and type 4 (which means ``title''). So the scan
+is in the title index.
+
+=item fish
+
+Start the scan from the lexicographically earliest term that is equal
+to or falls after ``fish''.
+
+=back
+
+The argument C<@attr 1=4 @attr 6=3 fish> would behave similarly; but
+the BIB-1 attribute 6=3 mean completeness=``complete field'', so the
+scan would be for complete titles rather than for words occurring in
+titles.
+
+This takes a bit of getting used to.
+
+I<###> discuss how the values of options affect scanning.
+
=head4 package()
+ $p = $conn->package();
+ $o = new ZOOM::Options();
+ $o->option(databaseName => "newdb");
+ $p = $conn->package($o);
+
+Creates and returns a new C<ZOOM::Package>, to be used in invoking an
+Extended Service. An options block may optionally be passed in. See
+the C<ZOOM::Package> documentation.
+
=head4 destroy()
+ $conn->destroy()
+
+Destroys a Connection object, tearing down any low-level connection
+associated with it and freeing its resources. It is an error to reuse
+a Connection that has been C<destroy()>ed.
+
=head2 ZOOM::ResultSet
I<###>
main code in an C<eval{}> block and checking C<$@> on exit from that
block, as in the code-sample above.
-There are a small number of exceptions to this rule.
+There are a small number of exceptions to this rule: the three
+record-fetching methods in the C<ZOOM::ResultSet> class,
+C<record()>,
+C<record_immediate()>,
+and
+C<records()>
+can all return undefined values for legitimate reasons, under
+circumstances that do not merit throwing an exception. For this
+reason, the return values of these methods should be checked. See the
+individual methods' documentation for details.
+
+=head3 Methods
+
I<###>
=head2 ZOOM::ScanSet
C<QUERY_CQL>,
C<QUERY_PQF>,
C<SORTBY>,
-C<CLONE>
+C<CLONE>,
+C<PACKAGE>
and
-C<PACKAGE>,
+C<SCANTERM>,
each of which specifies a client-side error. Since errors may also be
diagnosed by the server, and returned to the client, error codes may
also take values from the BIB-1 diagnostic set of Z39.50, listed at
The C<Net::Z3950::ZOOM> module, included in the same distribution as this one.
The C<Net::Z3950> module, which this one supersedes.
+http://perl.z3950.org/
The documentation for the ZOOM-C module of the YAZ Toolkit, which this
module is built on. Specifically, its lists of options are useful.