DBD::SQLAnywhere -- an Adaptive Server Anywhere interface for Perl 5.

   Portions Copyright (c) 1994,1995,1996            Tim Bunce
   Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2008		    iAnywhere Solutions, Inc.

   For license information, please see license.txt included in this
   distribution.

*BEFORE* BUILDING, TESTING AND INSTALLING this you will need to:

    Build, test and install Perl 5 (at least 5.6.0 is recommended).
    It is very important to test it and install it!

    Build, test and install the DBI module (at least DBI 1.34 is recommended).
    It is very important to test it and install it!

    A SQLAnywhere client installation is *required* for building and
    deploying.

    A SQLAnywhere server install is recommended for building otherwise
    the "make test" portion of the build will fail.

    Remember to *read* the DBI README file!


Building:
    On UNIX:
	[ Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, Linux, etc. ]

	source sa_config.sh (or sa_config.csh) from the SQLAnywhere
	installation

	perl Makefile.PL
	make
	copy demo.db from the SQLAnywhere installation directory
	    to the current directory
	make test
	make install
    
    On Win32:
	[ requires Microsoft C and ActiveState's ActivePerl
	  (www.activestate.com) ]

	NOTE: ActivePerl 5.6.0 build 616 or later is required.

	perl Makefile.PL
	nmake
	copy demo.db from the SQLAnywhere installation directory
	    to the current directory
	nmake test
	nmake install
    

    Do NOT hand edit the generated Makefile unless you are completely sure
    you understand the implications! Always try to make changes via the
    Makefile.PL command line and/or editing the Makefile.PL.


Notes:

1.  SQLAnywhere connection parameters can be passed to DBD::SQLAnywhere by
    placing the list of parameters after 'DBI:SQLAnywhere:' in the first
    parameter to connect(). The connection parameters are specified as a
    list of LABEL=value pairs that are delimited by semicolons.

    If you are not familiar with SQLAnywhere connection parameters, *please*
    refer to the SQLAnywhere documentation.

    Example:

	$dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:SQLAnywhere:ENG=demo;UID=dba;PWD=sql', '', '' );
    
    If the second parameter is nonblank, it is assumed to be a user
    name and UID=parameter2 will be appended to the SQLAnywhere connection
    string.

    Similarly, if the third parameter is nonblank, it is assumed to be
    a password and PWD=parameter3 will be appended to the SQLAnywhere
    connection string.

    The following is equivalent to the example above:

	$dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:SQLAnywhere:ENG=demo', 'dba', 'sql' );
    

2.  The SQLAnywhere DBD driver is thread-safe when using Perl ithreads.

3.  Prepared statements are not dropped from the SQLAnywhere server until the
    statement handle is destroyed in the perl script. Calling finish()
    is not sufficient to drop the handle that the server is holding
    onto -- use "undef" instead or reuse the same perl variable for
    another handle. To help detect handle leaks in client
    applications, SQL Anywhere by default limits the number of prepared
    statements and cursors that any connection can hold at one time to
    50 of each. If that limit is exceeded, a "Resource governor
    ... exceeded" error is reported. If you encounter this error, make
    sure you are dropping all of your statement handles and, if so,
    consult the SQLAnywhere documentation for the MAX_CURSOR_COUNT and
    MAX_STATEMENT_COUNT options. Be careful when using
    prepare_cached() since the cache will hold onto statement handles.

---------------------------------------------------------------

Examples can be found in the 'eg' directory:
connect.pl  -> Demonstrates a simple connect.
retrieve.pl -> Demonstrates retrieving data from a table and displaying the result set.
blobs.pl    -> Demonstrates the use of blobs

For further examples, consult the test scripts located in the 't' directory.