Name
   DBM::Deep::Blue - Memory Mapped Paged Permanent Perl Objects with
   optional commit and rollback.

   Windows only.

Synopsis
     use DBM::Deep::Blue;
     use Test::More;

      {my $m = DBM::Deep::Blue::file('memory.data');
       my $h = $m->allocGlobalHash;
          $h->{a}[1]{b}[2]{c}[3] =  'a1b2c2';
      }

     # A later execution ...

      {my $m = DBM::Deep::Blue::file('memory.data');
       my $h = $m->allocGlobalHash;
       is $h->{a}[1]{b}[2]{c}[3],   'a1b2c2';
      }

     done_testing;

Description
   DBM::Deep::Blue makes Perl Objects permanent, but pageable, using the
   standard Perl syntax for manipulating nested data structures comprised
   of strings, hashes and arrays.

   Permanent hashes and arrays may be blessed and auto vivified,
   dereferenced and dumped: consequently you can use Data::Dump or
   Data::Dumper and Perl debugger commands to examine data structures built
   with DBM::Deep::Blue in the normal way.

   Units of work can either be committed continuously or discretely using
   "begin_work()", "commit()", "rollback()". Uncommitted changes are rolled
   back automatically when a backing file is reopened. Blessing is subject
   to rollback.

   The data structures are held in a memory area backed by a file using
   your computer's virtual paging mechanism created by "file()". On large
   data structures, this allows DBM::Deep::Blue to load pages on demand as
   needed to locate data, and to write back to the backing file only the
   pages containing modified data. By contrast, other schemes for making
   Perl objects permanent have either to write the entire data structure or
   track the changes made internally and then write them piecemeal.

   To obtain addressability to permanent data objects, you can call
   "allocGlobalHash()" or "allocGlobalArray()" to create an array or hash
   that can be immediately addressed. Other data can then be connected to
   these structures.

   Free space liberated by assigning new values to array and hash elements,
   deleting hash keys, clearing arrays and hashes, and reducing the size of
   arrays is automatically recycled. The memory area grows as needed and
   within the confines of the available user virtual storage available in
   one address space on your computer. A reference counting scheme is used
   to detect objects that are not referenced by any other data structure
   and should therefore be reclaimed. Thus a data object returned by
   "delete" in perlfunc from a hash should be assigned to some other data
   structure before any other operation is performed on the memory area.
   Space reclamation is suspended during a unit of work, any space
   liberated is removed by commit() or rollback().

   Memory structures can also be created without a backing file by using
   the new() function.

   DBM::Deep::Blue is written entirely in C to maximize performance.

Methods
 Allocation
   Use these methods to create a new memory area.

   new()
       my $m = DBM::Deep::Blue::new();

     Creates a new memory structure

   file()
       my $m = DBM::Deep::Blue::file("aaa.data");

     Creates or reloads a memory structure in or from backing file
     aaa.data. If the file does not exist, it will be created. If it does
     exist, processing continues with the the memory structure as saved in
     the file.

     Any uncommitted changes from an incomplete unit of work will be rolled
     back when an existing file is reopened.

     Please create any directory names in the file path before calling this
     function.

   allocGlobalHash()
       my $h = $m->allocGlobalHash();

     If the backing file is being created, this will create a hash in the
     new file. If the backing file is being reopened, $h will refer to the
     existing global hash. Sub arrays and hashes can then be auto vivified
     from this hash:

       $h->{a}[1]{b}[2] = "ccc";

   allocGlobalArray()
       my $a = $m->allocGlobalArray();

     If the backing file is being created, this will create an array in the
     new file. If the backing file is being reopened, $a will refer to the
     existing global array. Sub arrays and hashes can then be auto vivified
     from this array:

       $a->[1]{a}[2]{b} = "ccc";

 Units Of Work
   Use these methods to start and end units of work. A unit of work is a
   sequence of operations that must either complete or whose effect must be
   completely removed from the memory area.

   begin_work()
       $m->begin_work();

     Starts a unit of work.

     Normally, changes are committed continuously. Calling begin_work()
     starts logging changes so that they can be rolled back with
     "rollback()" or committed with "commit()". Uncommitted changes are
     automatically rolled back if the backing file is reopened with
     "file()".

     Units of work are not nested. Calling "begin_work()" more than once
     before a matching "commit()" or "rollback()" has no effect.

   commit()
       $m->commit();

     Commit changes made in the current unit of work and return to
     continuous commit mode.

   rollback()
       $m->rollback();

     Rollback changes made in the current unit of work and return to
     continuous commit mode.

 Debugging
   dump()
       $m->dump("dump.data");

     Dump the memory area to file: dump.data.

   size()
       my $s = 2 **($m->size());

     $s will contain the size in bytes of the memory area.

   dahs()
       $m->dahs();

     Dump the sizes of internal arrays and hashes to stderr.

Limitations
   Windows only.

   The delete() function for arrays has not been implemented as its use is
   deprecated.

   Code, file handles and typeglobs are not supported.

Exports
   None.

Installation
   The usual installation sequence modified slightly by being on Windows.

     perl Makefile.PL
     dmake
     dmake test
     dmake install

   If you do not have gcc and dmake, you can get them from
   http::www.strawberryperl.org

See Also
   DBM::Deep

Acknowledgements
   DBM::Deep::Blue uses many of the tests from by DBM::Deep.

Bugs
   Please report bugs etc. through CPAN. To include a dump of your memory
   area with your bug report, call:

     my $m = DBM::Deep::Blue::File(...);

     ... actions which demonstrate the bug

     $m->dump("zzz.data");

   and include file zzz.data with your bug report.

Licence
   Perl Artistic

Copyright
   Philip R Brenan, 2010, www.handybackup.org