CGI::Prototype.3pm

Langue: en

Autres versions - même langue

Version: 2005-05-12 (fedora - 01/12/10)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

CGI::Prototype - Create a CGI application by subclassing

SYNOPSIS

   package My::HelloWorld;
   use base CGI::Prototype;
 
   sub template { \ <<'END_OF_TEMPLATE' }
   [% self.CGI.header; %]
   Hello world at [% USE Date; Date.format(date.now) | html %]!
   END_OF_TEMPLATE
 
   My::HelloWorld->activate;
 
 

DESCRIPTION

The core of every CGI application seems to be roughly the same:
*
Analyze the incoming parameters, cookies, and URLs to determine the state of the application (let's call this ``dispatch'').
*
Based on the current state, analyze the incoming parameters to respond to any form submitted (``respond'').
*
From there, decide what response page should be generated, and produce it (``render'').

CGI::Prototype creates a "Class::Prototyped" engine for doing all this, with the right amount of callback hooks to customize the process. Because I'm biased toward Template Toolkit for rendering HTML, I've also integrated that as my rendering engine of choice. And, being a fan of clean MVC designs, the classes become the controllers, and the templates become the views, with clean separation of responsibilities, and "CGI::Prototype" a sort of ``archetypal'' controller.

You can create the null application by simply activating it:

   use CGI::Prototype;
   CGI::Prototype->activate;
 
 

But this won't be very interesting. You'll want to subclass this class in a "Class::Prototyped"-style manner to override most of its behavior. Slots can be added to add or alter behavior. You can subclass your subclasses when groups of your CGI pages share similar behavior. The possibilities are mind-boggling.

Within the templates, "self" refers to the current controller. Thus, you can define callbacks trivially. In your template, if you need some data, you can pull it as a request:

   [% my_data = self.get_some_big_data %]
 
 

which is supplied by simply adding the same slot (method or data) in the controlling class:

   sub get_some_big_data {
     my $self = shift;
     return $self->some_other_method(size => 'big');
   }
 
 

And since the classes are hierarchical, you can start out with an implementation for one page, then move it to a region or globally quickly.

Although the name "CGI::Prototype" implies a CGI protocol, I see no reason that this would not work with "Apache::Registry" in a "mod_perl" environment, or a direct content handler such as:

   package My::App;
   use base CGI::Prototype;
   sub handler {
     __PACKAGE__->activate;
   }
 
 

Note that the $r request object will have to be created if needed if you use this approach.

CORE SLOTS

These slots provide core functionality. You will probably not need to override these.
activate
Invoke the "activate" slot to ``activate'' your application, causing it to process the incoming CGI values, select a page to be respond to the parameters, which in turn selects a page to render, and then responds with that page. For example, your App might consist only of:
   package My::App;
   use base qw(CGI::Prototype);
   My::App->activate;
 
 

Again, this will not be interesting, but it shows that the null app is easy to create. Almost always, you will want to override some of the ``callback'' slots below.

CGI
Invoking "$self->CGI" gives you access to the CGI.pm object representing the incoming parameters and other CGI.pm-related values. For example,
   $self->CGI->self_url
 
 

generates a self-referencing URL. From a template, this is:

   [% self.CGI.self_url %]
 
 

for the same thing.

See "initialize_CGI" for how this slot gets established.

render
The "render" method uses the results from "engine" and "template" to process a selected template through Template Toolkit. If the result does not throw an error, "$self->display" is called to show the result.
display
The "display" method is called to render the output of the template under normal circumstances, normally dumping the first parameter to "STDOUT". Test harnesses may override this method to cause the output to appear into a variable, but normally this method is left alone.
param
The "param" method is a convenience method that maps to "$self->CGI->param", because accessing params is a very common thing.
interstitial
Please note that this feature is still experimental and subject to change.

Use this in your per-page respond methods if you have a lot of heavy processing to perform. For example, suppose you're deleting something, and it takes 5 seconds to do the first step, and 3 seconds to do the second step, and then you want to go back to normal web interaction. Simulating the heavy lifting with sleep, we get:

   my $p = $self->interstitial
     ({ message => "Your delete is being processed...",
        action => sub { sleep 5 },
      },
      { message => "Just a few seconds more....",
        action => sub { sleep 3 },
      },
     );
   return $p if $p;
 
 

"interstitial" returns either a page that should be returned so that it can be rendered (inside a wrapper that provides the standard top and bottom of your application page), or "undef".

The list passed to "interstitial" should be a series of hashrefs with one or more parameters reflecting the steps:

message
What the user should see while the step is computing. (Default: "Working...".)
action
A coderef with the action performed server-side during the message. (Default: no action.)
delay
The number of seconds the browser should wait before initiating the next connection, triggering the start of "action". (Default: 0 seconds.)

The user sees the first message at the first call to "interstitial" (via the first returned page), at which time a meta-refresh will immediately repost the same parameters as on the call that got you here. (Thus, it's important not to have changed the params yet, or you might end up in a different part of your code.) When the call to "interstitial" is re-executed, the first coderef is then performed. At the end of that coderef, the second interstitial page is returned, and the user sees the second message, which then performs the next meta-refresh, which gets us back to this call to "interstitial" again (whew). The second coderef is executed while the user is seeing the second message, and then "interstitial" returns "undef", letting us roll through to the final code. Slick.
config_interstitial_param
This parameter is used by "interstitial" to determine the processing step. You should ensure that the name doesn't conflict with any other param that you might need.

The default value is "_interstitial".

CALLBACK SLOTS

engine
The engine returns a Template object that will be generating any response. The object is computed lazily (with autoloading) when needed.

The Template object is passed the configuration returned from the "engine_config" callback.

engine_config
Returns a hashref of desired parameters to pass to the "Template" "new" method as a configuration. Defaults to an empty hash.
prototype_enter
Called when the prototype mechanism is entered, at the very beginning of each hit. Defaults to calling "-"initialize_CGI>, which see.

Generally, you should not override this method. If you do, be sure to call the SUPER method, in case future versions of this module need additional initialization.

prototype_leave
Called when the prototype mechanism is exited, at the very end of each hit. Defaults to no action.

Generally, you should not override this method. If you do, be sure to call the SUPER method, in case future versions of this module need additional teardown.

initialize_CGI
Sets up the CGI slot as an autoload, defaulting to creating a new CGI.pm object. Called from "prototype_enter".
app_enter
Called when the application is entered, at the very beginning of each hit. Defaults to no action.
app_leave
Called when the application is left, at the very end of each hit. Defaults to no action.
control_enter
Called when a page gains control, either at the beginning for a response, or in the middle when switched for rendering. Defaults to nothing.

This is a great place to hang per-page initialization, because you'll get this callback at most once per hit.

control_leave
Called when a page loses control, either after a response phase because we're switching to a new page, or render phase after we've delivered the new text to the browser.

This is a great place to hang per-page teardown, because you'll get this callback at most once per hit.

render_enter
Called when a page gains control specifically for rendering (delivering text to the browser), just after "control_enter" if needed.
render_leave
Called when a page loses control specifically for rendering (delivering text to the browser), just before "control_leave".
respond_enter
Called when a page gains control specifically for responding (understanding the incoming parameters, and deciding what page should render the response), just after "control_enter".
respond_leave
Called when a page loses control specifically for rendering (understanding the incoming parameters, and deciding what page should render the response), just before "control_leave" (if needed).
template
Delivers a template document object (something compatible to the "Template" "process" method, such as a "Template::Document" or a filehandle or a reference to a scalar). The default is a simple ``this page intentionally left blank'' template.

When rendered, the only extra global variable passed into the template is the "self" variable, representing the controller object. However, as seen earlier, this is sufficient to allow access to anything you need from the template, thanks to Template Toolkit's ability to call methods on an object and understand the results.

For example, to get at the "barney" parameter:

   The barney field is [% self.param("barney") | html %].
 
 
error
Called if an uncaught error is triggered in any of the other steps, passing the error text or object as the first method parameter. The default callback simply displays the output to the browser, which is highly insecure and should be overridden, perhaps with something that logs the error and puts up a generic error message with an incident code for tracking.
dispatch
Called to analyze the incoming parameters to define which page object gets control based on the incoming CGI parameters.

This callback must return a page object (the object taking control during the response phase). By default, this callback returns the application itself.

respond
Called to determine how to respond specifically to this set of incoming parameters. Probably updates databases and such.

This callback must return a page object (the object taking control during the render phase). By default, this callback returns the same object that had control during the response phase (``stay here'' logic), which works most of the time.

SEE ALSO

Class::Prototyped, Template::Manual, <http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col56.html>.

BUG REPORTS

Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-cgi-prototype@rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

AUTHOR

Randal L. Schwartz, <merlyn@stonehenge.com>

Special thanks to Geekcruises.com and an unnamed large university for providing funding for the development of this module.

Copyright (C) 2003, 2004, 2005 by Randal L. Schwartz

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.5 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.