NAME
HTML::Mason::Params - Mason configuration parameters
DESCRIPTION
This document lists all of the Mason configuration parameters that are intended to be used by end users.
PERL AND APACHE NAMES
Each parameter has two names: a Perl version and an Apache version. The Perl version uses lowercase_with_underscores
, while the Apache version uses StudlyCaps
with a Mason
prefix. The conversion from one version to the other is otherwise very predictable. For example,
autohandler_name
<-->
MasonAutohandlerName
comp_root
<-->
MasonCompRoot
data_cache_defaults
<-->
MasonDataCacheDefaults
Where Apache Names Are Used
The Apache parameter names are used in the Apache configuration file in an httpd-based configuration. They are only effective if you have
PerlHandler HTML::Mason::ApacheHandler
in your httpd.conf
. They cannot be used in conjunction with a handler.pl-based configuration.
Where Perl Names Are Used
The Perl parameter names are used from Perl code, i.e. anywhere other than the Apache configuration file. For example,
In an handler.pl-based configuration, you can pass most of these parameters to the ApacheHandler constructor.
In a standalone Mason script, you can pass most of these parameters to the Interp constructor.
When launching a subrequest, you can pass any of the
HTML::Mason::Request
parameters to make_subrequest.
PARAMETERS
allow_globals
Perl name: | allow_globals | |
Apache name: | MasonAllowGlobals | |
Type: | list | |
Default: | [] | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler |
List of variable names, complete with prefix ($@%
), that you intend to use as globals in components. Normally global variables are forbidden by strict
, but any variable mentioned in this list is granted a reprieve via a "use vars" statement. For example:
allow_globals => [qw($DBH %session)]
In a mod_perl environment, $r
(the request object) is automatically added to this list.
apache_status_title
Perl name: | apache_status_title | |
Apache name: | MasonApacheStatusTitle | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason status | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::ApacheHandler |
Title that you want this ApacheHandler to appear as under Apache::Status. Default is "HTML::Mason status". This is useful if you create more than one ApacheHandler object and want them all visible via Apache::Status.
args_method
Perl name: | args_method | |
Apache name: | MasonArgsMethod | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | mod_perl | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::ApacheHandler |
Method to use for unpacking GET and POST arguments. The valid options are 'CGI' and 'mod_perl'; these indicate that a CGI.pm
or Apache::Request
object (respectively) will be created for the purposes of argument handling.
'mod_perl' is the default and requires that you have installed the Apache::Request
package.
If the args_method is 'CGI', the Mason request object ($m
) will have a method called cgi_object
available. This method returns the CGI object used for argument processing.
If args_method is 'mod_perl', the $r
global is upgraded to an Apache::Request object. This object inherits all Apache methods and adds a few of its own, dealing with parameters and file uploads. See Apache::Request
for more information.
While Mason will load Apache::Request
or CGI
as needed at runtime, it is recommended that you preload the relevant module either in your httpd.conf or handler.pl file, as this will save some memory.
auto_send_headers
Perl name: | auto_send_headers | |
Apache name: | MasonAutoSendHeaders | |
Type: | boolean | |
Default: | 1 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request::ApacheHandler |
True or false, default is true. Indicates whether Mason should automatically send HTTP headers before sending content back to the client. If you set to false, you should call $r->send_http_header
manually.
See the sending HTTP headers section of the developer's manual for more details about the automatic header feature.
autoflush
Perl name: | autoflush | |
Apache name: | MasonAutoflush | |
Type: | boolean | |
Default: | 0 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
True or false, default is false. Indicates whether to flush the output buffer after every string is output. Turn on autoflush if you need to send partial output to the client, for example in a progress meter.
autohandler_name
Perl name: | autohandler_name | |
Apache name: | MasonAutohandlerName | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | autohandler | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
File name used for autohandlers. Default is "autohandler".
buffer_class
Perl name: | buffer_class | |
Apache name: | MasonBufferClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Buffer | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
The class to use when creating buffers. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Buffer.
code_cache_max_size
Perl name: | code_cache_max_size | |
Apache name: | MasonCodeCacheMaxSize | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | 10485760 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
Specifies the maximum size, in bytes, of the in-memory code cache where components are stored. Default is 10 MB. See the code cache section of the administrator's manual for further details.
comp_class
Perl name: | comp_class | |
Apache name: | MasonCompClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Component | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject |
The class into which component objects are blessed. This defaults to HTML::Mason::Component.
comp_root
Perl name: | comp_root | |
Apache name: | MasonCompRoot | |
Type: | list | |
Default: | Varies | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Resolver::File |
The component root marks the top of your component hierarchy and defines how component paths are translated into real file paths. For example, if your component root is /usr/local/httpd/docs, a component path of /products/index.html translates to the file /usr/local/httpd/docs/products/index.html.
Under Apache and CGI, comp_root defaults to the server's document root. In standalone mode comp_root defaults to the current working directory.
This parameter may be either a scalar or an array reference. If it is a scalar, it should be a filesystem path indicating the component root. If it is an array reference, it should be of the following form:
[ [ key1 => '/path/to/root' ],
[ key2 => '/path/to/other/root' ] ]
The "keys" for each path must be unique names and their "values" must be filesystem paths. These paths will be searched in the provided order whenever a component path must be resolved to a filesystem path.
compiler_class
Perl name: | compiler_class | |
Apache name: | MasonCompilerClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
The class to use when creating a compiler. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Compiler.
current_time
Perl name: | current_time | |
Apache name: | MasonCurrentTime | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | real | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
Interpreter's notion of the current time (deprecated).
data_cache_api
Perl name: | data_cache_api | |
Apache name: | MasonDataCacheApi | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | 1.1 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
The $m->cache
API to use. '1.1', the default, indicates the newer API documented in this manual. '1.0' indicates the old API documented in 1.0x and earlier. This compatibility layer is provided as a convenience for users upgrading from older versions of Mason, but will not be supported indefinitely.
data_cache_defaults
Perl name: | data_cache_defaults | |
Apache name: | MasonDataCacheDefaults | |
Type: | hash | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
A hash reference of default options to use for the $m->cache
command. For example, to use the MemoryCache
implementation by default,
data_cache_defaults => {cache_class => 'MemoryCache'}
These settings are overriden by options given to particular $m->cache
calls.
data_dir
Perl name: | data_dir | |
Apache name: | MasonDataDir | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
The data directory is a writable directory that Mason uses for various features and optimizations: for example, component object files and data cache files. Mason will create the directory on startup, if necessary, and set its permissions according to the web server User/Group.
Under Apache, data_dir defaults to a directory called "mason" under the Apache server root. You will need to change this on certain systems that assign a high-level server root such as /usr!
In non-Apache environments, data_dir has no default. If it is left unspecified, Mason will not use object files, and the default data cache class will be MemoryCache
instead of FileCache
.
decline_dirs
Perl name: | decline_dirs | |
Apache name: | MasonDeclineDirs | |
Type: | boolean | |
Default: | 1 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::ApacheHandler |
True or false, default is true. Indicates whether Mason should decline directory requests, leaving Apache to serve up a directory index or a FORBIDDEN
error as appropriate. See the allowing directory requests section of the administrator's manual for more information about handling directories with Mason.
default_escape_flags
Perl name: | default_escape_flags | |
Apache name: | MasonDefaultEscapeFlags | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | [] | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler |
Escape flags to apply to all <% %> expressions by default. The current valid flags are
h - escape for HTML ('<' => '<', etc.)
u - escape for URL (':' => '%3A', etc.)
The developer can override default escape flags on a per-expression basis; see the escaping expressions section of the developer's manual.
If you want to set multiple flags as the default, this should be given as a reference to an array of flags.
dhandler_name
Perl name: | dhandler_name | |
Apache name: | MasonDhandlerName | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | dhandler | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
File name used for dhandlers. Default is "dhandler".
error_format
Perl name: | error_format | |
Apache name: | MasonErrorFormat | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | Varies | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
Indicates how errors are formatted. The built-in choices are
brief - just the error message with no trace information
text - a multi-line text format
line - a single-line text format, with different pieces of information separated by tabs (useful for log files)
html - a fancy html format
The default format under Apache and CGI is either line or html depending on whether the error mode is fatal or output, respectively. The default for standalone mode is text.
The formats correspond to HTML::Mason::Exception
methods named as_format. You can define your own format by creating an appropriately named method; for example, to define an "xml" format, create a method HTML::Mason::Exception::as_xml
patterned after one of the built-in methods.
error_mode
Perl name: | error_mode | |
Apache name: | MasonErrorMode | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | Varies | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
Indicates how errors are returned to the caller. The choices are fatal, meaning die with the error, and output, meaning output the error just like regular output.
The default under Apache and CGI is output, causing the error to be displayed in the browser. The default for standalone mode is fatal.
escape_flags
Perl name: | escape_flags | |
Apache name: | MasonEscapeFlags | |
Type: | list | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
A hash reference of escape flags to set for this object. See the section on the set_escape method for more details.
ignore_warnings_expr
Perl name: | ignore_warnings_expr | |
Apache name: | MasonIgnoreWarningsExpr | |
Type: | regex | |
Default: | qr/Subroutine .* redefined/i | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
Regular expression indicating which warnings to ignore when loading components. Any warning that is not ignored will prevent the component from being loaded and executed. For example:
ignore_warnings_expr =>
'Global symbol.*requires explicit package'
If undef, all warnings are heeded; if '.', all warnings are ignored.
By default, this is set to 'Subroutine .* redefined'. This allows you to declare global subroutines inside <%once> sections and not receive an error when the component is reloaded.
in_package
Perl name: | in_package | |
Apache name: | MasonInPackage | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Commands | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject |
This is the package in which a component's code is executed. For historical reasons, this defaults to HTML::Mason::Commands
.
interp_class
Perl name: | interp_class | |
Apache name: | MasonInterpClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Interp | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::ApacheHandler |
The class to use when creating a interpreter. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Interp.
lexer_class
Perl name: | lexer_class | |
Apache name: | MasonLexerClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Lexer | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler |
The class to use when creating a lexer. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Lexer.
max_recurse
Perl name: | max_recurse | |
Apache name: | MasonMaxRecurse | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | 32 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
The maximum recursion depth for the component stack, for the request stack, and for the inheritance stack. An error is signalled if the maximum is exceeded. Default is 32.
out_method
Perl name: | out_method | |
Apache name: | MasonOutMethod | |
Type: | code | |
Default: | Print to STDOUT | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Request |
Indicates where to send output. If out_method is a reference to a scalar, output is appended to the scalar. If out_method is a reference to a subroutine, the subroutine is called with each output string. For example, to send output to a file called "mason.out":
my $fh = new IO::File ">mason.out";
...
out_method => sub { $fh->print($_[0]) }
By default, out_method prints to standard output. Under Apache, standard output is redirected to $r->print
.
postamble
Perl name: | postamble | |
Apache name: | MasonPostamble | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject |
Text given for this parameter is placed at the end of each component. See also preamble.
postprocess_perl
Perl name: | postprocess_perl | |
Apache name: | MasonPostprocessPerl | |
Type: | code | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler |
Sub reference that is called to postprocess the Perl portion of a compiled component, just before it is assembled into its final subroutine form. The sub is called with a single parameter, a scalar reference to the Perl portion of the component. The sub is expected to process the string in-place. See also preprocess and postprocess_text.
postprocess_text
Perl name: | postprocess_text | |
Apache name: | MasonPostprocessText | |
Type: | code | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler |
Sub reference that is called to postprocess the text portion of a compiled component, just before it is assembled into its final subroutine form. The sub is called with a single parameter, a scalar reference to the text portion of the component. The sub is expected to process the string in-place. See also preprocess and postprocess_perl.
preamble
Perl name: | preamble | |
Apache name: | MasonPreamble | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject |
Text given for this parameter is placed at the beginning of each component. See also postamble.
preloads
Perl name: | preloads | |
Apache name: | MasonPreloads | |
Type: | list | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
A list of component paths, optionally with glob wildcards, to load when the interpreter initializes. e.g.
preloads => ['/foo/index.html','/bar/*.pl']
Default is the empty list. For maximum performance, this should only be used for components that are frequently viewed and rarely updated. See the preloading section of the administrator's manual for further details.
As mentioned in the developer's manual, a component's <%once>
section is executed when it is loaded. For preloaded components, this means that this section will be executed before a Mason or Apache request exist, so preloading a component that uses $m
or $r
in a <%once>
section will fail.
preprocess
Perl name: | preprocess | |
Apache name: | MasonPreprocess | |
Type: | code | |
Default: | None | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler |
Sub reference that is called to preprocess each component before Parser does it's magic. The sub is called with a single parameter, a scalar reference to the script. The sub is expected to process the script in-place. This is one way to extend the HTML::Mason syntax with new tags, etc., although a much more flexible way is to subclass the Lexer or Compiler class. See also postprocess_text and postprocess_perl.
request_class
Perl name: | request_class | |
Apache name: | MasonRequestClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Request | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
The class to use when creating requests. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Request.
resolver_class
Perl name: | resolver_class | |
Apache name: | MasonResolverClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Resolver::File | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
The class to use when creating a resolver. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Resolver::File.
static_source
Perl name: | static_source | |
Apache name: | MasonStaticSource | |
Type: | boolean | |
Default: | 0 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
True or false, default is false. When false, Mason checks the timestamp of the component source file each time the component is used to see if it has changed. This provides the instant feedback for source changes that is expected for development. However it does entail a file stat for each component executed.
When true, Mason assumes that the component source tree is unchanging: it will not check component source files to determine if the memory cache or object file has expired. This can save many file stats per request. However, in order to get Mason to recognize a component source change, you must remove object files and restart the server (so as to clear the memory cache).
Use this feature for live sites where performance is crucial and where updates are infrequent and well-controlled.
subcomp_class
Perl name: | subcomp_class | |
Apache name: | MasonSubcompClass | |
Type: | string | |
Default: | HTML::Mason::Component::Subcomponent | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject |
The class into which subcomponent objects are blessed. This defaults to HTML::Mason::Component::Subcomponent.
use_object_files
Perl name: | use_object_files | |
Apache name: | MasonUseObjectFiles | |
Type: | boolean | |
Default: | 1 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Interp |
True or false, default is true. Specifies whether Mason creates object files to save the results of component parsing. You may want to turn off object files for disk space reasons, but otherwise this should be left alone.
use_strict
Perl name: | use_strict | |
Apache name: | MasonUseStrict | |
Type: | boolean | |
Default: | 1 | |
Belongs to: | HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject |
True or false, default is true. Indicates whether or not a given component should use strict
.