NAME
Poet::Mason -- Mason settings and enhancements for Poet
SYNOPSIS
# In a conf file...
mason:
plugins:
- Cache
- TidyObjectFiles
- +My::Mason::Plugin
static_source: 1
static_source_touch_file: ${root}/data/purge.dat
# Get the main Mason instance
my $mason = Poet::Mason->instance();
# Create a new Mason object
my $mason = Poet::Mason->new(...);
DESCRIPTION
This is a Poet-specific Mason subclass. It sets up sane default settings, maintains a main Mason instance for handling web requests, and adds Poet-specific methods to $m
(the Mason request object).
CLASS METHODS
- get_options
-
Returns a hash of Mason options by combining default settings and configuration.
- instance
-
Returns the main Mason instance used for web requests, which is created with options from get_options.
- new
-
Returns a new main Mason object, using options from get_options. Unless you specifically need a new object, you probably want to call instance.
DEFAULT SETTINGS
comp_root
is set to $env->comps_dir, by default thecomps
subdirectory under the environment root.data_dir
is set to $env->data_dir, by default thedata
subdirectory under the environment root.plugins
is set to include Cache, HTMLFilters and RouterSimple.cache_root_class
(a parameter of theCache
plugin) is set toMyApp::Cache
if it exists (replacingMyApp
with your app name), otherwisePoet::Cache
.
CONFIGURATION
The Poet configuration entry 'mason', if any, will be treated as a hash of options that supplements and/or overrides the defaults above. If the hash contains 'extra_plugins', these will be added to the default plugins. e.g.
mason:
static_source: 1
static_source_touch_file: ${root}/data/purge.dat
extra_plugins:
- AnotherFavoritePlugin
QUICK VARS AND UTILITIES
Poet inserts the following line at the top of of every compiled Mason component:
use Poet qw($conf $env :web);
which means that $conf, $env, and web utilities are available from every component.
NEW REQUEST METHODS
Under Poet these additional web-related methods are available in the Mason request object, accessible in components via $m
or elsewhere via Mason::Request->current_request
.
- req ()
-
A reference to the Plack::Request object. e.g.
my $user_agent = $m->req->headers->header('User-Agent');
- res ()
-
A reference to the Plack::Response object. e.g.
$m->res->content_type('text/plain');
- abort (status)
- clear_and_abort (status)
-
These methods are overriden to set the response status before aborting, if status is provided. e.g. to send back a FORBIDDEN result:
$m->clear_and_abort(403);
This is equivalent to
$m->res->status(403); $m->clear_and_abort();
If a status is not provided, the methods work just as before.
- redirect (url[, status])
-
Sets headers and status for redirect, then clears the Mason buffer and aborts the request. e.g.
$m->redirect("http://somesite.com", 302);
is equivalent to
$m->res->redirect("http://somesite.com", 302); $m->clear_and_abort();
- not_found ()
-
Sets the status to 404, then clears the Mason buffer and aborts the request. e.g.
$m->not_found();
is equivalent to
$m->clear_and_abort(404);
- session
-
A shortcut for
$m->req->session
, the Plack session. This is simply a persistent hash that you can read from and write to. It is tied to the user's browser session via cookies and stored in a file cache in the data directory (by default).my $value = $m->session->{key}; $m->session->{key} = { some_complex => ['value'] };
- send_json ($data)
-
Output the JSON-encoded $data, set the content type to "application/json", and abort. e.g.
method handle { my $data; # compute data somehow $m->send_json($data); }
send_json
is a shortcut for$m->clear_buffer; $m->print(JSON::XS::encode_json($data)); $m->res->content_type("application/json"); $m->abort();
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Jonathan Swartz.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.