NAME
Mojolicious::Lite - Micro Web Framework
SYNOPSIS
# Using Mojolicious::Lite will enable "strict" and "warnings"
use Mojolicious::Lite;
# Route with placeholder
get '/:foo' => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render_text('Yea baby!');
};
# Start the Mojolicious command system
shagadelic;
DESCRIPTION
Mojolicous::Lite is a micro web framework built around Mojolicious.
A minimal application looks like this.
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use Mojolicious::Lite;
get '/' => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render_text('Yea baby!');
};
shagadelic;
There is also a helper command to generate a small example application.
% mojolicious generate lite_app
All the normal Mojolicious command options are available from the command line.
% ./myapp.pl daemon
Server available at http://127.0.0.1:3000.
% ./myapp.pl daemon 8080
Server available at http://127.0.0.1:8080.
% ./myapp.pl daemon_prefork
Server available at http://127.0.0.1:3000.
% ./myapp.pl cgi
...CGI output...
% ./myapp.pl fastcgi
...Blocking FastCGI main loop...
The shagadelic call that starts the Mojolicious command system can be customized to override normal @ARGV
use.
shagadelic('cgi');
Routes are basically just fancy paths that can contain different kinds of placeholders.
# /foo
get '/foo' => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render_text('Yea baby!');
};
All routes can have a name associated with them, this allows automatic template detection and back referencing with url_for
. Names are always the last argument.
# /
get '/' => 'index';
# /foo
get '/foo' => 'foo';
# /bar
get '/bar' => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render_text('Hi!')
} => 'bar';
__DATA__
@@ index.html.ep
<a href="<%= url_for 'foo' %>">Foo</a>.
<a href="<%= url_for 'bar' %>">Bar</a>.
@@ foo.html.ep
<a href="<%= url_for 'index' %>">Home</a>.
Templates can have layouts.
# GET /with_layout
get '/with_layout' => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render('with_layout', layout => 'green');
};
__DATA__
@@ with_layout.html.ep
We've got content!
@@ layouts/green.html.ep
<!doctype html><html>
<head><title>Green!</title></head>
<body><%== content %></body>
</html>
Route placeholders allow capturing parts of a request path until a /
or .
separator occurs, results will be stored by name in the stash
.
# /foo/*
get '/foo/:bar' => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $bar = $self->stash('bar');
$self->render_text("Our :bar placeholder matched $bar");
};
# /*something/foo
get '/(:bar)something/foo' => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $bar = $self->stash('bar');
$self->render_text("Our :bar placeholder matched $bar");
};
Relaxed placeholders allow matching of everything until a /
occurs.
# GET /hello/*
get '/hello/(.you)' => sub {
shift->render('groovy');
};
__DATA__
@@ groovy.html.ep
Your name is <%= $you %>.
Wildcard placeholders allow matching absolutely everything, including /
and .
.
# /hello/*
get '/hello/(*you)' => sub {
shift->render('groovy');
};
__DATA__
@@ groovy.html.ep
Your name is <%= $you %>.
Routes can be restricted to specific request methods.
# GET /bye
get '/bye' => sub { shift->render_text('Bye!') };
# POST /bye
post '/bye' => sub { shift->render_text('Bye!') };
# GET|POST|DELETE /bye
any [qw/get post delete/] => '/bye' => sub {
shift->render_text('Bye!');
};
# /baz
any '/baz' => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $method = $self->req->method;
$self->render_text("You called /baz with $method");
};
All placeholders get compiled to a regex internally, with regex constraints this process can be easily customized.
# /*
any '/:bar' => [bar => qr/\d+/] => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $bar = $self->stash('bar');
$self->render_text("Our :bar placeholder matched $bar");
};
Routes allow default values to make placeholders optional.
# /hello/*
get '/hello/:name' => {name => 'Sebastian'} => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render('groovy', format => 'txt');
};
__DATA__
@@ groovy.txt.ep
My name is <%= $name %>.
All those features can be easily used together.
# /everything/*?name=*
get '/everything/:stuff' => [stuff => qr/\d+/] => {stuff => 23} => sub {
shift->render('welcome');
};
__DATA__
@@ welcome.html.ep
Stuff is <%= $stuff %>.
Query param name is <%= param 'name' %>.
Here's a fully functional example for a html form handling application using multiple features at once.
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use Mojolicious::Lite;
get '/' => 'index';
post '/form' => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $groovy = $self->param('groovy') || 'Austin Powers';
$groovy =~ s/[^\w\s]+//g;
$self->render(
template => 'welcome',
layout => 'funky',
groovy => $groovy
);
} => 'form';
shagadelic;
__DATA__
@@ index.html.ep
% layout 'funky');
Who is groovy?
<form action="<%= url_for 'form' %>" method="POST">
<input type="text" name="groovy" />
<input type="submit" value="Woosh!">
</form>
@@ welcome.html.ep
<%= $groovy %> is groovy!
<%== include 'menu' %>
@@ menu.html.ep
<a href="<%= url_for 'index' %>">Try again</a>
@@ layouts/funky.html.ep
<!doctype html><html>
<head><title>Funky!</title></head>
<body><%== content %>
</body>
</html>
Conditions such as agent
allow even more powerful route constructs.
# /foo
get '/foo' => (agent => qr/Firefox/) => sub {
shift->render_text('Congratulations, you are using a cool browser!');
}
# /foo
get '/foo' => (agent => qr/Internet Explorer/) => sub {
shift->render_text('Dude, you really need to upgrade to Firefox!');
}
Formats can be automatically detected by looking at file extensions.
# /detection.html
# /detection.txt
get '/detection' => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render('detected');
};
__DATA__
@@ detected.html.ep
<!doctype html><html>
<head><title>Detected!</title></head>
<body>HTML was detected.</body>
</html>
@@ detected.txt.ep
TXT was detected.
External templates will be searched by the renderer in a templates
directory.
# /external
any '/external' => sub {
my $self = shift;
# templates/foo/bar.html.ep
$self->render('foo/bar');
};
Static files will be automatically served from the public
directory if it exists.
% mkdir public
% mv something.js public/something.js
To disable debug messages later in a production setup you can change the Mojolicious mode, default will be development
.
% MOJO_MODE=production ./myapp.pl
Log messages will be automatically written to a log/$mode.log
file if a log
directory exists.
% mkdir log
For more control the Mojolicious instance can be accessed directly.
app->log->level('error');
app->routes->route('/foo/:bar')->via('get')->to(callback => sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->render_text('Hello Mojo!');
});
In case a lite app needs to grow, lite and real Mojolicous applications can be easily mixed to make the transition process very smooth.
package MyApp::Foo;
use base 'Mojolicious::Controller';
sub index { shift->render_text('It works!') }
package main;
use Mojolicious::Lite;
get '/bar' => sub { shift->render_text('This too!') };
app->routes->namespace('MyApp');
app->routes->route('/foo/:action')->via('get')
->to(controller => 'foo', action => index);
shagadelic;
ATTRIBUTES
Mojolicious::Lite inherits all attributes from Mojolicious.
METHODS
Mojolicious::Lite inherits all methods from Mojolicious and implements the following new ones.
new
my $mojo = Mojolicious::Lite->new;