NAME
Mojolicious::Guides - The Mojolicious Guide to the Galaxy
DON'T PANIC!
The Mojolicious documentation is structured into three parts. The "TUTORIAL" everyone starts with, the "GUIDES" that explain all major features in detail, and the "API" reference listing all available classes.
Some parts of the documentation only use the Mojolicious::Lite micro web framework for examples, but that's merely a convenience for the reader. Almost all features are exactly the same for full Mojolicious applications.
BASICS
Learning Perl
If you are new to Perl, we recommend Learn Perl in 2 hours 30 minutes for a quick introduction, or the Modern Perl book, freely available in many formats. Both are excellent introductions to the language. For more books and documentation, check out learn.perl.org.
Learning Web Technologies
All web development starts with HTML, CSS and JavaScript, to learn the basics we recommend the Mozilla Developer Network. And if you want to know more about how browsers and web servers actually communicate, there's also a very nice introduction to HTTP.
CONVENTIONS
Modern Perl
Mojolicious uses a modern subset of Perl exclusively, and therefore all documentation assumes that strict, warnings, utf8 and Perl 5.16 features are enabled, even if examples don't specifically mention it.
use strict;
use warnings;
use utf8;
use feature ':5.16';
Some modules, like Mojo::Base and Mojolicious::Lite, will enable them for you automatically, whenever they are used.
Signatures
On Perl 5.20+ you can also use the -signatures
flag with Mojo::Base to enable support for subroutine signatures. Signatures are used in all examples for clarity, even when -signatures
is omitted for brevity.
Variable names
For brevity and clarity, example variables will reflect the type of data the API uses. For instance, $bytes
or $chars
to distinguish whether it is encoded bytes or decoded characters in a Perl string, $bool
if the value just indicates true or false, $c
to denote a Mojolicious::Controller object, or $app
to denote the application object.
TUTORIAL
- Mojolicious::Guides::Tutorial
-
A fast and fun way to get started developing web applications with Mojolicious. The tutorial introduces the Mojolicious::Lite micro web framework, which is only a thin wrapper around the full web framework. The simplified notation introduced in the tutorial is commonly used throughout the guides and is therefore considered a prerequisite, you should definitely take a look!
GUIDES
- Mojolicious::Guides::Growing
-
Starting a Mojolicious::Lite prototype from scratch and growing it into a well-structured Mojolicious application.
- Mojolicious::Guides::Routing
-
Simple and fun introduction to the Mojolicious router.
- Mojolicious::Guides::Rendering
-
Generating content with the Mojolicious renderer.
- Mojolicious::Guides::Testing
-
Powerful yet elegant testing techniques and tools for Mojolicious and other web applications.
- Mojolicious::Guides::Cookbook
-
Cooking with Mojolicious, recipes for every taste.
- Mojolicious::Guides::Contributing
-
Become a part of the ongoing Mojolicious development.
- Mojolicious::Guides::FAQ
-
Answers to the most frequently asked questions.
HIGHLIGHTS
Mojolicious and Mojolicious::Lite are the sum of many parts, built on top of the Mojo web development toolkit. Small building blocks that can be used independently for all kinds of applications, these are the most prominent ones.
- Mojo::UserAgent
-
Full featured non-blocking I/O HTTP and WebSocket user agent.
- Mojo::DOM
-
Very fun and minimalistic HTML/XML DOM parser with CSS selector support.
- Mojo::JSON
-
Minimalistic JSON implementation that just works.
- Mojo::Server::Daemon
-
Full featured, highly portable non-blocking I/O HTTP and WebSocket server, with self-restart support through Mojo::Server::Morbo, perfect for development and testing.
- Mojo::Server::Prefork
-
Full featured, UNIX optimized, preforking non-blocking I/O HTTP and WebSocket server with support for zero downtime software upgrades (hot deployment) through Mojo::Server::Hypnotoad.
- Mojo::Server::CGI, Mojo::Server::PSGI
-
Transparent CGI and PSGI support out of the box.
- Mojo::IOLoop
-
A minimalistic event loop with support for multiple reactor backends.
- Mojo::Template
-
Very Perl-ish and minimalistic template system.
- Test::Mojo
-
Testing toolkit for web applications.
- ojo
-
Fun one-liners using everything above.
FULL-STACK
These modules are not part of the Mojolicious distribution, but have been designed to be used with it and are being developed under the same umbrella.
- Mojo::Pg
-
A tiny wrapper around DBD::Pg that makes PostgreSQL a lot of fun to use with Mojolicious. Perform queries blocking and non-blocking, use all SQL features PostgreSQL has to offer, generate CRUD queries from data structures, manage your database schema with migrations and build scalable real-time web applications with the publish/subscribe pattern.
Examples: The minimal chat application will show you how to scale WebSockets to multiple servers, and the well-structured blog application how to apply the MVC design pattern in practice.
- Minion
-
A full featured job queue for Mojolicious with support for multiple backends (such as PostgreSQL). Job queues allow you to process time and/or computationally intensive tasks in background processes, outside of the request/response lifecycle. Among those tasks you'll commonly find image resizing, spam filtering, HTTP downloads, building tarballs, warming caches and basically everything else you can imagine that's not super fast.
Examples: The link checker will show you how to integrate background jobs into well-structured Mojolicious applications.
API
This is the class hierarchy of the Mojolicious distribution.
MORE
A lot more documentation and examples by many different authors can be found in the Mojolicious wiki.
SUPPORT
If you have any questions the documentation might not yet answer, don't hesitate to ask in the Forum, on Matrix, or IRC.