NAME
CGI::Portable::AppMultiScreen - Delegate construction, navigation of hierarchical screens
DEPENDENCIES
Perl Version
5.004
Standard Modules
I<none>
Nonstandard Modules
CGI::Portable 0.461
CGI::Portable::AppStatic 0.461 (a superclass)
SYNOPSIS
Simple program with multiple screens from different modules:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
require CGI::Portable;
my $globals = CGI::Portable->new();
use Cwd;
$globals->file_path_root( cwd() ); # let us default to current working dir
$globals->file_path_delimiter( $^O=~/Mac/i ? ":" : $^O=~/Win/i ? "\\" : "/" );
require CGI::Portable::AdapterCGI;
my $io = CGI::Portable::AdapterCGI->new();
$io->fetch_user_input( $globals );
$globals->default_application_title( 'Demo Application' );
$globals->default_maintainer_name( 'Tony Simons' );
$globals->default_maintainer_email_address( 'tony@aardvark.net' );
$globals->current_user_path_level( 1 );
$globals->set_prefs( 'myconfig.pl' );
$globals->call_component( 'CGI::Portable::AppMultiScreen' );
$io->send_user_output( $globals );
1;
Content of file 'myconfig.pl' telling program what to do:
This is not a whole example, but you can get an idea what to substitute. This example shows 5 screens handled by 5 module instances, most of which has their own preferences and optional subdirectory for files.
my $rh_preferences = {
delegate_list => {
pg_one => {
file_subdir => 'statics',
preferences => { filename => 'welcome.html' },
module_name => 'other::module::textfile',
},
pg_two => {
file_subdir => 'content',
preferences => 'content_config.pl',
module_name => 'other::module::content',
},
pg_three => {
file_subdir => 'indexes',
preferences => { key1 => 'value1', key2 => 'value2' },
module_name => 'other::module::search',
},
pg_four => {
file_subdir => 'statics',
preferences => { filename => 'help.html' },
module_name => 'other::module::textfile',
},
},
default_delegate => 'pg_one',
unknown_delegate => {
file_subdir => undef,
preferences => {},
module_name => 'other::module::error',
},
};
DESCRIPTION
This Perl 5 object class is a simple encapsulated application, or "component", that runs in the CGI::Portable environment. It allows you to easily define a group of screens that are related, delegate the construction of each screen to separate "components", and simplify the creation of links between the screens. When screens are related hierarchically according to the possible values of the "user path", this class will evaluate the "current user path element" and compare it to the valid options you specify, in order to resolve exactly which screen the user requested. You define what options are available at the current hierarchy node or branch within the standard "preferences", or specifically in the "delegate_list" hash preference; each key/value pair has a user path segment to match and instructions for how to build that chosen node or screen. Each hash value says what delegate module to call and what its preferences are. If the option leads to another branch then the called module could be another AppMultiScreen instance; these can be chained as far as you want. This class is subclassed from CGI::Portable::AppStatic, which is convenient if you want to do simple post-processing of your new screen using its preferences. This module is designed to be easily subclassed by your own application components, should you wish to extend or customize its functionality.
SYNTAX
This class does not export any functions or methods, so you need to call them using object notation. This means using Class->function() for functions and $object->method() for methods. If you are inheriting this class for your own modules, then that often means something like $self->method().
This class does not have any of its own stored properties, so there is no risk of property namespace collisions with subclasses. Instead, you must provide the CGI::Portable object to each method explicitely as its first argument.
THE ONLY PUBLIC METHOD
main( GLOBALS )
You invoke this method to run the application component that is encapsulated by this class. The required argument GLOBALS is an CGI::Portable object that you have previously configured to hold the instance settings and user input for this class. When this method returns then the encapsulated application will have finished and you can get its user output from the CGI::Portable object.
This method is simple and intended to be overriden by subclasses. All it does by itself is invoke the private methods listed under PRIVATE METHODS FOR USE BY SUBCLASSES, and equivalents in CGI::Portable::Static, which do the actual work.
PREFERENCES HANDLED BY THIS MODULE
This module is a subclass of CGI::Portable::AppStatic and will handle all of that module's preferences in addition to the new ones discussed below.
The preferences specifically for CGI::Portable::AppMultiScreen allow you to define a list of other modules which are to be called under certain circumstances to construct a result screen. AppMultiScreen doesn't normally do any screen construction by itself, but instead handles the conditional logic required to pick one module from the list and call it. The key preference that you need to set is "delegate_list", but you can optionally set "default_delegate" and "unknown_delegate" as well. See the SYNOPSIS for the format of each preference.
delegate_list
This hash-ref preference is a lookup table which matches the "current user path element" with an "application component" module instance that will handle the screen or hierarchy of screens associated with the currently resolved user path. The keys in the hash are scalars that match a user path element, and associated values are hash-refs that say what other module to call and what its config preferences are. A key can only match if the associated value is a hash-ref.
Each of these latter hash-refs must have values for at least these two keys set: "module_name" and "preferences". Each can optionally have this one key set: "file_subdir". The value for "module_name" is a scalar having the name of the Perl 5 module to invoke as an "application component" that will make the new result screen. The value for "preferences" can be either a hash-ref having literal preferences for the invoked module, or a scalar having a filename of a Perl file that can be executed to return the same preferences hash ref; it must be an empty hash ref if the module takes no preferences. The value for "file_subdir" is a relative file system path within which the invoked module should look for its files (or config file) if any; if this value is not set then the current file directory is used instead.
Delegated modules operate within a new "context" created by the current CGI::Portable object's make_new_context() method. Within that context, AppMultiScreen does the following: 1. call inc_user_path_level() so that the delegated module sees a different "current user path element" than this one does; 2. call navigate_url_path() with the "current user path element" as its argument so that any self-referencing urls generated by the delegated module are correct for the current screen; 3. call navigate_file_path() with the "file_subdir" value as its argument; 4. call set_prefs() with the "preferences" value as its argument; 5. call call_component() with the "module_name" value as its argument. Finally, the output held by the inner context is saved using the current CGI::Portable object's take_context_output() method.
default_delegate
This optional scalar preference is a default value for the "current user path element" that will be used when processing "delegate_list" in situations where the existing "current user path element" is not defined or false. The functionality of this is similar to how web browsers look for specific filenames like "index.html" when the user didn't specify a file name inside a directory. If this preference is not set then it is unlikely that any screen would match the user's request.
unknown_delegate
This optional hash-ref preference lets you customize the response screen that the user will get if they provide a "current user path element" that does not match any keys in the "delegate_list" lookup table. The functionality of this is similar to how web browsers produce a "404 Page Not Found" message when the user specifies a file or directory name that doesn't exist. This preference is formatted the name way as a value in "delegate_list", so it requires the same "module_name" and "preferences" settings to work properly. If this preference is not set then AppMultiScreen will generate a default error screen instead.
PRIVATE METHODS FOR USE BY SUBCLASSES
set_multi_screen_navigate_delegate_list( GLOBALS )
This method will resolve the "current user path element" towards a screen some how, using the [delegate_list, default_delegate, unknown_delegate] preferences to decide how that is done. If a preferences-defined screen is resolved to, whether a normal or an error screen, then this method calls the set_multi_screen_dispatch_one_delegate() method to handle the details of invoking the delegate module, including any context-related matters. Otherwise, this method calls the set_multi_screen_no_delegate_message() method which produces a default error screen instead.
set_multi_screen_dispatch_one_delegate( GLOBALS, DELEGATE, USER_PATH )
This method will use its DELEGATE argument to construct a new screen and store it in the GLOBALS context argument. DELEGATE is a hash ref whose values describe how the new screen is to be made. It's properties are described by the delegate_list preference documentation, above, as DELEGATE can be set as an element in the delegate_list lookup table; it may also have been set from the unknown_delegate preference. This method uses its USER_PATH argument as an argument for navigate_url_path() rather than taking the "current user path element" from GLOBALS because the latter may be empty, meaning that USER_PATH would have the default value. This method returns without doing anything if DELEGATE is not a valid hash ref.
set_multi_screen_no_delegate_message( GLOBALS )
This method produces a default error screen to use if the user requested a screen not defined in the "delegate_list" preference, and the "unknown_delegate" preference is not set. This default screen has some resemblence to the error screen that CGI::Portable's call_component() method produces when it fails, except that the other message is for a program error while this method's screen is for a user error. It says '404 Page Not Found'. Since this method assumes a user error, CGI::Portable's error list is not supplemented.
AUTHOR
Copyright (c) 1999-2003, Darren R. Duncan. All rights reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. However, I do request that this copyright information and credits remain attached to the file. If you modify this module and redistribute a changed version then please attach a note listing the modifications. This module is available "as-is" and the author can not be held accountable for any problems resulting from its use.
I am always interested in knowing how my work helps others, so if you put this module to use in any of your own products or services then I would appreciate (but not require) it if you send me the website url for said product or service, so I know who you are. Also, if you make non-proprietary changes to the module because it doesn't work the way you need, and you are willing to make these freely available, then please send me a copy so that I can roll desirable changes into the main release.
Address comments, suggestions, and bug reports to perl@DarrenDuncan.net.
SEE ALSO
perl(1), CGI::Portable, CGI::Portable::AppStatic, CGI::Portable::Response, CGI::Portable::Files, CGI::Portable::Request, CGI::Portable::AppSplitScreen.