NAME
Catalyst::Component - Catalyst Component Base Class
SYNOPSIS
# lib/MyApp/Model/Something.pm
package MyApp::Model::Something;
use base 'Catalyst::Component';
__PACKAGE__->config( foo => 'bar' );
has foo => (
is => 'ro',
);
sub test {
my $self = shift;
return $self->foo;
}
sub forward_to_me {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->response->output( $self->foo );
}
1;
# Methods can be a request step
$c->forward(qw/MyApp::Model::Something forward_to_me/);
# Or just methods
print $c->comp('MyApp::Model::Something')->test;
print $c->comp('MyApp::Model::Something')->foo;
DESCRIPTION
This is the universal base class for Catalyst components (Model/View/Controller).
It provides you with a generic new() for component construction through Catalyst's component loader with config() support and a process() method placeholder.
Note that calling $self->config
inside a component is strongly not recommended - the correctly merged config should have already been passed to the constructor and stored in attributes - accessing the config accessor directly from an instance is likely to get the wrong values (as it only holds the class wide config, not things loaded from the config file!)
METHODS
new($app, $arguments)
Called by COMPONENT to instantiate the component; should return an object to be stored in the application's component hash.
COMPONENT
my $component_instance = $component->COMPONENT($app, $arguments);
If this method is present (as it is on all Catalyst::Component subclasses), it is called by Catalyst during setup_components with the application class as $app and any config entry on the application for this component (for example, in the case of MyApp::Controller::Foo this would be MyApp->config('Controller::Foo' => \%conf
).
The arguments are expected to be a hashref and are merged with the __PACKAGE__->config
hashref before calling ->new
to instantiate the component.
You can override it in your components to do custom construction, using something like this:
sub COMPONENT {
my ($class, $app, $args) = @_;
$args = $class->merge_config_hashes($class->config, $args);
return $class->new($app, $args);
}
$c->config
$c->config($hashref)
$c->config($key, $value, ...)
Accessor for this component's config hash. Config values can be set as key value pair, or you can specify a hashref. In either case the keys will be merged with any existing config settings. Each component in a Catalyst application has its own config hash.
The component's config hash is merged with any config entry on the application for this component and passed to new()
(as mentioned above at "COMPONENT"). The recommended practice to access the merged config is to use a Moose attribute for each config entry on the receiving component.
$c->process()
This is the default method called on a Catalyst component in the dispatcher. For instance, Views implement this action to render the response body when you forward to them. The default is an abstract method.
$c->merge_config_hashes( $hashref, $hashref )
Merges two hashes together recursively, giving right-hand precedence. Alias for the method in Catalyst::Utils.
$c->expand_modules( $setup_component_config )
Return a list of extra components that this component has created. By default, it just looks for a list of inner packages of this component
OPTIONAL METHODS
ACCEPT_CONTEXT($c, @args)
Catalyst components are normally initialized during server startup, either as a Class or a Instance. However, some components require information about the current request. To do so, they can implement an ACCEPT_CONTEXT method.
If this method is present, it is called during $c->comp/controller/model/view with the current $c and any additional args (e.g. $c->model('Foo', qw/bar baz/) would cause your MyApp::Model::Foo instance's ACCEPT_CONTEXT to be called with ($c, 'bar', 'baz')) and the return value of this method is returned to the calling code in the application rather than the component itself.
SEE ALSO
Catalyst, Catalyst::Model, Catalyst::View, Catalyst::Controller.
AUTHORS
Catalyst Contributors, see Catalyst.pm
COPYRIGHT
This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.