NAME

Mojolicious - The Web In A Box!

SYNOPSIS

# Mojolicious application
package MyApp;

use base 'Mojolicious';

sub startup {
    my $self = shift;

    # Routes
    my $r = $self->routes;

    # Default route
    $r->route('/:controller/:action/:id')->to('foo#welcome');
}

# Mojolicious controller
package MyApp::Foo;

use base 'Mojolicious::Controller';

# Say hello
sub welcome {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->render(text => 'Hi there!');
}

# Say goodbye from a template (foo/bye.html.ep)
sub bye { shift->render }

DESCRIPTION

Back in the early days of the web there was this wonderful Perl library called CGI, many people only learned Perl because of it. It was simple enough to get started without knowing much about the language and powerful enough to keep you going, learning by doing was much fun. While most of the techniques used are outdated now, the idea behind it is not. Mojolicious is a new attempt at implementing this idea using state of the art technology.

Features

  • An amazing MVC web framework supporting a simplified single file mode through Mojolicious::Lite.

      Powerful out of the box with RESTful routes, plugins, Perl-ish templates, session management, signed cookies, testing framework, static file server, I18N, first class unicode support and much more for you to discover.

  • Very clean, portable and Object Oriented pure Perl API without any hidden magic and no requirements besides Perl 5.8.7.

  • Full stack HTTP 1.1 and WebSocket client/server implementation with TLS, Bonjour, IDNA, Comet (long polling), chunking and multipart support.

  • Builtin async IO web server supporting epoll, kqueue, UNIX domain sockets and hot deployment, perfect for embedding.

  • Automatic CGI, FastCGI and PSGI detection.

  • JSON and XML/HTML5 parser with CSS3 selector support.

  • Fresh code based upon years of experience developing Catalyst.

Duct Tape For The HTML5 Web

Web development for humans, making hard things possible and everything fun.

use Mojolicious::Lite;

get '/hello' => sub { shift->render(text => 'Hello World!') }

get '/time' => 'clock';

websocket '/echo' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->on_message(
        sub {
            my ($self, $message) = @_;
            $self->send_message("echo: $message");
        }
    );
};

get '/title' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    my $url  = $self->param('url');
    $self->render(text =>
          $self->client->get($url)->res->dom->at('title')->text);
};

post '/:offset' => sub {
    my $self   = shift;
    my $offset = $self->param('offset') || 23;
    $self->render(json => {list => [0 .. $offset]});
};

app->start;
__DATA__

@@ clock.html.ep
% my ($second, $minute, $hour) = (localtime(time))[0, 1, 2];
<%= link_to clock => begin %>
    The time is <%= $hour %>:<%= $minute %>:<%= $second %>.
<% end %>

Have Some Cake

Loosely coupled building blocks, use what you like and just ignore the rest.

.---------------------------------------------------------------.
|                                                               |
|                .----------------------------------------------'
|                | .--------------------------------------------.
|   Application  | |              Mojolicious::Lite             |
|                | '--------------------------------------------'
|                | .--------------------------------------------.
|                | |                 Mojolicious                |
'----------------' '--------------------------------------------'
.---------------------------------------------------------------.
|                             Mojo                              |
'---------------------------------------------------------------'
.-------. .-----------. .--------. .------------. .-------------.
|  CGI  | |  FastCGI  | |  PSGI  | |  HTTP 1.1  | |  WebSocket  |
'-------' '-----------' '--------' '------------' '-------------'

Highlights

These are some of the most important building blocks of Mojolicious.

Mojolicious::Lite

Micro Web Framework built on top of Mojolicious for prototypes and small applications.

Mojo::Client

Full featured async io HTTP 1.1 and WebSocket client.

Mojo::DOM

Very fun and minimalistic XML/HTML5 DOM parser with CSS3 selector support.

Mojo::JSON

Minimalistic JSON implementation that just works.

Mojo::Server::Daemon

Full featured async io HTTP 1.1 and WebSocket server.

Mojo::Server::CGI, Mojo::Server::FastCGI, Mojo::Server::PSGI

Transparent CGI, FastCGI and PSGI support out of the box.

Mojo::Template

Very perlish and minimalistic template system.

Mojo::ByteStream

Countless portable and very convenient bytestream manipulation methods.

Mojolicious::Commands

Pluggable command line system and the backbone of the mojo script.

Test::Mojo

Test driven development toolkit for web applications.

ojo

Fun oneliners using everything above.

For more documentation see Mojolicious::Guides and the tutorial in Mojolicious::Lite!

ATTRIBUTES

Mojolicious inherits all attributes from Mojo and implements the following new ones.

controller_class

my $class = $app->controller_class;
$app      = $app->controller_class('Mojolicious::Controller');

Class to be used for the default controller, defaults to Mojolicious::Controller.

mode

my $mode = $app->mode;
$app     = $app->mode('production');

The operating mode for your application. It defaults to the value of the environment variable MOJO_MODE or development. Mojo will name the log file after the current mode and modes other than development will result in limited log output.

If you want to add per mode logic to your application, you can add a sub to your application named $mode_mode.

sub development_mode {
    my $self = shift;
}

sub production_mode {
    my $self = shift;
}

plugins

my $plugins = $app->plugins;
$app        = $app->plugins(Mojolicious::Plugins->new);

The plugin loader, by default a Mojolicious::Plugins object. You can usually leave this alone, see Mojolicious::Plugin if you want to write a plugin.

renderer

my $renderer = $app->renderer;
$app         = $app->renderer(Mojolicious::Renderer->new);

Used in your application to render content, by default a Mojolicious::Renderer object. The two main renderer plugins Mojolicious::Plugin::EpRenderer and Mojolicious::Plugin::EplRenderer contain more specific information.

routes

my $routes = $app->routes;
$app       = $app->routes(Mojolicious::Routes->new);

The routes dispatcher, by default a Mojolicious::Routes object. You use this in your startup method to define the url endpoints for your application.

sub startup {
    my $self = shift;

    my $r = $self->routes;
    $r->route('/:controller/:action')->to('test#welcome');
}

secret

my $secret = $app->secret;
$app       = $app->secret('passw0rd');

A secret passphrase used for signed cookies and the like, defaults to the application name which is not very secure, so you should change it!!! As long as you are using the unsecure default there will be debug messages in the log file reminding you to change your passphrase.

session

my $session = $app->session;
$app        = $app->session(Mojolicious::Session->new);

Simple singed cookie based sessions, by default a Mojolicious::Session object.

static

my $static = $app->static;
$app       = $app->static(Mojolicious::Static->new);

For serving static assets from your public directory, by default a Mojolicious::Static object.

types

my $types = $app->types;
$app      = $app->types(Mojolicious::Types->new);

Responsible for tracking the types of content you want to serve in your application, by default a Mojolicious::Types object. You can easily register new types.

$app->types->type(vti => 'help/vampire');

METHODS

Mojolicious inherits all methods from Mojo and implements the following new ones.

new

my $app = Mojolicious->new;

Construct a new Mojolicious application. Will automatically detect your home directory and set up logging based on your current operating mode. Also sets up the renderer, static dispatcher and a default set of plugins.

defaults

my $defaults = $app->defaults;
my $foo      = $app->defaults('foo');
$app         = $app->defaults({foo => 'bar'});
$app         = $app->defaults(foo => 'bar');

Default values for the stash. Note that this method is EXPERIMENTAL and might change without warning!

$app->defaults->{foo} = 'bar';
my $foo = $app->defaults->{foo};
delete $app->defaults->{foo};

dispatch

$app->dispatch($c);

The heart of every Mojolicious application, calls the static and routes dispatchers for every request and passes them a Mojolicious::Controller object.

handler

$tx = $app->handler($tx);

Sets up the default controller and calls process for every request.

helper

$app->helper(foo => sub { ... });

Add a new helper. Note that this method is EXPERIMENTAL and might change without warning!

# Helper
$app->helper(add => sub { $_[1] + $_[2] });

# Controller/Application
my $result = $self->add(2, 3);

# Template
<%= add 2, 3 %>

hook

$app->hook(after_dispatch => sub { ... });

Add hooks to named events. Note that this method is EXPERIMENTAL and might change without warning!

The following events are available and run in the listed order.

after_build_tx

Triggered right after the transaction is built and before the HTTP request gets parsed. One use case would be upload progress bars. (Passed the transaction and application instances)

$app->hook(before_request => sub {
    my ($tx, $app) = @_;
});
before_dispatch

Triggered right before the static and routes dispatchers start their work. (Passed the default controller instance)

$app->hook(before_dispatch => sub {
    my $self = shift;
});
after_static_dispatch

Triggered after the static dispatcher determined if a static file should be served and before the routes dispatcher starts its work, the callbacks of this hook run in reverse order. (Passed the default controller instance)

$app->hook(after_static_dispatch => sub {
    my $self = shift;
});
after_dispatch

Triggered after the static and routes dispatchers are finished and a response has been rendered, the callbacks of this hook run in reverse order. (Passed the current controller instance)

$app->hook(after_dispatch => sub {
    my $self = shift;
});

plugin

$app->plugin('something');
$app->plugin('something', foo => 23);
$app->plugin('something', {foo => 23});
$app->plugin('Foo::Bar');
$app->plugin('Foo::Bar', foo => 23);
$app->plugin('Foo::Bar', {foo => 23});

Load a plugin. Note that this method is EXPERIMENTAL and might change without warning!

process

$app->process($c);

This method can be overloaded to do logic on a per request basis, by default just calls dispatch and passes it a Mojolicious::Controller object. Generally you will use a plugin or controller instead of this, consider it the sledgehammer in your toolbox.

sub process {
    my ($self, $c) = @_;
    $self->dispatch($c);
}

start

Mojolicious->start;
Mojolicious->start('daemon');

Start the Mojolicious::Commands command line interface for your application.

startup

$app->startup;

This is your main hook into the application, it will be called at application startup.

sub startup {
    my $self = shift;
}

SUPPORT

Web

http://mojolicious.org

IRC

#mojo on irc.perl.org

Mailing-List

http://groups.google.com/group/mojolicious

DEVELOPMENT

Repository

http://github.com/kraih/mojo

CODE NAMES

Every major release of Mojolicious has a code name, these are the ones that have been used in the past.

0.999930, Hot Beverage (u2615)

0.999927, Comet (u2604)

0.999920, Snowman (u2603)

AUTHOR

Sebastian Riedel, sri@cpan.org.

CORE DEVELOPERS EMERITUS

Retired members of the core team, we thank you dearly for your service.

    Viacheslav Tykhanovskyi, vti@cpan.org.

CREDITS

In alphabetical order.

    Adam Kennedy

    Adriano Ferreira

    Alex Salimon

    Alexey Likhatskiy

    Anatoly Sharifulin

    Andre Vieth

    Andrew Fresh

    Andreas Koenig

    Andy Grundman

    Aristotle Pagaltzis

    Ashley Dev

    Ask Bjoern Hansen

    Audrey Tang

    Breno G. de Oliveira

    Burak Gursoy

    Ch Lamprecht

    Chas. J. Owens IV

    Christian Hansen

    Curt Tilmes

    Danijel Tasov

    David Davis

    Dmitriy Shalashov

    Dmitry Konstantinov

    Eugene Toropov

    Gisle Aas

    Glen Hinkle

    Graham Barr

    Hideki Yamamura

    James Duncan

    Jan Jona Javorsek

    Jaroslav Muhin

    Jesse Vincent

    John Kingsley

    Jonathan Yu

    Kazuhiro Shibuya

    Kevin Old

    Lars Balker Rasmussen

    Leon Brocard

    Maik Fischer

    Marcus Ramberg

    Mark Stosberg

    Matthew Lineen

    Maksym Komar

    Maxim Vuets

    Mirko Westermeier

    Mons Anderson

    Oleg Zhelo

    Pascal Gaudette

    Paul Tomlin

    Pedro Melo

    Peter Edwards

    Pierre-Yves Ritschard

    Quentin Carbonneaux

    Rafal Pocztarski

    Randal Schwartz

    Robert Hicks

    Ryan Jendoubi

    Sascha Kiefer

    Sergey Zasenko

    Simon Bertrang

    Shu Cho

    Stanis Trendelenburg

    Tatsuhiko Miyagawa

    The Perl Foundation

    Tomas Znamenacek

    Ulrich Habel

    Ulrich Kautz

    Uwe Voelker

    Yaroslav Korshak

    Yuki Kimoto

    Zak B. Elep

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2008-2010, Sebastian Riedel.

This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.