NAME
Catalyst::View::JSON - JSON view for your data
SYNOPSIS
# lib/MyApp/View/JSON.pm
package MyApp::View::JSON;
use base qw( Catalyst::View::JSON );
1;
# configure in lib/MyApp.pm
MyApp->config({
...
'V::JSON' => {
allow_callback => 1, # defaults to 0
callback_param => 'cb', # defaults to 'callback'
expose_stash => [ qw(foo bar) ], # defaults to everything
},
});
sub hello : Local {
my($self, $c) = @_;
$c->stash->{message} = 'Hello World!';
$c->forward('MyApp::View::JSON');
}
DESCRIPTION
Catalyst::View::JSON is a Catalyst View handler that returns stash data in JSON format.
CONFIG VARIABLES
- allow_callback
-
Flag to allow callbacks by adding
callback=function
. Defaults to 0 (doesn't allow callbacks). See "CALLBACKS" for details. - callback_param
-
Name of URI parameter to specify JSON callback function name. Defaults to
callback
. Only effective whenallow_callback
is turned on. - expose_stash
-
Scalar, List or regular expression object, to specify which stash keys are exposed as a JSON response. Defaults to everything. Examples configuration:
# use 'json_data' value as a data to return expose_stash => 'json_data', # only exposes keys 'foo' and 'bar' expose_stash => [ qw( foo bar ) ], # only exposes keys that matches with /^json_/ expose_stash => qr/^json_/,
Suppose you have data structure of the following.
$c->stash->{foo} = [ 1, 2 ]; $c->stash->{bar} = [ 3, 4 ];
By default, this view will return:
{"foo":[1,2],"bar":2}
When you set
expose_stash => [ 'foo' ]
, it'll return{"foo":[1,2]}
and in the case of
expose_stash => 'foo'
, it'll just return[1,2]
instead of the whole object (hashref in perl). This option will be useful when you share the method with different views (e.g. TT) and don't want to expose non-irrelevant stash variables as in JSON.
- json_driver
-
json_driver: JSON::Syck
By default this plugin uses JSON to encode the object, but you can switch to the other drivers like JSON::Syck. For now, JSON::Syck is the only alternative encoding driver.
- no_x_json_header
-
no_x_json_header: 1
By default this plugin sets X-JSON header if the requested client is a Prototype.js with X-JSON support. By setting 1, you can opt-out this behavior so that you can do eval() by your own. Defaults to 0.
ENCODINGS
Due to the browser gotchas like those of Safari and Opera, sometimes you have to specify a valid charset value in the response's Content-Type header, e.g. text/javascript; charset=utf-8
.
Catalyst::View::JSON comes with the configuration variable encoding
which defaults to utf-8. You can change it via YourApp->config
or even runtime, using component
.
$c->component('View::JSON')->encoding('euc-jp');
This assumes you set your stash data in raw euc-jp bytes, or Unicode flagged variable. In case of Unicode flagged variable, Catalyst::View::JSON automatically encodes the data into your encoding
value (euc-jp in this case) before emitting the data to the browser.
Another option would be to use JavaScript-UCS as an encoding (and pass Unicode flagged string to the stash). That way all non-ASCII characters in the output JSON will be automatically encoded to JavaScript Unicode encoding like \uXXXX. You have to install Encode::JavaScript::UCS to use the encoding.
CALLBACKS
By default it returns raw JSON data so your JavaScript app can deal with using XMLHttpRequest calls. Adding callbacks (JSONP) to the API gives more flexibility to the end users of the API: overcome the cross-domain restrictions of XMLHttpRequest. It can be done by appending script node with dynamic DOM manipulation, and associate callback handler to the returned data.
For example, suppose you have the following code.
sub end : Private {
my($self, $c) = @_;
if ($c->req->param('output') eq 'json') {
$c->forward('MyApp::View::JSON');
} else {
...
}
}
/foo/bar?output=json
will just return the data set in $c->stash
as JSON format, like:
{ result: "foo", message: "Hello" }
but /foo/bar?output=json&callback=handle_result
will give you:
handle_result({ result: "foo", message: "Hello" });
and you can write a custom handle_result
function to handle the returned data asynchronously.
The valid characters you can use in the callback function are
[a-zA-Z0-9\.\_\[\]]
but you can customize the behaviour by overriding the validate_callback_param
method in your View::JSON class.
See http://developer.yahoo.net/common/json.html and http://ajaxian.com/archives/jsonp-json-with-padding for more about JSONP.
INTEROPERABILITY
JSON use is still developing and has not been standardized. This section provides some notes on various libraries.
Dojo Toolkit: Setting dojo.io.bind's mimetype to 'text/json' in the JavaScript request will instruct dojo.io.bind to expect JSON data in the response body and auto-eval it. Dojo ignores the server response Content-Type. This works transparently with Catalyst::View::JSON.
Prototype.js: prototype.js will auto-eval JSON data that is returned in the custom X-JSON header. The reason given for this is to allow a separate HTML fragment in the response body, however this of limited use because IE 6 has a max header length that will cause the JSON evaluation to silently fail when reached. The recommened approach is to use Catalyst::View::JSON which will JSON format all the response data and return it in the response body.
In at least prototype 1.5.0 rc0 and above, prototype.js will send the X-Prototype-Version header. If this is encountered, a JavaScript eval will be returned in the X-JSON resonse header to automatically eval the response body, unless you set no_x_json_header to 1. If your version of prototype does not send this header, you can manually eval the response body using the following JavaScript:
evalJSON: function(request) {
try {
return eval('(' + request.responseText + ')');
} catch (e) {}
}
// elsewhere
var json = this.evalJSON(request);
SECURITY CONSIDERATION
Catalyst::View::JSON makes the data available as a (sort of) JavaScript to the client, so you might want to be careful about the security of your data.
Use callbacks only for public data
When you enable callbacks (JSONP) by setting allow_callbacks
, all your JSON data will be available cross-site. This means embedding private data of logged-in user to JSON is considered bad.
# MyApp.yaml
View::JSON:
allow_callbacks: 1
sub foo : Local {
my($self, $c) = @_;
$c->stash->{address} = $c->user->street_address; # BAD
$c->forward('View::JSON');
}
If you want to enable callbacks in a controller (for public API) and disable in another, you need to create two different View classes, like MyApp::View::JSON and MyApp::View::JSONP, because allow_callbacks
is a static configuration of the View::JSON class.
See http://ajaxian.com/archives/gmail-csrf-security-flaw for more.
Avoid valid cross-site JSON requests
Even if you disable the callbacks, the nature of JavaScript still has a possiblity to access private JSON data cross-site, by overriding Array constructor []
.
# MyApp.yaml
View::JSON:
expose_stash: json
sub foo : Local {
my($self, $c) = @_;
$c->stash->{json} = [ $c->user->street_address ]; # BAD
$c->forward('View::JSON');
}
When you return logged-in user's private data to the response JSON, you might want to disable GET requests (because script tag invokes GET requests), or include a random digest string and validate it.
See http://jeremiahgrossman.blogspot.com/2006/01/advanced-web-attack-techniques-using.html for more.
AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
CONTRIBUTORS
Following people has been contributing patches, bug reports and suggestions for the improvement of Catalyst::View::JSON.
John Wang kazeburo Daisuke Murase Jun Kuriyama