NAME
plackup - Run PSGI application with Plack servers
SYNOPSIS
# read your app from app.psgi file
plackup
# can be passed as an ARGV[0] (or with -a option)
plackup hello.psgi
# Switch server implementation with --server (or -s)
plackup --server HTTP::Server::Simple --port 9090 --host 127.0.0.1 test.psgi
# Use UNIX socket to run FCGI daemon
plackup -s FCGI --listen /tmp/fcgi.sock myapp.psgi
# FCGI external server on port 9090
plackup -s FCGI --port 9090
DESCRIPTION
plackup is a command line utility to run PSGI application from the command line.
plackup automatically figures out the environment it is run in, and runs your application in that environment. FastCGI, CGI, AnyEvent and others can all be detected. See Plack::Loader for the authorative list.
plackup
assumes you have an app.psgi
script in your current directory, that would look like:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use MyApp;
my $app = MyApp->new;
my $handler = sub { $app->run_psgi(@_) };
The last statement of app.psgi
should be a code reference that is a PSGI application.
ARGUMENTS
- .psgi
-
plackup --host 127.0.0.1 --port 9090 /path/to/app.psgi
The first non-option argument is used as a
.psgi
file path. You can also set this path with-a
or--app
option. If omitted, the default file path isapp.psgi
in the current directory.
OPTIONS
- -a, --app
-
--app
option allows you to locate a.psgi
script with a different name in a different path. This can also be set as a non-option argument. (See above) - -e
-
Evaluate the given perl code as a PSGI app, much like perl's
-e
option.plackup -e 'sub { my $env = shift; return [ ... ] }'
You can also specify
-e
option with.psgi
file path to wrap the application with middleware configuration from the command line. You can also use Plack::Builder DSL syntax inside-e
code.plackup -e 'enable "Auth::Basic", authenticator => ...;' myapp.psgi
equals to run the following PSGI application:
use Plack::Builder; use Plack::Util; builder { enable "Auth::Basic", authenticator => ...; Plack::Util::load_psgi("myapp.psgi"); };
- -o, --host
-
The interface a TCP based server daemon binds to. Defauts to undef, which lets most server backends bind the any (*) interface. This opeion doesn't mean anything if the server does not support TCP socket.
- -p, --port
-
The port number a TCP based server daemon listens on. Defaults to 5000. This option doesn't mean anything if the server does not support TCP socket.
- -s, --server
-
Select a specific implementation to run on using the
PLACK_SERVER
environment variable or use the-s
or--server
flag which will be preferred over the environment variable if present. - -S, --socket
-
UNIX domain socket path to listen on. Defaults to undef. This option doesn't mean anything if the server doesn't support UNIX sockets.
- -l, --listen
-
Addresses to listen on. It could be "HOST:PORT", ":PORT" or "PATH" (without colons). It could be multiple but it depends on the server implementations whether multiple interfaces are supported.
- -D, --daemonize
-
Makes the process go background. It's up to the backend server/handler implementation whether this option is respected or not.
- -I
-
Specify perl library include path, like
perl
's -I option. - -M
-
Specify modules to load before loading the app code.
- -E, --env
-
Specify the environment option (default is
development
). You can set this value by settingPLACK_ENV
environment variable as well, and specifying the value with the command line options writes back toPLACK_ENV
as well, so applications or frameworks can tell which environment setting the application is running on.# These two are the same plackup -E deployment env PLACK_ENV=deployment plackup
The value can be anything but commonly used ones are
development
,deployment
andtest
.If it's set to
development
, following middleware components are enabled by default: AccessLog, StackTrace and Lint. - -r, --reload
-
Make plackup to watch updates from your development directory and restarts the server whenever a file is updated. This option by default watches the
lib
directory and the base directory where .psgi file is located. Use-R
if you want to watch other directories. - -R, --Reload
-
-R
option allows you to specify the path to watch file updates separated by comma (,
).plackup -R /path/to/project/lib,/path/to/project/templates
- -L, --loader
-
Specify the server loading subclass that implements how to run the server. Available options are Plack::Loader (default), Restarter (automatically set when
-r
or-R
is used), Delayed and Shotgun.See Plack::Loader::Delayed and Plack::Loader::Shotgun when to use those loader types.
- --access-log
-
Specify the pathname of a file where the access log should be written. By default, in the development environment access logs will go to STDERR.
Other options that starts with --
are passed through to the backend server. See each Plack::Handler backend documentations to see which options are available.