NAME
Catalyst::View::XML::Feed - Catalyst view for RSS, Atom, or other XML feeds
SYNOPSIS
Create your view, e.g. lib/MyApp/View/Feed.pm
package MyApp::View::Feed;
use base qw( Catalyst::View::XML::Feed );
1;
In a controller, set the feed
stash variable and forward to your view:
sub rss : Local {
my ($self, $c) = @_:
$c->stash->{feed} = $feed_obj_or_data;
$c->forward('View::Feed');
}
DESCRIPTION
Catalyst::View::XML::Feed is a hassle-free way to serve an RSS, Atom, or other XML feed from your Catalyst application.
Your controller should put feed data into $c->stash->{feed}
.
DATA FORMATS
The value in $c->stash->{feed}
can be an object from any of the popular RSS or Atom classes, a plain Perl data structure, arbitrary custom objects, or an xml string.
Plain Perl data
$c->stash->{feed} = {
format => 'RSS 1.0',
id => $c->req->base,
title => 'My Great Site',
description => 'Kitten pictures for the masses',
link => $c->req->base,
modified => DateTime->now,
entries => [
{
id => $c->uri_for('rss', 'kitten_post')->as_string,
link => $c->uri_for('rss', 'kitten_post')->as_string,
title => 'First post!',
modified => DateTime->now,
content => 'This is my first post!',
},
# ... more entries.
],
};
- Keys for feed
-
The
feed
hash can take any of the following keys. They are identical to those supported by XML::Feed. See XML::Feed for more details.Note: Depending on the feed format you choose, different subsets of attributes might be required. As such, it is recommended that you run the generated XML through a validator such as http://validator.w3.org/feed/ to ensure you included all necessary information.
- Keys for entries
-
The
entries
array contains any number of hashrefs, each representing an entry in the feed. Each can contain any of the following keys. They are identical to those of XML::Feed::Entry. See XML::Feed::Entry for details.Note: Depending on the feed format you choose, different subsets of attributes might be required. As such, it is recommended that you run the generated XML through a validator such as http://validator.w3.org/feed/ to ensure you included all necessary information.
Arbitrary custom objects
If you have custom objects that you would like to turn into feed entries, this can be done similar to plain Perl data structures.
For example, if we have a DB::BlogPost
DBIx::Class model, we can do the following:
$c->stash->{feed} = {
format => 'Atom',
id => $c->req->base,
title => 'My Great Site',
description => 'Kitten pictures for the masses',
link => $c->req->base,
modified => DateTime->now,
entries => [ $c->model('DB::BlogPost')->all() ],
};
The view will go through the keys for entries fields and, if possible, call a method of the same name on your entry object (e.g. $your_entry->title(); $your_entry->modified();
) to get that value for the XML.
Any missing fields are simply skipped.
If your class's method names do not match up to the entries
keys, you can simply alias them by wrapping with another method. For example, if your DB::BlogPost
has a post_title
field which should be the title for the feed entry, you can add this to BlogPost.pm:
sub title { $_[0]->post_title }
XML::Feed
An XML::Feed object.
$c->stash->{feed} = $xml_feed_obj;
XML::RSS
An XML::RSS object.
$c->stash->{feed} = $xml_rss_obj;
XML::Atom::SimpleFeed
An XML::Atom::SimpleFeed object.
$c->stash->{feed} = $xml_atom_simplefeed_obj;
XML::Atom::Feed
An XML::Atom::Feed object.
$c->stash->{feed} = $xml_atom_feed_obj;
XML::Atom::Syndication::Feed
An XML::Atom::Syndication::Feed object.
$c->stash->{feed} = $xml_atom_syndication_feed_obj;
Plain text
If none of the formats mentioned above are suitable, you may also provide a string containing the XML data.
$c->stash->{feed} = $xml_string;
SOURCE REPOSITORY
http://github.com/mstratman/Catalyst-View-XML-Feed
AUTHOR
Mark A. Stratman <stratman@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2011 the above author(s).
This sofware is free software, and is licensed under the same terms as perl itself.