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NAME
RPC::Serialized - Subroutine calls over the network using common
serialization
VERSION
version 1.123630
SYNOPSIS
# for the RPC server...
# choose one of the supplied server types (NetServer is Net::Server)
use RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer;
my $s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new;
$s->run;
# server process is now looping and waiting for RPC (like Apache prefork)
# the default port number for Net::Server is 20203
# and so for the RPC client...
use RPC::Serialized::Client::INET;
my $c = RPC::Serialized::Client::INET->new({
io_socket_inet => {PeerPort => 20203},
});
my $result = $c->remote_sub_name(qw/ some data /);
# remote_sub_name gets mapped to an invocation on the RPC server
# it's best to wrap this in an eval{} block
DESCRIPTION
This module allows you to call a Perl subroutine in another process,
possibly on another machine, using a very simple and extensible
interface which ties together the features of other good modules from
the CPAN.
There are lots of uses for RPC (remote procedure calls), so here are a
couple of examples just to give you an idea:
Priveledge separation
If you have a web interface which is used to control a critical
backend system, perhaps a key database or the settings on a
firewall, you can use RPC to prevent security flaws on the web
service from affecting the backend service. Only procedure calls
which are permitted will be accepted from the web host, and it also
offers a nice interface separation for your systems.
File or data access
To avoid sharing of filesystems over the network (SAMBA, NFS, etc),
you can provide a restricted interface using RPC. For example a web
service to search log files could send an RPC request with the
search string to the log server, and display the results. There
would be no need to run a network filesystem.
What makes this module different from another RPC implementation?
Data Serialization
This module uses Data::Serializer to construct its "on the wire"
protocol. This means any Perl data structure can be sent or
received, even Perl code itself in the case of some of the
serialization modules (e.g. YAML supports this). You can also
encrypt and compress data; all options to Data::Serializer are
easily available through the configuration of this module.
Simple deployment
Each remote procedure is simply a perl subroutine in a module which
is loaded by the server. You can let the server autoload everything
as it is called, or specify each "handler" subroutine individually
(or combine both!). Adding and modifying the available handlers is
simple, meaning you think less about the RPC subsystem and more
about your code and service provision.
Flexible configuration
All the modules used by "RPC::Serialized" can be fully configured as
you wish, from one configuration file, or via options to "new()".
You saw an example of this in the "SYNOPSIS" section, above, for the
IO::Socket::INET module.
The following sections take you through setting up an RPC server and
client.
GENERAL CONFIGURATION
Both the client and server parts of this module share the same
configuration system. There is a file, RPC::Serialized::Config, which
contains the basic defaults suitable for most situations. Then, you can
also specify the name of a configuration file as a parameter to any call
to "new()". Finally, a hash reference of options can be supplied
directly to any call to "new()". Let's go through these cases by
example:
# this is for a server, but the example applies equally to a client
use RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer;
# no configuration at all - use the built in defaults
$s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new;
If you are happy with the settings in the source code of
RPC::Serialized::Config, then no options are required. In the case of
some types of server and client this is enough to get you going.
# load a configuration file, using Config::Any
$s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new('/path/to/config/file');
Alternatively, specify a file with configuration. We use Config::Any to
load the file, and so it should contain a data structure in one of the
formats supported by that module. *Tip*: make sure there is a filename
suffix, e.g. ".yml", to help "Config::Any" load the data. For details of
the required structure of that data, read on...
# pass some options directly
$s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new({
net_server => {log_file => undef, port => 5233},
rpc_serialized => {handler_namespaces => 'RPC::Serialized::Handler'},
});
You can pass a hash reference to "new()". Each key in this hash is the
name of a module to configure. The module names are converted to
lowercase, and the "::" separator is replaced by an underscore. In the
example above we are providing some options to Net::Server and this
module, RPC::Serialized.
The value of each key is another anonymous hash, this time with any
options as specified by that module's own manual page. Of course, this
only works for modules which use key/value options themselves, but
thankfully that is the case for each module used by "RPC::Serialized".
Remember, in all of the examples in this manual page which show passing
configuration settings to "new()", you can also achieve the same thing
using a configuration file by passing its name to "new()" instead.
As a final note on this topic, you can provide both a configuration
filename, and an hash reference of options to the "new()" call. In fact,
whatever and however many of these you provide, they will be read in
with the later ones taking prescedent.
SETTING UP A SERVER
You do not have to know too much about internet servers to use this
module. As well as providing a standard TCP and UDP server, there are
also UNIX socket and Standard Input/Output servers that you might use
for communicating with clients on the same host system.
In the main, we are dealing with a UNIX world here, so most of the
description will make assumptions about that. If you get this module
running on Windows, please let the author know!
A small perl script which starts the server running is all you need.
This can be copied verbatim from the "SYNOPSIS" section above. For
guidance on providing configuration to the server, see "GENERAL
CONFIGURATION", above.
When running a server process, it can either stay in the foreground, or
detach from your shell. The default is to stay in the foreground, for
two reasons. First, when you are developing you probably want to start
the server and see what is happening on "STDERR". Second, many people
use Dan Bernstein's "daemontools" package to manage persistent servers,
and this requires a process which does not detach from its parent
process. If you are using the "NetServer" server, then it is easy to
make it detach:
$s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new({
net_server => { background => 1, setsid => 1 },
});
To stop the server you will then have to issue a kill to the detached
process.
There is a handful of alternative servers shipped with this module. For
more details, please see the manual pages for each of them:
RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer
This is a full-blown pre-forking internet server, with many many
good features. You will have to install the Net::Server Perl module
and dependencies to use this server. It supports TCP and UDP INET
sockets, as well as UNIX domain sockets.
RPC::Serialized::Server::STDIO
This is a very simple server which processes one request at a time,
accepting data on Standard Input and sending responses to Standard
Output.
RPC::Serialized::Server::UCSPI::TCP
If you use Dan Bernstein's "tcpserver" (a.k.a. "ucspi-tcp") then
this is the option for you. It is based upon the "STDIO" server,
above, and is designed to be fired up by "tcpserver" whenever an
incoming connection is handled. There is an example script for this
in the Perl distribution for this module.
RPC::Serialized::Server::UCSPI::IPC
This is similar to the option above, but for UNIX (i.e. local
filesystem) sockets rather than INET sockets. It is designed for
"ucspi-ipc", producted by *SuperScript Technology, Inc.*, and you
can find more details by searching on *Google*.
How the server works
Each RPC message which comes in "over the wire" is really just a Perl
data structure, a hash. There is a "CALL" key, which has the name of the
RPC method to invoke, and some "ARGS" to pass to it as arguments.
The server looks at the CALL and tries to load and execute the handler
which maps to that CALL. If it fails it raises an Exception, and fires
that back to the client. If the invocation is successful, then the
RESPONSE is sent back to the client, again in a Perl data structure. It
is all quite elegant and simple (i.e. not my design, see "AUTHOR" below
for the acknowledgement!).
On the wire, if we switch off most of the Data::Serializer magic and set
the Serializer to YAML, then it looks like this:
---
CALL: localtime
ARGS: []
...
---
RESPONSE: Sun Jul 8 21:57:28 2007
...
Note that "..." is the record separator which tells the server when it
can process the incoming request. In this example, the CALL was for a
method called "localtime", and there were no arguments so I passed an
empty list. The RESPONSE was just the scalar output of Perl's
"localtime" function.
You might find it interesting to note that, inside of "RPC::Serialized",
the methods used to send and receive data at the client and server *are
identical*. In the example above, I entered the YAML document and
trailing "..." to make the method call, and the server responded with
another YAML document and "..." record terminator. Using one of the
"RPC::Serialized::Client" family, it would look just the same.
How to write RPC Handlers
First, know that there are three example handlers included in this
distribution, so you can just go and look at them if you prefer reading
code to documentation! See the modules under
"RPC::Serialized::Handler::".
So you might have guessed that the first step is to choose your package
name for the handler. Each package contains one handler, or put another
way, each handler lives in its own package. You can either have the
handler's name be derived from the package's name, or set it manually.
Using the "localtime" example from above, this is what the handler looks
like:
package RPC::Serialized::Handler::Localtime;
use strict;
use warnings FATAL => 'all';
use base 'RPC::Serialized::Handler';
sub invoke {
my $self = shift;
my $time = shift;
$time = time unless defined $time;
return scalar localtime($time);
}
1;
There is a "magic" method in the package, called "invoke()", and it is
this which is called by the RPC server to handle the incoming request.
By default all the servers will take the name of the requested method
CALL, convert underscores to "::" separators, convert initial letters to
uppercase, and try to load a module in the "RPC::Serialized::Handler::"
namespace. For example, if I called the "$c->frobnits_goo" handler from
a client, the server would try to load a package called
"RPC::Serialized::Handler::Frobnits::Goo" and then call the <invoke()>
method within that.
Alternatively you can see the "OPTIONS FOR THIS MODULE" section below to
change that default namespace, or have your own mappings between client
calls and loaded handler packages (or a mixture of both).
You should expect all arguments passed to your "invoke()" method to be
in a plain perl list (i.e. @_); items in the list may be references to
complex data structures. You should return a single scalar value from
that method, and nothing else. The scalar value can, however, be a
reference to an arbitrarily complex data structure.
SETTING UP A CLIENT
As with the server, you don't need to know a lot about how networked
services operate in order to set up the client. However you probably do
need to know where your server is listening, to make contact with it!
Therefore, you will need to use the client which corresponds to your
server. Please read the manual page for the appropriate module:
RPC::Serialized::Client::INET
Use this client package to communicate with either a "NetServer"
server, or the "UCSPI/TCP" server.
RPC::Serialized::Client::UNIX
This client will make UNIX domain socket (i.e. local filesystem)
connections to the "NetServer" or "UCSPI/IPC" servers.
RPC::Serialized::Client::STDIO
For testing purposes you can use this client, which communicates on
Standard Input and Standard Output. Alternatively, use this package
as a base to implement a new kind of client.
The basis of the client set-up is given in "SYNOPSIS", above, but we
will show another example here for completeness:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings FATAL => 'all';
use Readonly;
use RPC::Serialized::Client::UNIX;
Readonly my $SOCKET => '/var/run/rpc-serialized-example.socket';
my $c = RPC::Serialized::Client::UNIX->new({
io_socket_unix => { Peer => $SOCKET }
});
eval {
my $response = $c->echo(qw/ a b c d /);
print "echo: " . join( ":", @$res ) . "\n";
};
warn "$@\n" if $@;
eval {
my $now = $c->localtime;
print "Localtime on the server is: $now\n";
};
warn "$@\n" if $@;
The above code uses the UNIX domain socket client to contact a server
which is listening on the file mentioned in $SOCKET. Once the client
object is set up, we can make a call to any method we wish on the remote
server, just by specifying its name. Here, we call the "echo" and the
"localtime" handlers.
For each call, you should specify the arguments as a plain perl list,
although that list can include references to complex data structures.
There is a single (scalar) return value from each call you make,
although again this may be a reference to a data structure if you wish.
This example also shows how you should use "eval{}" constructs around
the RPC calls. This is good practice for most network programming, as
all kinds of things can go wrong. See the section "ERROR HANDLING" below
for more information.
Timeouts
You should be aware that "RPC::Serialized" operates timeouts on all
handler calls. By default, you get 30 seconds to make your request (i.e.
make the call and pass any data to the server), another 30 seconds for
the server to handle the call, and 30 seconds to transfer the response
back to your client.
If any of this fails or times out, an exception will be raised and
passed back to you if possible. Exceptions can be passed through RPC,
but you don't need to know about how that works, only that you should be
prepared to handle "die" using "eval".
To alter the timeout setting, see the next section "OPTIONS FOR THIS
MODULE". To see examples of the "eval" construct see "ERROR HANDLING",
below.
OPTIONS FOR THIS MODULE
There is actually only a small number of options for this module, as
most of the heavy lifting within is done by other modules on the CPAN.
In particular, we use Data::Serializer, and there is a section below
which explains how to customize your serializer set-up.
Options are passed to the "new()" method in a hash reference. To see how
this is done, take a look at the "GENERAL CONFIGURATION" or "SYNOPSIS"
sections above, although here is a quick example:
my $s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new({
rpc_serialized => { timeout => 15, trace => 1 },
});
"handler_namespaces"
As explained above in "How the server works", the server will try to
auto-load the handler for a call, based on some naming conventions.
This value sets the Perl package namespaces which are searched. You
can set this either to a scalar string, the name of a single
namespace, or an array reference containing a list of such
namespaces. The default setting is "RPC::Serialized::Handler", into
which we supply the "echo", "localtime", and "sleep" handlers as
examples. Setting this value to an array reference containing an
empty list will disable auto-loading.
"handlers"
An alternative to "handler_namespaces", this value allows you to map
individual CALLs to a given package name. In this way you can alias
or alter the "published" name of handlers, or restrict calls. It can
be used in addition to "handler_namespaces", but will take priority
where both can be used to invoke an RPC handler. Set this value to
an anonymous hash, where keys are calls made by the client (e.g.
"echo") and values are package names containing the handler (e.g.
"RPC::Serialized::Handler::Echo"). No handlers are specified by
default.
"timeout"
This is a scalar value which sets how long "RPC::Serializer" servers
wait before timing out their connections. As explained above, it is
used when receiving an RPC call, when dispatching to the handler of
that call, and when replying to the client. Each phase is given the
"timeout" in seconds to do its work. The default value is 30
seconds.
"trace"
This is a boolean (scalar) which sets whether logging of the content
of RPC traffic is made using UNIX syslog. For more details see the
section "SERVER LOGGING", below. If set to a true value, logging
will be enabled. The default value is false.
"debug"
This is a boolean (scalar) which disables the "RPC::Serializer"
magic, meaning just the raw serialized data structures are sent
between client and server. Normally, "RPC::Serializer" will perform
compression, encryption, ASCII-armoring and hashing of the data it
sends, if so configured. If set to a true value, "debug" prevents
this. It can be very useful when combined with the "STDIO" client
and server, to test operations, as you can type CALLs in by hand at
the console. The default value is false.
"callbacks"
Hash reference with key value pairs of the callback names and the
corresponding code reference. Currently only callback
"pre_handler_argument_filter" is working. It will be called after
the arguments were encoded from the RPC call and before your RPC
method will called. When the callback is called, its input
parameters are:
Hash Reference
The contains just one parameter: "server" and that is the
"Net::Server::*" .object
List of Original RPC Parameters
This is the normal list of parameters for you to filter.
Returned values are the new RPC parameters. In the callback you can
modify, add and/or remove parameters. The call is protected by an
"eval/throw_app" construct so the code can die if needed. For
example:
my $c = RPC::Serialized::Client::INET->new({
... OTHER OPTIONS ...
callbacks => {
pre_handler_argument_filter => sub {
my $opt = shift;
# Net::Server::* object:
# $opt->{server}
# The normal arguments:
my @arguments = @_;
# Return the reversed list of arguments
return reverse @arguments;
},
}
});
CONFIGURING Data::Serializer
The defaults for Data::Serializer, which is used to encode and decode
your method calls and responses, are quite sane so you can safely leave
this alone.
However you might prefer to override this and use a particular
serialization format, or enable encryption, and this is quite
straightforward to do. Passing a hash of options within the call to
"new()" at either the client or server will do this, like so:
my $c = RPC::Serialized::Client::STDIO->new({
data_serializer => { serializer => 'YAML::Syck', encoding => 'b64' },
});
The only option which you cannot alter is "portable", and this is forced
to true, meaning that "Data::Serializer" will ASCII-armor the a data
structure (i.e. encode it in hexadecimal or base64). Of course, if you
have enabled the "debug" option to "RPC::Serialized" then "portable" is
ignored.
In most cases, the "Data::Serializer" module at the RPC server will
auto-detect the settings used, and reply with a packet with the same
settings. Where this might not work is in two cases: First make sure
that the serializer used on the client is installed on the server.
Second, make sure any keys and modules used for encryption on the client
are available on the server. With a standard install of
"RPC::Serialized" there should be no concern here, as it uses only core
Perl modules, and encryption is not enabled.
For further details please see the Data::Serializer manual page.
CONFIGURING Net::Server
The Net::Server binding shipped with this module has some defaults set,
although none are enforced so you can override all options to that
module.
The chosen *personality* is "PreFork", and a "Single" personality is
also available. If you want to use something else just copy the bundled
binding module ("RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer") and modify as
appropriate. Default settings which differ from those in the native
"Net::Server" are as follows:
"log_level" is set to 4
"syslog_facility" is set to "local1"
"background" is set to "undef"
"setsid" is set to "undef"
This means that logging goes to STDERR from the parent server, but to
send it to Syslog instead just do the following (after reading the
Net::Server manual page):
my $s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new({
net_server => { log_file => 'Sys::Syslog' },
});
In addition the server does not fork or detach from the shell and go
into the background. For further details please see the Net::Server
manual page.
AUTHORIZATION
The system from which "RPC::Serialized" derives supports user-based
authorization based on a calling username, the called handler, and the
arguments passed to that handler.
In addition, "Net::Server" supports IP-based access control lists.
Both of these systems are available although by default disabled.
Looking in the examples folder with this distribution you should find
some sample ACLs for "RPC::Serialized". You can also consult the
Net::Server manual page for its options.
For the time being the authorization is not documented here, but it is
hoped this will be remedied before too long! If you want help with
authorization configuration, feel free to email the module author.
SERVER LOGGING
If you have enabled RPC server logging, using the "trace" option to
"new()", then output is sent via UNIX Syslog. The server will write out
a serialized dump of the data sent and received, using whichever
serializer you have set the server to use. This might not be the same
serializer used in the transaction, however, as explained in the section
"CONFIGURING Data::Serializer", above. You will see the CALL, ARGS,
RESPONSE and any EXCEPTIONs raised, in the log.
Logging uses the excellent Log::Dispatch module from CPAN, with its
"Syslog" personality. The default settings are as follows:
"name" is set to "rpc-serialized"
"min_level" is set to "info"
"facility" is set to "local0"
"callbacks" is set to add a newline to each log message
You can override these settings in the configuration file, or the call
to "new()", like this:
my $s = RPC::Serialized::Server::STDIO->new({
log_dispatch_syslog => { facility => 'local7' },
});
Log messages will be dispatched to your syslog subsystem at the level
set in "min_level". Note that the hash key used is
"log_dispatch_syslog", as above.
Suppressing Sensitive Data
If you transmit sensitive data in the arguments to handler calls, but
also wish to log a trace of the handler call+args, then the
"args_suppress_log" configuration parameter will help.
This parameter takes a Hash reference where they keys are the names of
handlers and the values are Array references of sensitive argument
names. Naturally, this assumes treating of the "args" list as a Hash of
keys/values by the handler and you would only be able to use this
parameter in that situation. For example:
$s = RPC::Serialized::Server::NetServer->new({
rpc_serialized => { args_suppress_log => {
login => [qw/ password /],
}},
});
Using the above configuration, the "login" handler when called would not
log the value of the "password" named argument in its "args". The text
"[suppressed]" is output to the log in place of the named argument's
value.
ERROR HANDLING
This module makes use of Exception::Class when it needs to raise a
critical error, but don't fret if this makes no sense to you. The
essential concept is that calls to this module might die, and you need
to be able to deal with that.
The usual way is to wrap calls in an "eval{}" block to trap errors, like
so:
eval {
my $now = $c->localtime;
print "Localtime on the server is: $now\n";
};
warn "Remote procedure call failed: $@\n" if $@;
A nifty part of this module (courtesy of the original authors of the
code) is that an exception can be raised in the server and delivered to
the client. The exceptions are "RPC::Serialized::X" objects, derived
from "Class::Exception", of the following types:
"RPC::Serialized::X::Protocol" is for an RPC protocol error
"RPC::Serialized::X::Parse" is for a Data::Serializer parser failure
"RPC::Serialized::X::Validation" is for a data validation error
"RPC::Serialized::X::System" is for any system error
"RPC::Serialized::X::Application" is for application programming errors
"RPC::Serialized::X::Authorization" is for an authorization failure
Typically you want to check if it was "RPC::Serialized" having a
problem, or some other issue:
eval {
my $num = $c->cabbages;
print "Number of cabbages is: $num\n";
};
if ($@ and $@->isa('RPC::Serialized::X')) {
print $@->message, "\n"; # "no handler for cabbages"
}
else { die $@ } # rethrow the exception
For further details please see the Class::Exception manual page.
DIAGNOSTICS
Here is a list of the common error messages and exception types raised
by this module, and probable causes:
"Failed to create socket: ..." in an "X::System"
The "INET" or "UNIX" client has failed to set up an IO::Socket::INET
or IO::Socket::UNIX socket respectively.
"Invalid or missing CALL" in an "X::Protocol"
After de-serializing the incoming data message from the client,
there appears to be no CALL parameter.
"Invalid or missing ARGS" in an "X::Protocol"
After de-serializing the incoming data message from the client,
there appears to be no ARGS list.
"Failed to load ..." in an "X::System"
The server has attempted to load the handler specified for the
current call, but failed. Did you specify the correct handler?
"No handler for ..." in an "X::Application"
After searching any manual handler mappings, or the auto-load
namespaces, no suitable handler package was found for the current
call.
"... not a RPC::Serialized::Handler" in an "X::Application"
Having found a package to load for the current call from the handler
specification, it does not inherit from "RPC::Serialized::Handler".
"Cannot search for invalid name: ..." in an "X::Application"
You are attempting to auto-load a handler whose package name would
not be valid in perl. It must be letters, digits and underscores
only.
"Invalid or missing CLASS" in an "X::Protocol"
An Exception class rasied by the server is not known to the client,
so this exception is raised instead.
"Object method called on class" in an "X::Application"
You are attempting to invoke a call on the client module directly,
rather than instantiating a new client object from it and then
making the call on that.
"Missing or invalid input handle" in an "X::Application"
The server has not been passed a valid "IO::Handle" upon which to
read data. The handle is passed in the call to "new()" or via the
"ifh" accessor method on the server object.
"Missing or invalid output handle" in an "X::Application"
The server has not been passed a valid "IO::Handle" upon which to
write data. The handle is passed in the call to "new()" or via the
"ofh" accessor method on the server object.
"Failed to load Log::Dispatch but trace is on: ..." in an
"X::Application"
You have enabled server logging using the "trace" option, but the
Log::Dispatch or Log::Dispatch::Syslog module has failed to load.
"Data not a hash reference" in an "X::Protocol"
After de-serializing some data (from the client or server), the data
structure appears not to be a hash reference.
"Failed to send data: ..." in an "X::System"
A system error has ocurred when sending data through the handle to
the client or server.
"Failed to read data: ..." in an "X::System"
A system error has ocurred when reading data from the handle to the
client or server.
"Data::Serializer error: ..." in an "X::Protocol"
An error has been thrown by the Data::Serializer module when
initializing.
"Serializer parse error" in an "X::Protocol"
An error has been thrown by the "Data::Serializer" module when
attempting to serialize or de-serialize data to or from the client
or server.
DEPENDENCIES
In addition to the contents of the standard Perl 5.8.4 distribution,
this module requires the following:
Data::Serializer
Exception::Class
Module::MultiConf
Readonly
Class::Accessor::Fast::Contained
To use some optional features, you may require the following:
Net::Server
Log::Dispatch
GDBM_File
THANKS
This module is a derivative of "YAML::RPC", written by "pod" and Ray
Miller, at the University of Oxford Computing Services. Without their
brilliant creation this system would not exist.
AUTHOR
Oliver Gorwits <oliver@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by University of Oxford.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.