NAME
FCGI::Async - Module to allow use of FastCGI asynchronously
SYNOPSIS
This module allows a program to respond to FastCGI requests using an asynchronous model. It is based on IO::Async and will fully interact with any program using this base.
use FCGI::Async;
use IO::Async::Set::IO_Poll;
my $fcgi = FCGI::Async->new(
on_request => sub {
my ( $fcgi, $req ) = @_;
# Handle the request here
}
);
my $set = IO::Async::Set::IO_Poll->new();
$set->add( $fcgi );
$set->loop_forever;
FUNCTIONS
$fcgi = FCGI::Async->new( %args )
This function returns a new instance of a FCGI::Async
object, containing a master socket to listen on. The constructor returns immediately; it does not make any blocking calls.
The function operates in one of three ways, depending on arguments passed in the %args
hash:
Listening on an existing socket.
socket => $socket
This must be a socket opened in listening mode, derived from
IO::Socket
, or any other class that handles thefileno
andaccept
methods in a similar way.Creating a new listening socket.
port => $port
A new
IO::Socket::INET
socket will be opened on the given port number. It will listen on all interfaces, from all addresses.Using the socket passed as STDIN from a webserver.
When running a local FastCGI responder, the webserver will create a new INET socket connected to the script's STDIN file handle. To use the socket in this case, pass neither of the above options.
The %args
hash must also contain a CODE reference to a callback function to call when a new FastCGI request arrives
on_request => sub { ... }
or
on_request => \&handler
This will be passed two parameters; the FCGI::Async
container object, and a new FCGI::Async::Request
object representing the specific request.
$on_request->( $fcgi, $request )
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
2 POD Errors
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 183:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'
- Around line 187:
=back without =over