NAME

Catalyst::Manual::Internals - Catalyst Internals

DESCRIPTION

This document provides an overview of the internals of Catalyst. As Catalyst is still developing rapidly details may become out of date.

The coverage is split into initialization and request lifecycle.

Initialization

Catalyst initializes itself in two stages (I may be wrong in some of the details here - AF):

  1. When the Catalyst module is imported in the main application module it evaluates any options (-Debug, -Engine=XXX) and loads any specified plugins, making application module inherit from the plugin classes. It also sets up a default log object and ensures that the application module inherits from Catalyst and from the selected specialized Engine module.

  2. When the application module makes the first call to __PACKAGE__->action() (implemented in Catalyst::Engine) Catalyst automatically loads all components it finds in the $class\::Controller, $class\::C, $class\::Model, $class\::M, $class\::View and $class\::V namespaces (using Module::Pluggable::Fast). A table of actions is built up and added to on subsequent calls to action().

Request Lifecycle

For each request Catalyst builds a context object, which includes information about the request, and searches the action table for matching actions.

The handling of a request can be divided into three stages: preparation of the context, processing of the request, and finalization of the response. These are the steps of a Catalyst request in detail; every step can be overloaded to extend Catalyst.

handler
  prepare
    prepare_request
    prepare_path
    prepare_cookies
    prepare_headers
    prepare_connection
    prepare_action
    prepare_parameters
    prepare_uploads
  process
  finalize
    finalize_headers
    finalize_output

These steps are normally overloaded from engine classes, and may also be extended by plugins. Extending means using multiple inheritance with NEXT.

The specialized engine classes populate the Catalyst request object with information from the underlying layer (Apache::Request or CGI::Simple) during the prepare phase, then push the generated response information down to the underlying layer during the finalize phase.

AUTHOR

Sebastian Riedel, sri@oook.de

COPYRIGHT

This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.