Security Advisories (8)
CPANSA-Mojolicious-2022-03 (2022-12-10)

Mojo::DOM did not correctly parse <script> tags.

CPANSA-Mojolicious-2021-02 (2021-06-01)

Small sessions could be used as part of a brute-force attack to decode the session secret.

CVE-2021-47208 (2021-03-16)

A bug in format detection can potentially be exploited for a DoS attack.

CVE-2018-25100 (2018-02-13)

Mojo::UserAgent::CookieJar leaks old cookies because of the missing host_only flag on empty domain.

CPANSA-Mojolicious-2018-03 (2018-05-19)

Mojo::UserAgent was not checking peer SSL certificates by default.

CVE-2020-36829 (2020-11-10)

Mojo::Util secure_compare can leak the string length. By immediately returning when the two strings are not the same length, the function allows an attacker to guess the length of the secret string using timing attacks.

CPANSA-Mojolicious-2018-02 (2018-05-11)

GET requests with embedded backslashes can be used to access local files on Windows hosts

CVE-2024-58134 (2025-05-03)

Mojolicious versions from 0.999922 for Perl uses a hard coded string, or the application's class name, as a HMAC session secret by default. These predictable default secrets can be exploited to forge session cookies. An attacker who knows or guesses the secret could compute valid HMAC signatures for the session cookie, allowing them to tamper with or hijack another user's session.

NAME

Mojo::Base - Minimal base class for Mojo projects

SYNOPSIS

package Cat;
use Mojo::Base -base;

has name => 'Nyan';
has ['age', 'weight'] => 4;

package Tiger;
use Mojo::Base 'Cat';

has friend  => sub { Cat->new };
has stripes => 42;

package main;
use Mojo::Base -strict;

my $mew = Cat->new(name => 'Longcat');
say $mew->age;
say $mew->age(3)->weight(5)->age;

my $rawr = Tiger->new(stripes => 38, weight => 250);
say $rawr->tap(sub { $_->friend->name('Tacgnol') })->weight;

DESCRIPTION

Mojo::Base is a simple base class for Mojo projects with fluent interfaces.

# Automatically enables "strict", "warnings", "utf8" and Perl 5.10 features
use Mojo::Base -strict;
use Mojo::Base -base;
use Mojo::Base 'SomeBaseClass';

All three forms save a lot of typing.

# use Mojo::Base -strict;
use strict;
use warnings;
use utf8;
use feature ':5.10';
use IO::Handle ();

# use Mojo::Base -base;
use strict;
use warnings;
use utf8;
use feature ':5.10';
use IO::Handle ();
use Mojo::Base;
push @ISA, 'Mojo::Base';
sub has { Mojo::Base::attr(__PACKAGE__, @_) }

# use Mojo::Base 'SomeBaseClass';
use strict;
use warnings;
use utf8;
use feature ':5.10';
use IO::Handle ();
require SomeBaseClass;
push @ISA, 'SomeBaseClass';
use Mojo::Base;
sub has { Mojo::Base::attr(__PACKAGE__, @_) }

FUNCTIONS

Mojo::Base implements the following functions, which can be imported with the -base flag or by setting a base class.

has

has 'name';
has ['name1', 'name2', 'name3'];
has name => 'foo';
has name => sub {...};
has ['name1', 'name2', 'name3'] => 'foo';
has ['name1', 'name2', 'name3'] => sub {...};

Create attributes for hash-based objects, just like the "attr" method.

METHODS

Mojo::Base implements the following methods.

attr

$object->attr('name');
SubClass->attr('name');
SubClass->attr(['name1', 'name2', 'name3']);
SubClass->attr(name => 'foo');
SubClass->attr(name => sub {...});
SubClass->attr(['name1', 'name2', 'name3'] => 'foo');
SubClass->attr(['name1', 'name2', 'name3'] => sub {...});

Create attribute accessors for hash-based objects, an array reference can be used to create more than one at a time. Pass an optional second argument to set a default value, it should be a constant or a callback. The callback will be executed at accessor read time if there's no set value, and gets passed the current instance of the object as first argument. Accessors can be chained, that means they return their invocant when they are called with an argument.

new

my $object = SubClass->new;
my $object = SubClass->new(name => 'value');
my $object = SubClass->new({name => 'value'});

This base class provides a basic constructor for hash-based objects. You can pass it either a hash or a hash reference with attribute values.

tap

$object = $object->tap(sub {...});
$object = $object->tap('some_method');
$object = $object->tap('some_method', @args);

Tap into a method chain to perform operations on an object within the chain (also known as a K combinator or Kestrel). The object will be the first argument passed to the callback, and is also available as $_. The callback's return value will be ignored; instead, the object (the callback's first argument) will be the return value. In this way, arbitrary code can be used within (i.e., spliced or tapped into) a chained set of object method calls.

# Longer version
$object = $object->tap(sub { $_->some_method(@args) });

# Inject side effects into a method chain
$object->foo('A')->tap(sub { say $_->foo })->foo('B');

SEE ALSO

Mojolicious, Mojolicious::Guides, http://mojolicious.org.