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::IOLoop::Delay - Manage callbacks and control the flow of events

SYNOPSIS

use Mojo::IOLoop::Delay;

# Synchronize multiple non-blocking operations
my $delay = Mojo::IOLoop::Delay->new;
$delay->steps(sub { say 'BOOM!' });
for my $i (1 .. 10) {
  my $end = $delay->begin;
  Mojo::IOLoop->timer($i => sub {
    say 10 - $i;
    $end->();
  });
}
$delay->wait;

# Sequentialize multiple non-blocking operations
Mojo::IOLoop::Delay->new->steps(

  # First step (simple timer)
  sub {
    my $delay = shift;
    Mojo::IOLoop->timer(2 => $delay->begin);
    say 'Second step in 2 seconds.';
  },

  # Second step (concurrent timers)
  sub {
    my ($delay, @args) = @_;
    Mojo::IOLoop->timer(1 => $delay->begin);
    Mojo::IOLoop->timer(3 => $delay->begin);
    say 'Third step in 3 seconds.';
  },

  # Third step (the end)
  sub {
    my ($delay, @args) = @_;
    say 'And done after 5 seconds total.';
  }
)->wait;

# Handle exceptions in all steps
Mojo::IOLoop::Delay->new->steps(
  sub {
    my $delay = shift;
    die 'Intentional error';
  },
  sub {
    my ($delay, @args) = @_;
    say 'Never actually reached.';
  }
)->catch(sub {
  my ($delay, $err) = @_;
  say "Something went wrong: $err";
})->wait;

DESCRIPTION

Mojo::IOLoop::Delay manages callbacks and controls the flow of events for Mojo::IOLoop, which can help you avoid deep nested closures that often result from continuation-passing style.

EVENTS

Mojo::IOLoop::Delay inherits all events from Mojo::EventEmitter and can emit the following new ones.

error

$delay->on(error => sub {
  my ($delay, $err) = @_;
  ...
});

Emitted if an exception gets thrown in one of the steps, breaking the chain, fatal if unhandled.

finish

$delay->on(finish => sub {
  my ($delay, @args) = @_;
  ...
});

Emitted once the event counter reaches zero and there are no more steps.

ATTRIBUTES

Mojo::IOLoop::Delay implements the following attributes.

ioloop

my $loop = $delay->ioloop;
$delay   = $delay->ioloop(Mojo::IOLoop->new);

Event loop object to control, defaults to the global Mojo::IOLoop singleton.

remaining

my $remaining = $delay->remaining;
$delay        = $delay->remaining([sub {...}]);

Remaining "steps" in chain.

METHODS

Mojo::IOLoop::Delay inherits all methods from Mojo::EventEmitter and implements the following new ones.

begin

my $cb = $delay->begin;
my $cb = $delay->begin($offset);
my $cb = $delay->begin($offset, $len);

Indicate an active event by incrementing the event counter, the returned callback needs to be executed when the event has completed, to decrement the event counter again. When all callbacks have been executed and the event counter reached zero, "steps" will continue.

# Capture all arguments except for the first one (invocant)
my $delay = Mojo::IOLoop->delay(sub {
  my ($delay, $err, $stream) = @_;
  ...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->client({port => 3000} => $delay->begin);
$delay->wait;

Arguments passed to the returned callback are spliced with the given offset and length, defaulting to an offset of 1 with no default length. The arguments are then combined in the same order "begin" was called, and passed together to the next step or "finish" event.

# Capture all arguments
my $delay = Mojo::IOLoop->delay(sub {
  my ($delay, $loop, $err, $stream) = @_;
  ...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->client({port => 3000} => $delay->begin(0));
$delay->wait;

# Capture only the second argument
my $delay = Mojo::IOLoop->delay(sub {
  my ($delay, $err) = @_;
  ...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->client({port => 3000} => $delay->begin(1, 1));
$delay->wait;

# Capture and combine arguments
my $delay = Mojo::IOLoop->delay(sub {
  my ($delay, $three_err, $three_stream, $four_err, $four_stream) = @_;
  ...
});
Mojo::IOLoop->client({port => 3000} => $delay->begin);
Mojo::IOLoop->client({port => 4000} => $delay->begin);
$delay->wait;

data

my $hash = $delay->data;
my $foo  = $delay->data('foo');
$delay   = $delay->data({foo => 'bar', baz => 23});
$delay   = $delay->data(foo => 'bar', baz => 23);

Data shared between all "steps".

# Remove value
my $foo = delete $delay->data->{foo};

# Assign multiple values at once
$delay->data(foo => 'test', bar => 23);

pass

$delay = $delay->pass;
$delay = $delay->pass(@args);

Increment event counter and decrement it again right away to pass values to the next step.

# Longer version
$delay->begin(0)->(@args);

steps

$delay = $delay->steps(sub {...}, sub {...});

Sequentialize multiple events, every time the event counter reaches zero a callback will run, the first one automatically runs during the next reactor tick unless it is delayed by incrementing the event counter. This chain will continue until there are no "remaining" callbacks, a callback does not increment the event counter or an exception gets thrown in a callback.

wait

$delay->wait;

Start "ioloop" and stop it again once an "error" or "finish" event gets emitted, does nothing when "ioloop" is already running.

SEE ALSO

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