DOKK / manpages / debian 10 / libio-all-lwp-perl / IO::All::LWP.3pm.en
IO::All::LWP(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation IO::All::LWP(3pm)

IO::All::LWP - IO::All interface to LWP

    use IO::All;
    "hello world\n" > io('ftp://localhost/test/x');   # save to FTP
    $content < io('http://example.org');              # GET webpage
    io('http://example.org') > io('index.html');      # save webpage

This module acts as glue between IO::All and LWP, so that files can be read and written through the network using the convenient <IO:All> interface. Note that this module is not "use"d directly: you just use IO::All, which knows when to autoload IO::All::HTTP, IO::All::HTTPS, IO::All::FTP, or IO::All::Gopher, which implement the specific protocols based on IO::All::LWP.

GET requests. When the IO::All object is opened, the URI is fetched and stored by the object in an internal file handle. It can then be accessed like any other file via the IO::All methods and operators, it can be tied, etc.

PUT requests. When the IO::All object is opened, an internal file handle is created. It is possible to that file handle using the various IO::All methods and operators, it can be tied, etc. If $io->put is not called explicitly, when the IO::All object is closed, either explicitly via $io->close or automatically upon destruction, the actual PUT request is made.

The bad news is that the whole file is stored in memory after getting it or before putting it. This may cause problems if you are dealing with multi-gigabyte files!

The simplest way of doing things is via the overloaded operators > and <, as shown in the SYNOPSIS. These take care of automatically opening and closing the files and connections as needed. However, various methods are available to provide a finer degree of control.

This is a subclass of IO::All. In addition to the inherited methods, the following methods are available:

  • ua

    Set or get the user agent object (LWP::UserAgent or a subclass). If called with a list, the list is passed to LWP::UserAgent->new. If called with an object, the object is used directly as the user agent. Note that there is a default user agent if no user agent is specified.

  • uri

    Set or get the URI. It can take either a URI object or a string, and it returns an URI object. Note that calling this method overrides the user and password fields, because URIs can contain authentication information.

  • user

    Set or get the user name for authentication. Note that the user name (and the password) can also be set as part of the URL, as in "http://me:secret@example.com/".

  • password

    Set or get the password for authentication. Note that the password can also be set as part of the URL, as discussed above.

  • get

    GET the current URI using LWP. Or, if called with an HTTP::Request object as a parameter, it does that request instead. It returns the HTTP::Response object.

  • put

    PUT to the current URI using LWP. If called with an HTTP::Request object, it does that request instead. If called with a scalar, it PUTs that as the content to the current URI, instead of the current accumulated content.

  • response

    Return the HTTP::Response object.

  • request

    Does an LWP request. It requires an HTTP::Request object as a parameter. Returns an HTTP::Response object.

  • open

    Overrides the "open" method from IO::All. It takes care of GETting the content, or of setting up the internal buffer for PUTting. Just like the "open" method from IO::All, it can take a mode: '<' for GET and '>' for PUT.

  • close

    Overrides the "close" method from IO::All. It takes care of PUTting the content.

This module uses LWP for all the heavy lifting. It also requires perl-5.8.0 or a more recent version.

IO::All, LWP, IO::All::HTTP, IO::All::FTP.

Ivan Tubert-Brohman <itub@cpan.org> and Brian Ingerson <ingy@cpan.org>

Thanks to Sergey Gleizer for the ua method.

Copyright (c) 2007. Ivan Tubert-Brohman and Brian Ingerson. All rights reserved.

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

See <http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>

2018-07-01 perl v5.26.2