Mason::Request - Mason Request Class
$m->abort (...)
$m->comp (...)
etc.
Mason::Request represents a single request for a page, and is the
access point for most Mason features not provided by syntactic tags.
A Mason request is created when you call
"$interp->run", or in a web
environment, for each new web request. A new (sub-)request is also created
when you call visit or go on the current request.
Inside a component you can access the current request object via
the global $m. Outside of a component, you can use
the class method
"Mason::Request->current_request".
The methods comp, comp_exists, construct, go, load, and visit take
a component path argument. If the path does not begin with a '/', then it is
made absolute based on the current component path (using rel_to_abs).
Component paths are like URL paths, and always use a forward slash
(/) as the separator, regardless of what your operating system uses.
These parameters would normally be passed in an initial hashref to
"$interp->run",
"$m->visit", or
"$m->go".
- out_method
- Indicates where to send the page output. If out_method is a scalar
reference, output is appended to the scalar. If out_method is a code
reference, the code is called with the output string. For example, to send
output to a file called "mason.out":
open(my $fh, ">", "mason.out);
...
out_method => sub { $fh->print($_[0]) }
When "out_method" is
unspecified, the output can be obtained from the Mason::Result object
returned from "$interp->run".
- abort ()
- Ends the current request, finishing the page without returning through
components.
"abort" is implemented by
throwing an "Mason::Exception::Abort"
object and can thus be caught by
"eval". The
"aborted" method is a shortcut for
determining whether a caught error was generated by
"abort".
- aborted
([$err])
- Returns true or undef indicating whether the specified
$err was generated by
"abort". If no
$err was passed, uses $@.
In this Try::Tiny code, we catch and process fatal errors
while letting "abort" exceptions pass
through:
try {
code_that_may_fail_or_abort()
} catch {
die $_ if $m->aborted($_);
# handle fatal errors...
};
- add_cleanup
(code)
- Add a code reference to be executed when the request is cleaned up.
- clear_and_abort
()
- This method is syntactic sugar for calling
"clear_buffer()" and then
"abort()". If you are aborting the
request because of an error (or, in a web environment, to do a redirect),
you will often want to clear the buffer first so that any output generated
up to that point is not sent to the client.
- capture (code)
- Execute the code, capturing and returning any Mason output instead
of outputting it. e.g. the following
my $buf = $m->capture(sub { $m->comp('/foo') });
is equivalent to
my $buf = $m->scomp('/foo');
- clear_buffer
()
- Clears the Mason output buffer. Any output sent before this line is
discarded. Useful for handling error conditions that can only be detected
in the middle of a request.
clear_buffer is, of course, thwarted by flush_buffer.
- comp (path[, params
...])
- Creates a new instance of the component designated by path, and
calls its "main" method. params,
if any, are passed to the constructor.
The "<& &>"
tag provides a shortcut for
"$m->comp".
- comp_exists
(path)
- Makes the component path absolute if necessary, and calls Interp
comp_exists to determine whether a component exists at that path.
- current_comp_class
()
- Returns the current component class. This is determined by walking up the
Perl caller() stack until the first Mason::Component subclass is
found.
- current_request
()
- This class method returns the
"Mason::Request" currently in use. If
called when no Mason request is active it will return
"undef".
- construct (path[,
params ...])
- Constructs and return a new instance of the component designated by
path. params, if any, are passed to the constructor. Throws
an error if path does not exist.
- decline ()
- Clears the output buffer and tries the current request again, but acting
as if the previously chosen page component(s) do not exist.
For example, if the following components exist:
/news/sports.mc
/news/dhandler.mc
/dhandler.mc
then a request for path
"/news/sports" will initially resolve
to "/news/sports.mc". A call to
"$m->decline" would restart the
request and resolve to
"/news/dhandler.mc", a second
"$m->decline" would resolve to
"/dhandler.mc", and a third would
throw a "not found" error.
- filter (filter_expr,
[filter_expr...], string|coderef)
- Applies one or more filters to a string or to a coderef that returns a
string.
my $filtered_string = $m->filter($.Trim, $.NoBlankLines, $string);
- flush_buffer
()
- Flushes the main output buffer. Anything currently in the buffer is sent
to the request's out_method.
Note that anything output within a
"$m->scomp" or
"$m->capture" will not have made it
to the main output buffer, and thus cannot be flushed.
- go ([request params], path,
args...)
- Performs an internal redirect. Clears the output buffer, runs a new
request for the given path and args, and then aborts when
that request is done.
The first argument may optionally be a hashref of parameters
which are passed to the
"Mason::Request" constructor.
See also visit.
- interp ()
- Returns the Interp object associated with this request.
- load (path)
- Makes the component path absolute if necessary, and calls Interp
load to load the component class associated with the path.
- log ()
- Returns a "Log::Any" logger with a log
category specific to the current component. The category for a component
"/foo/bar" would be "Mason::Component::foo::bar".
- notes ([key[,
value]])
- The "notes()" method provides a place to
store application data between components - essentially, a hash which
persists for the duration of the request.
"notes($key, $value)" stores
a new entry in the hash; "notes($key)"
returns a previously stored value; and
"notes()" without any arguments
returns a reference to the entire hash of key-value pairs.
Consider storing this kind of data in a read-write attribute
of the page component.
- print (string)
- Add the given string to the Mason output buffer. This happens
implicitly for all content placed in the main component body.
- page ()
- Returns the page component originally called in the request.
- path_info
()
- Returns the remainder of the request path beyond the path of the page
component, with no leading slash. e.g. If a request for '/foo/bar/baz'
resolves to "/foo.mc", the path_info is "bar/baz". For
an exact match, it will contain the empty string (never undef), so you can
determine whether there's a path_info with
if ( length($m->path_info) )
- rel_to_abs
(path)
- Converts a component path to absolute form based on the current
component, if it does not already begin with a '/'.
- request_args
()
- Returns the original hashref of arguments passed to the request, e.g. via
"$interp->run".
- request_path
()
- Returns the original path passed to the request, e.g. in
"$interp->run".
- scomp (comp,
args...)
- Like comp, but returns the component output as a string instead of
printing it. (Think sprintf versus printf.)
See also capture.
- visit ([request params],
path, args...)
- Performs a subrequest with the given path and args, with
output being sent to the current output buffer.
The first argument may optionally be a hashref of parameters
which are passed to the
"Mason::Request" constructor. e.g. to
capture the output of the subrequest:
$m->visit({out_method => \my $buffer}, ...);
See also go.
These methods are not intended to be called externally, but may be
useful to modify with method modifiers in plugins and subclasses. Their APIs
will be kept as stable as possible.
- cleanup_request
()
- A place to perform cleanup duties when the request finishes or dies with
an error, even if the request object is not immediately destroyed.
Includes anything registered with add_cleanup.
- construct_page_component
($compc, $args)
- Constructs the page component of class
$compc, with hashref of
constructor arguments
$args.
- match_request_path
($request_path)
- Given a top level
$request_path, return a
corresponding component path or undef if none was found. Search includes
dhandlers and index files. See Mason::Manual::RequestDispatch.
- process_output
($outref)
- This method is called on the output buffer right before it is sent to its
final destination. $outref is
a reference to the output string; the method can modify it as
desired.
- run ($request_path,
args)
- Runs the request with
$request_path and
args, where the latter can be either a hashref or a hash. This is
generally called via << $interp->run
>>.
- with_tied_print
($code)
- Execute the given $code with
the current selected filehandle ('print') tied to the Mason output stream.
You could disable the filehandle selection by overriding this to just call
$code.
Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Jonathan Swartz.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.