Mason::Manual::RequestDispatch(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Mason::Manual::RequestDispatch(3pm) |
Mason::Manual::RequestDispatch - How request paths get mapped to page components
Given the request path
/news/sports/hockey
Mason searches for the following components in order, setting $m->path_info as noted.
/news/sports/hockey.{mp,mc} /news/sports/hockey/index.{mp,mc} /news/sports/hockey/dhandler.{mp,mc} /news/sports/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = hockey /news/sports.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = hockey (but see next section) /news/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = sports/hockey /news.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = sports/hockey (but see next section) /dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = news/sports/hockey
where ".{mp,mc}" means either ".mp" (indicating a pure-perl component). or ".mc" (indicating a top-level component).
The following sections describe these elements in more detail.
The request path is suffixed with ".mp" and ".mc" to translate it to a component path.
/news/sports/hockey.{mp,mc}
An index matches its exact directory, nothing underneath.
/news/sports/hockey/index.{mp,mc}
A dhandler matches its directory as well as anything underneath, setting "$m->path_info" to the remainder.
/news/sports/hockey/dhandler.{mp,mc} /news/sports/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = hockey /news/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = sports/hockey /dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = news/sports/hockey
A component can match an initial part of the URL, setting "$m->path_info" to the remainder:
/news/sports.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = hockey /news.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = sports/hockey
Since this isn't always desirable behavior, it must be explicitly enabled for the component. Mason will call method "allow_path_info" on the component class, and will only allow the match if it returns true:
<%class> method allow_path_info { 1 } </%class>
The default "allow_path_info" returns false.
"allow_path_info" is not checked on dhandlers, since the whole point of dhandlers is to match partial paths.
If the request URL has a trailing slash (ends with "/"), we remove it before the match process begins and add it to the "$m->path_info". Components that should match must have "allow_path_info" return true.
For example:
## request URL /news/ /news/index.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = / if index.{mp,mc} has # allow_path_info => true /news/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = / /news.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = / if news.{mp,mc} has # allow_path_info => true ## request URL /news/sports/ /news/sports/index.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = / if index.{mp,mc} has # allow_path_info => true /news/sports/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = / /news/sports.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = / if sports.{mp,mc} # has allow_path_info => true /news/dhandler.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = sports/ /news.{mp,mc} # $m->path_info = /sports/ if news.{mp,mc} # has allow_path_info => true
It is possible to use route syntax to more elegantly parse "$m->path_info" for dhandlers and partial paths, e.g.
<%class> route "{year:[0-9]+}/{month:[0-9]{2}}"; </%class>
See Mason::Plugin::RouterSimple.
Mason
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.
2022-05-27 | perl v5.34.0 |