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1 | package Catalyst::Controller::REST; |
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2 | use Moose; |
3 | use namespace::autoclean; |
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4 | |
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5 | our $VERSION = '0.85'; |
a66af307 |
6 | $VERSION = eval $VERSION; |
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7 | |
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8 | =head1 NAME |
9 | |
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10 | Catalyst::Controller::REST - A RESTful controller |
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11 | |
12 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
13 | |
14 | package Foo::Controller::Bar; |
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15 | use Moose; |
16 | use namespace::autoclean; |
17 | |
18 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller::REST' } |
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19 | |
20 | sub thing : Local : ActionClass('REST') { } |
21 | |
22 | # Answer GET requests to "thing" |
23 | sub thing_GET { |
24 | my ( $self, $c ) = @_; |
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25 | |
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26 | # Return a 200 OK, with the data in entity |
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27 | # serialized in the body |
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28 | $self->status_ok( |
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29 | $c, |
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30 | entity => { |
31 | some => 'data', |
32 | foo => 'is real bar-y', |
33 | }, |
34 | ); |
35 | } |
36 | |
37 | # Answer PUT requests to "thing" |
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38 | sub thing_PUT { |
10bcd217 |
39 | $radiohead = $req->data->{radiohead}; |
40 | |
41 | $self->status_created( |
42 | $c, |
43 | location => $c->req->uri->as_string, |
44 | entity => { |
45 | radiohead => $radiohead, |
46 | } |
47 | ); |
48 | } |
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49 | |
50 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
51 | |
52 | Catalyst::Controller::REST implements a mechanism for building |
53 | RESTful services in Catalyst. It does this by extending the |
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54 | normal Catalyst dispatch mechanism to allow for different |
55 | subroutines to be called based on the HTTP Method requested, |
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56 | while also transparently handling all the serialization/deserialization for |
57 | you. |
58 | |
59 | This is probably best served by an example. In the above |
60 | controller, we have declared a Local Catalyst action on |
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61 | "sub thing", and have used the ActionClass('REST'). |
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62 | |
63 | Below, we have declared "thing_GET" and "thing_PUT". Any |
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64 | GET requests to thing will be dispatched to "thing_GET", |
65 | while any PUT requests will be dispatched to "thing_PUT". |
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66 | |
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67 | Any unimplemented HTTP methods will be met with a "405 Method Not Allowed" |
68 | response, automatically containing the proper list of available methods. You |
69 | can override this behavior through implementing a custom |
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70 | C<thing_not_implemented> method. |
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71 | |
72 | If you do not provide an OPTIONS handler, we will respond to any OPTIONS |
73 | requests with a "200 OK", populating the Allowed header automatically. |
74 | |
75 | Any data included in C<< $c->stash->{'rest'} >> will be serialized for you. |
76 | The serialization format will be selected based on the content-type |
77 | of the incoming request. It is probably easier to use the L<STATUS HELPERS>, |
78 | which are described below. |
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79 | |
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80 | "The HTTP POST, PUT, and OPTIONS methods will all automatically |
81 | L<deserialize|Catalyst::Action::Deserialize> the contents of |
82 | C<< $c->request->body >> into the C<< $c->request->data >> hashref", based on |
83 | the request's C<Content-type> header. A list of understood serialization |
84 | formats is L<below|/AVAILABLE SERIALIZERS>. |
398c5a1b |
85 | |
e601adda |
86 | If we do not have (or cannot run) a serializer for a given content-type, a 415 |
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87 | "Unsupported Media Type" error is generated. |
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88 | |
89 | To make your Controller RESTful, simply have it |
90 | |
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91 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller::REST' } |
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92 | |
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93 | =head1 CONFIGURATION |
94 | |
95 | See L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize/CONFIGURATION>. Note that the C<serialize> |
96 | key has been deprecated. |
97 | |
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98 | =head1 SERIALIZATION |
99 | |
100 | Catalyst::Controller::REST will automatically serialize your |
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101 | responses, and deserialize any POST, PUT or OPTIONS requests. It evaluates |
102 | which serializer to use by mapping a content-type to a Serialization module. |
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103 | We select the content-type based on: |
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104 | |
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105 | =over |
e601adda |
106 | |
107 | =item B<The Content-Type Header> |
108 | |
109 | If the incoming HTTP Request had a Content-Type header set, we will use it. |
110 | |
111 | =item B<The content-type Query Parameter> |
112 | |
113 | If this is a GET request, you can supply a content-type query parameter. |
114 | |
115 | =item B<Evaluating the Accept Header> |
116 | |
117 | Finally, if the client provided an Accept header, we will evaluate |
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118 | it and use the best-ranked choice. |
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119 | |
120 | =back |
121 | |
122 | =head1 AVAILABLE SERIALIZERS |
123 | |
124 | A given serialization mechanism is only available if you have the underlying |
125 | modules installed. For example, you can't use XML::Simple if it's not already |
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126 | installed. |
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127 | |
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128 | In addition, each serializer has its quirks in terms of what sorts of data |
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129 | structures it will properly handle. L<Catalyst::Controller::REST> makes |
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130 | no attempt to save you from yourself in this regard. :) |
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131 | |
132 | =over 2 |
133 | |
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134 | =item * C<text/x-yaml> => C<YAML::Syck> |
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135 | |
136 | Returns YAML generated by L<YAML::Syck>. |
137 | |
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138 | =item * C<text/html> => C<YAML::HTML> |
e601adda |
139 | |
140 | This uses L<YAML::Syck> and L<URI::Find> to generate YAML with all URLs turned |
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141 | to hyperlinks. Only usable for Serialization. |
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142 | |
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143 | =item * C<application/json> => C<JSON> |
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144 | |
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145 | Uses L<JSON> to generate JSON output. It is strongly advised to also have |
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146 | L<JSON::XS> installed. The C<text/x-json> content type is supported but is |
147 | deprecated and you will receive warnings in your log. |
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148 | |
d0d292d4 |
149 | =item * C<text/javascript> => C<JSONP> |
150 | |
151 | If a callback=? parameter is passed, this returns javascript in the form of: $callback($serializedJSON); |
152 | |
92d78e8f |
153 | Note - this is disabled by default as it can be a security risk if you are unaware. |
154 | |
155 | The usual MIME types for this serialization format are: 'text/javascript', 'application/x-javascript', |
156 | 'application/javascript'. |
157 | |
95318468 |
158 | =item * C<text/x-data-dumper> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
159 | |
160 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<Data::Dumper> output. |
161 | |
95318468 |
162 | =item * C<text/x-data-denter> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
163 | |
164 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<Data::Denter> output. |
165 | |
95318468 |
166 | =item * C<text/x-data-taxi> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
167 | |
168 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<Data::Taxi> output. |
169 | |
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170 | =item * C<application/x-storable> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
171 | |
172 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<Storable> output. |
173 | |
95318468 |
174 | =item * C<application/x-freezethaw> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
175 | |
176 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<FreezeThaw> output. |
177 | |
95318468 |
178 | =item * C<text/x-config-general> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
179 | |
180 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<Config::General> output. |
181 | |
95318468 |
182 | =item * C<text/x-php-serialization> => C<Data::Serializer> |
e601adda |
183 | |
184 | Uses the L<Data::Serializer> module to generate L<PHP::Serialization> output. |
185 | |
95318468 |
186 | =item * C<text/xml> => C<XML::Simple> |
e601adda |
187 | |
188 | Uses L<XML::Simple> to generate XML output. This is probably not suitable |
189 | for any real heavy XML work. Due to L<XML::Simple>s requirement that the data |
190 | you serialize be a HASHREF, we transform outgoing data to be in the form of: |
191 | |
192 | { data => $yourdata } |
193 | |
95318468 |
194 | =item * L<View> |
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195 | |
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196 | Uses a regular Catalyst view. For example, if you wanted to have your |
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197 | C<text/html> and C<text/xml> views rendered by TT, set: |
198 | |
199 | __PACKAGE__->config( |
200 | map => { |
201 | 'text/html' => [ 'View', 'TT' ], |
202 | 'text/xml' => [ 'View', 'XML' ], |
203 | } |
5cb5f6bb |
204 | ); |
3d8a0645 |
205 | |
206 | Your views should have a C<process> method like this: |
207 | |
208 | sub process { |
209 | my ( $self, $c, $stash_key ) = @_; |
5cb5f6bb |
210 | |
3d8a0645 |
211 | my $output; |
212 | eval { |
213 | $output = $self->serialize( $c->stash->{$stash_key} ); |
214 | }; |
215 | return $@ if $@; |
5cb5f6bb |
216 | |
3d8a0645 |
217 | $c->response->body( $output ); |
218 | return 1; # important |
219 | } |
220 | |
221 | sub serialize { |
222 | my ( $self, $data ) = @_; |
5cb5f6bb |
223 | |
3d8a0645 |
224 | my $serialized = ... process $data here ... |
5cb5f6bb |
225 | |
3d8a0645 |
226 | return $serialized; |
227 | } |
9a76221e |
228 | |
e601adda |
229 | =back |
230 | |
95318468 |
231 | By default, L<Catalyst::Controller::REST> will return a |
232 | C<415 Unsupported Media Type> response if an attempt to use an unsupported |
233 | content-type is made. You can ensure that something is always returned by |
234 | setting the C<default> config option: |
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235 | |
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236 | __PACKAGE__->config(default => 'text/x-yaml'); |
398c5a1b |
237 | |
95318468 |
238 | would make it always fall back to the serializer plugin defined for |
239 | C<text/x-yaml>. |
398c5a1b |
240 | |
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241 | =head1 CUSTOM SERIALIZERS |
242 | |
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243 | Implementing new Serialization formats is easy! Contributions |
244 | are most welcome! If you would like to implement a custom serializer, |
245 | you should create two new modules in the L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize> |
246 | and L<Catalyst::Action::Deserialize> namespace. Then assign your new |
247 | class to the content-type's you want, and you're done. |
248 | |
249 | See L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize> and L<Catalyst::Action::Deserialize> |
250 | for more information. |
e601adda |
251 | |
398c5a1b |
252 | =head1 STATUS HELPERS |
253 | |
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254 | Since so much of REST is in using HTTP, we provide these Status Helpers. |
255 | Using them will ensure that you are responding with the proper codes, |
256 | headers, and entities. |
257 | |
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258 | These helpers try and conform to the HTTP 1.1 Specification. You can |
db8bb647 |
259 | refer to it at: L<http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616.txt>. |
398c5a1b |
260 | These routines are all implemented as regular subroutines, and as |
261 | such require you pass the current context ($c) as the first argument. |
262 | |
5cb5f6bb |
263 | =over |
398c5a1b |
264 | |
265 | =cut |
266 | |
930013e6 |
267 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller' } |
d4611771 |
268 | use Params::Validate qw(SCALAR OBJECT); |
256c894f |
269 | |
270 | __PACKAGE__->mk_accessors(qw(serialize)); |
271 | |
272 | __PACKAGE__->config( |
e540a1fa |
273 | 'stash_key' => 'rest', |
274 | 'map' => { |
275 | 'text/html' => 'YAML::HTML', |
276 | 'text/xml' => 'XML::Simple', |
277 | 'text/x-yaml' => 'YAML', |
278 | 'application/json' => 'JSON', |
279 | 'text/x-json' => 'JSON', |
280 | 'text/x-data-dumper' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Data::Dumper' ], |
281 | 'text/x-data-denter' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Data::Denter' ], |
282 | 'text/x-data-taxi' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Data::Taxi' ], |
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283 | 'application/x-storable' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Storable' ], |
284 | 'application/x-freezethaw' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'FreezeThaw' ], |
285 | 'text/x-config-general' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Config::General' ], |
e540a1fa |
286 | 'text/x-php-serialization' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'PHP::Serialization' ], |
287 | }, |
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288 | ); |
289 | |
e540a1fa |
290 | sub begin : ActionClass('Deserialize') { } |
5511d1ff |
291 | |
0ba73721 |
292 | sub end : ActionClass('Serialize') { } |
293 | |
398c5a1b |
294 | =item status_ok |
295 | |
296 | Returns a "200 OK" response. Takes an "entity" to serialize. |
297 | |
298 | Example: |
299 | |
300 | $self->status_ok( |
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301 | $c, |
398c5a1b |
302 | entity => { |
303 | radiohead => "Is a good band!", |
304 | } |
305 | ); |
306 | |
307 | =cut |
308 | |
309 | sub status_ok { |
310 | my $self = shift; |
e601adda |
311 | my $c = shift; |
d4611771 |
312 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( @_, { entity => 1, }, ); |
398c5a1b |
313 | |
314 | $c->response->status(200); |
e601adda |
315 | $self->_set_entity( $c, $p{'entity'} ); |
398c5a1b |
316 | return 1; |
317 | } |
318 | |
319 | =item status_created |
320 | |
321 | Returns a "201 CREATED" response. Takes an "entity" to serialize, |
322 | and a "location" where the created object can be found. |
323 | |
324 | Example: |
325 | |
326 | $self->status_created( |
db8bb647 |
327 | $c, |
398c5a1b |
328 | location => $c->req->uri->as_string, |
329 | entity => { |
330 | radiohead => "Is a good band!", |
331 | } |
332 | ); |
333 | |
334 | In the above example, we use the requested URI as our location. |
335 | This is probably what you want for most PUT requests. |
336 | |
337 | =cut |
bb4130f6 |
338 | |
5511d1ff |
339 | sub status_created { |
340 | my $self = shift; |
e601adda |
341 | my $c = shift; |
d4611771 |
342 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( |
e601adda |
343 | @_, |
5511d1ff |
344 | { |
e601adda |
345 | location => { type => SCALAR | OBJECT }, |
346 | entity => { optional => 1 }, |
5511d1ff |
347 | }, |
348 | ); |
256c894f |
349 | |
5511d1ff |
350 | my $location; |
e601adda |
351 | if ( ref( $p{'location'} ) ) { |
5511d1ff |
352 | $location = $p{'location'}->as_string; |
33e5de96 |
353 | } else { |
354 | $location = $p{'location'}; |
5511d1ff |
355 | } |
356 | $c->response->status(201); |
e601adda |
357 | $c->response->header( 'Location' => $location ); |
358 | $self->_set_entity( $c, $p{'entity'} ); |
bb4130f6 |
359 | return 1; |
360 | } |
361 | |
398c5a1b |
362 | =item status_accepted |
363 | |
364 | Returns a "202 ACCEPTED" response. Takes an "entity" to serialize. |
365 | |
366 | Example: |
367 | |
368 | $self->status_accepted( |
db8bb647 |
369 | $c, |
398c5a1b |
370 | entity => { |
371 | status => "queued", |
372 | } |
373 | ); |
374 | |
375 | =cut |
e601adda |
376 | |
398c5a1b |
377 | sub status_accepted { |
bb4130f6 |
378 | my $self = shift; |
e601adda |
379 | my $c = shift; |
d4611771 |
380 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( @_, { entity => 1, }, ); |
bb4130f6 |
381 | |
398c5a1b |
382 | $c->response->status(202); |
e601adda |
383 | $self->_set_entity( $c, $p{'entity'} ); |
bb4130f6 |
384 | return 1; |
385 | } |
386 | |
bbf0feae |
387 | =item status_no_content |
388 | |
389 | Returns a "204 NO CONTENT" response. |
390 | |
391 | =cut |
392 | |
393 | sub status_no_content { |
394 | my $self = shift; |
395 | my $c = shift; |
396 | $c->response->status(204); |
397 | $self->_set_entity( $c, undef ); |
398 | return 1.; |
399 | } |
400 | |
bdff70a9 |
401 | =item status_multiple_choices |
402 | |
403 | Returns a "300 MULTIPLE CHOICES" response. Takes an "entity" to serialize, which should |
404 | provide list of possible locations. Also takes optional "location" for preferred choice. |
405 | |
406 | =cut |
407 | |
408 | sub status_multiple_choices { |
409 | my $self = shift; |
410 | my $c = shift; |
411 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( |
412 | @_, |
413 | { |
414 | entity => 1, |
415 | location => { type => SCALAR | OBJECT, optional => 1 }, |
416 | }, |
417 | ); |
418 | |
419 | my $location; |
420 | if ( ref( $p{'location'} ) ) { |
421 | $location = $p{'location'}->as_string; |
422 | } else { |
423 | $location = $p{'location'}; |
424 | } |
425 | $c->response->status(300); |
426 | $c->response->header( 'Location' => $location ) if exists $p{'location'}; |
427 | $self->_set_entity( $c, $p{'entity'} ); |
428 | return 1; |
429 | } |
430 | |
398c5a1b |
431 | =item status_bad_request |
432 | |
433 | Returns a "400 BAD REQUEST" response. Takes a "message" argument |
434 | as a scalar, which will become the value of "error" in the serialized |
435 | response. |
436 | |
437 | Example: |
438 | |
439 | $self->status_bad_request( |
db8bb647 |
440 | $c, |
33e5de96 |
441 | message => "Cannot do what you have asked!", |
398c5a1b |
442 | ); |
443 | |
444 | =cut |
e601adda |
445 | |
cc186a5b |
446 | sub status_bad_request { |
447 | my $self = shift; |
e601adda |
448 | my $c = shift; |
d4611771 |
449 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( @_, { message => { type => SCALAR }, }, ); |
cc186a5b |
450 | |
451 | $c->response->status(400); |
faf5c20b |
452 | $c->log->debug( "Status Bad Request: " . $p{'message'} ) if $c->debug; |
e601adda |
453 | $self->_set_entity( $c, { error => $p{'message'} } ); |
cc186a5b |
454 | return 1; |
455 | } |
456 | |
398c5a1b |
457 | =item status_not_found |
458 | |
459 | Returns a "404 NOT FOUND" response. Takes a "message" argument |
460 | as a scalar, which will become the value of "error" in the serialized |
461 | response. |
462 | |
463 | Example: |
464 | |
465 | $self->status_not_found( |
db8bb647 |
466 | $c, |
33e5de96 |
467 | message => "Cannot find what you were looking for!", |
398c5a1b |
468 | ); |
469 | |
470 | =cut |
e601adda |
471 | |
bb4130f6 |
472 | sub status_not_found { |
473 | my $self = shift; |
e601adda |
474 | my $c = shift; |
d4611771 |
475 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( @_, { message => { type => SCALAR }, }, ); |
bb4130f6 |
476 | |
477 | $c->response->status(404); |
faf5c20b |
478 | $c->log->debug( "Status Not Found: " . $p{'message'} ) if $c->debug; |
e601adda |
479 | $self->_set_entity( $c, { error => $p{'message'} } ); |
bb4130f6 |
480 | return 1; |
481 | } |
482 | |
bbf0feae |
483 | =item gone |
484 | |
485 | Returns a "41O GONE" response. Takes a "message" argument as a scalar, |
486 | which will become the value of "error" in the serialized response. |
487 | |
488 | Example: |
489 | |
490 | $self->status_gone( |
491 | $c, |
492 | message => "The document have been deleted by foo", |
493 | ); |
494 | |
495 | =cut |
496 | |
497 | sub status_gone { |
498 | my $self = shift; |
499 | my $c = shift; |
500 | my %p = Params::Validate::validate( @_, { message => { type => SCALAR }, }, ); |
501 | |
502 | $c->response->status(410); |
503 | $c->log->debug( "Status Gone " . $p{'message'} ) if $c->debug; |
504 | $self->_set_entity( $c, { error => $p{'message'} } ); |
505 | return 1; |
506 | } |
507 | |
bb4130f6 |
508 | sub _set_entity { |
e601adda |
509 | my $self = shift; |
510 | my $c = shift; |
bb4130f6 |
511 | my $entity = shift; |
e601adda |
512 | if ( defined($entity) ) { |
faf5c20b |
513 | $c->stash->{ $self->{'stash_key'} } = $entity; |
5511d1ff |
514 | } |
515 | return 1; |
eccb2137 |
516 | } |
256c894f |
517 | |
398c5a1b |
518 | =back |
519 | |
520 | =head1 MANUAL RESPONSES |
521 | |
522 | If you want to construct your responses yourself, all you need to |
523 | do is put the object you want serialized in $c->stash->{'rest'}. |
524 | |
e601adda |
525 | =head1 IMPLEMENTATION DETAILS |
526 | |
527 | This Controller ties together L<Catalyst::Action::REST>, |
528 | L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize> and L<Catalyst::Action::Deserialize>. It should be suitable for most applications. You should be aware that it: |
529 | |
530 | =over 4 |
531 | |
532 | =item Configures the Serialization Actions |
533 | |
534 | This class provides a default configuration for Serialization. It is currently: |
535 | |
536 | __PACKAGE__->config( |
95318468 |
537 | 'stash_key' => 'rest', |
538 | 'map' => { |
539 | 'text/html' => 'YAML::HTML', |
540 | 'text/xml' => 'XML::Simple', |
541 | 'text/x-yaml' => 'YAML', |
542 | 'application/json' => 'JSON', |
543 | 'text/x-json' => 'JSON', |
544 | 'text/x-data-dumper' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Data::Dumper' ], |
545 | 'text/x-data-denter' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Data::Denter' ], |
546 | 'text/x-data-taxi' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Data::Taxi' ], |
547 | 'application/x-storable' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Storable' ], |
548 | 'application/x-freezethaw' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'FreezeThaw' ], |
549 | 'text/x-config-general' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'Config::General' ], |
550 | 'text/x-php-serialization' => [ 'Data::Serializer', 'PHP::Serialization' ], |
551 | }, |
e601adda |
552 | ); |
553 | |
554 | You can read the full set of options for this configuration block in |
555 | L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize>. |
556 | |
557 | =item Sets a C<begin> and C<end> method for you |
558 | |
559 | The C<begin> method uses L<Catalyst::Action::Deserialize>. The C<end> |
560 | method uses L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize>. If you want to override |
561 | either behavior, simply implement your own C<begin> and C<end> actions |
def65dcc |
562 | and use MRO::Compat: |
e601adda |
563 | |
10bcd217 |
564 | package Foo::Controller::Monkey; |
565 | use Moose; |
566 | use namespace::autoclean; |
567 | |
568 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller::REST' } |
e601adda |
569 | |
570 | sub begin :Private { |
571 | my ($self, $c) = @_; |
db8bb647 |
572 | ... do things before Deserializing ... |
573 | $self->maybe::next::method($c); |
e601adda |
574 | ... do things after Deserializing ... |
db8bb647 |
575 | } |
e601adda |
576 | |
577 | sub end :Private { |
578 | my ($self, $c) = @_; |
db8bb647 |
579 | ... do things before Serializing ... |
def65dcc |
580 | $self->maybe::next::method($c); |
e601adda |
581 | ... do things after Serializing ... |
582 | } |
583 | |
e540a1fa |
584 | =back |
585 | |
e601adda |
586 | =head1 A MILD WARNING |
587 | |
588 | I have code in production using L<Catalyst::Controller::REST>. That said, |
589 | it is still under development, and it's possible that things may change |
d6ece98c |
590 | between releases. I promise to not break things unnecessarily. :) |
e601adda |
591 | |
398c5a1b |
592 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
593 | |
594 | L<Catalyst::Action::REST>, L<Catalyst::Action::Serialize>, |
595 | L<Catalyst::Action::Deserialize> |
596 | |
597 | For help with REST in general: |
598 | |
599 | The HTTP 1.1 Spec is required reading. http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616.txt |
600 | |
601 | Wikipedia! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer |
602 | |
603 | The REST Wiki: http://rest.blueoxen.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?FrontPage |
604 | |
5cb5f6bb |
605 | =head1 AUTHORS |
e540a1fa |
606 | |
5cb5f6bb |
607 | See L<Catalyst::Action::REST> for authors. |
e540a1fa |
608 | |
398c5a1b |
609 | =head1 LICENSE |
610 | |
611 | You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. |
612 | |
613 | =cut |
614 | |
256c894f |
615 | 1; |