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1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | |
3 | Catalyst::Upgrading - Instructions for upgrading to the latest Catalyst |
4 | |
ba7766f8 |
5 | =head1 Upgrading to Catalyst 5.90040 |
717fc5c9 |
6 | |
8275d3b9 |
7 | =head2 Catalyst::Plugin::Unicode::Encoding is now core |
8 | |
9 | The previously stand alone Unicode support module L<Catalyst::Plugin::Unicode::Encoding> |
10 | has been brought into core as a default plugin. Going forward, all you need is |
11 | to add a configuration setting for the encoding type. For example: |
12 | |
13 | package Myapp::Web; |
14 | |
15 | use Catalyst; |
16 | |
17 | __PACKAGE__->config( encoding => 'UTF-8' ); |
18 | |
19 | Please note that this is different from the old stand alone plugin which applied |
20 | C<UTF-8> encoding by default (that is, if you did not set an explicit |
21 | C<encoding> configuration value, it assumed you wanted UTF-8). In order to |
22 | preserve backwards compatibility you will need to explicitly turn it on via the |
23 | configuration setting. THIS MIGHT CHANGE IN THE FUTURE, so please consider |
24 | starting to test your application with proper UTF-8 support and remove all those |
25 | crappy hacks you munged into the code because you didn't know the Plugin |
26 | existed :) |
27 | |
28 | For people that are using the Plugin, you will note a startup warning suggesting |
29 | that you can remove it from the plugin list. When you do so, please remember to |
30 | add the configuration setting, since you can no longer rely on the default being |
31 | UTF-8. We'll add it for you if you continue to use the stand alone plugin and |
32 | we detect this, but this backwards compatibility shim will likely be removed in |
33 | a few releases (trying to clean up the codebase after all). |
34 | |
35 | If you have trouble with any of this, please bring it to the attention of the |
36 | Catalyst maintainer group. |
37 | |
38 | =head2 basic async and event loop support |
39 | |
717fc5c9 |
40 | This version of L<Catalyst> offers some support for using L<AnyEvent> and |
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41 | L<IO::Async> event loops in your application. These changes should work |
42 | fine for most applications however if you are already trying to perform |
43 | some streaming, minor changes in this area of the code might affect your |
4e6e0ab2 |
44 | functionality. Please see L<Catalyst::Response\write_fh> for more and for a |
45 | basic example. |
8275d3b9 |
46 | |
47 | We consider this feature experimental. We will try not to break it, but we |
48 | reserve the right to make necessary changes to fix major issues that people |
49 | run into when the use this functionality in the wild. |
717fc5c9 |
50 | |
ba7766f8 |
51 | =head1 Upgrading to Catalyst 5.90030 |
52 | |
53 | =head2 Regex dispatch type is deprecated. |
54 | |
55 | The Regex dispatchtype (L<Catalyst::DispatchType::Regex>) has been deprecated. |
56 | |
57 | You are encouraged to move your application to Chained dispatch (L<Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained>). |
58 | |
59 | If you cannot do so, please add a dependency to Catalyst::DispatchType::Regex to your application's |
60 | Makefile.PL |
61 | |
dacd8b0e |
62 | =head1 Upgrading to Catalyst 5.9 |
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63 | |
e6006848 |
64 | The major change is that L<Plack>, a toolkit for using the L<PSGI> |
862a7989 |
65 | specification, now replaces most of the subclasses of L<Catalyst::Engine>. If |
e6006848 |
66 | you are using one of the standard subclasses of L<Catalyst::Engine> this |
67 | should be a straightforward upgrade for you. It was a design goal for |
68 | this release to preserve as much backwards compatibility as possible. |
69 | However, since L<Plack> is different from L<Catalyst::Engine>, it is |
70 | possible that differences exist for edge cases. Therefore, we recommend |
71 | that care be taken with this upgrade and that testing should be greater |
72 | than would be the case with a minor point update. Please inform the |
73 | Catalyst developers of any problems so that we can fix them and |
74 | incorporate tests. |
5d5f4a73 |
75 | |
773b3b08 |
76 | It is highly recommended that you become familiar with the L<Plack> ecosystem |
ae908e7e |
77 | and documentation. Being able to take advantage of L<Plack> development and |
78 | middleware is a major bonus to this upgrade. Documentation about how to |
79 | take advantage of L<Plack::Middleware> by writing your own C<< .psgi >> file |
80 | is contained in L<Catalyst::PSGI>. |
5d5f4a73 |
81 | |
e6006848 |
82 | If you have created a custom subclass of L<Catalyst:Engine>, you will |
83 | need to convert it to be a subclass of L<Plack::Handler>. |
5d5f4a73 |
84 | |
85 | If you are using the L<Plack> engine, L<Catalyst::Engine::PSGI>, this new |
773b3b08 |
86 | release supersedes that code. |
5d5f4a73 |
87 | |
e6006848 |
88 | If you are using a subclass of L<Catalyst::Engine> that is aimed at |
89 | nonstandard or internal/testing uses, such as |
90 | L<Catalyst::Engine::Embeddable>, you should still be able to continue |
91 | using that engine. |
5d5f4a73 |
92 | |
93 | Advice for specific subclasses of L<Catalyst::Engine> follows: |
94 | |
93d60cae |
95 | =head2 Upgrading the FastCGI Engine |
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96 | |
e6006848 |
97 | No upgrade is needed if your myapp_fastcgi.pl script is already upgraded |
98 | to use L<Catalyst::Script::FastCGI>. |
5d5f4a73 |
99 | |
93d60cae |
100 | =head2 Upgrading the mod_perl / Apache Engines |
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101 | |
e6006848 |
102 | The engines that are built upon the various iterations of mod_perl, |
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103 | L<Catalyst::Engine::Apache::MP13> (for mod_perl 1, and Apache 1.x) and |
862a7989 |
104 | L<Catalyst::Engine::Apache2::MP20> (for mod_perl 2, and Apache 2.x), |
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105 | should be seamless upgrades and will work using using L<Plack::Handler::Apache1> |
106 | or L<Plack::Handler::Apache2> as required. |
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107 | |
e6006848 |
108 | L<Catalyst::Engine::Apache2::MP19>, however, is no longer supported, as |
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109 | Plack does not support mod_perl version 1.99. This is unlikely to be a |
110 | problem for anyone, as 1.99 was a brief beta-test release for mod_perl |
111 | 2, and all users of mod_perl 1.99 are encouraged to upgrade to a |
112 | supported release of Apache 2 and mod_perl 2. |
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113 | |
93d60cae |
114 | =head2 Upgrading the HTTP Engine |
5d5f4a73 |
115 | |
040835f0 |
116 | The default development server that comes with the L<Catalyst> distribution |
117 | should continue to work as expected with no changes as long as your C<myapp_server> |
118 | script is upgraded to use L<Catalyst::Script::HTTP>. |
5d5f4a73 |
119 | |
93d60cae |
120 | =head2 Upgrading the CGI Engine |
5d5f4a73 |
121 | |
697a3e9e |
122 | If you were using L<Catalyst::Engine::CGI> there is no upgrade needed if your |
e6006848 |
123 | myapp_cgi.pl script is already upgraded to use L<Catalyst::Script::CGI>. |
5d5f4a73 |
124 | |
cf8eab35 |
125 | =head2 Upgrading Catalyst::Engine::HTTP::Prefork |
5d5f4a73 |
126 | |
040835f0 |
127 | If you were using L<Catalyst::Engine::HTTP::Prefork> then L<Starman> |
da9eab5a |
128 | is automatically loaded. You should (at least) change your C<Makefile.PL> |
129 | to depend on Starman. |
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130 | |
da9eab5a |
131 | You can regenerate your C<myapp_server.pl> script with C<catalyst.pl> |
132 | and implement a C<MyApp::Script::Server> class that looks like this: |
133 | |
134 | package MyApp::Script::Server; |
135 | use Moose; |
136 | use namespace::autoclean; |
137 | |
138 | extends 'CatalystX::Script::Server::Starman'; |
139 | |
140 | 1; |
141 | |
e6006848 |
142 | This takes advantage of the new script system, and will add a number of |
143 | options to the standard server script as extra options are added by |
144 | Starman. |
da9eab5a |
145 | |
146 | More information about these options can be seen at |
147 | L<CatalystX::Script::Server::Starman/SYNOPSIS>. |
148 | |
149 | An alternate route to implement this functionality is to write a simple .psgi |
e6006848 |
150 | file for your application, and then use the L<plackup> utility to start the |
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151 | server. |
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152 | |
93d60cae |
153 | =head2 Upgrading the PSGI Engine |
5d5f4a73 |
154 | |
e6006848 |
155 | If you were using L<Catalyst::Engine::PSGI>, this new release supersedes |
156 | this engine in supporting L<Plack>. By default the Engine is now always |
157 | L<Plack>. As a result, you can remove the dependency on |
158 | L<Catalyst::Engine::PSGI> in your C<Makefile.PL>. |
8f912f0b |
159 | |
160 | Applications that were using L<Catalyst::Engine::PSGI> |
161 | previously should entirely continue to work in this release with no changes. |
162 | |
e6006848 |
163 | However, if you have an C<app.psgi> script, then you no longer need to |
164 | specify the PSGI engine. Instead, the L<Catalyst> application class now |
165 | has a new method C<psgi_app> which returns a L<PSGI> compatible coderef |
166 | which you can wrap in the middleware of your choice. |
8f912f0b |
167 | |
168 | Catalyst will use the .psgi for your application if it is located in the C<home> |
e6006848 |
169 | directory of the application. |
697a3e9e |
170 | |
93a57b4b |
171 | For example, if you were using L<Catalyst::Engine::PSGI> in the past, you will |
8f912f0b |
172 | have written (or generated) a C<script/myapp.psgi> file similar to this one: |
697a3e9e |
173 | |
174 | use Plack::Builder; |
175 | use MyCatalytApp; |
176 | |
177 | MyCatalystApp->setup_engine('PSGI'); |
178 | |
179 | builder { |
180 | enable ... # enable your desired middleware |
181 | sub { MyCatalystApp->run(@_) }; |
182 | }; |
183 | |
8f912f0b |
184 | Instead, you now say: |
697a3e9e |
185 | |
186 | use Plack::Builder; |
187 | use MyCatalystApp; |
188 | |
189 | builder { |
190 | enable ... #enable your desired middleware |
75d68821 |
191 | MyCatalystApp->psgi_app; |
697a3e9e |
192 | }; |
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193 | |
34effbc7 |
194 | In the simplest case: |
8f912f0b |
195 | |
34effbc7 |
196 | MyCatalystApp->setup_engine('PSGI'); |
197 | my $app = sub { MyCatalystApp->run(@_) } |
198 | |
199 | becomes |
200 | |
34effbc7 |
201 | my $app = MyCatalystApp->psgi_app(@_); |
202 | |
203 | B<NOT>: |
204 | |
205 | my $app = sub { MyCatalystApp->psgi_app(@_) }; |
206 | # If you make ^^ this mistake, your app won't work, and will confuse the hell out of you! |
207 | |
e6006848 |
208 | You can now move C<< script/myapp.psgi >> to C<< myapp.psgi >>, and the built-in |
773b3b08 |
209 | Catalyst scripts and your test suite will start using your .psgi file. |
ad15c817 |
210 | |
e6006848 |
211 | B<NOTE:> If you rename your .psgi file without these modifications, then |
212 | any tests run via L<Catalyst::Test> will not be compatible with the new |
213 | release, and will result in the development server starting, rather than |
214 | the expected test running. |
93a57b4b |
215 | |
c47cd2ce |
216 | B<NOTE:> If you are directly accessing C<< $c->req->env >> to get the PSGI |
217 | environment then this accessor is moved to C<< $c->engine->env >>, |
218 | you will need to update your code. |
219 | |
e6006848 |
220 | =head2 Engines which are known to be broken |
93a57b4b |
221 | |
e6006848 |
222 | The following engines B<DO NOT> work as of Catalyst version 5.9. The |
223 | core team will be happy to work with the developers and/or users of |
224 | these engines to help them port to the new Plack/Engine system, but for |
225 | now, applications which are currently using these engines B<WILL NOT> |
226 | run without modification to the engine code. |
93a57b4b |
227 | |
228 | =over |
229 | |
230 | =item Catalyst::Engine::Wx |
231 | |
ad15c817 |
232 | =item Catalyst::Engine::Zeus |
233 | |
234 | =item Catalyst::Engine::JobQueue::POE |
235 | |
236 | =item Catalyst::Engine::XMPP2 |
237 | |
238 | =item Catalyst::Engine::SCGI |
239 | |
93a57b4b |
240 | =back |
241 | |
5d5f4a73 |
242 | =head2 Engines with unknown status |
243 | |
e6006848 |
244 | The following engines are untested or have unknown compatibility. |
245 | Reports are highly encouraged: |
5d5f4a73 |
246 | |
ad15c817 |
247 | =over |
248 | |
249 | =item Catalyst::Engine::Mojo |
250 | |
e6006848 |
251 | =item Catalyst::Engine::Server (marked as Deprecated) |
ad15c817 |
252 | |
e6006848 |
253 | =item Catalyst::Engine::HTTP::POE (marked as Deprecated) |
ad15c817 |
254 | |
255 | =back |
5d5f4a73 |
256 | |
3f22de0b |
257 | =head2 Plack functionality |
040835f0 |
258 | |
3f22de0b |
259 | See L<Catalyst::PSGI>. |
0aafa77a |
260 | |
dacd8b0e |
261 | =head2 Tests in 5.9 |
4db14a9a |
262 | |
e6006848 |
263 | Tests should generally work the same in Catalyst 5.9, but there are |
264 | some differences. |
4db14a9a |
265 | |
e6006848 |
266 | Previously, if using L<Catalyst::Test> and doing local requests (against |
267 | a local server), if the application threw an exception then this |
268 | exception propagated into the test. |
4db14a9a |
269 | |
e6006848 |
270 | This behavior has been removed, and now a 500 response will be returned |
271 | to the test. This change standardizes behavior, so that local test |
272 | requests behave similarly to remote requests. |
4db14a9a |
273 | |
7e2ec16e |
274 | =head1 Upgrading to Catalyst 5.80 |
275 | |
5687c7f9 |
276 | Most applications and plugins should run unaltered on Catalyst 5.80. |
7e2ec16e |
277 | |
8f61d649 |
278 | However, a lot of refactoring work has taken place, and several changes have |
1a98f036 |
279 | been made which could cause incompatibilities. If your application or plugin |
8f61d649 |
280 | is using deprecated code, or relying on side effects, then you could have |
ba03ccca |
281 | issues upgrading to this release. |
5687c7f9 |
282 | |
cf8eab35 |
283 | Most issues found with existing components have been easy to |
8f61d649 |
284 | solve. This document provides a complete description of behavior changes |
285 | which may cause compatibility issues, and of new Catalyst warnings which |
773b3b08 |
286 | might be unclear. |
7e2ec16e |
287 | |
8f61d649 |
288 | If you think you have found an upgrade-related issue which is not covered in |
289 | this document, please email the Catalyst list to discuss the problem. |
7e2ec16e |
290 | |
85f0a66f |
291 | =head1 Moose features |
292 | |
8f61d649 |
293 | =head2 Application class roles |
85f0a66f |
294 | |
8f61d649 |
295 | You can only apply method modifiers after the application's C<< ->setup >> |
85f0a66f |
296 | method has been called. This means that modifiers will not work with methods |
773b3b08 |
297 | run during the call to C<< ->setup >>. |
85f0a66f |
298 | |
a6eb852a |
299 | See L<Catalyst::Manual::ExtendingCatalyst> for more information about using |
300 | L<Moose> in your applications. |
301 | |
85f0a66f |
302 | =head2 Controller actions in Moose roles |
303 | |
d76c88f3 |
304 | You can use L<MooseX::MethodAttributes::Role> if you want to declare actions |
305 | inside Moose roles. |
85f0a66f |
306 | |
d935773d |
307 | =head2 Using Moose in Components |
308 | |
309 | The correct way to use Moose in a component in a both forward and backwards |
310 | compatible way is: |
311 | |
312 | package TestApp::Controller::Root; |
313 | use Moose; |
314 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Component' }; # Or ::Controller, or whatever |
315 | |
316 | See L<Components which inherit from Moose::Object before Catalyst::Component>. |
317 | |
8f61d649 |
318 | =head1 Known backwards compatibility breakages |
7e2ec16e |
319 | |
8f61d649 |
320 | =head2 Applications in a single file |
85f0a66f |
321 | |
322 | Applications must be in their own file, and loaded at compile time. This |
8f61d649 |
323 | issue generally only affects the tests of CPAN distributions. Your |
324 | application will fail if you try to define an application inline in a |
325 | block, and use plugins which supply a C< new > method, then use that |
326 | application latter in tests within the same file. |
85f0a66f |
327 | |
328 | This is due to the fact that Catalyst is inlining a new method on your |
8f61d649 |
329 | application class allowing it to be compatible with Moose. The method |
330 | used to do this changed in 5.80004 to avoid the possibility of reporting |
331 | an 'Unknown Error' if your application failed to compile. |
85f0a66f |
332 | |
38f90e49 |
333 | =head2 Issues with Class::C3 |
334 | |
8f61d649 |
335 | Catalyst 5.80 uses the L<Algorithm::C3> method dispatch order. This is |
336 | built into Perl 5.10, and comes via L<Class::C3> for Perl 5.8. This |
337 | replaces L<NEXT> with L<Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT>, forcing all components |
338 | to resolve methods using C3, rather than the unpredictable dispatch |
339 | order of L<NEXT>. |
38f90e49 |
340 | |
cf8eab35 |
341 | This issue manifests itself by your application failing to start due to an |
5d06547d |
342 | error message about having a non-linear @ISA. |
343 | |
8f61d649 |
344 | The Catalyst plugin most often causing this is |
345 | L<Catalyst::Plugin::Session::Store::FastMmap> - if you are using this |
346 | plugin and see issues, then please upgrade your plugins, as it has been |
347 | fixed. Note that Makefile.PL in the distribution will warn about known |
348 | incompatible components. |
5d06547d |
349 | |
350 | This issue can, however, be found in your own application - the only solution is |
351 | to go through each base class of the class the error was reported against, until |
352 | you identify the ones in conflict, and resolve them. |
353 | |
354 | To be able to generate a linear @ISA, the list of superclasses for each |
355 | class must be resolvable using the C3 algorithm. Unfortunately, when |
356 | superclasses are being used as mixins (to add functionality used in your class), |
ae7da8f5 |
357 | and with multiple inheritance, it is easy to get this wrong. |
38f90e49 |
358 | |
359 | Most common is the case of: |
360 | |
361 | package Component1; # Note, this is the common case |
362 | use base qw/Class::Accessor::Fast Class::Data::Inheritable/; |
363 | |
8f61d649 |
364 | package Component2; # Accidentally saying it this way causes a failure |
38f90e49 |
365 | use base qw/Class::Data::Inheritable Class::Accessor::Fast/; |
366 | |
367 | package GoesBang; |
368 | use base qw/Component1 Component2/; |
369 | |
5d06547d |
370 | Any situation like this will cause your application to fail to start. |
38f90e49 |
371 | |
8f61d649 |
372 | For additional documentation about this issue, and how to resolve it, see |
5d06547d |
373 | L<Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT>. |
38f90e49 |
374 | |
6f04e56a |
375 | =head2 Components which inherit from Moose::Object before Catalyst::Component |
7e2ec16e |
376 | |
6f04e56a |
377 | Moose components which say: |
7e2ec16e |
378 | |
6f04e56a |
379 | package TestApp::Controller::Example; |
380 | use Moose; |
845bfcd2 |
381 | extends qw/Moose::Object Catalyst::Component/; |
7e2ec16e |
382 | |
8f61d649 |
383 | to use the constructor provided by Moose, while working (if you do some hacks |
1a98f036 |
384 | with the C< BUILDARGS > method), will not work with Catalyst 5.80 as |
6f04e56a |
385 | C<Catalyst::Component> inherits from C<Moose::Object>, and so C< @ISA > fails |
25f61108 |
386 | to linearize. |
6f04e56a |
387 | |
6f04e56a |
388 | The correct way to use Moose in a component in a both forward and backwards |
389 | compatible way is: |
390 | |
391 | package TestApp::Controller::Root; |
392 | use Moose; |
393 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Component' }; # Or ::Controller, or whatever |
394 | |
ba03ccca |
395 | Note that the C< extends > declaration needs to occur in a begin block for |
3df46b1b |
396 | L<attributes> to operate correctly. |
397 | |
d935773d |
398 | This way you do not inherit directly from C<Moose::Object> |
399 | yourself. Having components which do not inherit their constructor from |
400 | C<Catalyst::Component> is B<unsupported>, and has never been recommended, |
401 | therefore you're on your own if you're using this technique. You'll need |
402 | to detect the version of Catalyst your application is running, and deal |
403 | with it appropriately. |
404 | |
eaae9a92 |
405 | You also don't get the L<Moose::Object> constructor, and therefore attribute |
406 | initialization will not work as normally expected. If you want to use Moose |
3df46b1b |
407 | attributes, then they need to be made lazy to correctly initialize. |
408 | |
409 | Note that this only applies if your component needs to maintain component |
410 | backwards compatibility for Catalyst versions before 5.71001 - in 5.71001 |
411 | attributes work as expected, and the BUILD method is called normally |
eaae9a92 |
412 | (although BUILDARGS is not). |
3df46b1b |
413 | |
414 | If you depend on Catalyst 5.8, then B<all> Moose features work as expected. |
8566c0de |
415 | |
d935773d |
416 | You will also see this issue if you do the following: |
417 | |
418 | package TestApp::Controller::Example; |
419 | use Moose; |
420 | use base 'Catalyst::Controller'; |
421 | |
422 | as C< use base > appends to @ISA. |
423 | |
e11cac87 |
424 | =head3 use Moose in MyApp |
425 | |
426 | Similar to the above, this will also fail: |
427 | |
428 | package MyApp; |
429 | use Moose; |
430 | use Catalyst qw/ |
431 | ConfigLoader |
432 | /; |
433 | __PACKAGE__->setup; |
434 | |
435 | If you need to use Moose in your application class (e.g. for method modifiers |
8f61d649 |
436 | etc.) then the correct technique is: |
e11cac87 |
437 | |
438 | package MyApp; |
439 | use Moose; |
5b6f82d2 |
440 | use Catalyst; |
441 | |
e11cac87 |
442 | extends 'Catalyst'; |
5b6f82d2 |
443 | |
444 | __PACKAGE__->config( name => 'MyApp' ); |
e11cac87 |
445 | __PACKAGE__->setup(qw/ |
446 | ConfigLoader |
447 | /); |
448 | |
04a48104 |
449 | =head2 Anonymous closures installed directly into the symbol table |
450 | |
451 | If you have any code which installs anonymous subroutine references directly |
452 | into the symbol table, you may encounter breakages. The simplest solution is |
453 | to use L<Sub::Name> to name the subroutine. Example: |
454 | |
e11cac87 |
455 | # Original code, likely to break: |
1a98f036 |
456 | my $full_method_name = join('::', $package_name, $method_name); |
04a48104 |
457 | *$full_method_name = sub { ... }; |
458 | |
e11cac87 |
459 | # Fixed Code |
04a48104 |
460 | use Sub::Name 'subname'; |
461 | my $full_method_name = join('::',$package_name, $method_name); |
462 | *$full_method_name = subname $full_method_name, sub { ... }; |
463 | |
8f61d649 |
464 | Additionally, you can take advantage of Catalyst's use of L<Class::MOP> and |
465 | install the closure using the appropriate metaclass. Example: |
04a48104 |
466 | |
467 | use Class::MOP; |
468 | my $metaclass = Moose::Meta::Class->initialize($package_name); |
469 | $metaclass->add_method($method_name => sub { ... }); |
470 | |
780654ad |
471 | =head2 Hooking into application setup |
472 | |
8f61d649 |
473 | To execute code during application start-up, the following snippet in MyApp.pm |
780654ad |
474 | used to work: |
475 | |
476 | sub setup { |
477 | my ($class, @args) = @_; |
478 | $class->NEXT::setup(@args); |
479 | ... # things to do after the actual setup |
480 | } |
481 | |
8f61d649 |
482 | With Catalyst 5.80 this won't work anymore, because Catalyst no longer |
483 | uses NEXT.pm for method resolution. The functionality was only ever |
484 | originally operational as L<NEXT> remembers what methods have already |
485 | been called, and will not call them again. |
780654ad |
486 | |
1a98f036 |
487 | Using this now causes infinite recursion between MyApp::setup and |
488 | Catalyst::setup, due to other backwards compatibility issues related to how |
e6c5b548 |
489 | plugin setup works. Moose method modifiers like C<< before|after|around setup |
1a98f036 |
490 | => sub { ... }; >> also will not operate correctly on the setup method. |
780654ad |
491 | |
492 | The right way to do it is this: |
493 | |
494 | after setup_finalize => sub { |
495 | ... # things to do after the actual setup |
496 | }; |
497 | |
ade00972 |
498 | The setup_finalize hook was introduced as a way to avoid this issue. |
1a98f036 |
499 | |
e11cac87 |
500 | =head2 Components with a new method which returns false |
7e2ec16e |
501 | |
8dd2f514 |
502 | Previously, if you had a component which inherited from Catalyst::COMPONENT, |
8f61d649 |
503 | but overrode the new method to return false, then your class's configuration |
8dd2f514 |
504 | would be blessed into a hash on your behalf, and this would be returned from |
a87f5aa5 |
505 | the COMPONENT method. |
7e2ec16e |
506 | |
8f61d649 |
507 | This behavior makes no sense, and so has been removed. Implementing your own |
508 | C< new > method in components is B<highly> discouraged. Instead, you should |
509 | inherit the new method from Catalyst::Component, and use Moose's BUILD |
1a98f036 |
510 | functionality and/or Moose attributes to perform any construction work |
511 | necessary for your class. |
7e2ec16e |
512 | |
513 | =head2 __PACKAGE__->mk_accessor('meta'); |
514 | |
e11cac87 |
515 | Won't work due to a limitation of L<Moose>. This is currently being fixed |
516 | inside Moose. |
7e2ec16e |
517 | |
518 | =head2 Class::Data::Inheritable side effects |
519 | |
8dd2f514 |
520 | Previously, writing to a class data accessor would copy the accessor method |
521 | down into your package. |
522 | |
8f61d649 |
523 | This behavior has been removed. While the class data is still stored |
8dd2f514 |
524 | per-class, it is stored on the metaclass of the class defining the accessor. |
7e2ec16e |
525 | |
8f61d649 |
526 | Therefore anything relying on the side effect of the accessor being copied down |
8dd2f514 |
527 | will be broken. |
7e2ec16e |
528 | |
1a98f036 |
529 | The following test demonstrates the problem: |
8dd2f514 |
530 | |
531 | { |
532 | package BaseClass; |
533 | use base qw/Class::Data::Inheritable/; |
534 | __PACKAGE__->mk_classdata('foo'); |
535 | } |
536 | |
537 | { |
538 | package Child; |
539 | use base qw/BaseClass/; |
540 | } |
541 | |
542 | BaseClass->foo('base class'); |
543 | Child->foo('sub class'); |
eaae9a92 |
544 | |
e11cac87 |
545 | use Test::More; |
8dd2f514 |
546 | isnt(BaseClass->can('foo'), Child->can('foo')); |
7e2ec16e |
547 | |
f4dda4a8 |
548 | =head2 Extending Catalyst::Request or other classes in an ad hoc manner using mk_accessors |
7e2ec16e |
549 | |
8dd2f514 |
550 | Previously, it was possible to add additional accessors to Catalyst::Request |
551 | (or other classes) by calling the mk_accessors class method. |
7e2ec16e |
552 | |
8f61d649 |
553 | This is no longer supported - users should make a subclass of the class whose |
554 | behavior they would like to change, rather than globally polluting the |
e11cac87 |
555 | Catalyst objects. |
8be895a7 |
556 | |
10011c19 |
557 | =head2 Confused multiple inheritance with Catalyst::Component::COMPONENT |
8be895a7 |
558 | |
8f61d649 |
559 | Previously, Catalyst's COMPONENT method would delegate to the method on |
560 | the right hand side, which could then delegate back again with |
561 | NEXT. This is poor practice, and in addition, makes no sense with C3 |
562 | method dispatch order, and is therefore no longer supported. |
bcc773b9 |
563 | |
ba03ccca |
564 | If a COMPONENT method is detected in the inheritance hierarchy to the right |
bcc773b9 |
565 | hand side of Catalyst::Component::COMPONENT, then the following warning |
566 | message will be emitted: |
7e2ec16e |
567 | |
8dd2f514 |
568 | There is a COMPONENT method resolving after Catalyst::Component |
5687c7f9 |
569 | in ${next_package}. |
8dd2f514 |
570 | |
8f61d649 |
571 | The correct fix is to re-arrange your class's inheritance hierarchy so that the |
bcc773b9 |
572 | COMPONENT method you would like to inherit is the first (left-hand most) |
573 | COMPONENT method in your @ISA. |
7e2ec16e |
574 | |
7e9340de |
575 | =head2 Development server relying on environment variables |
576 | |
577 | Previously, the development server would allow propagation of system |
578 | environment variables into the request environment, this has changed with the |
579 | adoption of Plack. You can use L<Plack::Middleware::ForceEnv> to achieve the |
580 | same effect. |
581 | |
c571d2c8 |
582 | =head1 WARNINGS |
583 | |
63b546b1 |
584 | =head2 Actions in your application class |
585 | |
586 | Having actions in your application class will now emit a warning at application |
e256d0e1 |
587 | startup as this is deprecated. It is highly recommended that these actions are moved |
63b546b1 |
588 | into a MyApp::Controller::Root (as demonstrated by the scaffold application |
55dd186c |
589 | generated by catalyst.pl). |
da73c6af |
590 | |
e256d0e1 |
591 | This warning, also affects tests. You should move actions in your test, |
592 | creating a myTest::Controller::Root, like the following example: |
da73c6af |
593 | |
594 | package MyTest::Controller::Root; |
95a52a01 |
595 | |
da73c6af |
596 | use strict; |
597 | use warnings; |
95a52a01 |
598 | |
da73c6af |
599 | use parent 'Catalyst::Controller'; |
95a52a01 |
600 | |
da73c6af |
601 | __PACKAGE__->config(namespace => ''); |
95a52a01 |
602 | |
da73c6af |
603 | sub action : Local { |
604 | my ( $self, $c ) = @_; |
605 | $c->do_something; |
606 | } |
95a52a01 |
607 | |
da73c6af |
608 | 1; |
63b546b1 |
609 | |
ac9279b0 |
610 | =head2 ::[MVC]:: naming scheme |
611 | |
612 | Having packages called MyApp::[MVC]::XX is deprecated and can no longer be generated |
613 | by catalyst.pl |
614 | |
615 | This is still supported, but it is recommended that you rename your application |
616 | components to Model/View/Controller. |
617 | |
618 | A warning will be issued at application startup if the ::[MVC]:: naming scheme is |
619 | in use. |
620 | |
ade00972 |
621 | =head2 Catalyst::Base |
622 | |
8f61d649 |
623 | Any code using L<Catalyst::Base> will now emit a warning; this |
624 | module will be removed in a future release. |
ade00972 |
625 | |
c571d2c8 |
626 | =head2 Methods in Catalyst::Dispatcher |
627 | |
8f61d649 |
628 | The following methods in Catalyst::Dispatcher are implementation |
629 | details, which may change in the 5.8X release series, and therefore their use |
bcc773b9 |
630 | is highly deprecated. |
c571d2c8 |
631 | |
632 | =over |
633 | |
8dd2f514 |
634 | =item tree |
c571d2c8 |
635 | |
8dd2f514 |
636 | =item dispatch_types |
c571d2c8 |
637 | |
8dd2f514 |
638 | =item registered_dispatch_types |
c571d2c8 |
639 | |
8dd2f514 |
640 | =item method_action_class |
c571d2c8 |
641 | |
8dd2f514 |
642 | =item action_hash |
c571d2c8 |
643 | |
644 | =item container_hash |
645 | |
646 | =back |
647 | |
648 | The first time one of these methods is called, a warning will be emitted: |
7e2ec16e |
649 | |
bcc773b9 |
650 | Class $class is calling the deprecated method Catalyst::Dispatcher::$public_method_name, |
dacd8b0e |
651 | this will be removed in Catalyst 5.9 |
7e2ec16e |
652 | |
c571d2c8 |
653 | You should B<NEVER> be calling any of these methods from application code. |
654 | |
8f61d649 |
655 | Plugin authors and maintainers whose plugins currently call these methods |
8f5a2bd9 |
656 | should change to using the public API, or, if you do not feel the public API |
8f61d649 |
657 | adequately supports your use case, please email the development list to |
8f5a2bd9 |
658 | discuss what API features you need so that you can be appropriately supported. |
7e2ec16e |
659 | |
95b20422 |
660 | =head2 Class files with names that don't correspond to the packages they define |
7e2ec16e |
661 | |
e11cac87 |
662 | In this version of Catalyst, if a component is loaded from disk, but no |
ba03ccca |
663 | symbols are defined in that component's name space after it is loaded, this |
bcc773b9 |
664 | warning will be issued: |
7e2ec16e |
665 | |
bcc773b9 |
666 | require $class was successful but the package is not defined. |
7e2ec16e |
667 | |
8f61d649 |
668 | This is to protect against confusing bugs caused by mistyping package names, |
bcc773b9 |
669 | and will become a fatal error in a future version. |
670 | |
671 | Please note that 'inner packages' (via L<Devel::InnerPackage>) are still fully |
8f61d649 |
672 | supported; this warning is only issued when component file naming does not map |
bcc773b9 |
673 | to B<any> of the packages defined within that component. |
7e2ec16e |
674 | |
5687c7f9 |
675 | =head2 $c->plugin method |
676 | |
25f61108 |
677 | Calling the plugin method is deprecated, and calling it at run time is B<highly |
8dd2f514 |
678 | deprecated>. |
7e2ec16e |
679 | |
95a52a01 |
680 | Instead you are recommended to use L<Catalyst::Model::Adaptor> or similar to |
ba03ccca |
681 | compose the functionality you need outside of the main application name space. |
7e2ec16e |
682 | |
4e68badc |
683 | Calling the plugin method will not be supported past Catalyst 5.81. |
bcc773b9 |
684 | |
7e2ec16e |
685 | =cut |
4e68badc |
686 | |