use Moose;
use namespace::autoclean;
-our $VERSION = '0.83';
+our $VERSION = '0.85';
$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
=head1 NAME
L<JSON::XS> installed. The C<text/x-json> content type is supported but is
deprecated and you will receive warnings in your log.
+You can also add a hash in your controller config to pass options to the json object.
+For instance, to relax permissions when deserializing input, add:
+ __PACKAGE__->config(
+ json_options => { relaxed => 1 }
+ )
+
=item * C<text/javascript> => C<JSONP>
If a callback=? parameter is passed, this returns javascript in the form of: $callback($serializedJSON);
return 1.;
}
+=item status_multiple_choices
+
+Returns a "300 MULTIPLE CHOICES" response. Takes an "entity" to serialize, which should
+provide list of possible locations. Also takes optional "location" for preferred choice.
+
+=cut
+
+sub status_multiple_choices {
+ my $self = shift;
+ my $c = shift;
+ my %p = Params::Validate::validate(
+ @_,
+ {
+ entity => 1,
+ location => { type => SCALAR | OBJECT, optional => 1 },
+ },
+ );
+
+ my $location;
+ if ( ref( $p{'location'} ) ) {
+ $location = $p{'location'}->as_string;
+ } else {
+ $location = $p{'location'};
+ }
+ $c->response->status(300);
+ $c->response->header( 'Location' => $location ) if exists $p{'location'};
+ $self->_set_entity( $c, $p{'entity'} );
+ return 1;
+}
+
=item status_bad_request
Returns a "400 BAD REQUEST" response. Takes a "message" argument