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38017482 1=head1 NAME
2
3Catalyst::Manual::ExtendingCatalyst - Extending The Framework
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7This document will provide you with access points, techniques and best
b7c570ac 8practices to extend the L<Catalyst> framework, or to find more elegant
9ways to abstract and use your own code.
38017482 10
b7c570ac 11The design of Catalyst is such that the framework itself should not
12get in your way. There are many entry points to alter or extend
13Catalyst's behaviour, and this can be confusing. This document is
14written to help you understand the possibilities, current practices
15and their consequences.
38017482 16
080bb620 17Please read the L</BEST PRACTICES> section before deciding on a design,
b7c570ac 18especially if you plan to release your code to CPAN. The Catalyst
19developer and user communities, which B<you are part of>, will benefit
20most if we all work together and coordinate.
21
22If you are unsure on an implementation or have an idea you would like
23to have RFC'ed, it surely is a good idea to send your questions and
24suggestions to the Catalyst mailing list (See L<Catalyst/SUPPORT>)
25and/or come to the C<#catalyst> channel on the C<irc.perl.org>
26network. You might also want to refer to those places for research to
27see if a module doing what you're trying to implement already
28exists. This might give you a solution to your problem or a basis for
29starting.
38017482 30
31=head1 BEST PRACTICES
32
b7c570ac 33During Catalyst's early days, it was common to write plugins to
34provide functionality application wide. Since then, Catalyst has
35become a lot more flexible and powerful. It soon became a best
36practice to use some other form of abstraction or interface, to keep
37the scope of its influence as close as possible to where it belongs.
38017482 38
b7c570ac 39For those in a hurry, here's a quick checklist of some fundamental
40points. If you are going to read the whole thing anyway, you can jump
38017482 41forward to L</Namespaces>.
42
43=head2 Quick Checklist
44
45=over
46
47=item Use the C<CatalystX::*> namespace if you can!
48
78170776 49If your extension isn't a Model, View, Controller, Plugin, Engine,
50or Log, it's best to leave it out of the C<Catalyst::> namespace.
51Use <CatalystX::> instead.
38017482 52
53=item Don't make it a plugin unless you have to!
54
1972ebdd 55A plugin should be careful since it's overriding Catalyst internals.
56If your plugin doesn't really need to muck with the internals, make it a
57base Controller or Model.
38017482 58
fa025310 59Also, if you think you really need a plugin, please instead consider
60using a L<Moose::Role>.
78170776 61
38017482 62=item There's a community. Use it!
63
b7c570ac 64There are many experienced developers in the Catalyst community,
65there's always the IRC channel and the mailing list to discuss things.
38017482 66
67=item Add tests and documentation!
68
b7c570ac 69This gives a stable basis for contribution, and even more importantly,
70builds trust. The easiest way is a test application. See
56a12748 71L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Testing|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::08_Testing>
72for more information.
38017482 73
74=back
75
76=head2 Namespaces
77
b7c570ac 78While some core extensions (engines, plugins, etc.) have to be placed
79in the C<Catalyst::*> namespace, the Catalyst core would like to ask
38017482 80developers to use the C<CatalystX::*> namespace if possible.
81
fa025310 82Please B<do not> invent components which are outside the well
83known C<Model>, C<View>, C<Controller> or C<Plugin> namespaces!
84
b7c570ac 85When you try to put a base class for a C<Model>, C<View> or
86C<Controller> directly under your C<MyApp> directory as, for example,
87C<MyApp::Controller::Foo>, you will have the problem that Catalyst
88will try to load that base class as a component of your
89application. The solution is simple: Use another namespace. Common
90ones are C<MyApp::Base::Controller::*> or C<MyApp::ControllerBase::*>
91as examples.
38017482 92
93=head2 Can it be a simple module?
94
b7c570ac 95Sometimes you want to use functionality in your application that
96doesn't require the framework at all. Remember that Catalyst is just
97Perl and you always can just C<use> a module. If you have application
98specific code that doesn't need the framework, there is no problem in
99putting it in your C<MyApp::*> namespace. Just don't put it in
100C<Model>, C<Controller> or C<View>, because that would make Catalyst
101try to load them as components.
38017482 102
1972ebdd 103Writing a generic component that only works with Catalyst is wasteful
104of your time. Try writing a plain perl module, and then a small bit
105of glue that integrates it with Catalyst. See
388f66e0 106L<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema> for a
1972ebdd 107module that takes the approach. The advantage here is that your
108"Catalyst" DBIC schema works perfectly outside of Catalyst, making
109testing (and command-line scripts) a breeze. The actual Catalyst
110Model is just a few lines of glue that makes working with the schema
111convenient.
112
7d36d4ac 113If you want the thinnest interface possible, take a look at
388f66e0 114L<Catalyst::Model::Adaptor>.
7d36d4ac 115
78170776 116=head2 Using Moose roles to apply method modifiers
117
118Rather than having a complex set of base classes which you have to mixin
400fa4c3 119via multiple inheritance, if your functionality is well structured, then
78170776 120it's possible to use the composability of L<Moose> roles, and method modifiers
fa025310 121to hook onto to provide functionality.
78170776 122
23cf3a36 123These can be applied to your models/views/controllers, and your application
4d719c7e 124class, and shipped to CPAN.
125Please see L<Catalyst::Manual::CatalystAndMoose> for specific information
126about using Roles in combination with Catalyst, and L<Moose::Manual::Roles>
127for more information about roles in general.
78170776 128
38017482 129=head2 Inheritance and overriding methods
130
433f1ad4 131When overriding a method, keep in mind that some day additional
38017482 132arguments may be provided to the method, if the last parameter is not
133a flat list. It is thus better to override a method by shifting the
134invocant off of C<@_> and assign the rest of the used arguments, so
135you can pass your complete arguments to the original method via C<@_>:
136
20a4dd98 137 use MRO::Compat; ...
38017482 138
fa025310 139 sub foo {
140 my $self = shift;
141 my ($bar, $baz) = @_; # ... return
142 $self->next::method(@_);
143 }
38017482 144
145If you would do the common
146
147 my ($self, $foo, $bar) = @_;
148
149you'd have to use a much uglier construct to ensure that all arguments
150will be passed along and the method is future proof:
151
152 $self->next::method(@_[ 1 .. $#_ ]);
153
154=head2 Tests and documentation
155
b7c570ac 156When you release your module to the CPAN, proper documentation and at
157least a basic test suite (which means more than pod or even just
158C<use_ok>, sorry) gives people a good base to contribute to the
159module. It also shows that you care for your users. If you would like
160your module to become a recommended addition, these things will prove
38017482 161invaluable.
162
1972ebdd 163If you're just getting started, try using
388f66e0 164L<CatalystX::Starter> to generate some example
1972ebdd 165tests for your module.
166
38017482 167=head2 Maintenance
168
b7c570ac 169In planning to release a module to the community (Catalyst or CPAN and
170Perl), you should consider if you have the resources to keep it up to
171date, including fixing bugs and accepting contributions.
38017482 172
b7c570ac 173If you're not sure about this, you can always ask in the proper
174Catalyst or Perl channels if someone else might be interested in the
175project, and would jump in as co-maintainer.
38017482 176
b7c570ac 177A public repository can further ease interaction with the
178community. Even read only access enables people to provide you with
179patches to your current development version. subversion, SVN and SVK,
180are broadly preferred in the Catalyst community.
38017482 181
b7c570ac 182If you're developing a Catalyst extension, please consider asking the
183core team for space in Catalyst's own subversion repository. You can
184get in touch about this via IRC or the Catalyst developers mailing
185list.
38017482 186
187=head2 The context object
188
189Sometimes you want to get a hold of the context object in a component
b7c570ac 190that was created on startup time, where no context existed yet. Often
38017482 191this is about the model reading something out of the stash or other
b7c570ac 192context information (current language, for example).
38017482 193
b7c570ac 194If you use the context object in your component you have tied it to an
195existing request. This means that you might get into problems when
196you try to use the component (e.g. the model - the most common case)
197outside of Catalyst, for example in cronjobs.
38017482 198
b7c570ac 199A stable solution to this problem is to design the Catalyst model
200separately from the underlying model logic. Let's take
201L<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema> as an example. You can create a
38017482 202schema outside of Catalyst that knows nothing about the web. This kind
203of design ensures encapsulation and makes development and maintenance
204a whole lot easier. The you use the aforementioned model to tie your
b7c570ac 205schema to your application. This gives you a C<MyApp::DBIC> (the name
206is of course just an example) model as well as
207C<MyApp::DBIC::TableName> models to access your result sources
208directly.
209
210By creating such a thin layer between the actual model and the
211Catalyst application, the schema itself is not at all tied to any
212application and the layer in-between can access the model's API using
213information from the context object.
214
215A Catalyst component accesses the context object at request time with
38017482 216L<Catalyst::Component/"ACCEPT_CONTEXT($c, @args)">.
217
218=head1 CONFIGURATION
219
b7c570ac 220The application has to interact with the extension with some
221configuration. There is of course again more than one way to do it.
38017482 222
223=head2 Attributes
224
b7c570ac 225You can specify any valid Perl attribute on Catalyst actions you like.
226(See L<attributes/"Syntax of Attribute Lists"> for a description of
56a12748 227what is valid.) These will be available on the L<Catalyst::Action>
b7c570ac 228instance via its C<attributes> accessor. To give an example, this
229action:
38017482 230
231 sub foo : Local Bar('Baz') {
232 my ($self, $c) = @_;
bbddff00 233 my $attributes = $self->action_for('foo')->attributes;
b7c570ac 234 $c->res->body($attributes->{Bar}[0] );
38017482 235 }
236
b7c570ac 237will set the response body to C<Baz>. The values always come in an
238array reference. As you can see, you can use attributes to configure
239your actions. You can specify or alter these attributes via
240L</"Component Configuration">, or even react on them as soon as
241Catalyst encounters them by providing your own L<component base
4307eb1c 242class|/"Component base classes">.
38017482 243
d7823323 244=head2 Component Configuration
38017482 245
b7c570ac 246At creation time, the class configuration of your component (the one
429d1caf 247available via C<< $self->config >>) will be merged with possible
38017482 248configuration settings from the applications configuration (either
6e1417cd 249directly or via config file). This is done by Catalyst, and the
250correctly merged configuration is passed to your component's
251constructor (i.e. the new method).
38017482 252
6e1417cd 253Ergo, if you define an accessor for each configuration value
254that your component takes, then the value will be automatically stored
255in the controller object's hash reference, and available from the
256accessor.
38017482 257
6e1417cd 258The C<config> accessor always only contains the original class configuration
080bb620 259and you B<MUST NEVER> call C<< $self->config >> to get your component configuration,
6e1417cd 260as the data there is likely to be a subset of the correct config.
38017482 261
6e1417cd 262For example:
bbddff00 263
6e1417cd 264 package MyApp
265 use Moose;
266
267 extends 'Catalyst';
268
269 ...
270
271 __PACKAGE__->config(
272 'Controller::Foo' => { some_value => 'bar' },
273 );
274
275 ...
bbddff00 276
277 package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
278 use Moose;
279 use namespace::autoclean;
280 BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller' };
281
6e1417cd 282 has some_value ( is => 'ro', required => 1 );
283
284 sub some_method {
285 my $self = shift;
286 return "the value of 'some_value' is " . $self->some_value;
287 }
38017482 288
38017482 289 ...
6e1417cd 290
291 my $controller = $c->controller('Foo');
292 warn $controller->some_value;
293 warn $controller->some_method;
38017482 294
295=head1 IMPLEMENTATION
296
b7c570ac 297This part contains the technical details of various implementation
38017482 298methods. Please read the L</"BEST PRACTICES"> before you start your
299implementation, if you haven't already.
300
301=head2 Action classes
302
303Usually, your action objects are of the class L<Catalyst::Action>.
304You can override this with the C<ActionClass> attribute to influence
b7c570ac 305execution and/or dispatching of the action. A widely used example of
306this is L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView>, which is used in every newly
307created Catalyst application in your root controller:
38017482 308
309 sub end : ActionClass('RenderView') { }
310
b7c570ac 311Usually, you want to override the C<execute> and/or the C<match>
312method. The execute method of the action will naturally call the
313methods code. You can surround this by overriding the method in a
314subclass:
38017482 315
7ce05098 316 package Catalyst::Action::MyFoo;
bbddff00 317 use Moose;
318 use namespace::autoclean;
7ce05098 319 use MRO::Compat;
bbddff00 320 extends 'Catalyst::Action';
38017482 321
322 sub execute {
323 my $self = shift;
324 my ($controller, $c, @args) = @_;
38017482 325 # put your 'before' code here
326 my $r = $self->next::method(@_);
327 # put your 'after' code here
38017482 328 return $r;
329 }
38017482 330 1;
331
20a4dd98 332We are using L<MRO::Compat> to ensure that you have the next::method
7ce05098 333call, from L<Class::C3> (in older perls), or natively (if you are using
334perl 5.10) to re-dispatch to the original C<execute> method in the
20a4dd98 335L<Catalyst::Action> class.
38017482 336
b7c570ac 337The Catalyst dispatcher handles an incoming request and, depending
7ce05098 338upon the dispatch type, will call the appropriate target or chain.
b7c570ac 339From time to time it asks the actions themselves, or through the
340controller, if they would match the current request. That's what the
341C<match> method does. So by overriding this, you can change on what
342the action will match and add new matching criteria.
38017482 343
b7c570ac 344For example, the action class below will make the action only match on
345Mondays:
38017482 346
7ce05098 347 package Catalyst::Action::OnlyMondays;
bbddff00 348 use Moose;
349 use namespace::autoclean;
20a4dd98 350 use MRO::Compat;
bbddff00 351 extends 'Catalyst::Action';
38017482 352
353 sub match {
354 my $self = shift;
355 return 0 if ( localtime(time) )[6] == 1;
356 return $self->next::method(@_);
b7c570ac 357 }
38017482 358 1;
359
360And this is how we'd use it:
361
362 sub foo: Local ActionClass('OnlyMondays') {
363 my ($self, $c) = @_;
364 $c->res->body('I feel motivated!');
365 }
366
b7c570ac 367If you are using action classes often or have some specific base
368classes that you want to specify more conveniently, you can implement
369a component base class providing an attribute handler.
38017482 370
bbddff00 371It is not possible to use multiple action classes at once, however
372L<Catalyst::Controller::ActionRole> allows you to apply L<Moose Roles|Moose::Role>
373to actions.
374
375For further information on action classes and roles, please refer to
38017482 376L<Catalyst::Action> and L<Catalyst::Manual::Actions>.
377
378=head2 Component base classes
379
b7c570ac 380Many L<Catalyst::Plugin> that were written in Catalyst's early days
381should really have been just controller base classes. With such a
382class, you could provide functionality scoped to a single controller,
383not polluting the global namespace in the context object.
38017482 384
b7c570ac 385You can provide regular Perl methods in a base class as well as
386actions which will be inherited to the subclass. Please refer to
387L</Controllers> for an example of this.
38017482 388
b7c570ac 389You can introduce your own attributes by specifying a handler method
390in the controller base. For example, to use a C<FullClass> attribute
391to specify a fully qualified action class name, you could use the
392following implementation. Note, however, that this functionality is
393already provided via the C<+> prefix for action classes. A simple
38017482 394
395 sub foo : Local ActionClass('+MyApp::Action::Bar') { ... }
396
397will use C<MyApp::Action::Bar> as action class.
398
bbddff00 399 package MyApp::Base::Controller::FullClass;
400 use Moose;
401 use namespace::autoclean;
402 BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller'; }
38017482 403
404 sub _parse_FullClass_attr {
405 my ($self, $app_class, $action_name, $value, $attrs) = @_;
406 return( ActionClass => $value );
407 }
38017482 408 1;
409
b7c570ac 410Note that the full line of arguments is only provided for completeness
411sake. We could use this attribute in a subclass like any other
412Catalyst attribute:
38017482 413
414 package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
bbddff00 415 use Moose;
416 use namespace::autoclean;
417 BEGIN { extends 'MyApp::Base::Controller::FullClass'; }
38017482 418
419 sub foo : Local FullClass('MyApp::Action::Bar') { ... }
420
421 1;
422
423=head2 Controllers
424
b7c570ac 425Many things can happen in controllers, and it often improves
426maintainability to abstract some of the code out into reusable base
38017482 427classes.
428
429You can provide usual Perl methods that will be available via your
b7c570ac 430controller object, or you can even define Catalyst actions which will
431be inherited by the subclasses. Consider this controller base class:
38017482 432
433 package MyApp::Base::Controller::ModelBase;
bbddff00 434 use Moose;
435 use namespace::autoclean;
436
437 BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller'; }
38017482 438
439 sub list : Chained('base') PathPart('') Args(0) {
440 my ($self, $c) = @_;
b7c570ac 441 my $model = $c->model( $self->{model_name} );
38017482 442 my $condition = $self->{model_search_condition} || {};
b7c570ac 443 my $attrs = $self->{model_search_attrs} || {};
38017482 444 $c->stash(rs => $model->search($condition, $attrs);
bbddff00 445 }
38017482 446
447 sub load : Chained('base') PathPart('') CaptureArgs(1) {
448 my ($self, $c, $id) = @_;
449 my $model = $c->model( $self->{model_name} );
450 $c->stash(row => $model->find($id));
bbddff00 451 }
38017482 452 1;
453
b7c570ac 454This example implements two simple actions. The C<list> action chains
455to a (currently non-existent) C<base> action and puts a result-set
456into the stash taking a configured C<model_name> as well as a search
457condition and attributes. This action is a
458L<chained|Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained> endpoint. The other action,
459called C< load > is a chain midpoint that takes one argument. It takes
460the value as an ID and loads the row from the configured model. Please
461not that the above code is simplified for clarity. It misses error
462handling, input validation, and probably other things.
38017482 463
b7c570ac 464The class above is not very useful on its own, but we can combine it
465with some custom actions by sub-classing it:
38017482 466
467 package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
bbddff00 468 use Moose;
469 use namespace::autoclean;
7ce05098 470
bbddff00 471 BEGIN { extends 'MyApp::Base::Controller::ModelBase'; }
38017482 472
b7c570ac 473 __PACKAGE__->config( model_name => 'DB::Foo',
474 model_search_condition=> { is_active => 1 },
475 model_search_attrs => { order_by => 'name' },
476 );
38017482 477
478 sub base : Chained PathPart('foo') CaptureArgs(0) { }
479
480 sub view : Chained('load') Args(0) {
481 my ($self, $c) = @_;
482 my $row = $c->stash->{row};
b7c570ac 483 $c->res->body(join ': ', $row->name,
484 $row->description); }
38017482 485 1;
486
b7c570ac 487This class uses the formerly created controller as a base
488class. First, we see the configurations that were used in the parent
489class. Next comes the C<base> action, where everything chains off of.
38017482 490
b7c570ac 491Note that inherited actions act like they were declared in your
492controller itself. You can therefor call them just by their name in
38017482 493C<forward>s, C<detaches> and C<Chained(..)> specifications. This is an
494important part of what makes this technique so useful.
495
b7c570ac 496The new C<view> action ties itself to the C<load> action specified in
497the base class and outputs the loaded row's C<name> and C<description>
498columns. The controller C<MyApp::Controller::Foo> now has these
499publicly available paths:
38017482 500
501=over
502
503=item /foo
504
b7c570ac 505Will call the controller's C<base>, then the base classes C<list>
506action.
38017482 507
508=item /foo/$id/view
509
b7c570ac 510First, the controller's C<base> will be called, then it will C<load>
511the row with the corresponding C<$id>. After that, C<view> will
512display some fields out of the object.
38017482 513
514=back
515
516=head2 Models and Views
517
b7c570ac 518If the functionality you'd like to add is really a data-set that you
519want to manipulate, for example internal document types, images,
520files, it might be better suited as a model.
38017482 521
b7c570ac 522The same applies for views. If your code handles representation or
523deals with the applications interface and should be universally
524available, it could be a perfect candidate for a view.
38017482 525
b7c570ac 526Please implement a C<process> method in your views. This method will
527be called by Catalyst if it is asked to forward to a component without
528a specified action. Note that C<process> is B<not a Catalyst action>
529but a simple Perl method.
38017482 530
531You are also encouraged to implement a C<render> method corresponding
532with the one in L<Catalyst::View::TT>. This has proven invaluable,
533because people can use your view for much more fine-grained content
534generation.
535
536Here is some example code for a fictional view:
537
bbddff00 538 package Catalyst::View::MyView;
539 use Moose;
540 use namespace::autoclean;
7ce05098 541
bbddff00 542 extends 'Catalyst::View';
38017482 543
544 sub process {
545 my ($self, $c) = @_;
38017482 546 my $template = $c->stash->{template};
b7c570ac 547 my $content = $self->render($c, $template, $c->stash);
38017482 548 $c->res->body( $content );
549 }
550
551 sub render {
552 my ($self, $c, $template, $args) = @_;
b7c570ac 553 # prepare content here
38017482 554 return $content;
555 }
38017482 556 1;
557
558=head2 Plugins
559
b7c570ac 560The first thing to say about plugins is that if you're not sure if
561your module should be a plugin, it probably shouldn't. It once was
562common to add features to Catalyst by writing plugins that provide
563accessors to said functionality. As Catalyst grew more popular, it
564became obvious that this qualifies as bad practice.
565
566By designing your module as a Catalyst plugin, every method you
567implement, import or inherit will be available via your applications
568context object. A plugin pollutes the global namespace, and you
569should be only doing that when you really need to.
570
571Often, developers design extensions as plugins because they need to
572get hold of the context object. Either to get at the stash or
573request/response objects are the widely spread reasons. It is,
574however, perfectly possible to implement a regular Catalyst component
575(read: model, view or controller) that receives the current context
576object via L<Catalyst::Component/"ACCEPT_CONTEXT($c, @args)">.
577
578When is a plugin suited to your task? Your code needs to be a
579plugin to act upon or alter specific parts of Catalyst's request
78170776 580lifecycle. If your functionality needs to change some C<prepare_*> or
b7c570ac 581C<finalize_*> stages, you won't get around a plugin.
582
78170776 583Note, if you just want to hook into such a stage, and run code before,
080bb620 584or after it, then it is recommended that you use L<Moose>'s method modifiers
78170776 585to do this.
586
b7c570ac 587Another valid target for a plugin architecture are things that
588B<really> have to be globally available, like sessions or
589authentication.
590
591B<Please do not> release Catalyst extensions as plugins only to
592provide some functionality application wide. Design it as a controller
bbddff00 593base class or another better suited technique with a smaller scope, so that
b7c570ac 594your code only influences those parts of the application where it is
595needed, and namespace clashes and conflicts are ruled out.
38017482 596
597The implementation is pretty easy. Your plugin will be inserted in the
598application's inheritance list, above Catalyst itself. You can by this
b7c570ac 599alter Catalyst's request lifecycle behaviour. Every method you
600declare, every import in your package will be available as method on
601the application and the context object. As an example, let's say you
78170776 602want Catalyst to warn you every time uri_for was called without an action
603object as the first parameter, for example to test that all your chained
604uris are generated from actions (a recommended best practice).
605You could do this with this simple
38017482 606implementation (excuse the lame class name, it's just an example):
607
608 package Catalyst::Plugin::UriforUndefWarning;
609 use strict;
78170776 610 use Scalar::Util qw/blessed/;
20a4dd98 611 use MRO::Compat;
38017482 612
613 sub uri_for {
b7c570ac 614 my $c = shift;
38017482 615 my $uri = $c->next::method(@_);
78170776 616 $c->log->warn( 'uri_for with non action: ', join(', ', @_), )
617 if (!blessed($_[0]) || !$_[0]->isa('Catalyst::Action'));
38017482 618 return $uri;
619 }
620
621 1;
622
b7c570ac 623This would override Catalyst's C<uri_for> method and emit a C<warn>
78170776 624log entry containing the arguments to uri_for.
625
626Please note this is not a practical example, as string URLs are fine for
627static content etc.
628
629A simple example like this is actually better as a L<Moose> role, for example:
630
631 package CatalystX::UriforUndefWarning;
632 use Moose::Role;
4d719c7e 633 use namespace::autoclean;
78170776 634
635 after 'uri_for' => sub {
636 my ($c, $arg) = @_;
637 $c->log->warn( 'uri_for with non action: ', join(', ', @_), )
638 if (!blessed($_[0]) || !$_[0]->isa('Catalyst::Action'));
639 return $uri;
fa025310 640 };
7ce05098 641
bbddff00 642Note that Catalyst will load any Moose Roles in the plugin list,
643and apply them to your application class.
38017482 644
645=head2 Factory components with COMPONENT()
646
b7c570ac 647Every component inheriting from L<Catalyst::Component> contains a
648C<COMPONENT> method. It is used on application startup by
649C<setup_components> to instantiate the component object for the
650Catalyst application. By default, this will merge the components own
651C<config>uration with the application wide overrides and call the
652class' C<new> method to return the component object.
38017482 653
b7c570ac 654You can override this method and do and return whatever you want.
fa025310 655However, you should use L<Class::C3> (via L<MRO::Compat>) to forward
656to the original C<COMPONENT> method to merge the configuration of
20a4dd98 657your component.
38017482 658
659Here is a stub C<COMPONENT> method:
660
661 package CatalystX::Component::Foo;
bbddff00 662 use Moose;
663 use namespace::autoclean;
7ce05098 664
bbddff00 665 extends 'Catalyst::Component';
38017482 666
667 sub COMPONENT {
668 my $class = shift;
a70cede4 669 # Note: $app is like $c, but since the application isn't fully
7ce05098 670 # initialized, we don't want to call it $c yet. $config
a70cede4 671 # is a hashref of config options possibly set on this component.
672 my ($app, $config) = @_;
673
674 # Do things here before instantiation
675 $new = $class->next::method(@_);
676 # Do things to object after instantiation
677 return $new;
38017482 678 }
679
680The arguments are the class name of the component, the class name of
b7c570ac 681the application instantiating the component, and a hash reference with
682the controller's configuration.
38017482 683
b7c570ac 684You are free to re-bless the object, instantiate a whole other
685component or really do anything compatible with Catalyst's
686expectations on a component.
38017482 687
fa025310 688For more information, please see
689L<Catalyst::Component/"COMPONENT($c,$arguments)">.
38017482 690
bbddff00 691=head2 Applying roles to parts of the framework
692
693L<CatalystX::RoleApplicator> will allow you to apply Roles to
694the following classes:
695
696=over
697
698=item Request
699
700=item Response
701
702=item Engine
703
704=item Dispatcher
705
706=item Stats
707
708=back
709
710These roles can add new methods to these classes, or wrap preexisting methods.
711
712The namespace for roles like this is C<Catalyst::TraitFor::XXX::YYYY>.
713
714For an example of a CPAN component implemented in this manor, see
715L<Catalyst::TraitFor::Request::BrowserDetect>.
716
38017482 717=head1 SEE ALSO
718
b7c570ac 719L<Catalyst>, L<Catalyst::Manual::Actions>, L<Catalyst::Component>
38017482 720
bbddff00 721=head1 AUTHORS
38017482 722
bbddff00 723Catalyst Contributors, see Catalyst.pm
1972ebdd 724
bbddff00 725=head1 COPYRIGHT
38017482 726
bbddff00 727This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under
38017482 728the same terms as Perl itself.
729
730=cut