Merge branch 'tutorial_update_1108'
[catagits/Catalyst-Manual.git] / lib / Catalyst / Manual / Tutorial / 01_Intro.pod
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d442cc9f 1=head1 NAME
2
3ab6187c 3Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 1: Introduction
d442cc9f 4
5
6=head1 OVERVIEW
7
4b4d3884 8This is B<Chapter 1 of 10> for the Catalyst tutorial.
d442cc9f 9
10L<Tutorial Overview|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial>
11
12=over 4
13
14=item 1
15
3ab6187c 16B<01_Introduction>
d442cc9f 17
18=item 2
19
3ab6187c 20L<Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::02_CatalystBasics>
d442cc9f 21
22=item 3
23
3ab6187c 24L<More Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::03_MoreCatalystBasics>
d442cc9f 25
26=item 4
27
3ab6187c 28L<Basic CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD>
d442cc9f 29
30=item 5
31
3ab6187c 32L<Authentication|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::05_Authentication>
d442cc9f 33
34=item 6
35
3ab6187c 36L<Authorization|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::06_Authorization>
d442cc9f 37
38=item 7
39
3ab6187c 40L<Debugging|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::07_Debugging>
d442cc9f 41
42=item 8
43
3ab6187c 44L<Testing|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::08_Testing>
d442cc9f 45
46=item 9
47
3ab6187c 48L<Advanced CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::09_AdvancedCRUD>
1def4a20 49
50=item 10
51
3ab6187c 52L<Appendices|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::10_Appendices>
d442cc9f 53
54=back
55
1def4a20 56
d442cc9f 57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
232da04a 59This tutorial provides a multi-part introduction to the Catalyst Web
60Framework. It seeks to provide a rapid overview of many of its most
d442cc9f 61commonly used features. The focus is on the real-world best practices
62required in the construction of nearly all Catalyst applications.
63
64Although the primary target of the tutorial is users new to the Catalyst
65framework, experienced users may wish to review specific sections (for
1def4a20 66example, how to use DBIC for their model classes, how to add
8168726b 67authentication and authorization to an existing application, and/or
68form management).
d442cc9f 69
232da04a 70The most recent code for the tutorial is included on the Tutorial Virtual
71Machine you can download from:
d442cc9f 72
014065cb 73L<http://cattut.shadowcat.co.uk/>
74
75See L</STARTING WITH THE TUTORIAL VIRTUAL MACHINE> below for
76instructions getting and using the VM.
77
78Should you wish to download the code directly, you get pull it via the
79following command (note: will probably be switching to git soon):
80
028b4e1a 81 svn co http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/trunk/examples/Tutorial/ CatalystTutorial
d442cc9f 82
75b13da6 83This will download the most recent code for each chapter of the
84tutorial into the CatalystTutorial directory on your machine.
d442cc9f 85
81a33ef3 86These reference implementations are provided so that when you follow
232da04a 87the tutorial, you can use the code to ensure that your system is set up
88correctly (which shouldn't be an issue if you use the Tutorial Virtual
89Machine), :-) and that you have not inadvertently made any typographic
81a33ef3 90errors, or accidentally skipped part of the tutorial.
3d9ae335 91
8168726b 92B<NOTE: You can use any Perl-supported OS and environment to run
93Catalyst.> It should make little or no difference to Catalyst's
232da04a 94operation, B<but this tutorial has been written using the Debian-based
81a33ef3 95Tutorial Virtual Machine> that you can download and use to work through
232da04a 96the full tutorial step by step. B<WE STRONGLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU USE
97THE VIRTUAL MACHINE IMAGE TO WORK THROUGH THE TUTORIAL> to avoid issues
98that may crop up if you are working with a different configuration. We
99have tested the Tutorial Virtual Machine to make sure all of the
100examples work correctly, but it is hard to guarantee this on other
101platforms and versions.
102
103If you would prefer to install directly from CPAN and not use the
104Tutorial Virtual machine, you can download the example program and all
105the necessary dependencies to your local machine by installing the
106C<Task::Catalyst::Tutorial> distribution:
d442cc9f 107
108 cpan Task::Catalyst::Tutorial
109
110This will also test to make sure the dependencies are working. If you
111have trouble installing these, please ask for help on the #catalyst
112IRC channel, or the Catalyst mailing list.
113
3533daff 114Subjects covered by the tutorial include:
d442cc9f 115
116=over 4
117
118=item *
119
120A simple application that lists and adds books.
121
122=item *
123
2217b252 124The use of L<DBIx::Class> (DBIC) for the model (including
8168726b 125some of the more advanced techniques you will probably want to use in
acbd7bdd 126your applications).
d442cc9f 127
128=item *
129
130How to write CRUD (Create, Read, Update, and Delete) operations in
131Catalyst.
132
133=item *
134
135Authentication ("auth").
136
137=item *
138
139Role-based authorization ("authz").
140
141=item *
142
8168726b 143Attempts to provide an example showing current (5.9) Catalyst
144practices.
d442cc9f 145
146=item *
147
1390ef0e 148The use of Template Toolkit (TT).
d442cc9f 149
150=item *
151
152Useful techniques for troubleshooting and debugging Catalyst
153applications.
154
155=item *
156
157The use of SQLite as a database (with code also provided for MySQL and
8168726b 158PostgreSQL). (Note: Because we make use of the DBIx::Class Object
444d6b27 159Relational Mapping [ORM] layer, out our application will be database
8168726b 160agnostic and can easily be used by any of the databases supported by
161DBIx::Class.)
d442cc9f 162
163=item *
164
2217b252 165The use of L<HTML::FormFu> or L<HTML::FormHandler>
0abc72ed 166for automated form processing and validation.
d442cc9f 167
168=back
169
170This tutorial makes the learning process its main priority. For
171example, the level of comments in the code found here would likely be
1def4a20 172considered excessive in a "normal project." Because of their contextual
d442cc9f 173value, this tutorial will generally favor inline comments over a
174separate discussion in the text. It also deliberately tries to
175demonstrate multiple approaches to various features (in general, you
176should try to be as consistent as possible with your own production
177code).
178
179Furthermore, this tutorial tries to minimize the number of controllers,
180models, TT templates, and database tables. Although this does result in
181things being a bit contrived at times, the concepts should be applicable
182to more complex environments. More complete and complicated example
232da04a 183applications can be found at
184L<http://wiki.catalystframework.org/wiki/resources/catalystexamples> and
185in the C<examples> area of the Catalyst Subversion repository at
d442cc9f 186L<http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/trunk/examples/>.
1390ef0e 187
2e73e2be 188
232da04a 189=head1 STARTING WITH THE TUTORIAL VIRTUAL MACHINE
2e73e2be 190
ec5b24b2 191The steps below briefly outline how you can download the Tutorial
192Virtual Machine. This document uses the term "host machine" to refer to
193the physical machine where you will run the virtualization software and
194boot up the VM. The terms "guest machine" or just "VM" refer to the
195virtual machine itself -- the thing where you actually do the tutorial
196and that you boot up on the "host machine".
197
198Also, to reduce download size, the Tutorial VM just includes a minimal
199command-line environment. In general, it is expected that people will
200boot up the Tutorial VM on their main desktop (the "host machine" using
201the terminology above) and then use that main desktop machine to SSH and
202web browse into the "guest VM" as they work through the tutorial. If
203you wish to install X-Windows (or any other packages), just use the
204C<aptitude> (or C<apt-get>) Debian commands.
205
206
2e73e2be 207=over 4
208
209=item 1
210
014065cb 211Download a Tutorial Virtual Machine image from
212L<http://cattut.shadowcat.co.uk/>
213
81a33ef3 214B<A big thanks to Shadowcat Systems for hosting the virtual machines>
215B<(and everything else they do for the Perl community)!>
2e73e2be 216
217=item 2
218
232da04a 219Uncompress the image:
220
221 tar zxvf CatalystTutorial.tgz
2e73e2be 222
223=item 3
224
232da04a 225Boot the virtual machine using a tool like VMWare Player
226L<http://www.vmware.com/products/player> or VirtualBox
227L<http://www.virtualbox.org/>.
2e73e2be 228
229=item 4
230
232da04a 231Once you get a login prompt, enter the username B<root> and a password
232for C<catalyst>. You should now be at a prompt that looks like:
2e73e2be 233
3f97ca7b 234 catalyst login: root
235 Password: catalyst
236 ...
232da04a 237 root@catalyst:~#
2e73e2be 238
239=item 5
240
232da04a 241Type "C<ifconfig>" to get the IP address assigned to the virtual
242machine. You should get output along the lines of:
2e73e2be 243
232da04a 244 eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:01:22:3b:45:69
ec5b24b2 245 inet addr:192.168.0.12 Bcast:192.168.0.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
2e73e2be 246 ...
247
232da04a 248You want the IP address on the second line below the C<eth0> interface.
249The image it design to automatically use a DHCP-assigned address.
250
232da04a 251
ec5b24b2 252Try to ping this IP address from your "host machine" (main desktop):
2e73e2be 253
2e73e2be 254
ec5b24b2 255 MainComputer:~$ ping 192.168.0.12
256 PING 192.168.0.12 (192.168.0.12) 56(84) bytes of data.
257 64 bytes from 192.168.0.12: icmp_req=1 ttl=255 time=4.97 ms
258 64 bytes from 192.168.0.12: icmp_req=2 ttl=255 time=3.43 ms
259 ...
2e73e2be 260
2e73e2be 261
ec5b24b2 262B<Note:> The ping above is being originated B<from> your B<host machine>
263(main desktop) and going B<to> your guest B<virtual machine>, not the
264other way around.
265
266If you are not seeing a valid IP address or it's not responding to pings
267(for example, you get error messages along the lines of "Request timed
268out", "100% packet loss", or "Destination Host Unreachable"), there
269could be a few network-related issues you might need to sort out. See
014065cb 270the section below L</Sorting Out Virtual Machine Network-Related Issues>
ec5b24b2 271for additional information and troubleshooting advice.
272
81a33ef3 273B<Note:> Remember this IP address... you will be using it throughout the
ec5b24b2 274tutorial.
275
232da04a 276
277=item 6
278
ec5b24b2 279B<From your main desktop machine>, open an SSH client and connect to the
280IP address found in the previous step. You should get a login prompt
281(accept the SSH key if you get a warning message about that). Login
282with the same username and password as we used in Step 4: B<root> /
283B<catalyst>
284
285 catalyst login: root
286 Password: catalyst
287 ...
288 root@catalyst:~#
289
2e73e2be 290
291=item 7
292
232da04a 293B<Using the SSH session>, change to the sample code directory for
294Chapter 3 included with the Tutorial Virtual Machine and start the
295Catalyst Development Server:
2e73e2be 296
ec5b24b2 297 $ cd Final/Chapter03/MyApp
298 $ perl scripts/myapp_server
2e73e2be 299
300=item 8
301
ec5b24b2 302B<From your main desktop machine> (the "host machine"), open a web
303browser and go to B<http://A.B.C.D:3000/>, where C<A.B.C.D> is the IP
304address to your virtual machine that you looked up in Step 5. For
305example, if your virtual machine is using the IP address
306C<192.168.0.12>, you would put the following URL into your web browser:
232da04a 307
ec5b24b2 308 http://192.168.0.12:3000/
232da04a 309
310Make sure you don't forget the B<:3000> to use port 3000 instead of the
311usual port 80 that is used by HTTP by default.
2e73e2be 312
232da04a 313You should get a Catalyst Welcome Screen. If you do, feel free to jump
314right in to L<Chapter 2|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::02_CatalystBasics>
315of the tutorial. If you don't go get the Catalyst Welcome Screen, go
316back and carefully check each of the steps above.
317
318=item 9
319
320B<Optional:> The VI/VIM editor is already installed on the Tutorial
321Virtual Machine. In order to reduce the size of the download, Emacs is
322not pre-installed. Since people obviously have very strong opinions
323about which editor is best, :-) Debian fortunately make it very easy to
324install Emacs:
325
326 $ aptitude install emacs
2e73e2be 327
328=back
329
330
ec5b24b2 331You may note that the Tutorial Virtual Machine uses L<local::lib> so
e684d796 332that the Perl modules are run from ~/perl5 (in this case, /root/perl5)
333vs. the usual location of your "system Perl". We recommend that you
334also consider using this very handy module. It can greatly ease the
335process of maintaining and testing different combinations or Perl
336modules across development, staging, and production servers. (The
337"relocatable Perl" feature can also be used to to run both the modules
338B<and> Perl itself from your home directory [or any other directory you
339chose]).
340
d35624c1 341B<Note>: Please provide feedback on how the Virtual Machine approach for
342the tutorial works for you. If you have suggestions or comments, you
343can reach the author through the email address at the bottom of this
344page or via an RT ticket at
345L<https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Catalyst-Manual>.
346
347
e684d796 348
ec5b24b2 349=head2 Sorting Out Virtual Machine Network-Related Issues
350
351In general, using a virtual machine to work through the tutorial is
352*much* easier than trying to do it in other environments, especially if
353you are new to Catalyst (or Perl or CPAN or ...). However, it's
354possible that you could run into a few network-related issues. The good
355news is that there is lots of information about the issue available via
356search engines on the Internet. Here is some background information to
357get you started.
358
359In Step 5 of the prior section above, we assumed that a "Bridged Mode"
360configuration and DHCP will work (it should for most people). If DHCP
361is not working or is not available in your location, most virtual
362machine "host" environments let you select between one of several
363different types of networking between the "guest" and the "host"
364machine.
365
366 1) Bridged
367 2) NAT
368 3) Local host only
369
370The Tutorial Virtual Machine defaults to "Bridged" -- this should result
371in the VM acting like another device on your network that will get a
372different DHCP IP address than the host machine. The advantage of this
373approach, is that you can easily SSH and web browse to the guest virtual
374machine. In general, this is the best option if you want to be able to
375boot up the VM and then use your SSH client and web browser from your
376main machine to connect into the virtual machine.
377
378In some environments, you might have better luck with "NAT" (Network
379Address Translation) mode. With this configuration, the guest VM shares
380the same IP address as the host machine. The downside of this approach
381is that special configuration is required if you want to be able to SSH
382or web browse to the guest VM. The NAT option should automatically
383allow the VM "outbound connection" (e.g., to the Internet if you want to
384install additional Debian packages), but it requires special
385configuration if you want to get "inbound connections" that go from some
386other machine (including the "host machine") into the VM. Some virtual
387machine host environments let you configure a "static NAT" or "port
388forwarding" to reach the guest OS, but others omit this functionality.
389
390"Local host only" mode let's the guest VM and the host machine talk on a
391"private subnet" that other devices in your network cannot reach. This
392can work as long as you don't need to go from the VM to the Internet
393(for example, to install other Debian packages).
394
395Consult the documentation on your virtual machine host environment for
396help configuring the options above. Here are some links that might
397help:
398
399=over 4
400
401=item *
402
81a33ef3 403L<http://vmfaq.com/entry/34/>
ec5b24b2 404
405=item *
406
81a33ef3 407L<http://www.vmware.com/support/pubs/player_pubs.html>
ec5b24b2 408
409=item *
410
81a33ef3 411L<http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/ch06.html>
ec5b24b2 412
413=back
414
415
416
417
d442cc9f 418=head1 VERSIONS AND CONVENTIONS USED IN THIS TUTORIAL
419
420This tutorial was built using the following resources. Please note that
a6b4cff5 421you may need to make adjustments for different environments and versions
422(note that trailing zeros in version numbers are not significant and may
423get dropped with some techniques for viewing them; for example, Catalyst
424v5.80020 might show up as 5.8002):
d442cc9f 425
426=over 4
427
428=item *
429
95968b61 430Debian 6 (Squeeze)
d442cc9f 431
432=item *
433
232da04a 434Catalyst v5.90002
dd88c3b6 435
22a67212 436=item *
dd88c3b6 437
232da04a 438Catalyst::Devel v1.34
d442cc9f 439
440=item *
441
232da04a 442DBIx::Class v0.08195
d442cc9f 443
fce83e5f 444=item *
445
232da04a 446Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema v0.54
2e73e2be 447
448=item *
449
95968b61 450Template Toolkit v2.22
fce83e5f 451
2e73e2be 452
d442cc9f 453=item *
454
232da04a 455HTML::FormFu -- v0.09004
2e73e2be 456
d442cc9f 457=item *
458
865d3efb 459B<NOTE:> You can check the versions you have installed with the
95968b61 460following command (note the slash before the space):
461
462 perl -M<_mod_name_>\ 999
463
464or:
865d3efb 465
f63a9a2b 466 perl -M<_mod_name_> -e 'print "$<_mod_name_>::VERSION\n"'
865d3efb 467
468For example:
865d3efb 469
95968b61 470 perl -MCatalyst::Devel\ 999
444d6b27 471
472or:
473
474 perl -MCatalyst::Devel -e 'print "$Catalyst::Devel::VERSION\n";'
d442cc9f 475
476=item *
477
232da04a 478This tutorial will show URLs in the format of C<http://localhost:3000>,
479but if you are running your web browser from outside the Tutorial
480Virtual Machine, you will want to substitute the IP address of your VM
481for the C<localhost> in the URLs (again, you can get the IP address for
482eth0 from the C<ifconfig> command). For example, if your VM has an
ec5b24b2 483IP address of 192.168.0.12, you will want to use a base URL of
484C<http://192.168.0.12:3000>. Note that the development server
232da04a 485defaults to port 3000 (you can change with with the "-p" option on the
486command line.
487
d3b61552 488B<Please Note:> Depending on the web browser you are using, you might
489need to hit C<Shift+Reload> or C<Ctrl+Reload> to pull a fresh page when
8168726b 490testing your application at various points (see
d3b61552 491L<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Bypass_your_cache> for a
492comprehensive list of options for each browser).
493
494Also, the C<-k> B<keepalive option> to the development server can be
495necessary with some browsers (B<especially Internet Explorer>).
0c51850e 496
d442cc9f 497=back
498
1390ef0e 499
d442cc9f 500=head1 DATABASES
501
502This tutorial will primarily focus on SQLite because of its simplicity
503of installation and use; however, modifications in the script required
a6b4cff5 504to support MySQL and PostgreSQL will be presented in the Appendix.
d442cc9f 505
a6b4cff5 506B<Note:> One of the advantages of using tools like Catalyst and DBIC is
507that applications become much more database independent. As such, you
508will notice that only the C<.sql> files used to initialize the database
509change between database systems: most of the code generally remains the
d442cc9f 510same.
511
1390ef0e 512
24acc5d7 513You can jump to the next chapter of the tutorial here:
514L<Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::02_CatalystBasics>
515
516
d442cc9f 517=head1 AUTHOR
518
519Kennedy Clark, C<hkclark@gmail.com>
520
bb0999d3 521Feel free to contact the author for any errors or suggestions, but the
522best way to report issues is via the CPAN RT Bug system at
523L<https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Catalyst-Manual>.
d442cc9f 524
bb0999d3 525Copyright 2006-2011, Kennedy Clark, under the
ec3ef4ad 526Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike License Version 3.0
865d3efb 527(L<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).