update _server.pl output
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d442cc9f 1=head1 NAME
2
3ab6187c 3Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::02_CatalystBasics - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 2: Catalyst Application Development Basics
d442cc9f 4
5
6=head1 OVERVIEW
7
4b4d3884 8This is B<Chapter 2 of 10> for the Catalyst tutorial.
d442cc9f 9
10L<Tutorial Overview|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial>
11
12=over 4
13
14=item 1
15
3ab6187c 16L<Introduction|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro>
d442cc9f 17
18=item 2
19
3ab6187c 20B<02_Catalyst Basics>
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>
3533daff 49
50=item 10
51
3ab6187c 52L<Appendices|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::10_Appendices>
d442cc9f 53
54=back
55
56
57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
4b4d3884 59In this chapter of the tutorial, we will create a very basic Catalyst
60web application, demonstrating a number of powerful capabilities, such
61as:
d442cc9f 62
63=over 4
64
65=item * Helper Scripts
66
67Catalyst helper scripts that can be used to rapidly bootstrap the
68skeletal structure of an application.
69
70=item * MVC
71
72Model/View/Controller (MVC) provides an architecture that facilitates a
73clean "separation of control" between the different portions of your
74application. Given that many other documents cover this subject in
75detail, MVC will not be discussed in depth here (for an excellent
76introduction to MVC and general Catalyst concepts, please see
865d3efb 77L<Catalyst::Manual::About|Catalyst::Manual::About>). In short:
d442cc9f 78
79=over 4
80
81=item * Model
82
83The model usually represents a data store. In most applications, the
84model equates to the objects that are created from and saved to your SQL
85database.
86
87=item * View
88
89The view takes model objects and renders them into something for the end
90user to look at. Normally this involves a template-generation tool that
91creates HTML for the user's web browser, but it could easily be code
865d3efb 92that generates other forms such as PDF documents, e-mails, spreadsheets,
93or even "behind the scenes" formats such as XML and JSON.
d442cc9f 94
95=item * Controller
96
97As suggested by its name, the controller takes user requests and routes
98them to the necessary model and view.
99
100=back
101
102=item * ORM
103
104The use of Object-Relational Mapping (ORM) technology for database
105access. Specifically, ORM provides an automated and standardized means
444d6b27 106to persist and restore objects to/from a relational database and will
107automatically create our Catalyst model for use with a database.
d442cc9f 108
109=back
110
111You can checkout the source code for this example from the catalyst
112subversion repository as per the instructions in
3ab6187c 113L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro>.
d442cc9f 114
3533daff 115
d442cc9f 116=head1 CREATE A CATALYST PROJECT
117
3533daff 118Catalyst provides a number of helper scripts that can be used to
119quickly flesh out the basic structure of your application. All
120Catalyst projects begin with the C<catalyst.pl> helper (see
121L<Catalyst::Helper|Catalyst::Helper> for more information on helpers).
122Also note that as of Catalyst 5.7000, you will not have the helper
123scripts unless you install both L<Catalyst::Runtime|Catalyst::Runtime>
124and L<Catalyst::Devel|Catalyst::Devel>.
125
4b4d3884 126In this first chapter of the tutorial, use the Catalyst C<catalyst.pl>
127script to initialize the framework for an application called C<Hello>:
3533daff 128
129 $ catalyst.pl Hello
130 created "Hello"
131 created "Hello/script"
132 created "Hello/lib"
133 created "Hello/root"
d442cc9f 134 ...
3533daff 135 created "Hello/script/hello_create.pl"
444d6b27 136 Change to application directory and Run "perl Makefile.PL" to make sure your install is complete
3533daff 137 $ cd Hello
d442cc9f 138
444d6b27 139Note: If you are using Strawberry Perl on Win32, drop the ".pl"
140from the end of the "catalyst.pl" command and simply use
141"catalyst Hello".
142
d442cc9f 143The C<catalyst.pl> helper script will display the names of the
3533daff 144directories and files it creates:
145
146 Changes # Record of application changes
865d3efb 147 lib # Lib directory for your app's Perl modules
148 Hello # Application main code directory
3533daff 149 Controller # Directory for Controller modules
150 Model # Directory for Models
151 View # Directory for Views
152 Hello.pm # Base application module
153 Makefile.PL # Makefile to build application
45d511e0 154 hello.conf # Application configuration file
3533daff 155 README # README file
156 root # Equiv of htdocs, dir for templates, css, javascript
157 favicon.ico
158 static # Directory for static files
159 images # Directory for image files used in welcome screen
160 script # Directory for Perl scripts
161 hello_cgi.pl # To run your app as a cgi (not recommended)
162 hello_create.pl # To create models, views, controllers
163 hello_fastcgi.pl # To run app as a fastcgi program
164 hello_server.pl # The normal development server
165 hello_test.pl # Test your app from the command line
166 t # Directory for tests
167 01app.t # Test scaffold
168 02pod.t
169 03podcoverage.t
170
171
172Catalyst will "auto-discover" modules in the Controller, Model, and
173View directories. When you use the hello_create.pl script it will
174create Perl module scaffolds in those directories, plus test files in
175the "t" directory. The default location for templates is in the "root"
176directory. The scripts in the script directory will always start with
177the lowercased version of your application name. If your app is
178MaiTai, then the create script would be "maitai_create.pl".
179
180Though it's too early for any significant celebration, we already have
181a functioning application. We can use the Catalyst supplied script to
182start up a development server and view the default Catalyst page in
183your browser. All scripts in the script directory should be run from
184the base directory of your application, so change to the Hello
185directory.
186
187Run the following command to start up the built-in development web
acbd7bdd 188server (make sure you didn't forget the "C<cd Hello>" from the
189previous step):
d442cc9f 190
3533daff 191 $ script/hello_server.pl
d442cc9f 192 [debug] Debug messages enabled
865d3efb 193 [debug] Statistics enabled
d442cc9f 194 [debug] Loaded plugins:
195 .----------------------------------------------------------------------------.
f34d7f62 196 | Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader 0.27 |
d442cc9f 197 '----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
198
199 [debug] Loaded dispatcher "Catalyst::Dispatcher"
200 [debug] Loaded engine "Catalyst::Engine::HTTP"
3533daff 201 [debug] Found home "/home/me/Hello"
e13f83cc 202 [debug] Loaded Config "/home/me/Hello/hello.conf"
d442cc9f 203 [debug] Loaded components:
204 .-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------.
205 | Class | Type |
206 +-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
3533daff 207 | Hello::Controller::Root | instance |
d442cc9f 208 '-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------'
209
210 [debug] Loaded Private actions:
211 .----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------.
212 | Private | Class | Method |
213 +----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------+
3533daff 214 | /default | Hello::Controller::Root | default |
215 | /end | Hello::Controller::Root | end |
acbd7bdd 216 | /index | Hello::Controller::Root | index |
d442cc9f 217 '----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------'
218
865d3efb 219 [debug] Loaded Path actions:
220 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
221 | Path | Private |
222 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
865d3efb 223 | / | /index |
08ae25e9 224 | / | /default |
865d3efb 225 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
acbd7bdd 226
08ae25e9 227 [info] Hello powered by Catalyst 5.80018
acbd7bdd 228 You can connect to your server at http://debian:3000
d442cc9f 229
1435672d 230Point your web browser to L<http://localhost:3000> (substituting a
d442cc9f 231different hostname or IP address as appropriate) and you should be
acbd7bdd 232greeted by the Catalyst welcome screen (if you get some other welcome
233screen or an "Index" screen, you probably forgot to specify port 3000
234in your URL). Information similar to the following should be appended
235to the logging output of the development server:
236
444d6b27 237 [info] *** Request 1 (0.005/s) [20712] [Sun Oct 11 11:58:51 2009] ***
238 [debug] "GET" request for "/" from "172.0.0.1"
acbd7bdd 239 [info] Request took 0.007342s (136.203/s)
d442cc9f 240 .----------------------------------------------------------------+-----------.
241 | Action | Time |
242 +----------------------------------------------------------------+-----------+
acbd7bdd 243 | /index | 0.000491s |
244 | /end | 0.000595s |
d442cc9f 245 '----------------------------------------------------------------+-----------'
246
247Press Ctrl-C to break out of the development server.
248
249
3533daff 250=head1 HELLO WORLD
d442cc9f 251
3533daff 252=head2 The Simplest Way
d442cc9f 253
3533daff 254The Root.pm controller is a place to put global actions that usually
255execute on the root URL. Open the C<lib/Hello/Controller/Root.pm> file in
865d3efb 256your editor. You will see the "index" subroutine, which is
3533daff 257responsible for displaying the welcome screen that you just saw in
258your browser. Later on you'll want to change that to something more
865d3efb 259reasonable, such as a "404" message or a redirect, but for now just
260leave it alone.
d442cc9f 261
865d3efb 262 sub index :Path :Args(0) {
3533daff 263 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
865d3efb 264
265 # Hello World
3533daff 266 $c->response->body( $c->welcome_message );
d442cc9f 267 }
268
3533daff 269The "C<$c>" here refers to the Catalyst context, which is used to
270access the Catalyst application. In addition to many other things,
271the Catalyst context provides access to "response" and "request"
d0496197 272objects. (See L<Catalyst|Catalyst>,
273L<Catalyst::Response|Catalyst::Response>, and
274L<Catalyst::Request|Catalyst::Request>)
d442cc9f 275
14e5ed66 276C<$c-E<gt>response-E<gt>body> sets the HTTP response (see
277L<Catalyst::Response|Catalyst::Response>), while C<$c-E<gt>welcome_message>
d0496197 278is a special method that returns the welcome message that you saw in
279your browser.
d442cc9f 280
444d6b27 281The ":Path :Args(0)" after the method name are attributes which
282determine which URLs will be dispatched to this method. (You might see
283":Private" if you are using an older version of Catalyst, but using
284that with 'default' or 'index' is currently deprecated. If so, you
285should also probably upgrade before continuing the tutorial.)
d442cc9f 286
3533daff 287Some MVC frameworks handle dispatching in a central place. Catalyst,
288by policy, prefers to handle URL dispatching with attributes on
289controller methods. There is a lot of flexibility in specifying which
290URLs to match. This particular method will match all URLs, because it
865d3efb 291doesn't specify the path (nothing comes after "Path"), but will only
444d6b27 292accept a URL without any args because of the ":Args(0)".
d442cc9f 293
444d6b27 294The default is to map URLs to controller names, and because of the way
295that Perl handles namespaces through package names, it is simple to
296create hierarchical structures in Catalyst. This means that you can
297create controllers with deeply nested actions in a clean and logical
298way. For example, the URL C<http://hello.com/admin/articles/create>
299maps to the package C<Hello::Controller::Admin::Articles>, and the
300C<create> method.
d442cc9f 301
d0496197 302Add the following subroutine to your C<lib/Hello/Controller/Root.pm>
303file:
d442cc9f 304
3d0b2e0b 305 sub hello :Global {
3533daff 306 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
d0496197 307
3533daff 308 $c->response->body("Hello, World!");
309 }
d442cc9f 310
acbd7bdd 311B<TIP>: See Appendix 1 for tips on removing the leading spaces when
312cutting and pasting example code from POD-based documents.
313
3533daff 314Here you're sending your own string to the webpage.
315
316Save the file, start the server (stop and restart it if it's still
444d6b27 317running), and go to L<http://localhost:3000/hello> to
318see "Hello, World!" Also notice that a new action is listed under
319"Loaded Private actions" in the development server debug output.
3533daff 320
865d3efb 321
3533daff 322=head2 Hello, World! Using a View and a Template
323
444d6b27 324In the Catalyst world a "View" itself is not a page of XHTML or a
325template designed to present a page to a browser. Rather, it is the
326module that determines the I<type> of view -- HTML, pdf, XML, etc. For
327the thing that generates the I<content> of that view (such as the a
328Toolkit Template template file), the actual templates go under the
865d3efb 329"root" directory.
3533daff 330
331To create a TT view, run:
332
333 $ script/hello_create.pl view TT TT
334
335This creates the C<lib/Hello/View/TT.pm> module, which is a subclass of
1435672d 336C<Catalyst::View::TT>.
337
338=over 4
339
340=item *
341
342The "view" keyword tells the create script that you are creating a view.
343
344=item *
345
346The first "TT" tells the script to name the View module "TT.pm", which is a
347commonly used name for TT views. (You can name it anything you want, such as
348"HTML.pm".)
349
350=item *
351
444d6b27 352The final "TT" tells Catalyst the I<type> of the view, with "TT"
353indicating that you want to a Template Toolkit view.
1435672d 354
355=back
356
444d6b27 357If you look at C<lib/Hello/View/TT.pm> you will find that it only
358contains a config statement to set the TT extension to ".tt".
3533daff 359
360Now that the TT.pm "View" exists, Catalyst will autodiscover it and be
444d6b27 361able to use it to display the view templates using the "process"
3533daff 362method that it inherits from the C<Catalyst::View::TT class>.
363
c010ae0d 364Template Toolkit is a very full featured template facility, with
865d3efb 365excellent documentation at L<http://template-toolkit.org/>,
3533daff 366but since this is not a TT tutorial, we'll stick to only basic TT
367usage here (and explore some of the more common TT features in later
4b4d3884 368chapters of the tutorial).
3533daff 369
370Create a C<root/hello.tt> template file (put it in the C<root> under
371the C<Hello> directory that is the base of your application). Here is
372a simple sample:
373
3533daff 374 <p>
1435672d 375 This is a TT view template, called '[% template.name %]'.
3533daff 376 </p>
377
378[% and %] are markers for the TT parts of the template. Inside you can
1435672d 379access Perl variables and classes, and use TT directives. In this
380case, we're using a special TT variable that defines the name of the
381template file (C<hello.tt>). The rest of the template is normal HTML.
382
383Change the hello method in C<lib/Hello/Controller/Root.pm> to the
384following:
3533daff 385
3d0b2e0b 386 sub hello :Global {
3533daff 387 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
d0496197 388
3533daff 389 $c->stash->{template} = 'hello.tt';
390 }
d442cc9f 391
444d6b27 392This time, instead of doing C<$c-E<gt>response-E<gt>body()>, you are
393setting the value of the "template" hash key in the Catalyst "stash",
394an area for putting information to share with other parts of your
395application. The "template" key determines which template will be
396displayed at the end of the request cycle. Catalyst controllers have a
397default "end" action for all methods which causes the first (or
398default) view to be rendered (unless there's a C<$c-E<gt>response-
399E<gt>body()> statement). So your template will be magically displayed
400at the end of your method.
d442cc9f 401
3533daff 402After saving the file, restart the development server, and look at
d0496197 403L<http://localhost:3000/hello> again. You should
3533daff 404see the template that you just made.
d442cc9f 405
d442cc9f 406
3533daff 407=head1 CREATE A SIMPLE CONTROLLER AND AN ACTION
d442cc9f 408
3533daff 409Create a controller named "Site" by executing the create script:
d442cc9f 410
3533daff 411 $ script/hello_create.pl controller Site
d442cc9f 412
3533daff 413This will create a C<lib/Hello/Controller/Site.pm> file (and a test
414file). Bring Site.pm up in your editor, and you can see that there's
444d6b27 415not much there.
d442cc9f 416
d0496197 417In C<lib/Hello/Controller/Site.pm>, add the following method:
d442cc9f 418
3d0b2e0b 419 sub test :Local {
3533daff 420 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
d0496197 421
3533daff 422 $c->stash->{username} = "John";
423 $c->stash->{template} = 'site/test.tt';
d442cc9f 424 }
425
1435672d 426Notice the "Local" attribute on the C<test> method. This will cause
444d6b27 427the C<test> action (now that we have assigned an "action type" to the
428method it appears as a "controller action" to Catalyst) to be executed
1435672d 429on the "controller/method" URL, or, in this case, "site/test". We
430will see additional information on controller actions throughout the
431rest of the tutorial, but if you are curious take a look at
432L<Catalyst::Manual::Intro/Actions>.
433
434It's not actually necessary to set the template value as we do here.
435By default TT will attempt to render a template that follows the
436naming pattern "controller/method.tt", and we're following that
437pattern here. However, in other situations you will need to specify
438the template (such as if you've "forwarded" to the method, or if it
439doesn't follow the default naming convention).
440
441We've also put the variable "username" into the stash, for use in the
442template.
d442cc9f 443
3533daff 444Make a subdirectory "site" in the "root" directory. Copy the hello.tt
d0496197 445file into the directory as C<root/site/test.tt>, or create a new
446template file at that location. Include a line like:
d442cc9f 447
d0496197 448 <p>Hello, [% username %]!</p>
d442cc9f 449
3533daff 450Bring up or restart the server. Notice in the server output that
451C</site/test> is listed in the Loaded Path actions. Go to
865d3efb 452L<http://localhost:3000/site/test> in your browser.
d442cc9f 453
3533daff 454You should see your test.tt file displayed, including the name "John"
455that you set in the controller.
d442cc9f 456
d442cc9f 457
3533daff 458=head1 AUTHORS
d442cc9f 459
3533daff 460Gerda Shank, C<gerda.shank@gmail.com>
d442cc9f 461Kennedy Clark, C<hkclark@gmail.com>
462
463Please report any errors, issues or suggestions to the author. The
464most recent version of the Catalyst Tutorial can be found at
59884771 465L<http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/Catalyst-Manual/5.80/trunk/lib/Catalyst/Manual/Tutorial/>.
d442cc9f 466
45c7830f 467Copyright 2006-2008, Kennedy Clark & Gerda Shank, under Creative Commons License
865d3efb 468(L<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).