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[catagits/Catalyst-Manual.git] / lib / Catalyst / Manual / Tutorial / 03_MoreCatalystBasics.pod
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3533daff 1=head1 NAME
2
3ab6187c 3Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::03_MoreCatalystBasics - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 3: More Catalyst Application Development Basics
3533daff 4
5
6=head1 OVERVIEW
7
4b4d3884 8This is B<Chapter 3 of 10> for the Catalyst tutorial.
3533daff 9
10L<Tutorial Overview|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial>
11
12=over 4
13
14=item 1
15
3ab6187c 16L<Introduction|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro>
3533daff 17
18=item 2
19
3ab6187c 20L<Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::02_CatalystBasics>
3533daff 21
22=item 3
23
3ab6187c 24B<03_More Catalyst Basics>
3533daff 25
26=item 4
27
3ab6187c 28L<Basic CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD>
3533daff 29
30=item 5
31
3ab6187c 32L<Authentication|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::05_Authentication>
3533daff 33
34=item 6
35
3ab6187c 36L<Authorization|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::06_Authorization>
3533daff 37
38=item 7
39
3ab6187c 40L<Debugging|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::07_Debugging>
3533daff 41
42=item 8
43
3ab6187c 44L<Testing|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::08_Testing>
3533daff 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>
3533daff 53
54=back
55
56
57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
4b4d3884 59This chapter of the tutorial builds on the work done in Chapter 2 to
60explore some features that are more typical of "real world" web
61applications. From this chapter of the tutorial onward, we will be
62building a simple book database application. Although the application
63will be too limited to be of use to anyone, it should provide a basic
64environment where we can explore a variety of features used in
65virtually all web applications.
3533daff 66
4d63a0d5 67You can check out the source code for this example from the Catalyst
68Subversion repository as per the instructions in
3ab6187c 69L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro>.
3533daff 70
a586a09f 71Please take a look at
3ab6187c 72L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro/CATALYST INSTALLATION> before
a586a09f 73doing the rest of this tutorial. Although the tutorial should work
74correctly under most any recent version of Perl running on any
75operating system, the tutorial has been written using Debian 5 and
76tested to be sure it runs correctly in this environment.
77
3533daff 78
79=head1 CREATE A NEW APPLICATION
80
1390ef0e 81The remainder of the tutorial will build an application called C<MyApp>.
82First use the Catalyst C<catalyst.pl> script to initialize the framework
83for the C<MyApp> application (make sure you aren't still inside the
4b4d3884 84directory of the C<Hello> application from the previous chapter of the
acbd7bdd 85tutorial or in a directory that already has a "MyApp" subdirectory):
3533daff 86
87 $ catalyst.pl MyApp
88 created "MyApp"
89 created "MyApp/script"
90 created "MyApp/lib"
91 created "MyApp/root"
92 ...
93 created "MyApp/script/myapp_create.pl"
444d6b27 94 Change to application directory and Run "perl Makefile.PL" to make sure your install is complete
3533daff 95 $ cd MyApp
96
4b4d3884 97This creates a similar skeletal structure to what we saw in Chapter 2 of
1390ef0e 98the tutorial, except with C<MyApp> and C<myapp> substituted for
444d6b27 99C<Hello> and C<hello>. (As noted in Chapter 2, omit the ".pl" from
100the command if you are using Strawberry Perl.)
3533daff 101
102
103=head1 EDIT THE LIST OF CATALYST PLUGINS
104
105One of the greatest benefits of Catalyst is that it has such a large
1390ef0e 106library of plugins and base classes available. Plugins are used to
107seamlessly integrate existing Perl modules into the overall Catalyst
108framework. In general, they do this by adding additional methods to the
109C<context> object (generally written as C<$c>) that Catalyst passes to
110every component throughout the framework.
3533daff 111
112By default, Catalyst enables three plugins/flags:
113
114=over 4
115
1390ef0e 116=item *
3533daff 117
118C<-Debug> Flag
119
120Enables the Catalyst debug output you saw when we started the
121C<script/myapp_server.pl> development server earlier. You can remove
79a529cc 122this item when you place your application into production.
3533daff 123
444d6b27 124To be technically correct, it turns out that C<-Debug> is not a plugin, but a I<flag>.
1390ef0e 125Although most of the items specified on the C<__PACKAGE__-E<gt>setup>
126line of your application class will be plugins, Catalyst supports a
127limited number of flag options (of these, C<-Debug> is the most
128common). See the documentation for C<Catalyst.pm> to get details on
129other flags (currently C<-Engine>, C<-Home>, and C<-Log>).
3533daff 130
444d6b27 131If you prefer, there are several other ways to enable debug output:
132
133=over 4
134
135=item *
136
137Use the C<$c-E<gt>debug> method
138
139=item *
140
141The C<-d> option to C<script/myapp_server.pl>
142
143=item *
144
145The C<CATALYST_DEBUG=1> environment variable (or set it to
146zero to templorarily disable debug output).
147
148=back
3533daff 149
150B<TIP>: Depending on your needs, it can be helpful to permanently
151remove C<-Debug> from C<lib/MyApp.pm> and then use the C<-d> option
152to C<script/myapp_server.pl> to re-enable it just for the development
1390ef0e 153server. We will not be using that approach in the tutorial, but feel
3533daff 154free to make use of it in your own projects.
155
156=item *
157
158L<Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader|Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader>
159
160C<ConfigLoader> provides an automatic way to load configurable
c010ae0d 161parameters for your application from a central
162L<Config::General|Config::General> file (versus having the values
163hard-coded inside your Perl modules). Config::General uses syntax
164very similar to Apache configuration files. We will see how to use
165this feature of Catalyst during the authentication and authorization
4b4d3884 166sections (Chapter 5 and Chapter 6).
3533daff 167
1435672d 168B<IMPORTANT NOTE:> If you are using a version of
169L<Catalyst::Devel|Catalyst::Devel> prior to version 1.06, be aware
170that Catalyst changed the default format from YAML to the more
171straightforward C<Config::General> style. This tutorial uses the
172newer C<myapp.conf> file for C<Config::General>. However, Catalyst
173supports both formats and will automatically use either C<myapp.conf>
174or C<myapp.yml> (or any other format supported by
175L<Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader|Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader> and
176L<Config::Any|Config::Any>). If you are using a version of
177Catalyst::Devel prior to 1.06, you can convert to the newer format by
178simply creating the C<myapp.conf> file manually and deleting
179C<myapp.yml>. The default contents of the C<myapp.conf> you create
180should only consist of one line:
181
182 name MyApp
15e1d0b2 183
1390ef0e 184B<TIP>: This script can be useful for converting between configuration
15e1d0b2 185formats:
186
1390ef0e 187 perl -Ilib -e 'use MyApp; use Config::General;
15e1d0b2 188 Config::General->new->save_file("myapp.conf", MyApp->config);'
189
3533daff 190=item *
191
192L<Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple|Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple>
193
4d63a0d5 194C<Static::Simple> provides an easy way to serve static content, such
195as images and CSS files, from the development server.
3533daff 196
197=back
198
94d8da41 199For our application, we want to add one new plugin into the mix. To
1390ef0e 200do this, edit C<lib/MyApp.pm> (this file is generally referred to as
acbd7bdd 201your I<application class>) and delete the lines with:
3533daff 202
acbd7bdd 203 use Catalyst qw/-Debug
204 ConfigLoader
205 Static::Simple/;
3533daff 206
1390ef0e 207Then replace it with:
b411df01 208
acbd7bdd 209 # Load plugins
fce83e5f 210 use Catalyst qw/
211 -Debug
3b1fa91b 212 ConfigLoader
213 Static::Simple
acbd7bdd 214
3b1fa91b 215 StackTrace
216 /;
1390ef0e 217
94d8da41 218B<Note:> Recent versions of C<Catalyst::Devel> have used a variety of
acbd7bdd 219techniques to load these plugins/flags. For example, you might see
220the following:
94d8da41 221
acbd7bdd 222 __PACKAGE__->setup(qw/-Debug ConfigLoader Static::Simple/);
94d8da41 223
224Don't let these variations confuse you -- they all accomplish the same
225result.
226
1390ef0e 227This tells Catalyst to start using one new plugin,
228L<Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace|Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace>, to add a
229stack trace to the standard Catalyst "debug screen" (the screen
230Catalyst sends to your browser when an error occurs). Be aware that
231L<StackTrace|Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace> output appears in your
232browser, not in the console window from which you're running your
233application, which is where logging output usually goes.
3533daff 234
444d6b27 235Make sure when adding new plugins you also include them as a new
236dependancy within the Makefile.PL file. For example, after adding
3b1fa91b 237the StackTrace plugin the Makefile.PL should include the following
238line:
239
240 requires 'Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace';
241
242
1390ef0e 243B<Notes:>
3533daff 244
245=over 4
246
1390ef0e 247=item *
248
249C<__PACKAGE__> is just a shorthand way of referencing the name of the
250package where it is used. Therefore, in C<MyApp.pm>, C<__PACKAGE__>
251is equivalent to C<MyApp>.
3533daff 252
1390ef0e 253=item *
3533daff 254
1390ef0e 255You will want to disable L<StackTrace|Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace>
256before you put your application into production, but it can be helpful
257during development.
3533daff 258
1390ef0e 259=item *
3533daff 260
444d6b27 261When specifying plugins, you can omit C<Catalyst::Plugin::> from the
262name. Additionally, you can spread the plugin names across multiple
263lines as shown here or place them all on one line.
cca5cd98 264
3533daff 265=back
266
3533daff 267
268=head1 CREATE A CATALYST CONTROLLER
269
1390ef0e 270As discussed earlier, controllers are where you write methods that
271interact with user input. Typically, controller methods respond to
4d63a0d5 272C<GET> and C<POST> requests from the user's web browser.
3533daff 273
274Use the Catalyst C<create> script to add a controller for book-related
275actions:
276
277 $ script/myapp_create.pl controller Books
278 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Controller"
279 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t"
280 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm"
281 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t/controller_Books.t"
282
4b4d3884 283Then edit C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> (as discussed in Chapter 2 of
1390ef0e 284the Tutorial, Catalyst has a separate directory under C<lib/MyApp> for
285each of the three parts of MVC: C<Model>, C<View>, and C<Controller>)
286and add the following method to the controller:
3533daff 287
288 =head2 list
289
290 Fetch all book objects and pass to books/list.tt2 in stash to be displayed
291
292 =cut
1390ef0e 293
3533daff 294 sub list : Local {
295 # Retrieve the usual Perl OO '$self' for this object. $c is the Catalyst
296 # 'Context' that's used to 'glue together' the various components
297 # that make up the application
298 my ($self, $c) = @_;
299
300 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
301 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template
3b1fa91b 302 # $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Book')->all];
1390ef0e 303 # But, for now, use this code until we create the model later
304 $c->stash->{books} = '';
305
3533daff 306 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
307 # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
308 # your controllers).
309 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
310 }
311
1390ef0e 312B<TIP>: See Appendix 1 for tips on removing the leading spaces when
313cutting and pasting example code from POD-based documents.
3533daff 314
1390ef0e 315Programmers experienced with object-oriented Perl should recognize
316C<$self> as a reference to the object where this method was called.
317On the other hand, C<$c> will be new to many Perl programmers who have
318not used Catalyst before (it's sometimes written as C<$context>). The
319Context object is automatically passed to all Catalyst components. It
320is used to pass information between components and provide access to
321Catalyst and plugin functionality.
3533daff 322
245b41d1 323Catalyst actions are regular Perl methods, but they make use of
324attributes (the "C<: Local>" next to the "C<sub list>" in the code
0416017e 325above) to provide additional information to the Catalyst dispatcher
326logic (note that the space between the colon and the attribute name is
4d63a0d5 327optional; you will see attributes written both ways). Most Catalyst
245b41d1 328Controllers use one of five action types:
0416017e 329
330=over 4
331
332=item *
333
245b41d1 334B<:Private> -- Use C<:Private> for methods that you want to make into
444d6b27 335an action, but you do not want Catalyst to directly expose the method
245b41d1 336to your users. Catalyst will not map C<:Private> methods to a URI.
337Use them for various sorts of "special" methods (the C<begin>,
338C<auto>, etc. discussed below) or for methods you want to be able to
339C<forward> or C<detach> to. (If the method is a plain old "helper
340method" that you don't want to be an action at all, then just define
341the method without any attribute -- you can call it in your code, but
342the Catalyst dispatcher will ignore it.)
0416017e 343
245b41d1 344There are five types of "special" build-in C<:Private> actions:
345C<begin>, C<end>, C<default>, C<index>, and C<auto>.
0416017e 346
26c9cad5 347=over 4
348
0416017e 349=item *
350
351With C<begin>, C<end>, C<default>, C<index> private actions, only the
352most specific action of each type will be called. For example, if you
353define a C<begin> action in your controller it will I<override> a
354C<begin> action in your application/root controller -- I<only> the
355action in your controller will be called.
356
357=item *
358
359Unlike the other actions where only a single method is called for each
360request, I<every> auto action along the chain of namespaces will be
361called. Each C<auto> action will be called I<from the application/root
362controller down through the most specific class>.
363
364=back
365
366=item *
367
245b41d1 368B<:Path> -- C<:Path> actions let you map a method to an explicit URI
369path. For example, "C<:Path('list')>" in
0416017e 370C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> would match on the URL
444d6b27 371C<http://localhost:3000/books/list>, but "C<:Path('/list')>" would
372match on C<http://localhost:3000/list> (because of the leading slash).
373You can use C<:Args()> to specify how many arguments an action should
374accept. See L<Catalyst::Manual::Intro/Action_types> for more
375information and examples.
0416017e 376
377=item *
378
245b41d1 379B<:Local> -- C<:Local> is merely a shorthand for
380"C<:Path('_name_of_method_')>". For example, these are equivalent:
381"C<sub create_book :Local {...}>" and
382"C<sub create_book :Path('create_book') {...}>".
383
384=item *
385
386B<:Global> -- C<:Global> is merely a shorthand for
387"C<:Path('/_name_of_method_')>". For example, these are equivalent:
388"C<sub create_book :Global {...}>" and
389"C<sub create_book :Path('/create_book') {...}>".
390
391=item *
392
393B<:Chained> -- Newer Catalyst applications tend to use the Chained
0416017e 394dispatch form of action types because of its power and flexibility.
4d63a0d5 395It allows a series of controller methods to be automatically dispatched
0416017e 396to service a single user request. See
3ab6187c 397L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD>
0416017e 398and L<Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained|Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained>
399for more information on chained actions.
400
401=back
402
403You should refer to L<Catalyst::Manual::Intro/Action_types> for
404additional information and for coverage of some lesser-used action
245b41d1 405types not discussed here (C<Regex> and C<LocalRegex>).
3533daff 406
407
408=head1 CATALYST VIEWS
409
4d63a0d5 410As mentioned in Chapter 2 of the tutorial, views are where you render
411output, typically for display in the user's web browser (but also
412possibly using into output-generation systems, such as PDF or JSON).
413The code in C<lib/MyApp/View> selects the I<type> of view to use, with
414the actual rendering template found in the C<root> directory. As with
415virtually every aspect of Catalyst, options abound when it comes to the
416specific view technology you adopt inside your application. However,
417most Catalyst applications use the Template Toolkit, known as TT (for
418more information on TT, see L<http://www.template-toolkit.org>). Other
419somewhat popular view technologies include Mason
420(L<http://www.masonhq.com> and L<http://www.masonbook.com>) and
1390ef0e 421L<HTML::Template> (L<http://html-template.sourceforge.net>).
422
423
424=head2 Create a Catalyst View
3533daff 425
444d6b27 426When using TT for the Catalyst view, the main helper script
427is L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TT|Catalyst::Helper::View::TT>.
428You may also come across references to
429L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TTSite|Catalyst::Helper::View::TTSite>,
430but its use is now deprecated.
1390ef0e 431
432Enter the following command to enable the C<TT> style of view
3533daff 433rendering for this tutorial:
434
1390ef0e 435 $ script/myapp_create.pl view TT TT
3533daff 436 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/View"
437 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t"
1390ef0e 438 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm"
439 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t/view_TT.t"
3533daff 440
1390ef0e 441This simply creates a view called C<TT> (the second 'TT' argument) in
442a file called C<TT.pm> (the first 'TT' argument). It is now up to you
443to decide how you want to structure your view layout. For the
444tutorial, we will start with a very simple TT template to initially
445demonstrate the concepts, but quickly migrate to a more typical
446"wrapper page" type of configuration (where the "wrapper" controls the
447overall "look and feel" of your site from a single file or set of
448files).
3533daff 449
1390ef0e 450Edit C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm> and you should see that the default
451contents contains something similar to the following:
3533daff 452
1390ef0e 453 __PACKAGE__->config(TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '.tt');
3533daff 454
1390ef0e 455And update it to match:
456
457 __PACKAGE__->config(
458 # Change default TT extension
459 TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '.tt2',
460 # Set the location for TT files
461 INCLUDE_PATH => [
6abd3023 462 MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'src' ),
1390ef0e 463 ],
464 );
3533daff 465
1390ef0e 466B<NOTE:> Make sure to add a comma after '.tt2' outside the single
467quote.
468
444d6b27 469This changes the default extension for Template Toolkit from '.tt' to
470'.tt2' and changes the base directory for your template files from
471C<root> to C<root/src>. Stick with these conventions for the
472tutorial, but feel free to use whatever options you desire in your
473applications (as with most things Perl, there's more than one way to
474do it...).
1390ef0e 475
acbd7bdd 476B<Note:> We will use C<root/src> as the base directory for our
444d6b27 477template files, with a full naming convention of
acbd7bdd 478C<root/src/_controller_name_/_action_name_.tt2>. Another popular option is to
479use C<root/> as the base (with a full filename pattern of
480C<root/_controller_name_/_action_name_.tt2>).
481
1390ef0e 482
483=head2 Create a TT Template Page
3533daff 484
485First create a directory for book-related TT templates:
486
1390ef0e 487 $ mkdir -p root/src/books
3533daff 488
489Then create C<root/src/books/list.tt2> in your editor and enter:
490
491 [% # This is a TT comment. The '-' at the end "chomps" the newline. You won't -%]
492 [% # see this "chomping" in your browser because HTML ignores blank lines, but -%]
493 [% # it WILL eliminate a blank line if you view the HTML source. It's purely -%]
494 [%- # optional, but both the beginning and the ending TT tags support chomping. -%]
495
1390ef0e 496 [% # Provide a title -%]
3533daff 497 [% META title = 'Book List' -%]
498
499 <table>
500 <tr><th>Title</th><th>Rating</th><th>Author(s)</th></tr>
501 [% # Display each book in a table row %]
502 [% FOREACH book IN books -%]
503 <tr>
504 <td>[% book.title %]</td>
505 <td>[% book.rating %]</td>
a46b474e 506 <td></td>
3533daff 507 </tr>
508 [% END -%]
509 </table>
510
511As indicated by the inline comments above, the C<META title> line uses
1390ef0e 512TT's META feature to provide a title to the "wrapper" that we will
513create later. Meanwhile, the C<FOREACH> loop iterates through each
514C<book> model object and prints the C<title> and C<rating> fields.
3533daff 515
4d63a0d5 516The C<[%> and C<%]> tags are used to delimit Template Toolkit code. TT
517supports a wide variety of directives for "calling" other files,
518looping, conditional logic, etc. In general, TT simplifies the usual
444d6b27 519range of Perl operators down to the single dot (".") operator. This
4d63a0d5 520applies to operations as diverse as method calls, hash lookups, and list
521index values (see
522L<http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?Template::Manual::Variables> for
444d6b27 523details and examples). In addition to the usual L<Template> module Pod
4d63a0d5 524documentation, you can access the TT manual at
55beb65d 525L<http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?Template::Manual>.
3533daff 526
444d6b27 527B<TIP:> While you can build all sorts of complex logic into your TT
528templates, you should in general keep the "code" part of your
529templates as simple as possible. If you need more complex logic,
530create helper methods in your model that abstract out a set of code
531into a single call from your TT template. (Note that the same is true
532of your controller logic as well -- complex sections of code in your
533controllers should often be pulled out and placed into your model
534objects.) In Chapter 4 of the tutorial we will explore some extremely
535helpful and powerful features of L<DBIx::Class> that allow you to pull
536code out of your views and controllers and place it where it
537rightfully belongs in a model class.
1390ef0e 538
539
540=head2 Test Run The Application
541
542To test your work so far, first start the development server:
543
544 $ script/myapp_server.pl
545
546Then point your browser to L<http://localhost:3000> and you should
547still get the Catalyst welcome page. Next, change the URL in your
548browser to L<http://localhost:3000/books/list>. If you have
549everything working so far, you should see a web page that displays
550nothing other than our column headers for "Title", "Rating", and
551"Author(s)" -- we will not see any books until we get the database and
552model working below.
553
554If you run into problems getting your application to run correctly, it
555might be helpful to refer to some of the debugging techniques covered in
fce83e5f 556the L<Debugging|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::07_Debugging> chapter of the
1390ef0e 557tutorial.
3533daff 558
559
560=head1 CREATE A SQLITE DATABASE
561
562In this step, we make a text file with the required SQL commands to
39e260e9 563create a database table and load some sample data. We will use
564L<SQLite|http://www.sqlite.org>, a popular database that is
565lightweight and easy to use. Be sure to get at least version 3. Open
1390ef0e 566C<myapp01.sql> in your editor and enter:
3533daff 567
568 --
569 -- Create a very simple database to hold book and author information
570 --
3b1fa91b 571 CREATE TABLE book (
3533daff 572 id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
573 title TEXT ,
574 rating INTEGER
575 );
3b1fa91b 576 -- 'book_author' is a many-to-many join table between books & authors
577 CREATE TABLE book_author (
3533daff 578 book_id INTEGER,
579 author_id INTEGER,
580 PRIMARY KEY (book_id, author_id)
581 );
3b1fa91b 582 CREATE TABLE author (
3533daff 583 id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
584 first_name TEXT,
585 last_name TEXT
586 );
587 ---
588 --- Load some sample data
589 ---
3b1fa91b 590 INSERT INTO book VALUES (1, 'CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide', 5);
591 INSERT INTO book VALUES (2, 'TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1', 5);
592 INSERT INTO book VALUES (3, 'Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1', 4);
593 INSERT INTO book VALUES (4, 'Perl Cookbook', 5);
594 INSERT INTO book VALUES (5, 'Designing with Web Standards', 5);
595 INSERT INTO author VALUES (1, 'Greg', 'Bastien');
596 INSERT INTO author VALUES (2, 'Sara', 'Nasseh');
597 INSERT INTO author VALUES (3, 'Christian', 'Degu');
598 INSERT INTO author VALUES (4, 'Richard', 'Stevens');
599 INSERT INTO author VALUES (5, 'Douglas', 'Comer');
600 INSERT INTO author VALUES (6, 'Tom', 'Christiansen');
601 INSERT INTO author VALUES (7, 'Nathan', 'Torkington');
602 INSERT INTO author VALUES (8, 'Jeffrey', 'Zeldman');
603 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (1, 1);
604 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (1, 2);
605 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (1, 3);
606 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (2, 4);
607 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (3, 5);
608 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (4, 6);
609 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (4, 7);
610 INSERT INTO book_author VALUES (5, 8);
3533daff 611
3533daff 612Then use the following command to build a C<myapp.db> SQLite database:
613
614 $ sqlite3 myapp.db < myapp01.sql
615
616If you need to create the database more than once, you probably want to
617issue the C<rm myapp.db> command to delete the database before you use
1390ef0e 618the C<sqlite3 myapp.db E<lt> myapp01.sql> command.
3533daff 619
620Once the C<myapp.db> database file has been created and initialized, you
621can use the SQLite command line environment to do a quick dump of the
622database contents:
623
624 $ sqlite3 myapp.db
acbd7bdd 625 SQLite version 3.5.9
3533daff 626 Enter ".help" for instructions
3b1fa91b 627 sqlite> select * from book;
3533daff 628 1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5
629 2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5
630 3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4
631 4|Perl Cookbook|5
632 5|Designing with Web Standards|5
633 sqlite> .q
634 $
635
636Or:
637
3b1fa91b 638 $ sqlite3 myapp.db "select * from book"
3533daff 639 1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5
640 2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5
641 3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4
642 4|Perl Cookbook|5
643 5|Designing with Web Standards|5
644
645As with most other SQL tools, if you are using the full "interactive"
646environment you need to terminate your SQL commands with a ";" (it's not
647required if you do a single SQL statement on the command line). Use
648".q" to exit from SQLite from the SQLite interactive mode and return to
649your OS command prompt.
650
3b1fa91b 651Please note that here we have chosen to use 'singular' table names. This
652is because the default inflection code for L<DBIx::Class:Schema::Loader>
653does NOT handle plurals. There has been much philosophical discussion
654on whether table names should be plural or singular. There is no one
655correct answer, as long as one makes a choice and remains consistent
656with it. If you prefer plural table names (e.g. they are easier and
657more natural to read) then you will need to pass it an inflect_map
658option. See L<DBIx::Class:Schema::Loader> for more information.
659
a6d800ac 660For using other databases, such as PostgreSQL or MySQL, see
3ab6187c 661L<Appendix 2|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::10_Appendices>.
3533daff 662
acbd7bdd 663
8a472b34 664=head1 DATABASE ACCESS WITH DBIx::Class
3533daff 665
27909ed4 666Catalyst can be used with virtually any form of datastore available
667via Perl. For example, L<Catalyst::Model::DBI|Catalyst::Model::DBI>
444d6b27 668can be used to access databases through the traditional Perl L<DBI>
27909ed4 669interface or you can use a model to access files of any type on the
670filesystem. However, most Catalyst applications use some form of
671object-relational mapping (ORM) technology to create objects
672associated with tables in a relational database. Matt Trout's
673L<DBIx::Class|DBIx::Class> (abbreviated as "DBIC") has rapidly emerged
674as the Perl-based ORM technology of choice. Most new Catalyst
a46b474e 675applications rely on DBIx::Class, as will this tutorial.
3533daff 676
a46b474e 677Although DBIx::Class has included support for a C<create=dynamic> mode
678to automatically read the database structure every time the
679application starts, it's use is no longer recommended. While it can
680make for "flashy" demos, the use of the C<create=static> mode we use
681below can be implemented just as quickly and provides many advantages
682(such as the ability to add your own methods to the overall DBIC
683framework, a technique that we see in Chapter 4).
3533daff 684
1390ef0e 685
a46b474e 686=head2 Make Sure You Have a Recent Version of the DBIx::Class Model
27909ed4 687
688First, let's be sure we have a recent version of the DBIC helper,
689L<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema|Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema>, by
690running this command:
691
692 $ perl -MCatalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema -e \
693 'print "$Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema::VERSION\n"'
694 0.23
695
fce83e5f 696Please note the '\' above. Depending on your environment, you might
697be able to cut and paste the text as shown or need to remove the '\'
698character to that the command is all on a single line.
3b1fa91b 699
444d6b27 700You should have version 0.23 or greater if you are following along
701with Debian 5. In other environments, you may need to run this
702command to install it directly from CPAN:
27909ed4 703
704 $ sudo cpan Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema
705
706And re-run the version print command to verify that you are now at
7070.23 or higher.
708
709
a46b474e 710=head2 Create Static DBIx::Class Schema Files
27909ed4 711
98fd8420 712Before you continue, make sure your C<myapp.db> database file is in
713the application's topmost directory. Now use the model helper with
714the C<create=static> option to read the database with
27909ed4 715L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> and
716automatically build the required files for us:
3533daff 717
4ab6212d 718 $ script/myapp_create.pl model DB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema \
fce83e5f 719 create=static dbi:SQLite:myapp.db
1390ef0e 720 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model"
721 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t"
27909ed4 722 Dumping manual schema for MyApp::Schema to directory /home/me/MyApp/script/../lib ...
723 Schema dump completed.
1390ef0e 724 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm"
725 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t/model_DB.t"
3533daff 726
fce83e5f 727Please note the '\' above. Depending on your environment, you might
728be able to cut and paste the text as shown or need to remove the '\'
729character to that the command is all on a single line.
3b1fa91b 730
27909ed4 731The C<script/myapp_create.pl> command breaks down like this:
732
733=over 4
734
735=item *
736
737C<DB> is the name of the model class to be created by the helper in
738C<lib/MyApp/Model>.
739
740=item *
741
742C<DBIC::Schema> is the type of the model to create.
743
744=item *
745
746C<MyApp::Schema> is the name of the DBIC schema file written to
747C<lib/MyApp/Schema.pm>.
748
749=item *
750
751C<create=static> causes
752L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader|DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> to
753load the schema as it runs and then write that information out
754into files.
755
756=item *
757
758C<components=TimeStamp> causes the help to include the
759L<DBIx::Class::TimeStamp|DBIx::Class::TimeStamp> DBIC component.
760
761=item *
762
763And finally, C<dbi:SQLite:myapp.db> is the standard DBI connect string
764for use with SQLite.
765
766=back
767
768If you look in the C<lib/MyApp/Schema.pm> file, you will find that it
769only contains a call to the C<load_namespaces> method. You will also
770find that C<lib/MyApp> contains a C<Schema> subdirectory, which then
771has a subdirectory called "Result". This "Result" subdirectory then
772has files named according to each of the tables in our simple database
3b1fa91b 773(C<Author.pm>, C<BookAuthor.pm>, and C<Book.pm>). These three
a46b474e 774files are called "Result Classes" in DBIx::Class nomenclature. Although the
27909ed4 775Result Class files are named after tables in our database, the classes
776correspond to the I<row-level data> that is returned by DBIC (more on
777this later, especially in
3ab6187c 778L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD/EXPLORING THE POWER OF DBIC>).
27909ed4 779
780The idea with the Result Source files created under
781C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result> by the C<create=static> option is to only
782edit the files below the C<# DO NOT MODIFY THIS OR ANYTHING ABOVE!>
783warning. If you place all of your changes below that point in the
784file, you can regenerate the automatically created information at the
785top of each file should your database structure get updated.
786
787Also note the "flow" of the model information across the various files
788and directories. Catalyst will initially load the model from
789C<lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm>. This file contains a reference to
790C<lib/MyApp/Schema.pm>, so that file is loaded next. Finally, the
791call to C<load_namespaces> in C<Schema.pm> will load each of the
792"Result Class" files from the C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result> subdirectory.
793The final outcome is that Catalyst will dynamically create three
794table-specific Catalyst models every time the application starts (you
795can see these three model files listed in the debug output generated
796when you launch the application).
797
798B<NOTE:> Older versions of
799L<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema|Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema> use the
a46b474e 800deprecated DBIx::Class C<load_classes> technique instead of the newer
27909ed4 801C<load_namspaces>. For new applications, please try to use
802C<load_namespaces> since it more easily supports a very useful DBIC
803technique called "ResultSet Classes." If you need to convert an
804existing application from "load_classes" to "load_namespaces," you can
805use this process to automate the migration (but first make sure you
806have v0.23 C<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema> as discussed above):
807
808 $ # First delete the existing schema file to disable "compatibility" mode
809 $ rm lib/MyApp/Schema.pm
810 $
811 $ # Then re-run the helper to build the files for "load_namespaces"
812 $ script/myapp_create.pl model DB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema \
fce83e5f 813 create=static dbi:SQLite:myapp.db
3b1fa91b 814 $
27909ed4 815 $ # Now convert the existing files over
816 $ cd lib/MyApp/Schema
817 $ perl -MIO::All -e 'for (@ARGV) { my $s < io($_); $s =~ s/.*\n\# You can replace.*?\n//s;
818 $s =~ s/'MyApp::Schema::/'MyApp::Schema::Result::/g; my $d < io("Result/$_");
819 $d =~ s/1;\n?//; "$d$s" > io("Result/$_"); }' *.pm
820 $ cd ../../..
821 $
822 $ # And finally delete the old files
823 $ rm lib/MyApp/Schema/*.pm
824
825The "C<perl -MIO::ALL ...>" script will copy all the customized
826relationship (and other) information below "C<# DO NOT MODIFY>" line
827from the old files in C<lib/MyApp/Schema> to the new files in
828C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result> (we will be starting to add some
829"customized relationship information in the section below).
3533daff 830
dc9a0503 831
1390ef0e 832=head1 ENABLE THE MODEL IN THE CONTROLLER
833
acbd7bdd 834Open C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and un-comment the model code we
835left disabled earlier so that your version matches the following (un-
3b1fa91b 836comment the line containing C<[$c-E<gt>model('DB::Book')-E<gt>all]>
acbd7bdd 837and delete the next 2 lines):
1390ef0e 838
839 =head2 list
840
841 Fetch all book objects and pass to books/list.tt2 in stash to be displayed
842
843 =cut
844
845 sub list : Local {
846 # Retrieve the usual Perl OO '$self' for this object. $c is the Catalyst
847 # 'Context' that's used to 'glue together' the various components
848 # that make up the application
849 my ($self, $c) = @_;
850
851 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
852 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template
3b1fa91b 853 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Book')->all];
1390ef0e 854
855 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
856 # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
857 # your controllers).
858 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
859 }
860
3b1fa91b 861B<TIP>: You may see the C<$c-E<gt>model('DB::Book')> un-commented
862above written as C<$c-E<gt>model('DB')-E<gt>resultset('Book')>. The
c93b5eaa 863two are equivalent. Either way, C<$c-E<gt>model> returns a
864L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet|DBIx::Class::ResultSet> which handles queries
4d63a0d5 865against the database and iterating over the set of results that is
c93b5eaa 866returned.
867
868We are using the C<-E<gt>all> to fetch all of the books. DBIC
869supports a wide variety of more advanced operations to easily do
870things like filtering and sorting the results. For example, the
518f3851 871following could be used to sort the results by descending title:
c93b5eaa 872
3b1fa91b 873 $c->model('DB::Book')->search({}, {order_by => 'title DESC'});
c93b5eaa 874
875Some other examples are provided in
876L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook/Complex WHERE clauses>, with
877additional information found at L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search>,
878L<DBIx::Class::Manual::FAQ/Searching>,
879L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Intro|DBIx::Class::Manual::Intro>
880and L<Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema|Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema>.
1390ef0e 881
882
883=head2 Test Run The Application
3533daff 884
1435672d 885First, let's enable an environment variable that causes DBIx::Class to
acbd7bdd 886dump the SQL statements used to access the database. This is a
1435672d 887helpful trick when you are trying to debug your database-oriented
888code:
3533daff 889
890 $ export DBIC_TRACE=1
891
4d63a0d5 892This assumes you are using bash as your shell -- adjust accordingly if
3533daff 893you are using a different shell (for example, under tcsh, use
894C<setenv DBIC_TRACE 1>).
895
d0496197 896B<NOTE:> You can also set this in your code using
3533daff 897C<$class-E<gt>storage-E<gt>debug(1);>. See
898L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting> for details (including options
4d63a0d5 899to log to a file instead of displaying to the Catalyst development server
3533daff 900log).
901
1390ef0e 902Then launch the Catalyst development server. The log output should
903display something like:
3533daff 904
acbd7bdd 905 $ script/myapp_server.pl
3533daff 906 [debug] Debug messages enabled
1390ef0e 907 [debug] Statistics enabled
3533daff 908 [debug] Loaded plugins:
909 .----------------------------------------------------------------------------.
fce83e5f 910 | Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader 0.22 |
911 | Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace 0.09 |
3b1fa91b 912 | Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple 0.21 |
3533daff 913 '----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
914
915 [debug] Loaded dispatcher "Catalyst::Dispatcher"
916 [debug] Loaded engine "Catalyst::Engine::HTTP"
917 [debug] Found home "/home/me/MyApp"
45d511e0 918 [debug] Loaded Config "/home/me/MyApp/myapp.conf"
3533daff 919 [debug] Loaded components:
920 .-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------.
921 | Class | Type |
922 +-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
923 | MyApp::Controller::Books | instance |
924 | MyApp::Controller::Root | instance |
d0496197 925 | MyApp::Model::DB | instance |
3b1fa91b 926 | MyApp::Model::DB::Author | class |
927 | MyApp::Model::DB::Book | class |
928 | MyApp::Model::DB::BookAuthor | class |
3533daff 929 | MyApp::View::TT | instance |
930 '-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------'
931
932 [debug] Loaded Private actions:
933 .----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------.
934 | Private | Class | Method |
935 +----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------+
936 | /default | MyApp::Controller::Root | default |
937 | /end | MyApp::Controller::Root | end |
1390ef0e 938 | /index | MyApp::Controller::Root | index |
3533daff 939 | /books/index | MyApp::Controller::Books | index |
940 | /books/list | MyApp::Controller::Books | list |
941 '----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------'
942
943 [debug] Loaded Path actions:
944 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
945 | Path | Private |
946 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
1390ef0e 947 | / | /default |
948 | / | /index |
949 | /books | /books/index |
3533daff 950 | /books/list | /books/list |
951 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
952
3b1fa91b 953 [info] MyApp powered by Catalyst 5.80003
acbd7bdd 954 You can connect to your server at http://debian:3000
3533daff 955
1390ef0e 956B<NOTE:> Be sure you run the C<script/myapp_server.pl> command from
957the 'base' directory of your application, not inside the C<script>
958directory itself or it will not be able to locate the C<myapp.db>
959database file. You can use a fully qualified or a relative path to
960locate the database file, but we did not specify that when we ran the
3533daff 961model helper earlier.
962
963Some things you should note in the output above:
964
965=over 4
966
1390ef0e 967=item *
3533daff 968
1390ef0e 969Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema dynamically created three model classes,
970one to represent each of the three tables in our database
3b1fa91b 971(C<MyApp::Model::DB::Author>, C<MyApp::Model::DB::BookAuthor>,
972and C<MyApp::Model::DB::Book>).
3533daff 973
1390ef0e 974=item *
3533daff 975
976The "list" action in our Books controller showed up with a path of
977C</books/list>.
978
979=back
980
981Point your browser to L<http://localhost:3000> and you should still get
982the Catalyst welcome page.
983
984Next, to view the book list, change the URL in your browser to
985L<http://localhost:3000/books/list>. You should get a list of the five
1390ef0e 986books loaded by the C<myapp01.sql> script above without any formatting.
987The rating for each book should appear on each row, but the "Author(s)"
191dee29 988column will still be blank (we will fill that in later).
3533daff 989
a46b474e 990Also notice in the output of the C<script/myapp_server.pl> that
991DBIx::Class used the following SQL to retrieve the data:
3533daff 992
fce83e5f 993 SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating FROM book me
3533daff 994
995because we enabled DBIC_TRACE.
996
0c51850e 997You now have the beginnings of a simple but workable web application.
3533daff 998Continue on to future sections and we will develop the application
999more fully.
1000
1001
1390ef0e 1002=head1 CREATE A WRAPPER FOR THE VIEW
1003
acbd7bdd 1004When using TT, you can (and should) create a wrapper that will
1390ef0e 1005literally wrap content around each of your templates. This is
1006certainly useful as you have one main source for changing things that
1007will appear across your entire site/application instead of having to
1008edit many individual files.
1009
1010
1011=head2 Configure TT.pm For The Wrapper
1012
1013In order to create a wrapper, you must first edit your TT view and
444d6b27 1014tell it where to find your wrapper file.
1390ef0e 1015
444d6b27 1016Edit you TT view in C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm> and change it to match the
1017following:
1390ef0e 1018
1019 __PACKAGE__->config(
1020 # Change default TT extension
1021 TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '.tt2',
1022 # Set the location for TT files
1023 INCLUDE_PATH => [
c2dfb562 1024 MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'src' ),
1390ef0e 1025 ],
1026 # Set to 1 for detailed timer stats in your HTML as comments
1027 TIMER => 0,
1028 # This is your wrapper template located in the 'root/src'
1029 WRAPPER => 'wrapper.tt2',
1030 );
1031
1032
1033=head2 Create the Wrapper Template File and Stylesheet
1034
1035Next you need to set up your wrapper template. Basically, you'll want
1036to take the overall layout of your site and put it into this file.
1037For the tutorial, open C<root/src/wrapper.tt2> and input the following:
1038
1039 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
1040 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
1041 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
1042 <head>
1043 <title>[% template.title or "My Catalyst App!" %]</title>
1044 <link rel="stylesheet" href="[% c.uri_for('/static/css/main.css') %]" />
1045 </head>
1046
1047 <body>
1048 <div id="outer">
1049 <div id="header">
1050 [%# Your logo could go here -%]
1051 <img src="[% c.uri_for('/static/images/btn_88x31_powered.png') %]" />
1052 [%# Insert the page title -%]
1053 <h1>[% template.title or site.title %]</h1>
1054 </div>
1055
1056 <div id="bodyblock">
1057 <div id="menu">
1058 Navigation:
1059 <ul>
1060 <li><a href="[% c.uri_for('/books/list') %]">Home</a></li>
1061 <li><a href="[% c.uri_for('/') %]" title="Catalyst Welcome Page">Welcome</a></li>
1390ef0e 1062 </ul>
1063 </div><!-- end menu -->
1064
1065 <div id="content">
1066 [%# Status and error messages %]
1067 <span class="message">[% status_msg %]</span>
1068 <span class="error">[% error_msg %]</span>
1069 [%# This is where TT will stick all of your template's contents. -%]
1070 [% content %]
1071 </div><!-- end content -->
1072 </div><!-- end bodyblock -->
1073
1074 <div id="footer">Copyright (c) your name goes here</div>
c2dfb562 1075 </div><!-- end outer -->
1390ef0e 1076
1077 </body>
1078 </html>
1079
1080Notice the status and error message sections in the code above:
1081
1082 <span class="status">[% status_msg %]</span>
1083 <span class="error">[% error_msg %]</span>
1084
1085If we set either message in the Catalyst stash (e.g.,
1086C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{status_msg} = 'Request was successful!'>) it
1087will be displayed whenever any view used by that request is rendered.
1088The C<message> and C<error> CSS styles can be customized to suit your
1089needs in the C<root/static/css/main.css> file we create below.
1090
1091B<Notes:>
1092
1093=over 4
1094
1095=item *
1096
1097The Catalyst stash only lasts for a single HTTP request. If
1098you need to retain information across requests you can use
1099L<Catalyst::Plugin::Session|Catalyst::Plugin::Session> (we will use
4b4d3884 1100Catalyst sessions in the Authentication chapter of the tutorial).
1390ef0e 1101
1102=item *
1103
1104Although it is beyond the scope of this tutorial, you may wish to use
1105a JavaScript or AJAX tool such as jQuery (L<http://www.jquery.com>) or
1106Dojo (L<http://www.dojotoolkit.org>).
1107
1108=back
1109
1110
1111=head3 Create A Basic Stylesheet
1112
1113First create a central location for stylesheets under the static
1114directory:
1115
1116 $ mkdir root/static/css
1117
1118Then open the file C<root/static/css/main.css> (the file referenced in
1119the stylesheet href link of our wrapper above) and add the following
1120content:
1121
1122 #header {
1123 text-align: center;
1124 }
1125 #header h1 {
1126 margin: 0;
1127 }
1128 #header img {
1129 float: right;
1130 }
1131 #footer {
1132 text-align: center;
1133 font-style: italic;
1134 padding-top: 20px;
1135 }
1136 #menu {
1137 font-weight: bold;
1138 background-color: #ddd;
1139 }
1140 #menu ul {
1141 list-style: none;
1142 float: left;
1143 margin: 0;
1144 padding: 0 0 50% 5px;
1145 font-weight: normal;
1146 background-color: #ddd;
1147 width: 100px;
1148 }
1149 #content {
1150 margin-left: 120px;
1151 }
1152 .message {
1153 color: #390;
1154 }
1155 .error {
1156 color: #f00;
1157 }
1158
1159You may wish to check out a "CSS Framework" like Emastic
1160(L<http://code.google.com/p/emastic/>) as a way to quickly
1161provide lots of high-quality CSS functionality.
1162
1163
1164=head2 Test Run The Application
1165
1166Restart the development server and hit "Reload" in your web browser
1167and you should now see a formatted version of our basic book list.
1168Although our wrapper and stylesheet are obviously very simple, you
1169should see how it allows us to control the overall look of an entire
1170website from two central files. To add new pages to the site, just
1171provide a template that fills in the C<content> section of our wrapper
1172template -- the wrapper will provide the overall feel of the page.
1173
1174
a46b474e 1175=head2 Updating the Generated DBIx::Class Result Class Files
3533daff 1176
acbd7bdd 1177Let's manually add some relationship information to the auto-generated
1178Result Class files. (Note: if you are using a database other than
1179SQLite, such as PostgreSQL, then the relationship could have been
1180automatically placed in the Result Class files. If so, you can skip
3b1fa91b 1181this step.) First edit C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Book.pm> and add the
acbd7bdd 1182following text below the C<# You can replace this text...> comment:
3533daff 1183
1184 #
1185 # Set relationships:
1390ef0e 1186 #
3533daff 1187
1188 # has_many():
1189 # args:
1190 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
1191 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
1435672d 1192 # 3) Column name in *foreign* table (aka, foreign key in peer table)
fce83e5f 1193 __PACKAGE__->has_many(book_authors => 'MyApp::Schema::Result::BookAuthor', 'book_id');
3533daff 1194
1195 # many_to_many():
1196 # args:
1197 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
1390ef0e 1198 # 2) Name of has_many() relationship this many_to_many() is shortcut for
1199 # 3) Name of belongs_to() relationship in model class of has_many() above
3533daff 1200 # You must already have the has_many() defined to use a many_to_many().
fce83e5f 1201 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many(authors => 'book_authors', 'author');
3533daff 1202
1203
1204B<Note:> Be careful to put this code I<above> the C<1;> at the end of the
1205file. As with any Perl package, we need to end the last line with
1206a statement that evaluates to C<true>. This is customarily done with
1207C<1;> on a line by itself.
1208
a46b474e 1209This code defines both a C<has_many> and a C<many_to_many>
1210relationship. The C<many_to_many> relationship is optional, but it
1211makes it easier to map a book to its collection of authors. Without
3b1fa91b 1212it, we would have to "walk" though the C<book_author> table as in
1213C<$book-E<gt>book_author-E<gt>first-E<gt>author-E<gt>last_name> (we
a46b474e 1214will see examples on how to use DBIx::Class objects in your code soon,
3b1fa91b 1215but note that because C<$book-E<gt>book_author> can return multiple
1390ef0e 1216authors, we have to use C<first> to display a single author).
5a82cb36 1217C<many_to_many> allows us to use the shorter
1218C<$book-E<gt>author-E<gt>first-E<gt>last_name>. Note that you cannot
1219define a C<many_to_many> relationship without also having the
1220C<has_many> relationship in place.
3533daff 1221
3b1fa91b 1222Then edit C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Author.pm> and add relationship
3533daff 1223information as follows (again, be careful to put in above the C<1;> but
1224below the C<# DO NOT MODIFY THIS OR ANYTHING ABOVE!> comment):
1225
1226 #
1227 # Set relationships:
1228 #
1229
1230 # has_many():
1231 # args:
4d63a0d5 1232 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create an accessor with this name
3533daff 1233 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
1435672d 1234 # 3) Column name in *foreign* table (aka, foreign key in peer table)
fce83e5f 1235 __PACKAGE__->has_many(book_authors => 'MyApp::Schema::Result::BookAuthor', 'author_id');
3533daff 1236
1237 # many_to_many():
1238 # args:
1239 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
1240 # 2) Name of has_many() relationship this many_to_many() is shortcut for
1390ef0e 1241 # 3) Name of belongs_to() relationship in model class of has_many() above
3533daff 1242 # You must already have the has_many() defined to use a many_to_many().
fce83e5f 1243 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many(books => 'book_authors', 'book');
3533daff 1244
1390ef0e 1245Finally, do the same for the "join table,"
3b1fa91b 1246C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/BookAuthor.pm>:
3533daff 1247
1248 #
1249 # Set relationships:
1250 #
1251
1252 # belongs_to():
1253 # args:
1254 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
1255 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
1256 # 3) Column name in *this* table
3b1fa91b 1257 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(book => 'MyApp::Schema::Result::Book', 'book_id');
3533daff 1258
1259 # belongs_to():
1260 # args:
1261 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
1262 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
1263 # 3) Column name in *this* table
3b1fa91b 1264 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(author => 'MyApp::Schema::Result::Author', 'author_id');
3533daff 1265
1266
1390ef0e 1267=head2 Run The Application
3533daff 1268
4d63a0d5 1269Run the Catalyst development server script with the C<DBIC_TRACE> option
1270(it might still be enabled from earlier in the tutorial, but here is an
1271alternate way to specify the option just in case):
3533daff 1272
1273 $ DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl
1274
1390ef0e 1275Make sure that the application loads correctly and that you see the
1276three dynamically created model class (one for each of the
4ab6212d 1277Result Classes we created).
3533daff 1278
acbd7bdd 1279Then hit the URL L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> with your browser
444d6b27 1280and be sure that the book list still displays correctly. You can leave
1281the development server running for the next step if you wish.
3533daff 1282
c2dfb562 1283B<Note:> You will not see the authors yet because the view does not yet
1284use the new relations. Read on to the next section where we update the
1285template to do that.
3533daff 1286
1287
1288=head1 UPDATING THE VIEW
1289
acbd7bdd 1290Let's add a new column to our book list page that takes advantage of
1291the relationship information we manually added to our schema files in
a46b474e 1292the previous section. Edit C<root/src/books/list.tt2> and replace
3b1fa91b 1293the "empty" table cell "<td></td>" with the following:
3533daff 1294
acbd7bdd 1295 ...
3533daff 1296 <td>
fce83e5f 1297 [% # NOTE: See Chapter 4 for a better way to do this! -%]
3533daff 1298 [% # First initialize a TT variable to hold a list. Then use a TT FOREACH -%]
1299 [% # loop in 'side effect notation' to load just the last names of the -%]
6d97b973 1300 [% # authors into the list. Note that the 'push' TT vmethod doesn't return -%]
3533daff 1301 [% # a value, so nothing will be printed here. But, if you have something -%]
6d97b973 1302 [% # in TT that does return a value and you don't want it printed, you -%]
1303 [% # 1) assign it to a bogus value, or -%]
1304 [% # 2) use the CALL keyword to call it and discard the return value. -%]
3533daff 1305 [% tt_authors = [ ];
1306 tt_authors.push(author.last_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
1307 [% # Now use a TT 'virtual method' to display the author count in parens -%]
1308 [% # Note the use of the TT filter "| html" to escape dangerous characters -%]
1309 ([% tt_authors.size | html %])
1310 [% # Use another TT vmethod to join & print the names & comma separators -%]
1311 [% tt_authors.join(', ') | html %]
1312 </td>
acbd7bdd 1313 ...
3533daff 1314
444d6b27 1315B<IMPORTANT NOTE:> Again, you should keep as much "logic code" as
1316possible out of your views. This kind of logic belongs in your model
fce83e5f 1317(the same goes for controllers -- keep them as "thin" as possible and
1318push all of the "complicated code" out to your model objects). Avoid
1319code like you see in the previous example -- we are only using it here
1320to show some extra features in TT until we get to the more advanced
444d6b27 1321model features we will see in Chapter 4 (see
fce83e5f 1322L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD/EXPLORING THE POWER OF DBIC>).
1323
1390ef0e 1324Then hit "Reload" in your browser (note that you don't need to reload
3533daff 1325the development server or use the C<-r> option when updating TT
1390ef0e 1326templates) and you should now see the number of authors each book has
1327along with a comma-separated list of the authors' last names. (If you
1328didn't leave the development server running from the previous step,
1329you will obviously need to start it before you can refresh your
1330browser window.)
1331
1332If you are still running the development server with C<DBIC_TRACE>
1333enabled, you should also now see five more C<SELECT> statements in the
1334debug output (one for each book as the authors are being retrieved by
a46b474e 1335DBIx::Class):
3533daff 1336
fce83e5f 1337 SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating FROM book me:
3b1fa91b 1338 SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name FROM book_author me
fce83e5f 1339 JOIN author author ON author.id = me.author_id WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '1'
3b1fa91b 1340 SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name FROM book_author me
fce83e5f 1341 JOIN author author ON author.id = me.author_id WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '2'
3b1fa91b 1342 SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name FROM book_author me
fce83e5f 1343 JOIN author author ON author.id = me.author_id WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '3'
3b1fa91b 1344 SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name FROM book_author me
fce83e5f 1345 JOIN author author ON author.id = me.author_id WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '4'
3b1fa91b 1346 SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name FROM book_author me
fce83e5f 1347 JOIN author author ON author.id = me.author_id WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '5'
c2dfb562 1348
1349Also note in C<root/src/books/list.tt2> that we are using "| html", a
1350type of TT filter, to escape characters such as E<lt> and E<gt> to &lt;
1351and &gt; and avoid various types of dangerous hacks against your
1352application. In a real application, you would probably want to put
1353"| html" at the end of every field where a user has control over the
1354information that can appear in that field (and can therefore inject
1355markup or code if you don't "neutralize" those fields). In addition to
1356"| html", Template Toolkit has a variety of other useful filters that
1357can found in the documentation for
1358L<Template::Filters|Template::Filters>.
3533daff 1359
1360
1390ef0e 1361=head1 RUNNING THE APPLICATION FROM THE COMMAND LINE
1362
1363In some situations, it can be useful to run your application and
1364display a page without using a browser. Catalyst lets you do this
1365using the C<scripts/myapp_test.pl> script. Just supply the URL you
1366wish to display and it will run that request through the normal
1367controller dispatch logic and use the appropriate view to render the
1368output (obviously, complex pages may dump a lot of text to your
1369terminal window). For example, if you type:
1370
1371 $ script/myapp_test.pl "/books/list"
1372
1373You should get the same text as if you visited
1374L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> with the normal development server
1375and asked your browser to view the page source.
3533daff 1376
1390ef0e 1377
1378=head1 OPTIONAL INFORMATION
1379
4b4d3884 1380B<NOTE: The rest of this chapter of the tutorial is optional. You can
3ab6187c 1381skip to Chapter 4, L<Basic CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD>,
3533daff 1382if you wish.>
1383
acbd7bdd 1384
8a472b34 1385=head2 Using 'RenderView' for the Default View
1390ef0e 1386
1387Once your controller logic has processed the request from a user, it
1388forwards processing to your view in order to generate the appropriate
3533daff 1389response output. Catalyst uses
1390ef0e 1390L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> by
4d63a0d5 1391default to automatically perform this operation. If you look in
1390ef0e 1392C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Root.pm>, you should see the empty
3533daff 1393definition for the C<sub end> method:
1394
1395 sub end : ActionClass('RenderView') {}
1396
1390ef0e 1397The following bullet points provide a quick overview of the
3533daff 1398C<RenderView> process:
1399
1400=over 4
1401
1402=item *
1403
1404C<Root.pm> is designed to hold application-wide logic.
1405
1406=item *
1407
1390ef0e 1408At the end of a given user request, Catalyst will call the most specific
1409C<end> method that's appropriate. For example, if the controller for a
1410request has an C<end> method defined, it will be called. However, if
1411the controller does not define a controller-specific C<end> method, the
3533daff 1412"global" C<end> method in C<Root.pm> will be called.
1413
1414=item *
1415
1416Because the definition includes an C<ActionClass> attribute, the
1417L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> logic
1418will be executed B<after> any code inside the definition of C<sub end>
1419is run. See L<Catalyst::Manual::Actions|Catalyst::Manual::Actions>
1420for more information on C<ActionClass>.
1421
1422=item *
1423
1390ef0e 1424Because C<sub end> is empty, this effectively just runs the default
1425logic in C<RenderView>. However, you can easily extend the
1426C<RenderView> logic by adding your own code inside the empty method body
1427(C<{}>) created by the Catalyst Helpers when we first ran the
1428C<catalyst.pl> to initialize our application. See
1429L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> for more
4d63a0d5 1430detailed information on how to extend C<RenderView> in C<sub end>.
3533daff 1431
1432=back
1433
1434
fce83e5f 1435=head2 RenderView's "dump_info" Feature
1436
1437One of the nice features of C<RenderView> is that it automatically
1438allows you to add C<dump_info=1> to the end of any URL for your
1439application and it will force the display of the "exception dump"
1440screen to the client browser. You can try this out by starting the
1441development server as before and then point your browser to this URL:
1442
1443 http://localhost:3000/books/list?dump_info=1
1444
1445You should get a page with the following message at the top:
1446
1447 Caught exception in MyApp::Controller::Root->end "Forced debug -
1448 Scrubbed output at /usr/share/perl5/Catalyst/Action/RenderView.pm line 46."
1449
1450Along with a summary of your application's state at the end of the
1451processing for that request. The "Stash" section should show a
1452summarized version of the DBIC book model objects. If desired, you
1453can adjust the summarization logic (called "scrubbing" logic) -- see
1454L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> for
1455details.
1456
1457Note that you shouldn't need to worry about "normal clients" using
1458this technique to "reverse engineer" your application -- C<RenderView>
1459only supports the C<dump_info=1> feature when your application is
1460running in C<-Debug> mode (something you won't do once you have your
1461application deployed in production).
1462
1463
3533daff 1464=head2 Using The Default Template Name
1465
1390ef0e 1466By default, C<Catalyst::View::TT> will look for a template that uses the
1467same name as your controller action, allowing you to save the step of
1468manually specifying the template name in each action. For example, this
1469would allow us to remove the
1470C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{template} = 'books/list.tt2';> line of our
1471C<list> action in the Books controller. Open
3533daff 1472C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> in your editor and comment out this line
1473to match the following (only the C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{template}> line
1474has changed):
1475
1476 =head2 list
1477
1478 Fetch all book objects and pass to books/list.tt2 in stash to be displayed
1479
1480 =cut
1481
1482 sub list : Local {
1483 # Retrieve the usual Perl OO '$self' for this object. $c is the Catalyst
1484 # 'Context' that's used to 'glue together' the various components
1485 # that make up the application
1486 my ($self, $c) = @_;
1487
1488 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
1489 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template
3b1fa91b 1490 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Book')->all];
3533daff 1491
1492 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
1493 # in your action methods (actions methods respond to user input in
1494 # your controllers).
1495 #$c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1496 }
1497
3533daff 1498
1390ef0e 1499You should now be able to restart the development server as per the
3533daff 1500previous section and access the L<http://localhost:3000/books/list>
1501as before.
1502
1503B<NOTE:> Please note that if you use the default template technique,
1504you will B<not> be able to use either the C<$c-E<gt>forward> or
4b4d3884 1505the C<$c-E<gt>detach> mechanisms (these are discussed in Chapter 2 and
1506Chapter 9 of the Tutorial).
3533daff 1507
3b1fa91b 1508B<IMPORTANT:> Make sure that you do NOT skip the following section
1509before continuing to the next chapter 4 Basic CRUD.
3533daff 1510
fce83e5f 1511
4d63a0d5 1512=head2 Return To A Manually Specified Template
3533daff 1513
1514In order to be able to use C<$c-E<gt>forward> and C<$c-E<gt>detach>
1515later in the tutorial, you should remove the comment from the
1516statement in C<sub list> in C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm>:
1517
1518 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1519
1390ef0e 1520Then delete the C<TEMPLATE_EXTENSION> line in
3533daff 1521C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm>.
1522
1390ef0e 1523You should then be able to restart the development server and
3533daff 1524access L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> in the same manner as
1525with earlier sections.
1526
1527
1528=head1 AUTHOR
1529
1530Kennedy Clark, C<hkclark@gmail.com>
1531
1532Please report any errors, issues or suggestions to the author. The
1533most recent version of the Catalyst Tutorial can be found at
59884771 1534L<http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/Catalyst-Manual/5.80/trunk/lib/Catalyst/Manual/Tutorial/>.
3533daff 1535
45c7830f 1536Copyright 2006-2008, Kennedy Clark, under Creative Commons License
8482d557 1537(L<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).