Minor: typo and format fixes
[catagits/Catalyst-Manual.git] / lib / Catalyst / Manual / Tutorial / MoreCatalystBasics.pod
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3533daff 1=head1 NAME
2
3Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::MoreCatalystBasics - Catalyst Tutorial - Part 3: More Catalyst Application Development Basics
4
5
6=head1 OVERVIEW
7
8This is B<Part 3 of 10> for the Catalyst tutorial.
9
10L<Tutorial Overview|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial>
11
12=over 4
13
14=item 1
15
16L<Introduction|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Intro>
17
18=item 2
19
20L<Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::CatalystBasics>
21
22=item 3
23
24B<More Catalyst Basics>
25
26=item 4
27
28L<Basic CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::BasicCRUD>
29
30=item 5
31
32L<Authentication|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Authentication>
33
34=item 6
35
36L<Authorization|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Authorization>
37
38=item 7
39
40L<Debugging|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Debugging>
41
42=item 8
43
44L<Testing|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Testing>
45
46=item 9
47
48L<Advanced CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::AdvancedCRUD>
49
50=item 10
51
52L<Appendices|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Appendices>
53
54=back
55
56
57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
59This part of the tutorial builds on the work done in Part 2 to explore
60some features that are more typical of "real world" web applications.
61From this part of the tutorial onward, we will be building a simple
62book database application. Although the application will be too
63limited to be of use to anyone, it should provide a basic environment
64where we can explore a variety of features used in virtually all web
65applications.
66
67You can checkout the source code for this example from the catalyst
68subversion repository as per the instructions in
69L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Intro>
70
71
72=head1 CREATE A NEW APPLICATION
73
74The remainder of the tutorial will build an application call C<MyApp>.
75Use the Catalyst C<catalyst.pl> script to initialize the framework for
76an application called C<MyApp> (make sure you aren't still inside the
77directory of the C<Hello> application from the previous part of the
78tutorial):
79
80 $ catalyst.pl MyApp
81 created "MyApp"
82 created "MyApp/script"
83 created "MyApp/lib"
84 created "MyApp/root"
85 ...
86 created "MyApp/script/myapp_create.pl"
87 $ cd MyApp
88
89This creates a similar skeletal structure to what we saw in Part 2 of
90the tutorial, except with C<MyApp> or C<myapp> substituted for
91C<Hello> and C<hello>.
92
93
94=head1 EDIT THE LIST OF CATALYST PLUGINS
95
96One of the greatest benefits of Catalyst is that it has such a large
97library of plugins available. Plugins are used to seamlessly integrate
98existing Perl modules into the overall Catalyst framework. In general,
99they do this by adding additional methods to the C<context> object
100(generally written as C<$c>) that Catalyst passes to every component
101throughout the framework.
102
103By default, Catalyst enables three plugins/flags:
104
105=over 4
106
107=item *
108
109C<-Debug> Flag
110
111Enables the Catalyst debug output you saw when we started the
112C<script/myapp_server.pl> development server earlier. You can remove
113this plugin when you place your application into production.
114
115As you may have noticed, C<-Debug> is not a plugin, but a I<flag>.
116Although most of the items specified on the C<use Catalyst> line of your
117application class will be plugins, Catalyst supports a limited number of
118flag options (of these, C<-Debug> is the most common). See the
119documentation for C<Catalyst.pm> to get details on other flags
120(currently C<-Engine>, C<-Home>, and C<-Log>).
121
122If you prefer, you can use the C<$c-E<gt>debug> method to enable debug
123messages.
124
125B<TIP>: Depending on your needs, it can be helpful to permanently
126remove C<-Debug> from C<lib/MyApp.pm> and then use the C<-d> option
127to C<script/myapp_server.pl> to re-enable it just for the development
128server. We will not be using that approach in the tutorial, but feel
129free to make use of it in your own projects.
130
131=item *
132
133L<Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader|Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader>
134
135C<ConfigLoader> provides an automatic way to load configurable
c010ae0d 136parameters for your application from a central
137L<Config::General|Config::General> file (versus having the values
138hard-coded inside your Perl modules). Config::General uses syntax
139very similar to Apache configuration files. We will see how to use
140this feature of Catalyst during the authentication and authorization
141sections (Part 5 and Part 6).
3533daff 142
d0496197 143B<IMPORTANT NOTE:> If you are following along in Ubuntu 8.04 or
056394af 144otherwise using a version of L<Catalyst::Devel|Catalyst::Devel> prior
145to version 1.06, you need to be aware that Catalyst changed from a
146default format of YAML to the more straightforward C<Config::General>
147format. Because Catalyst has long supported both formats, this
148tutorial will simply use a configuration file called C<myapp.conf>
149instead of C<myapp.yml> and Catatlyst will automcatically use the new
150format. Just be aware that earlier versions of Catalyst will still
151create the C<myapp.yml> file and that you will need to B<remove
152C<myapp.yml>> and create a new C<myapp.conf> file by hand, but
153otherwise this transition is very painless. The default contents of
154C<myapp.conf> should only consist of one line: C<name MyApp>. Also be
155aware that you can continue to use any format supported by
156L<Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader|Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader> and
157L<Config::Any|Config::Any>, including YAML -- Catalyst will
158automatically look for any of the supported configuration file
159formats.
15e1d0b2 160
d0496197 161B<TIP>: This script can be useful for converting between configuration
15e1d0b2 162formats:
163
164 perl -Ilib -e 'use MyApp; use Config::General;
165 Config::General->new->save_file("myapp.conf", MyApp->config);'
166
d0496197 167B<NOTE:> The default C<myapp.conf> should look like:
168
169 name MyApp
15e1d0b2 170
3533daff 171=item *
172
173L<Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple|Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple>
174
175C<Static::Simple> provides an easy method of serving static content such
176as images and CSS files under the development server.
177
178=back
179
180To modify the list of plugins, edit C<lib/MyApp.pm> (this file is
181generally referred to as your I<application class>) and delete the line
182with:
183
184 use Catalyst qw/-Debug ConfigLoader Static::Simple/;
185
186Replace it with:
187
188 use Catalyst qw/
189 -Debug
190 ConfigLoader
191 Static::Simple
192
193 StackTrace
194 /;
195
196This tells Catalyst to start using one new plugin:
197
198=over 4
199
200=item *
201
202L<Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace|Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace>
203
204Adds a stack trace to the standard Catalyst "debug screen" (this is the
205screen Catalyst sends to your browser when an error occurs).
206
207Note: L<StackTrace|Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace> output appears in your
208browser, not in the console window from which you're running your
209application, which is where logging output usually goes.
210
cca5cd98 211B<Note:> You will want to disable
212L<StackTrace|Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace> before you put your
213application into production, but it can be helpful during development.
214
3533daff 215=back
216
217Note that when specifying plugins on the C<use Catalyst> line, you can
218omit C<Catalyst::Plugin::> from the name. Additionally, you can spread
219the plugin names across multiple lines as shown here, or place them all
220on one (or more) lines as with the default configuration.
221
222
223=head1 CREATE A CATALYST CONTROLLER
224
225As discussed earlier, controllers are where you write methods that
226interact with user input. Typically, controller methods respond to
227C<GET> and C<POST> messages from the user's web browser.
228
229Use the Catalyst C<create> script to add a controller for book-related
230actions:
231
232 $ script/myapp_create.pl controller Books
233 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Controller"
234 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t"
235 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm"
236 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t/controller_Books.t"
237
238Then edit C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and add the following method
239to the controller:
240
241 =head2 list
242
243 Fetch all book objects and pass to books/list.tt2 in stash to be displayed
244
245 =cut
246
247 sub list : Local {
248 # Retrieve the usual Perl OO '$self' for this object. $c is the Catalyst
249 # 'Context' that's used to 'glue together' the various components
250 # that make up the application
251 my ($self, $c) = @_;
252
253 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
254 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template
d0496197 255 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Books')->all];
3533daff 256
257 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
258 # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
259 # your controllers).
260 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
261 }
262
263B<Note:> This won't actually work yet since you haven't set up your
d0496197 264model yet. We will be covering the model soon.
3533daff 265
266B<Note:> Programmers experienced with object-oriented Perl should
267recognize C<$self> as a reference to the object where this method was
268called. On the other hand, C<$c> will be new to many Perl programmers
269who have not used Catalyst before (it's sometimes written as
270C<$context>). The Context object is automatically passed to all
271Catalyst components. It is used to pass information between
272components and provide access to Catalyst and plugin functionality.
273
d0496197 274B<TIP>: You may see the C<$c-E<gt>model('DB::Book')> used above
275written as C<$c-E<gt>model('DB')-E<gt>resultset('Book)>. The two
3533daff 276are equivalent.
277
278B<Note:> Catalyst actions are regular Perl methods, but they make use
279of Nicholas Clark's C<attributes> module (that's the C<: Local> next
280to the C<sub list> in the code above) to provide additional
281information to the Catalyst dispatcher logic. Many newer Catalyst
ae492862 282applications are switching to the use of "Literal" C<:Path> actions
3533daff 283and C<Args> attribute in lieu of C<: Local> and C<: Private>. For
ae492862 284example, C<sub any_method :Path :Args(0)> can be used instead of
3533daff 285C<sub index :Private> (because no path was supplied to C<Path> it
286matches the "empty" URL in the namespace of that module... the same
ae492862 287thing C<sub index> would do) or C<sub list :Path('list') :Args(0)>
3533daff 288could be used instead of the C<sub list : Local> above (the C<list>
289argument to C<Path> would make it match on the URL C<list> under
290C<books>, the namespace of the current module). See "Action Types" in
291L<Catalyst::Manual::Intro|Catalyst::Manual::Intro> as well as Part 5
292of this tutorial (Authentication) for additional information. Another
293popular but more advanced feature is C<Chained> actions that allow a
294single URL to "chain together" multiple action method calls, each with
295an appropriate number of arguments (see
296L<Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained|Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained>
297for details).
298
299
300=head1 CATALYST VIEWS
301
302As mentioned in Part 2 of the tutorial, views are where you render
303output, typically for display in the user's web browser, but also
304possibly using other display output- generation systems. As with
305virtually every aspect of Catalyst, options abound when it comes to
306the specific view technology you adopt inside your application.
307However, most Catalyst applications use the Template Toolkit, known as
d0496197 308TT (for more information on TT, see
309L<http://www.template-toolkit.org>). Other popular view technologies
310include Mason (L<http://www.masonhq.com> and
311L<http://www.masonbook.com>) and L<HTML::Template>
312(L<http://html- template.sourceforge.net>).
3533daff 313
314=head2 Create a Catalyst View Using C<TTSite>
315
316When using TT for the Catalyst view, there are two main helper scripts:
317
318=over 4
319
320=item *
321
322L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TT|Catalyst::Helper::View::TT>
323
324=item *
325
326L<Catalyst::Helper::View::TTSite|Catalyst::Helper::View::TTSite>
327
328=back
329
330Both are similar, but C<TT> merely creates the C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm>
331file and leaves the creation of any hierarchical template organization
332entirely up to you. (It also creates a C<t/view_TT.t> file for testing;
333test cases will be discussed in Part 8). The C<TTSite> helper creates a
334modular and hierarchical view layout with separate Template Toolkit (TT)
335files for common header and footer information, configuration values, a
336CSS stylesheet, and more.
337
338While TTSite is useful to bootstrap a project, we recommend that
339unless you know what you're doing or want to pretty much use the
340supplied templates as is, that you use the plain Template Toolkit view
341when starting a project from scratch. This is because TTSite can be
342tricky to customize. Additionally TT contains constructs that you
343need to learn yourself if you're going to be a serious user of TT.
344Our experience suggests that you're better off learning these from
345scratch. We use TTSite here precisely because it is useful for
346bootstrap/prototype purposes.
347
348Enter the following command to enable the C<TTSite> style of view
349rendering for this tutorial:
350
351 $ script/myapp_create.pl view TT TTSite
352 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/View"
353 exists "/home/me/MyApp/script/../t"
354 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm"
355 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../root/lib"
356 ...
357 created "/home/me/MyApp/script/../root/src/ttsite.css"
358
359This puts a number of files in the C<root/lib> and C<root/src>
360directories that can be used to customize the look and feel of your
361application. Also take a look at C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm> for config
362values set by the C<TTSite> helper.
363
364B<TIP>: Note that TTSite does one thing that could confuse people who
365are used to the normal C<TT> Catalyst view: it redefines the Catalyst
366context object in templates from its usual C<c> to C<Catalyst>. When
367looking at other Catalyst examples, remember that they almost always use
368C<c>. Note that Catalyst and TT I<do not complain> when you use the
369wrong name to access the context object...TT simply outputs blanks for
370that bogus logic (see next tip to change this behavior with TT C<DEBUG>
371options). Finally, be aware that this change in name I<only>
372applies to how the context object is accessed inside your TT templates;
373your controllers will continue to use C<$c> (or whatever name you use
374when fetching the reference from C<@_> inside your methods). (You can
375change back to the "default" behavior be removing the C<CATALYST_VAR>
376line from C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm>, but you will also have to edit
377C<root/lib/config/main> and C<root/lib/config/url>. If you do this, be
378careful not to have a collision between your own C<c> variable and the
379Catalyst C<c> variable.)
380
381B<TIP>: When troubleshooting TT it can be helpful to enable variable
382C<DEBUG> options. You can do this in a Catalyst environment by adding
383a C<DEBUG> line to the C<__PACKAGE__->config> declaration in
384C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm>:
385
386 __PACKAGE__->config({
387 CATALYST_VAR => 'Catalyst',
388 ...
389 DEBUG => 'undef',
390 ...
391 });
392
393B<Note:> C<__PACKAGE__> is just a shorthand way of referencing the name
394of the package where it is used. Therefore, in C<TT.pm>,
395C<__PACKAGE__> is equivalent to C<TT>.
396
397There are a variety of options you can use, such as 'undef', 'all',
398'service', 'context', 'parser', 'provider', and 'service'. See
399L<Template::Constants> for more information (remove the C<DEBUG_>
400portion of the name shown in the TT docs and convert to lower case
401for use inside Catalyst).
402
403B<NOTE:> B<Please be sure to disable TT debug options before
404continuing the tutorial> (especially the 'undef' option -- leaving
405this enabled will conflict with several of the conventions used
406by this tutorial and TTSite to leave some variables undefined
407on purpose).
408
409
410=head2 Globally Customize Every View
411
412When using TTSite, files in the subdirectories of C<root/lib> can be
413used to make changes that will appear in every view. For example, to
414display optional status and error messages in every view, edit
415C<root/lib/site/layout>, updating it to match the following (the two HTML
416C<span> elements are new):
417
418 <div id="header">[% PROCESS site/header %]</div>
419
420 <div id="content">
421 <span class="message">[% status_msg %]</span>
422 <span class="error">[% error_msg %]</span>
423 [% content %]
424 </div>
425
426 <div id="footer">[% PROCESS site/footer %]</div>
427
428If we set either message in the Catalyst stash (e.g.,
429C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{status_msg} = 'Request was successful!'>) it will
430be displayed whenever any view used by that request is rendered. The
431C<message> and C<error> CSS styles are automatically defined in
432C<root/src/ttsite.css> and can be customized to suit your needs.
433
434B<Note:> The Catalyst stash only lasts for a single HTTP request. If
435you need to retain information across requests you can use
436L<Catalyst::Plugin::Session|Catalyst::Plugin::Session> (we will use
437Catalyst sessions in the Authentication part of the tutorial).
438
439
440=head2 Create a TT Template Page
441
442To add a new page of content to the TTSite view hierarchy, just create a
443new C<.tt2> file in C<root/src>. Only include HTML markup that goes
444inside the HTML <body> and </body> tags, TTSite will use the contents of
445C<root/lib/site> to add the top and bottom.
446
447First create a directory for book-related TT templates:
448
449 $ mkdir root/src/books
450
451Then create C<root/src/books/list.tt2> in your editor and enter:
452
453 [% # This is a TT comment. The '-' at the end "chomps" the newline. You won't -%]
454 [% # see this "chomping" in your browser because HTML ignores blank lines, but -%]
455 [% # it WILL eliminate a blank line if you view the HTML source. It's purely -%]
456 [%- # optional, but both the beginning and the ending TT tags support chomping. -%]
457
458 [% # Provide a title to root/lib/site/header -%]
459 [% META title = 'Book List' -%]
460
461 <table>
462 <tr><th>Title</th><th>Rating</th><th>Author(s)</th></tr>
463 [% # Display each book in a table row %]
464 [% FOREACH book IN books -%]
465 <tr>
466 <td>[% book.title %]</td>
467 <td>[% book.rating %]</td>
468 </tr>
469 [% END -%]
470 </table>
471
472As indicated by the inline comments above, the C<META title> line uses
473TT's META feature to provide a title to C<root/lib/site/header>.
474Meanwhile, the outer C<FOREACH> loop iterates through each C<book> model
475object and prints the C<title> and C<rating> fields. An inner
476C<FOREACH> loop prints the last name of each author in a comma-separated
477list within a single table cell.
478
479If you are new to TT, the C<[%> and C<%]> tags are used to delimit TT
480code. TT supports a wide variety of directives for "calling" other
481files, looping, conditional logic, etc. In general, TT simplifies the
482usual range of Perl operators down to the single dot (C<.>) operator.
483This applies to operations as diverse as method calls, hash lookups, and
484list index values (see
485L<http://www.template-toolkit.org/docs/default/Manual/Variables.html>
486for details and examples). In addition to the usual C<Template> module
487Pod documentation, you can access the TT manual at
488L<http://www.template-toolkit.org/docs/default/>.
489
d0496197 490B<NOTE:> The C<TTSite> helper creates several TT files using an
3533daff 491extension of C<.tt2>. Most other Catalyst and TT examples use an
492extension of C<.tt>. You can use either extension (or no extension at
493all) with TTSite and TT, just be sure to use the appropriate extension
494for both the file itself I<and> the C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{template} =
495...> line in your controller. This document will use C<.tt2> for
496consistency with the files already created by the C<TTSite> helper.
497
498
499=head1 CREATE A SQLITE DATABASE
500
501In this step, we make a text file with the required SQL commands to
502create a database table and load some sample data. Open C<myapp01.sql>
503in your editor and enter:
504
505 --
506 -- Create a very simple database to hold book and author information
507 --
508 CREATE TABLE books (
509 id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
510 title TEXT ,
511 rating INTEGER
512 );
513 -- 'book_authors' is a many-to-many join table between books & authors
514 CREATE TABLE book_authors (
515 book_id INTEGER,
516 author_id INTEGER,
517 PRIMARY KEY (book_id, author_id)
518 );
519 CREATE TABLE authors (
520 id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
521 first_name TEXT,
522 last_name TEXT
523 );
524 ---
525 --- Load some sample data
526 ---
527 INSERT INTO books VALUES (1, 'CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide', 5);
528 INSERT INTO books VALUES (2, 'TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1', 5);
529 INSERT INTO books VALUES (3, 'Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1', 4);
530 INSERT INTO books VALUES (4, 'Perl Cookbook', 5);
531 INSERT INTO books VALUES (5, 'Designing with Web Standards', 5);
532 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (1, 'Greg', 'Bastien');
533 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (2, 'Sara', 'Nasseh');
534 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (3, 'Christian', 'Degu');
535 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (4, 'Richard', 'Stevens');
536 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (5, 'Douglas', 'Comer');
537 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (6, 'Tom', 'Christiansen');
538 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (7, 'Nathan', 'Torkington');
539 INSERT INTO authors VALUES (8, 'Jeffrey', 'Zeldman');
540 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (1, 1);
541 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (1, 2);
542 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (1, 3);
543 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (2, 4);
544 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (3, 5);
545 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (4, 6);
546 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (4, 7);
547 INSERT INTO book_authors VALUES (5, 8);
548
549B<TIP>: See Appendix 1 for tips on removing the leading spaces when
550cutting and pasting example code from POD-based documents.
551
552Then use the following command to build a C<myapp.db> SQLite database:
553
554 $ sqlite3 myapp.db < myapp01.sql
555
556If you need to create the database more than once, you probably want to
557issue the C<rm myapp.db> command to delete the database before you use
558the C<sqlite3 myapp.db < myapp01.sql> command.
559
560Once the C<myapp.db> database file has been created and initialized, you
561can use the SQLite command line environment to do a quick dump of the
562database contents:
563
564 $ sqlite3 myapp.db
565 SQLite version 3.4.2
566 Enter ".help" for instructions
567 sqlite> select * from books;
568 1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5
569 2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5
570 3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4
571 4|Perl Cookbook|5
572 5|Designing with Web Standards|5
573 sqlite> .q
574 $
575
576Or:
577
578 $ sqlite3 myapp.db "select * from books"
579 1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5
580 2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5
581 3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4
582 4|Perl Cookbook|5
583 5|Designing with Web Standards|5
584
585As with most other SQL tools, if you are using the full "interactive"
586environment you need to terminate your SQL commands with a ";" (it's not
587required if you do a single SQL statement on the command line). Use
588".q" to exit from SQLite from the SQLite interactive mode and return to
589your OS command prompt.
590
591
592=head1 DATABASE ACCESS WITH C<DBIx::Class>
593
594Catalyst can be used with virtually any form of persistent datastore
595available via Perl. For example,
596L<Catalyst::Model::DBI|Catalyst::Model::DBI> can be used to
597easily access databases through the traditional Perl C<DBI> interface.
598However, most Catalyst applications use some form of ORM technology to
599automatically create and save model objects as they are used. Although
600Tony Bowden's L<Class::DBI|Class::DBI> has been a popular choice
601in the past, Matt Trout's L<DBIx::Class|DBIx::Class> (abbreviated
602as "DBIC") has rapidly emerged as the Perl-based ORM technology of choice.
603Most new Catalyst applications rely on DBIC, as will this tutorial.
604
bb2dbfb8 605=head2 Create a dynamic DBIC Model
3533daff 606
bb2dbfb8 607Use the C<create=dynamic> model helper option to build a model that
3533daff 608dynamically reads your database structure every time the application
609starts:
610
d0496197 611 $ script/myapp_create.pl model DB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema create=dynamic dbi:SQLite:myapp.db
612 exists "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model"
613 exists "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../t"
614 exists "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp"
615 created "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Schema.pm"
616 created "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm"
617 created "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../t/model_DB.t"
3533daff 618
619
d0496197 620C<DB> is the name of the model class to be created by the helper in
3533daff 621C<lib/MyApp/Model> (Catalyst has a separate directory under C<lib/MyApp>
d0496197 622for each of the three parts of MVC: C<Model>, C<View>, and C<Controller>).
623C<DBIC::Schema> is the type of the model to create.
624C<MyApp::Schema> is the name of the DBIC schema file written to
625C<lib/MyApp/Schema.pm>. Because we specified C<create=dynamic>
3533daff 626to the helper, it use L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> to dynamically load
627the schema information from the database every time the application
628starts. And finally, C<dbi:SQLite:myapp.db> is the standard DBI connect
629string for use with SQLite.
630
d0496197 631B<NOTE:> Although the C<create=dynamic> option to the DBIC helper
19c49089 632makes for a nifty demonstration, is only really suitable for very
633small applications. After this demonstration, you should almost always
634use the C<create=static> option that we switch to below.
dc9a0503 635
636
3533daff 637=head1 RUN THE APPLICATION
638
639First, let's enable an environment variable option that causes
640DBIx::Class to dump the SQL statements it's using to access the database
641(this option can provide extremely helpful troubleshooting information):
642
643 $ export DBIC_TRACE=1
644
645This assumes you are using BASH as your shell -- adjust accordingly if
646you are using a different shell (for example, under tcsh, use
647C<setenv DBIC_TRACE 1>).
648
d0496197 649B<NOTE:> You can also set this in your code using
3533daff 650C<$class-E<gt>storage-E<gt>debug(1);>. See
651L<DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting> for details (including options
652to log to file instead of displaying to the Catalyst development server
653log).
654
655Then run the Catalyst "demo server" script:
656
657 $ script/myapp_server.pl
658
659Your development server log output should display something like:
660
661 $script/myapp_server.pl
662 [debug] Debug messages enabled
663 [debug] Loaded plugins:
664 .----------------------------------------------------------------------------.
665 | Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader 0.17 |
666 | Catalyst::Plugin::StackTrace 0.06 |
667 | Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple 0.20 |
668 '----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
669
670 [debug] Loaded dispatcher "Catalyst::Dispatcher"
671 [debug] Loaded engine "Catalyst::Engine::HTTP"
672 [debug] Found home "/home/me/MyApp"
45d511e0 673 [debug] Loaded Config "/home/me/MyApp/myapp.conf"
3533daff 674 [debug] Loaded components:
675 .-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------.
676 | Class | Type |
677 +-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
678 | MyApp::Controller::Books | instance |
679 | MyApp::Controller::Root | instance |
d0496197 680 | MyApp::Model::DB | instance |
681 | MyApp::Model::DB::Authors | class |
682 | MyApp::Model::DB::BookAuthors | class |
683 | MyApp::Model::DB::Books | class |
3533daff 684 | MyApp::View::TT | instance |
685 '-----------------------------------------------------------------+----------'
686
687 [debug] Loaded Private actions:
688 .----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------.
689 | Private | Class | Method |
690 +----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------+
691 | /default | MyApp::Controller::Root | default |
692 | /end | MyApp::Controller::Root | end |
693 | /books/index | MyApp::Controller::Books | index |
694 | /books/list | MyApp::Controller::Books | list |
695 '----------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------'
696
697 [debug] Loaded Path actions:
698 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
699 | Path | Private |
700 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
701 | /books/list | /books/list |
702 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
703
704 [info] MyApp powered by Catalyst 5.7011
705 You can connect to your server at http://localhost:3000
706
d0496197 707B<NOTE:> Be sure you run the C<script/myapp_server.pl> command from
3533daff 708the 'base' directory of your application, not inside the C<script>
709directory itself or it will not be able to locate the C<myapp.db>
710database file. You can use a fully qualified or a relative path to
711locate the database file, but we did not specify that when we ran the
712model helper earlier.
713
714Some things you should note in the output above:
715
716=over 4
717
718=item *
719
720Catalyst::Model::DBIC::Schema dynamically created three model classes,
721one to represent each of the three tables in our database
d0496197 722(C<MyApp::Model::DB::Authors>, C<MyApp::Model::DB::BookAuthors>,
723and C<MyApp::Model::DB::Books>).
3533daff 724
725=item *
726
727The "list" action in our Books controller showed up with a path of
728C</books/list>.
729
730=back
731
732Point your browser to L<http://localhost:3000> and you should still get
733the Catalyst welcome page.
734
735Next, to view the book list, change the URL in your browser to
736L<http://localhost:3000/books/list>. You should get a list of the five
737books loaded by the C<myapp01.sql> script above, with TTSite providing
738the formatting for the very simple output we generated in our template.
739The rating for each book should appear on each row.
740
741Also notice in the output of the C<script/myapp_server.pl> that DBIC
742used the following SQL to retrieve the data:
743
744 SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating FROM books me
745
746because we enabled DBIC_TRACE.
747
748You now the beginnings of a simple but workable web application.
749Continue on to future sections and we will develop the application
750more fully.
751
752
753=head1 A STATIC DATABASE MODEL WITH C<DBIx::Class>
754
755=head2 Create Static DBIC Schema Files
756
757Unlike the previous section where we had DBIC automatically discover the
758structure of the database every time the application started, here we
759will use static schema files for more control. This is typical of most
760"real world" applications.
761
762One option would be to create a separate schema file for each table in
763the database, however, lets use the same L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader>
764used earlier with C<create=dynamic> to build the static files for us.
9ad715b3 765First, lets remove the schema file created earlier:
3533daff 766
d0496197 767 $ rm lib/MyApp/Schema.pm
3533daff 768
769Now regenerate the schema using the C<create=static> option:
770
d0496197 771 $ script/myapp_create.pl model DB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema create=static dbi:SQLite:myapp.db
772 exists "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model"
773 exists "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../t"
774 Dumping manual schema for MyApp::Schema to directory /home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib ...
3533daff 775 Schema dump completed.
d0496197 776 exists "/home/kclark/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm"
3533daff 777
d0496197 778We could have also deleted C<lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm>, but it would
3533daff 779have regenerated the same file (note the C<exists> in the output above).
d0496197 780If you take a look at C<lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm>, it simply contains
781a reference to the actual schema file in C<lib/MyApp/Schema.pm>
3533daff 782along with the database connect string.
783
784If you look in the C<lib/MyApp/Schema> directory, you will find that
d0496197 785C<DB.pm> is no longer using L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> as its
3533daff 786base class (L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> is only being used by the
787helper to load the schema once and then create the static files for us)
788and that it only contains a call to the C<load_classes> method. You
d0496197 789will also find that C<lib/MyApp/Schema> contains a C<Schema>
3533daff 790subdirectory, with one file inside this directory for each of the tables
791in our simple database (C<Authors.pm>, C<BookAuthors.pm>, and
792C<Books.pm>). These three files were created based on the information
793found by L<DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader> as the helper ran.
794
795The idea with all of the files created under C<lib/MyApp/Schema> by the
796C<create=static> option is to only edit the files below the C<# DO NOT
797MODIFY THIS OR ANYTHING ABOVE!> warning. If you place all of your
798changes below that point in the file, you can regenerate the
799auto-generated information at the top of each file should your database
800structure get updated.
801
802Also note the "flow" of the model information across the various files
803and directories. Catalyst will initially load the model from
d0496197 804C<lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm>. This file contains a reference to
805C<lib/MyApp/Schema.pm>, so that file is loaded next. Finally,
3533daff 806the call to C<load_classes> in that file will load each of the
d0496197 807table-specific "results source" files from the C<lib/MyApp/Schema>
3533daff 808subdirectory. These three table-specific DBIC schema files will then be
809used to create three table-specific Catalyst models every time the
810application starts (you can see these three model files listed in
811the debug output generated when you launch the application).
812
813
814=head2 Updating the Generated DBIC Schema Files
815
816
817Let's manually add some relationship information to the auto-generated
d0496197 818schema files. First edit C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Books.pm> and
3533daff 819add the following text below the C<# You can replace this text...>
820comment:
821
822 #
823 # Set relationships:
824 #
825
826 # has_many():
827 # args:
828 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
829 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
830 # 3) Column name in *foreign* table
d0496197 831 __PACKAGE__->has_many(book_authors => 'MyApp::Schema::BookAuthors', 'book_id');
3533daff 832
833 # many_to_many():
834 # args:
835 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
836 # 2) Name of has_many() relationship this many_to_many() is shortcut for
837 # 3) Name of belongs_to() relationship in model class of has_many() above
838 # You must already have the has_many() defined to use a many_to_many().
839 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many(authors => 'book_authors', 'author');
840
841
842B<Note:> Be careful to put this code I<above> the C<1;> at the end of the
843file. As with any Perl package, we need to end the last line with
844a statement that evaluates to C<true>. This is customarily done with
845C<1;> on a line by itself.
846
847This code defines both a C<has_many> and a C<many_to_many> relationship.
848The C<many_to_many> relationship is optional, but it makes it easier to
849map a book to its collection of authors. Without it, we would have to
850"walk" though the C<book_authors> table as in C<$book-E<gt>book_authors-
851E<gt>first-E<gt>author-E<gt>last_name> (we will see examples on how to
852use DBIC objects in your code soon, but note that because C<$book-
853E<gt>book_authors> can return multiple authors, we have to use C<first>
854to display a single author). C<many_to_many> allows us to use the
855shorter C<$book-E<gt>authors-E<gt>first-E<gt>last_name>. Note that you
856cannot define a C<many_to_many> relationship without also having the
857C<has_many> relationship in place.
858
d0496197 859Then edit C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Authors.pm> and add relationship
3533daff 860information as follows (again, be careful to put in above the C<1;> but
861below the C<# DO NOT MODIFY THIS OR ANYTHING ABOVE!> comment):
862
863 #
864 # Set relationships:
865 #
866
867 # has_many():
868 # args:
869 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
870 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
871 # 3) Column name in *foreign* table
d0496197 872 __PACKAGE__->has_many(book_author => 'MyApp::Schema::BookAuthors', 'author_id');
3533daff 873
874 # many_to_many():
875 # args:
876 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
877 # 2) Name of has_many() relationship this many_to_many() is shortcut for
878 # 3) Name of belongs_to() relationship in model class of has_many() above
879 # You must already have the has_many() defined to use a many_to_many().
880 __PACKAGE__->many_to_many(books => 'book_author', 'book');
881
882Finally, do the same for the "join table,"
d0496197 883C<lib/MyApp/Schema/BookAuthors.pm>:
3533daff 884
885 #
886 # Set relationships:
887 #
888
889 # belongs_to():
890 # args:
891 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
892 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
893 # 3) Column name in *this* table
d0496197 894 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(book => 'MyApp::Schema::Books', 'book_id');
3533daff 895
896 # belongs_to():
897 # args:
898 # 1) Name of relationship, DBIC will create accessor with this name
899 # 2) Name of the model class referenced by this relationship
900 # 3) Column name in *this* table
d0496197 901 __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(author => 'MyApp::Schema::Authors', 'author_id');
3533daff 902
903
904=head1 RUN THE APPLICATION
905
906Run the Catalyst "demo server" script with the C<DBIC_TRACE> option
907(it might still be enabled from earlier in the tutorial, but here
908is an alternate way to specify the option just in case):
909
910 $ DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl
911
912Make sure that the application loads correctly and that you see the
913three dynamically created model class (one for each of the
914table-specific schema classes we created).
915
916Then hit the URL L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> and be sure that
917the book list is displayed.
918
919
920=head1 RUNNING THE APPLICATION FROM THE COMMAND LINE
921
922In some situations, it can be useful to run your application and
923display a page without using a browser. Catalyst lets you do this
924using the C<scripts/myapp_test.pl> script. Just supply the URL you
925wish to display and it will run that request through the normal
926controller dispatch logic and use the appropriate view to render the
927output (obviously, complex pages may dump a lot of text to your
928terminal window). For example, if you type:
929
930 $ script/myapp_test.pl "/books/list"
931
932You should get the same text as if you visited
933L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> with the normal development server
934and asked your browser to view the page source.
935
936
937=head1 UPDATING THE VIEW
938
939Let's add a new column to our book list page that takes advantage of
940the relationship information we manually added to our schema files
941in the previous section. Edit C<root/src/books/list.tt2> add add the
942following code below the existing table cell that contains
943C<book.rating> (IOW, add a new table cell below the existing two
944C<td> cells):
945
946 <td>
947 [% # First initialize a TT variable to hold a list. Then use a TT FOREACH -%]
948 [% # loop in 'side effect notation' to load just the last names of the -%]
949 [% # authors into the list. Note that the 'push' TT vmethod does not -%]
950 [% # a value, so nothing will be printed here. But, if you have something -%]
951 [% # in TT that does return a method and you don't want it printed, you -%]
952 [% # can: 1) assign it to a bogus value, or 2) use the CALL keyword to -%]
953 [% # call it and discard the return value. -%]
954 [% tt_authors = [ ];
955 tt_authors.push(author.last_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
956 [% # Now use a TT 'virtual method' to display the author count in parens -%]
957 [% # Note the use of the TT filter "| html" to escape dangerous characters -%]
958 ([% tt_authors.size | html %])
959 [% # Use another TT vmethod to join & print the names & comma separators -%]
960 [% tt_authors.join(', ') | html %]
961 </td>
962
963Then hit C<Ctrl+R> in your browser (not that you don't need to reload
964the development server or use the C<-r> option when updating TT
965templates) and you should now the the number of authors each book and
966a comma-separated list of the author's last names.
967
968If you are still running the development server with C<DBIC_TRACE>
969enabled, you should also now see five more C<SELECT> statements in the
970debug output (one for each book as the authors are being retrieved by
971DBIC).
972
973Also note that we are using "| html", a type of TT filter, to escape
974characters such as E<lt> and E<gt> to &lt; and &gt; and avoid various
975types of dangerous hacks against your application. In a real
976application, you would probably want to put "| html" at the end of
977every field where a user has control over the information that can
978appear in that field (and can therefore inject markup or code if you
979don't "neutralize" those fields). In addition to "| html", Template
980Toolkit has a variety of other useful filters that can found in the
981documentation for L<Template::Filters|Template::Filters>.
982
983
984=head2 Using C<RenderView> for the Default View
985
986B<NOTE: The rest of this part of the tutorial is optional. You can
987skip to Part 4, L<Basic CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::BasicCRUD>,
988if you wish.>
989
990Once your controller logic has processed the request from a user, it
991forwards processing to your view in order to generate the appropriate
992response output. Catalyst uses
993L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> by
994default to automatically performs this operation. If you look in
995C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Root.pm>, you should see the empty
996definition for the C<sub end> method:
997
998 sub end : ActionClass('RenderView') {}
999
1000The following bullet points provide a quick overview of the
1001C<RenderView> process:
1002
1003=over 4
1004
1005=item *
1006
1007C<Root.pm> is designed to hold application-wide logic.
1008
1009=item *
1010
1011At the end of a given user request, Catalyst will call the most specific
1012C<end> method that's appropriate. For example, if the controller for a
1013request has an C<end> method defined, it will be called. However, if
1014the controller does not define a controller-specific C<end> method, the
1015"global" C<end> method in C<Root.pm> will be called.
1016
1017=item *
1018
1019Because the definition includes an C<ActionClass> attribute, the
1020L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> logic
1021will be executed B<after> any code inside the definition of C<sub end>
1022is run. See L<Catalyst::Manual::Actions|Catalyst::Manual::Actions>
1023for more information on C<ActionClass>.
1024
1025=item *
1026
1027Because C<sub end> is empty, this effectively just runs the default
1028logic in C<RenderView>. However, you can easily extend the
1029C<RenderView> logic by adding your own code inside the empty method body
1030(C<{}>) created by the Catalyst Helpers when we first ran the
1031C<catalyst.pl> to initialize our application. See
1032L<Catalyst::Action::RenderView|Catalyst::Action::RenderView> for more
1033detailed information on how to extended C<RenderView> in C<sub end>.
1034
1035=back
1036
1037
1038=head2 Using The Default Template Name
1039
1040By default, C<Catalyst::View::TT> will look for a template that uses the
1041same name as your controller action, allowing you to save the step of
1042manually specifying the template name in each action. For example, this
1043would allow us to remove the
1044C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{template} = 'books/list.tt2';> line of our
1045C<list> action in the Books controller. Open
1046C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> in your editor and comment out this line
1047to match the following (only the C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{template}> line
1048has changed):
1049
1050 =head2 list
1051
1052 Fetch all book objects and pass to books/list.tt2 in stash to be displayed
1053
1054 =cut
1055
1056 sub list : Local {
1057 # Retrieve the usual Perl OO '$self' for this object. $c is the Catalyst
1058 # 'Context' that's used to 'glue together' the various components
1059 # that make up the application
1060 my ($self, $c) = @_;
1061
1062 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
1063 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template
d0496197 1064 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Books')->all];
3533daff 1065
1066 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
1067 # in your action methods (actions methods respond to user input in
1068 # your controllers).
1069 #$c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1070 }
1071
1072C<Catalyst::View::TT> defaults to looking for a template with no
1073extension. In our case, we need to override this to look for an
1074extension of C<.tt2>. Open C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm> and add the
1075C<TEMPLATE_EXTENSION> definition as follows:
1076
1077 __PACKAGE__->config({
1078 CATALYST_VAR => 'Catalyst',
1079 INCLUDE_PATH => [
1080 MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'src' ),
1081 MyApp->path_to( 'root', 'lib' )
1082 ],
1083 PRE_PROCESS => 'config/main',
1084 WRAPPER => 'site/wrapper',
1085 ERROR => 'error.tt2',
1086 TIMER => 0,
1087 TEMPLATE_EXTENSION => '.tt2',
1088 });
1089
1090You should now be able to restart the development server as per the
1091previous section and access the L<http://localhost:3000/books/list>
1092as before.
1093
1094B<NOTE:> Please note that if you use the default template technique,
1095you will B<not> be able to use either the C<$c-E<gt>forward> or
1096the C<$c-E<gt>detach> mechanisms (these are discussed in Part 2 and
1097Part 9 of the Tutorial).
1098
1099
1100=head2 Return To A Manually-Specified Template
1101
1102In order to be able to use C<$c-E<gt>forward> and C<$c-E<gt>detach>
1103later in the tutorial, you should remove the comment from the
1104statement in C<sub list> in C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm>:
1105
1106 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1107
1108Then delete the C<TEMPLATE_EXTENSION> line in
1109C<lib/MyApp/View/TT.pm>.
1110
1111You should then be able to restart the development server and
1112access L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> in the same manner as
1113with earlier sections.
1114
1115
1116=head1 AUTHOR
1117
1118Kennedy Clark, C<hkclark@gmail.com>
1119
1120Please report any errors, issues or suggestions to the author. The
1121most recent version of the Catalyst Tutorial can be found at
1122L<http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/trunk/Catalyst-Manual/lib/Catalyst/Manual/Tutorial/>.
1123
45c7830f 1124Copyright 2006-2008, Kennedy Clark, under Creative Commons License
3533daff 1125(L<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/>).
1126