Fixed: assorted typos
[catagits/Catalyst-Runtime.git] / lib / Catalyst / Manual / Cookbook.pod
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fc7ec1d9 1=head1 NAME
2
3Catalyst::Manual::Cookbook - Cooking with Catalyst
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
aba94964 7Yummy code like your mum used to bake!
fc7ec1d9 8
9=head1 RECIPES
10
11=head2 Force debug screen
12
13You can force Catalyst to display the debug screen at the end of the request by
51ef2818 14placing a C<die()> call in the C<end> action.
fc7ec1d9 15
61b1e958 16 sub end : Private {
17 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
18 die "testing";
19 }
fc7ec1d9 20
aff93052 21If you're tired of removing and adding this all the time, you
51ef2818 22can easily add a condition. For example:
aff93052 23
24 die "Testing" if $c->param->{dump_info};
25
fc7ec1d9 26=head2 Disable statistics
27
28Just add this line to your application class if you don't want those nifty
29statistics in your debug messages.
30
31 sub Catalyst::Log::info { }
32
33=head2 Scaffolding
34
35Scaffolding is very simple with Catalyst.
51ef2818 36Just use Catalyst::Model::CDBI::CRUD as your base class.
fc7ec1d9 37
38 # lib/MyApp/Model/CDBI.pm
39 package MyApp::Model::CDBI;
40
41 use strict;
42 use base 'Catalyst::Model::CDBI::CRUD';
43
44 __PACKAGE__->config(
45 dsn => 'dbi:SQLite:/tmp/myapp.db',
46 relationships => 1
47 );
48
49 1;
50
51 # lib/MyApp.pm
52 package MyApp;
53
54 use Catalyst 'FormValidator';
55
56 __PACKAGE__->config(
57 name => 'My Application',
58 root => '/home/joeuser/myapp/root'
59 );
60
61b1e958 61 sub my_table : Global {
62 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
63 $c->form( optional => [ MyApp::Model::CDBI::Table->columns ] );
64 $c->forward('MyApp::Model::CDBI::Table');
65 }
fc7ec1d9 66
67 1;
68
69Modify the $c->form() parameters to match your needs, and don't forget to copy
70the templates. ;)
71
5c0ff128 72=head2 Single file upload with Catalyst
aba94964 73
74To implement uploads in Catalyst you need to have a HTML form similiar to
75this:
76
77 <form action="/upload" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
78 <input type="hidden" name="form_submit" value="yes">
79 <input type="file" name="my_file">
80 <input type="submit" value="Send">
81 </form>
82
51ef2818 83It's very important not to forget C<enctype="multipart/form-data"> in form. Uploads will not work without this.
aba94964 84
85Catalyst Controller module 'upload' action:
86
5c0ff128 87 sub upload : Global {
88 my ($self, $c) = @_;
4d89569d 89
90 if ( $c->request->parameters->{form_submit} eq 'yes' ) {
91
92 if ( my $upload = $c->request->upload('my_file') ) {
47ae6960 93
5c0ff128 94 my $filename = $upload->filename;
47ae6960 95 my $target = "/tmp/upload/$filename";
96
3ffaf022 97 unless ( $upload->link_to($target) || $upload->copy_to($target) ) {
47ae6960 98 die( "Failed to copy '$filename' to '$target': $!" );
5c0ff128 99 }
5c0ff128 100 }
101 }
4d89569d 102
5c0ff128 103 $c->stash->{template} = 'file_upload.html';
104 }
105
106=head2 Multiple file upload with Catalyst
107
108Code for uploading multiple files from one form needs little changes compared
109to single file upload.
110
111Form goes like this:
112
113 <form action="/upload" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
114 <input type="hidden" name="form_submit" value="yes">
115 <input type="file" name="file1" size="50"><br>
116 <input type="file" name="file2" size="50"><br>
117 <input type="file" name="file3" size="50"><br>
118 <input type="submit" value="Send">
119 </form>
120
121Controller:
122
123 sub upload : Local {
124 my ($self, $c) = @_;
4d89569d 125
126 if ( $c->request->parameters->{form_submit} eq 'yes' ) {
127
128 for my $field ( $c->req->upload ) {
129
4d89569d 130 my $filename = $upload->filename;
47ae6960 131 my $target = "/tmp/upload/$filename";
132
3ffaf022 133 unless ( $upload->link_to($target) || $upload->copy_to($target) ) {
47ae6960 134 die( "Failed to copy '$filename' to '$target': $!" );
aba94964 135 }
136 }
61b1e958 137 }
4d89569d 138
5c0ff128 139 $c->stash->{template} = 'file_upload.html';
140 }
141
51ef2818 142C<for my $field ($c-E<gt>req->upload)> loops automatically over all file input
5c0ff128 143fields and gets input names. After that is basic file saving code, just like in
144single file upload.
aba94964 145
51ef2818 146Notice: C<die>ing might not be what you want to do, when an error occurs, but
147it works as an example. A better idea would be to store error C<$!> in
148$c->stash->{error} and show a custom error template displaying this message.
aba94964 149
5c0ff128 150For more information about uploads and usable methods look at
151C<Catalyst::Request::Upload> and C<Catalyst::Request>.
aba94964 152
deb90705 153=head2 Authentication with Catalyst::Plugin::Authentication::CDBI
154
155There are (at least) two ways to implement authentication with this plugin:
51ef2818 1561) only checking username and password;
deb90705 1572) checking username, password and the roles the user has
158
159For both variants you'll need the following code in your MyApp package:
160
161 use Catalyst qw/Session::FastMmap Static Authentication::CDBI/;
162
163 MyApp->config( authentication => { user_class => 'MyApp::M::MyApp::Users',
164 user_field => 'email',
165 password_field => 'password' });
166
167'user_class' is a Class::DBI class for your users table.
168'user_field' tells which field is used for username lookup (might be
51ef2818 169email, first name, surname etc.).
deb90705 170'password_field' is, well, password field in your table and by default
171password is stored in plain text. Authentication::CDBI looks for 'user'
172and 'password' fields in table, if they're not defined in the config.
173
51ef2818 174In PostgreSQL, the users table might be something like:
deb90705 175
51ef2818 176 CREATE TABLE users (
177 user_id serial,
178 name varchar(100),
179 surname varchar(100),
180 password varchar(100),
181 email varchar(100),
182 primary key(user_id)
183 );
deb90705 184
185We'll discuss the first variant for now:
51ef2818 1861. user:password login/auth without roles
deb90705 187
51ef2818 188To log in a user you might use an action like this:
deb90705 189
61b1e958 190 sub 'login' : Local {
deb90705 191 my ($self, $c) = @_;
192 if ($c->req->params->{username}) {
193 $c->session_login($c->req->params->{username},
61b1e958 194 $c->req->params->{password} );
deb90705 195 if ($c->req->{user}) {
196 $c->forward('?restricted_area');
197 }
198 }
61b1e958 199 }
deb90705 200
201$c->req->params->{username} and $c->req->params->{password} are html
61b1e958 202form parameters from a login form. If login succeeds, then
203$c->req->{user} contains the username of the authenticated user.
deb90705 204
51ef2818 205If you want to remember the user's login status in between further
206requests, then just use the C<$c-E<gt>session_login> method. Catalyst will
207create a session id and session cookie and automatically append session
208id to all urls. So all you have to do is just check $c->req->{user}
61b1e958 209where needed.
deb90705 210
51ef2818 211To log out a user, just call $c->session_logout.
deb90705 212
51ef2818 213Now let's take a look at the second variant:
2142. user:password login/auth with roles
deb90705 215
51ef2818 216To use roles you need to add the following parameters to MyApp->config in the 'authentication' section:
deb90705 217
218 role_class => 'MyApp::M::MyApp::Roles',
219 user_role_class => 'MyApp::M::MyApp::UserRoles',
220 user_role_user_field => 'user_id',
221 user_role_role_field => 'role_id',
222
223Corresponding tables in PostgreSQL could look like this:
224
51ef2818 225 CREATE TABLE roles (
226 role_id serial,
227 name varchar(100),
228 primary key(role_id)
229 );
230
231 CREATE TABLE user_roles (
232 user_role_id serial,
233 user_id int,
234 role_id int,
235 primary key(user_role_id),
236 foreign key(user_id) references users(user_id),
237 foreign key(role_id) references roles(role_id)
238 );
deb90705 239
61b1e958 240The 'roles' table is a list of role names and the 'user_role' table is
241used for the user -> role lookup.
deb90705 242
51ef2818 243Now if a logged-in user wants to see a location which is allowed only
244for people with an 'admin' role, in your controller you can check it
61b1e958 245with:
deb90705 246
61b1e958 247 sub add : Local {
deb90705 248 my ($self, $c) = @_;
249 if ($c->roles(qw/admin/)) {
250 $c->req->output("Your account has the role 'admin.'");
251 } else {
51ef2818 252 $c->req->output("You're not allowed to be here.");
deb90705 253 }
61b1e958 254 }
deb90705 255
51ef2818 256One thing you might need is to forward non-authenticated users to a login
257form if they try to access restricted areas. If you want to do this
258controller-wide (if you have one controller for your admin section) then it's
259best to add a user check to a '!begin' action:
deb90705 260
61b1e958 261 sub begin : Private {
deb90705 262 my ($self, $c) = @_;
263 unless ($c->req->{user}) {
264 $c->req->action(undef); ## notice this!!
265 $c->forward('?login');
266 }
61b1e958 267 }
deb90705 268
51ef2818 269Pay attention to $c->req->action(undef). This is needed because of the
270way $c->forward works - C<forward> to C<login> gets called, but after that
271Catalyst will still execute the action defined in the URI (e.g. if you
272tried to go to C</add>, then first 'begin' will forward to 'login', but after
273that 'add' will nonetheless be executed). So $c->req->action(undef) undefines any
274actions that were to be called and forwards the user where we want him/her
deb90705 275to be.
276
51ef2818 277And this is all you need to do.
deb90705 278
145074c2 279
280=head2 How to use Catalyst without mod_perl
281
282Catalyst applications give optimum performance when run under mod_perl.
61b1e958 283However sometimes mod_perl is not an option, and running under CGI is
51ef2818 284just too slow. There's also an alternative to mod_perl that gives
dec2a2a9 285reasonable performance named FastCGI.
145074c2 286
287B<Using FastCGI>
288
61b1e958 289To quote from L<http://www.fastcgi.com/>: "FastCGI is a language
290independent, scalable, extension to CGI that provides high performance
291without the limitations of specific server APIs." Web server support
292is provided for Apache in the form of C<mod_fastcgi> and there is Perl
293support in the C<FCGI> module. To convert a CGI Catalyst application
294to FastCGI one needs to initialize an C<FCGI::Request> object and loop
295while the C<Accept> method returns zero. The following code shows how
296it is done - and it also works as a normal, single-shot CGI script.
145074c2 297
298 #!/usr/bin/perl
299 use strict;
300 use FCGI;
301 use MyApp;
302
303 my $request = FCGI::Request();
304 while ($request->Accept() >= 0) {
1c61c726 305 MyApp->run;
145074c2 306 }
307
61b1e958 308Any initialization code should be included outside the request-accept
309loop.
145074c2 310
51ef2818 311There is one little complication, which is that C<MyApp-E<gt>run> outputs a
61b1e958 312complete HTTP response including the status line (e.g.:
313"C<HTTP/1.1 200>").
314FastCGI just wants a set of headers, so the sample code captures the
315output and drops the first line if it is an HTTP status line (note:
316this may change).
317
318The Apache C<mod_fastcgi> module is provided by a number of Linux
319distros and is straightforward to compile for most Unix-like systems.
320The module provides a FastCGI Process Manager, which manages FastCGI
321scripts. You configure your script as a FastCGI script with the
322following Apache configuration directives:
145074c2 323
324 <Location /fcgi-bin>
325 AddHandler fastcgi-script fcgi
326 </Location>
327
328or:
329
330 <Location /fcgi-bin>
331 SetHandler fastcgi-script
332 Action fastcgi-script /path/to/fcgi-bin/fcgi-script
333 </Location>
334
335C<mod_fastcgi> provides a number of options for controlling the FastCGI
336scripts spawned; it also allows scripts to be run to handle the
51ef2818 337authentication, authorization, and access check phases.
145074c2 338
61b1e958 339For more information see the FastCGI documentation, the C<FCGI> module
340and L<http://www.fastcgi.com/>.
145074c2 341
fc7ec1d9 342=head1 AUTHOR
343
344Sebastian Riedel, C<sri@oook.de>
deb90705 345Danijel Milicevic C<me@danijel.de>
346Viljo Marrandi C<vilts@yahoo.com>
61b1e958 347Marcus Ramberg C<mramberg@cpan.org>
fc7ec1d9 348
349=head1 COPYRIGHT
350
61b1e958 351This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it
352under the same terms as Perl itself.