Release commit for 0.017
[catagits/Web-Simple.git] / lib / Web / Simple.pm
CommitLineData
5c33dda5 1package Web::Simple;
2
8bd060f4 3use strictures 1;
8c4ffad3 4use 5.008;
8bd060f4 5use warnings::illegalproto ();
876e62e1 6use Moo ();
7use Web::Dispatch::Wrapper ();
8c4ffad3 8
5e3e41f0 9our $VERSION = '0.017';
5c33dda5 10
44db8e76 11sub import {
5c33dda5 12 my ($class, $app_package) = @_;
876e62e1 13 $app_package ||= caller;
14 $class->_export_into($app_package);
15 eval "package $app_package; use Web::Dispatch::Wrapper; use Moo; 1"
16 or die "Failed to setup app package: $@";
445b3ea0 17 strictures->import;
8bd060f4 18 warnings::illegalproto->unimport;
5c33dda5 19}
20
21sub _export_into {
22 my ($class, $app_package) = @_;
23 {
24 no strict 'refs';
c7b1c57f 25 *{"${app_package}::PSGI_ENV"} = sub () { -1 };
5c33dda5 26 require Web::Simple::Application;
27 unshift(@{"${app_package}::ISA"}, 'Web::Simple::Application');
28 }
b7063124 29 (my $name = $app_package) =~ s/::/\//g;
30 $INC{"${name}.pm"} = 'Set by "use Web::Simple;" invocation';
5c33dda5 31}
32
fd6d986e 331;
34823486 34
7401408e 35=head1 NAME
36
37Web::Simple - A quick and easy way to build simple web applications
38
7401408e 39
40=head1 SYNOPSIS
41
05ad188d 42 #!/usr/bin/env perl
7401408e 43
4f83bde7 44 package HelloWorld;
6ee6b2dc 45 use Web::Simple;
4f83bde7 46
47 sub dispatch_request {
48 sub (GET) {
49 [ 200, [ 'Content-type', 'text/plain' ], [ 'Hello world!' ] ]
50 },
51 sub () {
52 [ 405, [ 'Content-type', 'text/plain' ], [ 'Method not allowed' ] ]
445b3ea0 53 }
7401408e 54 }
55
56 HelloWorld->run_if_script;
57
05ad188d 58If you save this file into your cgi-bin as C<hello-world.cgi> and then visit:
7401408e 59
60 http://my.server.name/cgi-bin/hello-world.cgi/
61
4f83bde7 62you'll get the "Hello world!" string output to your browser. At the same time
63this file will also act as a class module, so you can save it as HelloWorld.pm
64and use it as-is in test scripts or other deployment mechanisms.
65
ca30a017 66Note that you should retain the ->run_if_script even if your app is a
67module, since this additionally makes it valid as a .psgi file, which can
68be extremely useful during development.
69
4f83bde7 70For more complex examples and non-CGI deployment, see
71L<Web::Simple::Deployment>. To get help with L<Web::Simple>, please connect to
72the irc.perl.org IRC network and join #web-simple.
7401408e 73
fb771406 74=head1 DESCRIPTION
7401408e 75
6a4808bf 76The philosophy of L<Web::Simple> is to keep to an absolute bare minimum for
7401408e 77everything. It is not designed to be used for large scale applications;
78the L<Catalyst> web framework already works very nicely for that and is
79a far more mature, well supported piece of software.
80
81However, if you have an application that only does a couple of things, and
3895385d 82want to not have to think about complexities of deployment, then L<Web::Simple>
7401408e 83might be just the thing for you.
84
6a4808bf 85The only public interface the L<Web::Simple> module itself provides is an
86C<import> based one:
7401408e 87
88 use Web::Simple 'NameOfApplication';
89
6a4808bf 90This sets up your package (in this case "NameOfApplication" is your package)
3895385d 91so that it inherits from L<Web::Simple::Application> and imports L<strictures>,
38d5b336 92as well as installs a C<PSGI_ENV> constant for convenience, as well as some
3895385d 93other subroutines.
94
6a4808bf 95Importing L<strictures> will automatically make your code use the C<strict> and
3895385d 96C<warnings> pragma, so you can skip the usual:
7401408e 97
98 use strict;
3895385d 99 use warnings FATAL => 'aa';
7401408e 100
101provided you 'use Web::Simple' at the top of the file. Note that we turn
102on *fatal* warnings so if you have any warnings at any point from the file
103that you did 'use Web::Simple' in, then your application will die. This is,
104so far, considered a feature.
105
a5006b25 106When we inherit from L<Web::Simple::Application> we also use L<Moo>, which is
3895385d 107the the equivalent of:
7401408e 108
109 {
110 package NameOfApplication;
445b3ea0 111 use Moo;
112 extends 'Web::Simple::Application';
7401408e 113 }
114
6a4808bf 115So you can use L<Moo> features in your application, such as creating attributes
116using the C<has> subroutine, etc. Please see the documentation for L<Moo> for
117more information.
118
445b3ea0 119It also exports the following subroutines for use in dispatchers:
7401408e 120
74afe4b7 121 response_filter { ... };
7401408e 122
123 redispatch_to '/somewhere';
124
b7063124 125Finally, import sets
126
127 $INC{"NameOfApplication.pm"} = 'Set by "use Web::Simple;" invocation';
128
129so that perl will not attempt to load the application again even if
130
131 require NameOfApplication;
132
133is encountered in other code.
134
3583ca04 135=head1 DISPATCH STRATEGY
136
6a4808bf 137L<Web::Simple> despite being straightforward to use, has a powerful system
3895385d 138for matching all sorts of incoming URLs to one or more subroutines. These
139subroutines can be simple actions to take for a given URL, or something
140more complicated, including entire L<Plack> applications, L<Plack::Middleware>
141and nested subdispatchers.
142
c21c9f07 143=head2 Examples
144
445b3ea0 145 sub dispatch_request {
c21c9f07 146 # matches: GET /user/1.htm?show_details=1
147 # GET /user/1.htm
148 sub (GET + /user/* + ?show_details~ + .htm|.html|.xhtml) {
c254b30e 149 my ($self, $user_id, $show_details) = @_;
c21c9f07 150 ...
151 },
152 # matches: POST /user?username=frew
153 # POST /user?username=mst&first_name=matt&last_name=trout
154 sub (POST + /user + ?username=&*) {
c254b30e 155 my ($self, $username, $misc_params) = @_;
c21c9f07 156 ...
157 },
158 # matches: DELETE /user/1/friend/2
159 sub (DELETE + /user/*/friend/*) {
c254b30e 160 my ($self, $user_id, $friend_id) = @_;
c21c9f07 161 ...
162 },
163 # matches: PUT /user/1?first_name=Matt&last_name=Trout
164 sub (PUT + /user/* + ?first_name~&last_name~) {
c254b30e 165 my ($self, $user_id, $first_name, $last_name) = @_;
c21c9f07 166 ...
167 },
168 sub (/user/*/...) {
445b3ea0 169 my $user_id = $_[1];
170 # matches: PUT /user/1/role/1
171 sub (PUT + /role/*) {
172 my $role_id = $_[1];
173 ...
174 },
175 # matches: DELETE /user/1/role/1
176 sub (DELETE + /role/*) {
177 my $role_id = $_[1];
178 ...
179 },
c21c9f07 180 },
181 }
182
3706e2a0 183=head2 The dispatch cycle
81a5b03e 184
3706e2a0 185At the beginning of a request, your app's dispatch_request method is called
186with the PSGI $env as an argument. You can handle the request entirely in
187here and return a PSGI response arrayref if you want:
81a5b03e 188
3706e2a0 189 sub dispatch_request {
190 my ($self, $env) = @_;
191 [ 404, [ 'Content-type' => 'text/plain' ], [ 'Amnesia == fail' ] ]
192 }
81a5b03e 193
3706e2a0 194However, generally, instead of that, you return a set of dispatch subs:
81a5b03e 195
3706e2a0 196 sub dispatch_request {
197 my $self = shift;
198 sub (/) { redispatch_to '/index.html' },
199 sub (/user/*) { $self->show_user($_[1]) },
200 ...
201 }
81a5b03e 202
e927492b 203Well, a sub is a valid PSGI response too (for ultimate streaming and async
204cleverness). If you want to return a PSGI sub you have to wrap it into an
205array ref.
206
207 sub dispatch_request {
208 [ sub {
209 my $respond = shift;
210 # This is pure PSGI here, so read perldoc PSGI
211 } ]
212 }
213
3706e2a0 214If you return a subroutine with a prototype, the prototype is treated
215as a match specification - and if the test is passed, the body of the
216sub is called as a method any matched arguments (see below for more details).
81a5b03e 217
3706e2a0 218You can also return a plain subroutine which will be called with just $env
219- remember that in this case if you need $self you -must- close over it.
81a5b03e 220
3895385d 221If you return a normal object, L<Web::Simple> will simply return it upwards on
222the assumption that a response_filter (or some arbitrary L<Plack::Middleware>)
223somewhere will convert it to something useful. This allows:
81a5b03e 224
3706e2a0 225 sub dispatch_request {
226 my $self = shift;
227 sub (.html) { response_filter { $self->render_zoom($_[0]) } },
228 sub (/user/*) { $self->users->get($_[1]) },
229 }
81a5b03e 230
3895385d 231to render a user object to HTML, if there is an incoming URL such as:
232
233 http://myweb.org/user/111.html
234
235This works because as we descend down the dispachers, we first match
236C<sub (.html)>, which adds a C<response_filter> (basically a specialized routine
237that follows the L<Plack::Middleware> specification), and then later we also
238match C<sub (/user/*)> which gets a user and returns that as the response.
239This user object 'bubbles up' through all the wrapping middleware until it hits
240the C<response_filter> we defined, after which the return is converted to a
241true html response.
81a5b03e 242
3706e2a0 243However, two types of object are treated specially - a Plack::App object
3895385d 244will have its C<->to_app> method called and be used as a dispatcher:
81a5b03e 245
3706e2a0 246 sub dispatch_request {
247 my $self = shift;
248 sub (/static/...) { Plack::App::File->new(...) },
249 ...
81a5b03e 250 }
251
3706e2a0 252A Plack::Middleware object will be used as a filter for the rest of the
253dispatch being returned into:
81a5b03e 254
6af22ff2 255 ## responds to /admin/track_usage AND /admin/delete_accounts
256
3706e2a0 257 sub dispatch_request {
258 my $self = shift;
6af22ff2 259 sub (/admin/**) {
260 Plack::Middleware::Session->new(%opts);
261 },
262 sub (/admin/track_usage) {
263 ## something that needs a session
264 },
265 sub (/admin/delete_accounts) {
266 ## something else that needs a session
267 },
81a5b03e 268 }
269
3706e2a0 270Note that this is for the dispatch being -returned- to, so if you want to
271provide it inline you need to do:
81a5b03e 272
6af22ff2 273 ## ALSO responds to /admin/track_usage AND /admin/delete_accounts
274
3706e2a0 275 sub dispatch_request {
276 my $self = shift;
3706e2a0 277 sub (/admin/...) {
6af22ff2 278 sub {
279 Plack::Middleware::Session->new(%opts);
280 },
281 sub (/track_usage) {
282 ## something that needs a session
283 },
284 sub (/delete_accounts) {
285 ## something else that needs a session
286 },
3706e2a0 287 }
81a5b03e 288 }
289
3706e2a0 290And that's it - but remember that all this happens recursively - it's
3895385d 291dispatchers all the way down. A URL incoming pattern will run all matching
292dispatchers and then hit all added filters or L<Plack::Middleware>.
3706e2a0 293
81a5b03e 294=head2 Web::Simple match specifications
295
296=head3 Method matches
297
93e30ba3 298 sub (GET) {
15dfe701 299
300A match specification beginning with a capital letter matches HTTP requests
301with that request method.
302
81a5b03e 303=head3 Path matches
304
15dfe701 305 sub (/login) {
306
307A match specification beginning with a / is a path match. In the simplest
308case it matches a specific path. To match a path with a wildcard part, you
309can do:
310
311 sub (/user/*) {
312 $self->handle_user($_[1])
313
314This will match /user/<anything> where <anything> does not include a literal
315/ character. The matched part becomes part of the match arguments. You can
316also match more than one part:
317
318 sub (/user/*/*) {
319 my ($self, $user_1, $user_2) = @_;
320
321 sub (/domain/*/user/*) {
322 my ($self, $domain, $user) = @_;
323
324and so on. To match an arbitrary number of parts, use -
325
326 sub (/page/**) {
1d02a8ae 327 my ($self, $match) = @_;
15dfe701 328
1d02a8ae 329This will result in a single element for the entire match. Note that you can do
15dfe701 330
331 sub (/page/**/edit) {
332
333to match an arbitrary number of parts up to but not including some final
334part.
335
e060a690 336Note: Since Web::Simple handles a concept of file extensions, * and **
337matchers will not by default match things after a final dot, and this
338can be modified by using *.* and **.* in the final position, i.e.:
339
340 /one/* matches /one/two.three and captures "two"
341 /one/*.* matches /one/two.three and captures "two.three"
342 /** matches /one/two.three and captures "one/two"
343 /**.* matches /one/two.three and captures "one/two.three"
344
da8429c9 345Finally,
346
347 sub (/foo/...) {
348
e060a690 349Will match C</foo/> on the beginning of the path -and- strip it. This is
350designed to be used to construct nested dispatch structures, but can also prove
351useful for having e.g. an optional language specification at the start of a
352path.
da8429c9 353
354Note that the '...' is a "maybe something here, maybe not" so the above
355specification will match like this:
356
357 /foo # no match
358 /foo/ # match and strip path to '/'
359 /foo/bar/baz # match and strip path to '/bar/baz'
360
e060a690 361Almost the same,
15e679c1 362
e060a690 363 sub (/foo...) {
364
365Will match on C</foo/bar/baz>, but also include C</foo>. Otherwise it
366operates the same way as C</foo/...>.
367
368 /foo # match and strip path to ''
369 /foo/ # match and strip path to '/'
370 /foo/bar/baz # match and strip path to '/bar/baz'
371
372Please note the difference between C<sub(/foo/...)> and C<sub(/foo...)>. In
373the first case, this is expecting to find something after C</foo> (and fails to
374match if nothing is found), while in the second case we can match both C</foo>
375and C</foo/more/to/come>. The following are roughly the same:
376
377 sub (/foo) { 'I match /foo' },
378 sub (/foo/...) {
379 sub (/bar) { 'I match /foo/bar' },
380 sub (/*) { 'I match /foo/{id}' },
381 }
382
383Versus
384
385 sub (/foo...) {
386 sub (~) { 'I match /foo' },
387 sub (/bar) { 'I match /foo/bar' },
388 sub (/*) { 'I match /foo/{id}' },
389 }
390
391You may prefer the latter example should you wish to take advantage of
392subdispatchers to scope common activities. For example:
393
394 sub (/user...) {
395 my $user_rs = $schema->resultset('User');
396 sub (~) { $user_rs },
397 sub (/*) { $user_rs->find($_[1]) },
398 }
399
400You should note the special case path match C<sub (~)> which is only meaningful
401when it is contained in this type of path match. It matches to an empty path.
402
7c03cd61 403=head4 Naming your patch matches
404
405Any */**/*.*/**.* match can be followed with :name to make it into a named
406match, so:
407
408 sub (/*:one/*:two/*:three/*:four) {
409 "I match /1/2/3/4 capturing { one => 1, two => 2, three => 3, four => 4 }"
410 }
411
412 sub (/**.*:allofit) {
413 "I match anything capturing { allofit => \$whole_path }"
414 }
415
416In the specific case of a simple single-* match, the * may be omitted, to
417allow you to write:
418
419 sub (/:one/:two/:three/:four) {
420 "I match /1/2/3/4 capturing { one => 1, two => 2, three => 3, four => 4 }"
421 }
422
e060a690 423=head4 C</foo> and C</foo/> are different specs
424
425As you may have noticed with the difference between C<sub(/foo/...)> and
426C<sub(/foo...)>, trailing slashes in path specs are significant. This is
427intentional and necessary to retain the ability to use relative links on
428websites. Let's demonstrate on this link:
429
430 <a href="bar">bar</a>
431
432If the user loads the url C</foo/> and clicks on this link, they will be
433sent to C</foo/bar>. However when they are on the url C</foo> and click this
434link, then they will be sent to C</bar>.
435
436This makes it necessary to be explicit about the trailing slash.
15e679c1 437
81a5b03e 438=head3 Extension matches
439
15dfe701 440 sub (.html) {
441
6a4808bf 442will match .html from the path (assuming the subroutine itself returns
443something, of course). This is normally used for rendering - e.g.
15dfe701 444
445 sub (.html) {
74afe4b7 446 response_filter { $self->render_html($_[1]) }
15dfe701 447 }
448
b8bd7bd1 449Additionally,
450
451 sub (.*) {
452
6a4808bf 453will match any extension and supplies the extension as a match argument.
b8bd7bd1 454
9b9866ae 455=head3 Query and body parameter matches
456
457Query and body parameters can be match via
458
459 sub (?<param spec>) { # match URI query
460 sub (%<param spec>) { # match body params
461
cb12d2a3 462The body spec will match if the request content is either
463application/x-www-form-urlencoded or multipart/form-data - the latter
464of which is required for uploads, which are now handled experimentally
465- see below.
9b9866ae 466
467The param spec is elements of one of the following forms -
468
469 param~ # optional parameter
470 param= # required parameter
471 @param~ # optional multiple parameter
472 @param= # required multiple parameter
eb9e0e25 473 :param~ # optional parameter in hashref
474 :param= # required parameter in hashref
475 :@param~ # optional multiple in hashref
476 :@param= # required multiple in hashref
477 * # include all other parameters in hashref
478 @* # include all other parameters as multiple in hashref
9b9866ae 479
eb9e0e25 480separated by the & character. The arguments added to the request are
481one per non-:/* parameter (scalar for normal, arrayref for multiple),
482plus if any :/* specs exist a hashref containing those values.
9b9866ae 483
3895385d 484Please note that if you specify a multiple type parameter match, you are
485ensured of getting an arrayref for the value, EVEN if the current incoming
486request has only one value. However if a parameter is specified as single
487and multiple values are found, the last one will be used.
488
489For example to match a page parameter with an optional order_by parameter one
9b9866ae 490would write:
491
492 sub (?page=&order_by~) {
eb9e0e25 493 my ($self, $page, $order_by) = @_;
494 return unless $page =~ /^\d+$/;
495 $page ||= 'id';
9b9866ae 496 response_filter {
497 $_[1]->search_rs({}, $p);
498 }
499 }
500
501to implement paging and ordering against a L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> object.
502
3895385d 503Another Example: To get all parameters as a hashref of arrayrefs, write:
eb9e0e25 504
505 sub(?@*) {
506 my ($self, $params) = @_;
507 ...
508
8c4ffad3 509To get two parameters as a hashref, write:
510
511 sub(?:user~&:domain~) {
512 my ($self, $params) = @_; # params contains only 'user' and 'domain' keys
513
514You can also mix these, so:
515
516 sub (?foo=&@bar~&:coffee=&@*) {
517 my ($self, $foo, $bar, $params);
518
519where $bar is an arrayref (possibly an empty one), and $params contains
520arrayref values for all parameters -not- mentioned and a scalar value for
521the 'coffee' parameter.
522
3895385d 523Note, in the case where you combine arrayref, single parameter and named
524hashref style, the arrayref and single parameters will appear in C<@_> in the
38d5b336 525order you defined them in the protoype, but all hashrefs will merge into a
3895385d 526single C<$params>, as in the example above.
527
05aafc1a 528=head3 Upload matches (EXPERIMENTAL)
529
530Note: This feature is experimental. This means that it may not remain
531100% in its current form. If we change it, notes on updating your code
532will be added to the L</CHANGES BETWEEN RELEASES> section below.
533
534 sub (*foo=) { # param specifier can be anything valid for query or body
535
536The upload match system functions exactly like a query/body match, except
537that the values returned (if any) are C<Web::Dispatch::Upload> objects.
538
539Note that this match type will succeed in two circumstances where you might
540not expect it to - first, when the field exists but is not an upload field
541and second, when the field exists but the form is not an upload form (i.e.
542content type "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" rather than
543"multipart/form-data"). In either of these cases, what you'll get back is
544a C<Web::Dispatch::NotAnUpload> object, which will C<die> with an error
545pointing out the problem if you try and use it. To be sure you have a real
546upload object, call
547
548 $upload->is_upload # returns 1 on a valid upload, 0 on a non-upload field
549
550and to get the reason why such an object is not an upload, call
551
552 $upload->reason # returns a reason or '' on a valid upload.
553
554Other than these two methods, the upload object provides the same interface
555as L<Plack::Request::Upload> with the addition of a stringify to the temporary
556filename to make copying it somewhere else easier to handle.
557
81a5b03e 558=head3 Combining matches
559
15dfe701 560Matches may be combined with the + character - e.g.
561
b8bd7bd1 562 sub (GET + /user/*) {
563
564to create an AND match. They may also be combined withe the | character - e.g.
565
566 sub (GET|POST) {
567
568to create an OR match. Matches can be nested with () - e.g.
569
570 sub ((GET|POST) + /user/*) {
571
572and negated with ! - e.g.
573
574 sub (!/user/foo + /user/*) {
575
576! binds to the immediate rightmost match specification, so if you want
577to negate a combination you will need to use
578
579 sub ( !(POST|PUT|DELETE) ) {
580
581and | binds tighter than +, so
582
583 sub ((GET|POST) + /user/*) {
584
585and
586
587 sub (GET|POST + /user/*) {
588
589are equivalent, but
590
1760e999 591 sub ((GET + /admin/...) | (POST + /admin/...)) {
b8bd7bd1 592
593and
594
1760e999 595 sub (GET + /admin/... | POST + /admin/...) {
b8bd7bd1 596
597are not - the latter is equivalent to
598
1760e999 599 sub (GET + (/admin/...|POST) + /admin/...) {
b8bd7bd1 600
3895385d 601which will never match!
b8bd7bd1 602
603=head3 Whitespace
15dfe701 604
605Note that for legibility you are permitted to use whitespace -
606
44db8e76 607 sub (GET + /user/*) {
15dfe701 608
b8bd7bd1 609but it will be ignored. This is because the perl parser strips whitespace
610from subroutine prototypes, so this is equivalent to
611
612 sub (GET+/user/*) {
15dfe701 613
24175cb5 614=head3 Accessing the PSGI env hash
615
3706e2a0 616In some cases you may wish to get the raw PSGI env hash - to do this,
617you can either use a plain sub -
618
619 sub {
620 my ($env) = @_;
621 ...
622 }
24175cb5 623
3706e2a0 624or use the PSGI_ENV constant exported to retrieve it:
c21c9f07 625
3706e2a0 626 sub (GET + /foo + ?some_param=) {
627 my $param = $_[1];
628 my $env = $_[PSGI_ENV];
629 }
c21c9f07 630
3706e2a0 631but note that if you're trying to add a middleware, you should simply use
632Web::Simple's direct support for doing so.
c21c9f07 633
445b3ea0 634=head1 EXPORTED SUBROUTINES
c21c9f07 635
636=head2 response_filter
637
638 response_filter {
639 # Hide errors from the user because we hates them, preciousss
445b3ea0 640 if (ref($_[0]) eq 'ARRAY' && $_[0]->[0] == 500) {
641 $_[0] = [ 200, @{$_[0]}[1..$#{$_[0]}] ];
c21c9f07 642 }
445b3ea0 643 return $_[0];
c21c9f07 644 };
645
646The response_filter subroutine is designed for use inside dispatch subroutines.
647
648It creates and returns a special dispatcher that always matches, and calls
649the block passed to it as a filter on the result of running the rest of the
650current dispatch chain.
651
652Thus the filter above runs further dispatch as normal, but if the result of
653dispatch is a 500 (Internal Server Error) response, changes this to a 200 (OK)
654response without altering the headers or body.
655
656=head2 redispatch_to
657
658 redispatch_to '/other/url';
659
660The redispatch_to subroutine is designed for use inside dispatch subroutines.
661
662It creates and returns a special dispatcher that always matches, and instead
663of continuing dispatch re-delegates it to the start of the dispatch process,
664but with the path of the request altered to the supplied URL.
665
950d8829 666Thus if you receive a POST to '/some/url' and return a redispatch to
c21c9f07 667'/other/url', the dispatch behaviour will be exactly as if the same POST
668request had been made to '/other/url' instead.
669
3895385d 670Note, this is not the same as returning an HTTP 3xx redirect as a response;
38d5b336 671rather it is a much more efficient internal process.
3895385d 672
8c4ffad3 673=head1 CHANGES BETWEEN RELEASES
445b3ea0 674
675=head2 Changes between 0.004 and 0.005
676
677=over 4
678
679=item * dispatch {} replaced by declaring a dispatch_request method
680
681dispatch {} has gone away - instead, you write:
682
683 sub dispatch_request {
e4122532 684 my $self = shift;
445b3ea0 685 sub (GET /foo/) { ... },
686 ...
687 }
688
689Note that this method is still -returning- the dispatch code - just like
690dispatch did.
691
e4122532 692Also note that you need the 'my $self = shift' since the magic $self
693variable went away.
694
695=item * the magic $self variable went away.
696
697Just add 'my $self = shift;' while writing your 'sub dispatch_request {'
698like a normal perl method.
699
445b3ea0 700=item * subdispatch deleted - all dispatchers can now subdispatch
701
702In earlier releases you needed to write:
703
704 subdispatch sub (/foo/...) {
705 ...
706 [
707 sub (GET /bar/) { ... },
708 ...
709 ]
710 }
711
712As of 0.005, you can instead write simply:
713
714 sub (/foo/...) {
715 ...
716 (
717 sub (GET /bar/) { ... },
718 ...
719 )
720 }
8c4ffad3 721
c2150f7d 722=back
723
8c4ffad3 724=head2 Changes since Antiquated Perl
725
726=over 4
727
728=item * filter_response renamed to response_filter
729
730This is a pure rename; a global search and replace should fix it.
731
c21c9f07 732=item * dispatch [] changed to dispatch {}
8c4ffad3 733
734Simply changing
735
736 dispatch [ sub(...) { ... }, ... ];
737
738to
739
740 dispatch { sub(...) { ... }, ... };
741
742should work fine.
743
744=back
745
fb771406 746=head1 DEVELOPMENT HISTORY
747
748Web::Simple was originally written to form part of my Antiquated Perl talk for
749Italian Perl Workshop 2009, but in writing the bloggery example I realised
750that having a bare minimum system for writing web applications that doesn't
751drive me insane was rather nice and decided to spend my attempt at nanowrimo
752for 2009 improving and documenting it to the point where others could use it.
753
58fd1f7f 754The Antiquated Perl talk can be found at L<http://www.shadowcat.co.uk/archive/conference-video/> and the slides are reproduced in this distribution under
755L<Web::Simple::AntiquatedPerl>.
fb771406 756
8c4ffad3 757=head1 COMMUNITY AND SUPPORT
758
759=head2 IRC channel
760
761irc.perl.org #web-simple
762
763=head2 No mailing list yet
764
765Because mst's non-work email is a bombsite so he'd never read it anyway.
766
767=head2 Git repository
768
769Gitweb is on http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/ and the clone URL is:
770
771 git clone git://git.shadowcat.co.uk/catagits/Web-Simple.git
772
773=head1 AUTHOR
774
c2150f7d 775Matt S. Trout (mst) <mst@shadowcat.co.uk>
8c4ffad3 776
777=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
778
48904f80 779Devin Austin (dhoss) <dhoss@cpan.org>
780
781Arthur Axel 'fREW' Schmidt <frioux@gmail.com>
782
c2150f7d 783gregor herrmann (gregoa) <gregoa@debian.org>
8c4ffad3 784
48904f80 785John Napiorkowski (jnap) <jjn1056@yahoo.com>
786
787Josh McMichael <jmcmicha@linus222.gsc.wustl.edu>
788
f42be65c 789Justin Hunter (arcanez) <justin.d.hunter@gmail.com>
48904f80 790
791Kjetil Kjernsmo <kjetil@kjernsmo.net>
792
793markie <markie@nulletch64.dreamhost.com>
794
795Christian Walde (Mithaldu) <walde.christian@googlemail.com>
796
797nperez <nperez@cpan.org>
798
799Robin Edwards <robin.ge@gmail.com>
800
3c39d241 801Andrew Rodland (hobbs) <andrew@cleverdomain.org>
802
8c4ffad3 803=head1 COPYRIGHT
804
f42be65c 805Copyright (c) 2011 the Web::Simple L</AUTHOR> and L</CONTRIBUTORS>
8c4ffad3 806as listed above.
807
808=head1 LICENSE
809
810This library is free software and may be distributed under the same terms
811as perl itself.
812
3583ca04 813=cut