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HTML::Mason::Interp(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
HTML::Mason::Interp(3) |
HTML::Mason::Interp - Mason Component Interpreter
my $i = HTML::Mason::Interp->new (data_dir=>'/usr/local/mason',
comp_root=>'/usr/local/www/htdocs/',
...other params...);
Interp is the Mason workhorse, executing components and routing their output and
errors to all the right places. In a mod_perl environment, Interp objects are
handed off immediately to an ApacheHandler object which internally calls the
Interp implementation methods. In that case the only user method is the
new() constructor.
- autohandler_name
- File name used for autohandlers. Default is "autohandler". If
this is set to an empty string ("") then autohandlers are turned
off entirely.
- buffer_preallocate_size
- Number of bytes to preallocate in the output buffer for each request.
Defaults to 0. Setting this to, say, your maximum page size (or close to
it) can reduce the number of reallocations Perl performs as components add
to the output buffer.
- code_cache_max_size
- Specifies the maximum number of components that should be held in the
in-memory code cache. The default is 'unlimited', meaning no components
will ever be discarded; Mason can perform certain optimizations in this
mode. Setting this to zero disables the code cache entirely. See the code
cache section of the administrator's manual for further details.
- comp_root
- The component root marks the top of your component hierarchy and defines
how component paths are translated into real file paths. For example, if
your component root is /usr/local/httpd/docs, a component path of
/products/index.html translates to the file
/usr/local/httpd/docs/products/index.html.
Under Apache and CGI, comp_root defaults to the server's
document root. In standalone mode comp_root defaults to the current
working directory.
This parameter may be either a scalar or an array reference.
If it is a scalar, it should be a filesystem path indicating the
component root. If it is an array reference, it should be of the
following form:
[ [ foo => '/usr/local/foo' ],
[ bar => '/usr/local/bar' ] ]
This is an array of two-element array references, not a hash.
The "keys" for each path must be unique and their
"values" must be filesystem paths. These paths will be
searched in the provided order whenever a component path is resolved.
For example, given the above component roots and a component path of
/products/index.html, Mason would search first for
/usr/local/foo/products/index.html, then for
/usr/local/bar/products/index.html.
The keys are used in several ways. They help to distinguish
component caches and object files between different component roots, and
they appear in the "title()" of a
component.
When you specify a single path for a component root, this is
actually translated into
[ [ MAIN => path ] ]
If you have turned on dynamic_comp_root, you may modify the
component root(s) of an interpreter between requests by calling
"$interp->comp_root" with a value.
However, the path associated with any given key may not change between
requests. For example, if the initial component root is
[ [ foo => '/usr/local/foo' ],
[ bar => '/usr/local/bar' ], ]
then it may not be changed to
[ [ foo => '/usr/local/bar' ],
[ bar => '/usr/local/baz' ],
but it may be changed to
[ [ foo => '/usr/local/foo' ],
[ blarg => '/usr/local/blarg' ] ]
In other words, you may add or remove key/path pairs but not
modify an already-used key/path pair. The reason for this restriction is
that the interpreter maintains a component cache per key that would
become invalid if the associated paths were to change.
- compiler
- The Compiler object to associate with this Interpreter. By default a new
object of class compiler_class will be created.
- compiler_class
- The class to use when creating a compiler. Defaults to
HTML::Mason::Compiler.
- data_dir
- The data directory is a writable directory that Mason uses for various
features and optimizations: for example, component object files and data
cache files. Mason will create the directory on startup, if necessary, and
set its permissions according to the web server User/Group.
Under Apache, data_dir defaults to a directory called
"mason" under the Apache server root. You will need to change
this on certain systems that assign a high-level server root such as
/usr!
In non-Apache environments, data_dir has no default. If it is
left unspecified, Mason will not use object files, and the default data
cache class will be "MemoryCache"
instead of "FileCache".
- dynamic_comp_root
- True or false, defaults to false. Indicates whether the comp_root can be
modified on this interpreter between requests. Mason can perform a few
optimizations with a fixed component root, so you should only set this to
true if you actually need it.
- escape_flags
- A hash reference of escape flags to set for this object. See the section
on the set_escape method for more details.
- ignore_warnings_expr
- Regular expression indicating which warnings to ignore when loading
components. Any warning that is not ignored will prevent the component
from being loaded and executed. For example:
ignore_warnings_expr =>
'Global symbol.*requires explicit package'
If set to undef, all warnings are heeded. If set to '.',
warnings are turned off completely as a specially optimized case.
By default, this is set to 'Subroutine .* redefined'. This
allows you to declare global subroutines inside <%once> sections
and not receive an error when the component is reloaded.
- object_file_extension
- Extension to add to the end of object files. Default is
".obj".
- preloads
- A list of component paths, optionally with glob wildcards, to load when
the interpreter initializes. e.g.
preloads => ['/foo/index.html','/bar/*.pl']
Default is the empty list. For maximum performance, this
should only be used for components that are frequently viewed and rarely
updated. See the preloading components section of the administrator's
manual for further details.
As mentioned in the developer's manual, a component's
"<%once>" section is executed
when it is loaded. For preloaded components, this means that this
section will be executed before a Mason or Apache request exist, so
preloading a component that uses $m or
$r in a
"<%once>" section will fail.
- request_class
- The class to use when creating requests. Defaults to
HTML::Mason::Request.
- resolver
- The Resolver object to associate with this Compiler. By default a new
object of class resolver_class will be created.
- resolver_class
- The class to use when creating a resolver. Defaults to
HTML::Mason::Resolver::File.
- static_source
- True or false, default is false. When false, Mason checks the timestamp of
the component source file each time the component is used to see if it has
changed. This provides the instant feedback for source changes that is
expected for development. However it does entail a file stat for each
component executed.
When true, Mason assumes that the component source tree is
unchanging: it will not check component source files to determine if the
memory cache or object file has expired. This can save many file stats
per request. However, in order to get Mason to recognize a component
source change, you must flush the memory cache and remove object files.
See static_source_touch_file for one easy way to arrange this.
We recommend turning this mode on in your production sites if
possible, if performance is of any concern.
- static_source_touch_file
- Specifies a filename that Mason will check once at the beginning of of
every request. When the file timestamp changes, Mason will (1) clear its
in-memory component cache, and (2) remove object files if they have not
already been deleted by another process.
This provides a convenient way to implement static_source
mode. All you need to do is make sure that a single file gets touched
whenever components change. For Mason's part, checking a single file at
the beginning of a request is much cheaper than checking every component
file when static_source=0.
- use_object_files
- True or false, default is true. Specifies whether Mason creates object
files to save the results of component parsing. You may want to turn off
object files for disk space reasons, but otherwise this should be left
alone.
All of the above properties have standard accessor methods of the same name.
Only comp_root and ignore_warnings_expr can be modified in an existing
interpreter; the rest are read-only.
- apply_escapes ($text, $flags, [more flags...])
- This method applies a one or more escapes to a piece of text. The escapes
are specified by giving their flag. Each escape is applied to the text in
turn, after which the now-modified text is returned.
- remove_escape ($name)
- Given an escape name, this removes that escape from the interpreter's
known escapes. If the name is not recognized, it is simply ignored.
- set_escape ($name => see below])
- This method is called to add an escape flag to the list of known escapes
for the interpreter. The flag may only consist of the characters matching
"\w" and the dash (-). It must start
with an alpha character or an underscore (_).
The right hand side may be one of several things. It can be a
subroutine reference. It can also be a string match
"/^\w+$/", in which case it is assumed
to be the name of a subroutine in the
"HTML::Mason::Escapes" module.
Finally, if it is a string that does not match the above regex, then it
is assumed to be "eval"able code,
which will return a subroutine reference.
When setting these with
"PerlSetVar" directives in an Apache
configuration file, you can set them like this:
PerlSetVar MasonEscapeFlags "h => \&HTML::Mason::Escapes::basic_html_escape"
PerlSetVar MasonEscapeFlags "flag => \&subroutine"
PerlSetVar MasonEscapeFlags "uc => sub { ${$_[0]} = uc ${$_[0]}; }"
PerlAddVar MasonEscapeFlags "thing => other_thing"
- comp_exists (path)
- Given an absolute component path, this method returns a boolean
value indicating whether or not a component exists for that path.
- exec (comp, args...)
- Creates a new HTML::Mason::Request object for the given comp and
args, and executes it. The return value is the return value of
comp, if any.
This is useful for running Mason outside of a web environment.
See "using Mason from a standalone script" in
HTML::Mason::Admin for examples.
This method isn't generally useful in a mod_perl environment;
see subrequests instead.
- flush_code_cache
- Empties the component cache. When using Perl 5.00503 or earlier, you
should call this when finished with an interpreter, in order to remove
circular references that would prevent the interpreter from being
destroyed.
- load (path)
- Returns the component object corresponding to an absolute component
"path", or undef if none exists. Dies
with an error if the component fails to load because of a syntax
error.
- make_component (comp_source => ... )
- make_component (comp_file => ... )
- This method compiles Mason component source code and returns a Component
object. The source may be passed in as a string in
"comp_source", or as a filename in
"comp_file". When using
"comp_file", the filename is specified
as a path on the file system, not as a path relative to Mason's component
root (see $m->fetch_comp for that).
If Mason encounters an error during processing, an exception
will be thrown.
Example of usage:
# Make an anonymous component
my $anon_comp =
eval { $interp->make_component
( comp_source => '<%perl>my $name = "World";</%perl>Hello <% $name %>!' ) };
die $@ if $@;
$m->comp($anon_comp);
- make_request (@request_params)
- This method creates a Mason request object. The arguments to be passed are
the same as those for the
"HTML::Mason::Request->new"
constructor or its relevant subclass. This method will likely only be of
interest to those attempting to write new handlers or to subclass
"HTML::Mason::Interp". If you want to
create a subrequest, see subrequests instead.
- purge_code_cache ()
- Called during request execution in order to clear out the code cache.
Mainly useful to subclasses that may want to take some custom action upon
clearing the cache.
- set_global ($varname, [values...])
- This method sets a global to be used in components.
"varname" is a variable name, optionally
preceded with a prefix ("$",
"@", or
"%"); if the prefix is omitted then
"$" is assumed.
"varname" is followed by a value, in the
case of a scalar, or by one or more values in the case of a list or hash.
For example:
# Set a global variable $dbh containing the database handle
$interp->set_global(dbh => DBI->connect(...));
# Set a global hash %session from a local hash
$interp->set_global('%session', %s);
The global is set in the package that components run in:
usually "HTML::Mason::Commands",
although this can be overridden via the in_package parameter. The lines
above, for example, are equivalent to:
$HTML::Mason::Commands::dbh = DBI->connect(...);
%HTML::Mason::Commands::session = %s;
assuming that in_package has not been changed.
Any global that you set should also be registered with the
allow_globals parameter; otherwise you'll get warnings from
"strict".
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