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NAMEWeb::Simple::Application - A base class for your Web-Simple applicationDESCRIPTIONThis is a base class for your Web::Simple application. You probably don't need to construct this class yourself, since Web::Simple does the 'heavy lifting' for you in that regards.METHODSThis class exposes the following public methods.default_configMerges with the "config" initializer to provide configuration information for your application. For example:sub default_config { ( title => 'Bloggery', posts_dir => $FindBin::Bin.'/posts', ); } Now, the "config" attribute of $self will be set to a HashRef containing keys 'title' and 'posts_dir'. The keys from default_config are merged into any config supplied, so if you construct your application like: MyWebSimpleApp::Web->new( config => { title => 'Spoon', environment => 'dev' } ) then "config" will contain: { title => 'Spoon', posts_dir => '/path/to/myapp/posts', environment => 'dev' } run_if_scriptThe run_if_script method is designed to be used at the end of the script or .pm file where your application class is defined - for example:## my_web_simple_app.pl #!/usr/bin/env perl use Web::Simple 'HelloWorld'; { package HelloWorld; sub dispatch_request { sub (GET) { [ 200, [ 'Content-type', 'text/plain' ], [ 'Hello world!' ] ] }, sub () { [ 405, [ 'Content-type', 'text/plain' ], [ 'Method not allowed' ] ] } } } HelloWorld->run_if_script; This returns a true value, so your file is now valid as a module - so require 'my_web_simple_app.pl'; my $hw = HelloWorld->new; will work fine (and you can rename it to lib/HelloWorld.pm later to make it a real use-able module). However, it detects if it's being run as a script (via testing $0) and if so attempts to do the right thing. If run under a CGI environment, your application will execute as a CGI. If run under a FastCGI environment, your application will execute as a FastCGI process (this works both for dynamic shared-hosting-style FastCGI and for apache FastCgiServer style setups). If run from the commandline with a URL path, it runs a GET request against that path - $ perl -Ilib examples/hello-world/hello-world.cgi / 200 OK Content-Type: text/plain Hello world! You can also provide a method name - $ perl -Ilib examples/hello-world/hello-world.cgi POST / 405 Method Not Allowed Content-Type: text/plain Method not allowed For a POST or PUT request, pairs on the command line will be treated as form variables. For any request, pairs on the command line ending in : are treated as headers, and 'Content:' will set the request body - $ ./myapp POST / Accept: text/html form_field_name form_field_value $ ./myapp POST / Content-Type: text/json Content: '{ "json": "here" }' The body of the response is sent to STDOUT and the headers to STDERR, so $ ./myapp GET / >index.html will generally do the right thing. To send basic authentication credentials, use user:pass@ syntax - $ ./myapp GET bob:secret@/protected/path Additionally, you can treat the file as though it were a standard PSGI application file (*.psgi). For example you can start up up with "plackup" plackup my_web_simple_app.pl or "starman" starman my_web_simple_app.pl to_psgi_appThis method is called by "run_if_script" to create the PSGI app coderef for use via Plack and plackup. If you want to globally add middleware, you can override this method:use Web::Simple 'HelloWorld'; { package HelloWorld; use Plack::Builder; around 'to_psgi_app', sub { my ($orig, $self) = (shift, shift); my $app = $self->$orig(@_); builder { enable ...; ## whatever middleware you want $app; }; }; } This method can also be used to mount a Web::Simple application within a separate "*.psgi" file - use strictures 1; use Plack::Builder; use WSApp; use AnotherWSApp; builder { mount '/' => WSApp->to_psgi_app; mount '/another' => AnotherWSApp->to_psgi_app; }; This method can be called as a class method, in which case it implicitly calls ->new, or as an object method ... in which case it doesn't. runUsed for running your application under stand-alone CGI and FCGI modes.I should document this more extensively but run_if_script will call it when you need it, so don't worry about it too much. run_test_requestmy $res = $app->run_test_request(GET => '/' => %headers); my $res = $app->run_test_request(POST => '/' => %headers_or_form); my $res = $app->run_test_request($http_request); Accepts either an HTTP::Request object or ($method, $path) and runs that request against the application, returning an HTTP::Response object. If the HTTP method is POST or PUT, then a series of pairs can be passed after this to create a form style message body. If you need to test an upload, then create an HTTP::Request object by hand or use the "POST" subroutine provided by HTTP::Request::Common. If you prefix the URL with 'user:pass@' this will be converted into an Authorization header for HTTP basic auth: my $res = $app->run_test_request( GET => 'bob:secret@/protected/resource' ); If pairs are passed where the key ends in :, it is instead treated as a headers, so: my $res = $app->run_test_request( POST => '/', 'Accept:' => 'text/html', some_form_key => 'value' ); will do what you expect. You can also pass a special key of Content: to set the request body: my $res = $app->run_test_request( POST => '/', 'Content-Type:' => 'text/json', 'Content:' => '{ "json": "here" }', ); AUTHORSSee Web::Simple for authors.COPYRIGHT AND LICENSESee Web::Simple for the copyright and license.
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