package Apache::MVC;
-use base 'Maypole';
-use Apache;
-use Apache::Request;
+
use strict;
use warnings;
-our $VERSION = "0.3";
+
+use base 'Maypole';
+use mod_perl;
+
+if ( $mod_perl::VERSION >= 1.99 ) {
+ require Apache2;
+ require Apache::RequestRec;
+ require Apache::RequestUtil;
+ require APR::URI;
+}
+else { require Apache }
+require Apache::Request;
+
+our $VERSION = "0.4";
sub get_request {
- shift->{ar} = Apache::Request->new(Apache->request);
+ my ( $self, $r ) = @_;
+ $self->{ar} = Apache::Request->new($r);
}
sub parse_location {
my $self = shift;
$self->{path} = $self->{ar}->uri;
my $loc = $self->{ar}->location;
- $self->{path} =~ s/^$loc//; # I shouldn't need to do this?
- $self->{path} ||= "frontpage";
- my @pi = split /\//, $self->{path};
- shift @pi while @pi and !$pi[0];
- $self->{table} = shift @pi;
- $self->{action} = shift @pi;
- $self->{args} = \@pi;
-
- $self->{params} = { $self->{ar}->content };
- $self->{query} = { $self->{ar}->args };
+ no warnings 'uninitialized';
+ $self->{path} =~ s/^($loc)?\///;
+ $self->parse_path;
+ $self->parse_args;
+}
+
+sub parse_args {
+ my $self = shift;
+ $self->{params} = { $self->_mod_perl_args( $self->{ar} ) };
+ $self->{query} = { $self->_mod_perl_args( $self->{ar} ) };
+}
+
+sub send_output {
+ my $r = shift;
+ $r->{ar}->content_type( $r->{content_type} );
+ $r->{ar}->headers_out->set( "Content-Length" => length $r->{output} );
+ $r->{ar}->send_http_header;
+ $r->{ar}->print( $r->{output} );
+}
+
+sub get_template_root {
+ my $r = shift;
+ $r->{ar}->document_root . "/" . $r->{ar}->location;
+}
+
+sub _mod_perl_args {
+ my ( $self, $apr ) = @_;
+ my %args;
+ foreach my $key ( $apr->param ) {
+ my @values = $apr->param($key);
+ $args{$key} = @values == 1 ? $values[0] : \@values;
+ }
+ return %args;
}
1;
=head1 NAME
-Apache::MVC - Web front end to a data source
+Apache::MVC - Apache front-end to Maypole
=head1 SYNOPSIS
package BeerDB;
use base 'Apache::MVC';
- sub handler { Apache::MVC::handler("BeerDB", @_) }
- BeerDB->set_database("dbi:mysql:beerdb");
+ BeerDB->setup("dbi:mysql:beerdb");
BeerDB->config->{uri_base} = "http://your.site/";
BeerDB->config->{display_tables} = [qw[beer brewery pub style]];
# Now set up your database:
=head1 DESCRIPTION
-A large number of web programming tasks follow the same sort of pattern:
-we have some data in a datasource, typically a relational database. We
-have a bunch of templates provided by web designers. We have a number of
-things we want to be able to do with the database - create, add, edit,
-delete records, view records, run searches, and so on. We have a web
-server which provides input from the user about what to do. Something in
-the middle takes the input, grabs the relevant rows from the database,
-performs the action, constructs a page, and spits it out.
-
-This module aims to be the most generic and extensible "something in the
-middle".
-
-An example would help explain this best. You need to add a product
-catalogue to a company's web site. Users need to list the products in
-various categories, view a page on each product with its photo and
-pricing information and so on, and there needs to be a back-end where
-sales staff can add new lines, change prices, and delete out of date
-records. So, you set up the database, provide some default templates
-for the designers to customize, and then write an Apache handler like
-this:
-
- package ProductDatabase;
- use base 'Apache::MVC';
- __PACKAGE__->set_database("dbi:mysql:products");
- BeerDB->config->{uri_base} = "http://your.site/catalogue/";
- ProductDatabase::Product->has_a("category" => ProductDatabase::Category);
- # ...
-
- sub authenticate {
- my ($self, $request) = @_;
- return OK if $request->{ar}->get_remote_host() eq "sales.yourcorp.com";
- return OK if $request->{action} =~ /^(view|list)$/;
- return DECLINED;
- }
- 1;
+Maypole is a Perl web application framework to Java's struts. It is
+essentially completely abstracted, and so doesn't know anything about
+how to talk to the outside world. C<Apache::MVC> is a mod_perl based
+subclass of Maypole.
-You then put the following in your Apache config:
+To use it, you need to create a package which represents your entire
+application. In our example above, this is the C<BeerDB> package.
- <Location /catalogue>
- SetHandler perl-script
- PerlHandler ProductDatabase
- </Location>
+This needs to first inherit from C<Apache::MVC>, and then call setup.
+This will give your package an Apache-compatible C<handler> subroutine,
+and then pass any parameters onto the C<setup_database> method of the
+model class. The default model class for Maypole uses L<Class::DBI> to
+map a database to classes, but this can be changed by messing with the
+configuration. (B<Before> calling setup.)
-And copy the templates found in F<templates/factory> into the
-F<catalogue/factory> directory off the web root. When the designers get
-back to you with custom templates, they are to go in
-F<catalogue/custom>. If you need to do override templates on a
-database-table-by-table basis, put the new template in
-F<catalogue/I<table>>.
+Next, you should configure your application through the C<config>
+method. Configuration parameters at present are:
-This will automatically give you C<add>, C<edit>, C<list>, C<view> and
-C<delete> commands; for instance, a product list, go to
+=over
- http://your.site/catalogue/product/list
+=item uri_base
-For a full example, see the included "beer database" application.
+You B<must> specify this; it is the base URI of the application, which
+will be used to construct links.
-=head1 HOW IT WORKS
+=item display_tables
-There's some documentation for the workflow in L<Apache::MVC::Workflow>,
-but the basic idea is that a URL part like C<product/list> gets
-translated into a call to C<ProductDatabase::Product-E<gt>list>. This
-propagates the request with a set of objects from the database, and then
-calls the C<list> template; first, a C<product/list> template if it
-exists, then the C<custom/list> and finally C<factory/list>.
+If you do not want all of the tables in the database to be accessible,
+then set this to a list of only the ones you want to display
-If there's another action you want the system to do, you need to either
-subclass the model class, and configure your class slightly differently:
+=item rows_per_page
- package ProductDatabase::Model;
- use base 'Apache::MVC::Model::CDBI';
+List output is paged if you set this to a positive number of rows.
- sub supersearch :Exported {
- my ($self, $request) = @_;
- # Do stuff, get a bunch of objects back
- $r->objects(\@objects);
- $r->template("template_name");
- }
+=back
- ProductDatabase->config->{model_class} = "ProductDatabase::Model";
+You should also set up relationships between your classes, such that,
+for instance, calling C<brewery> on a C<BeerDB::Beer> object returns an
+object representing its associated brewery.
+
+For a full example, see the included "beer database" application.
-(The C<:Exported> attribute means that the method can be called via the
-URL C</I<table>/supersearch/...>.)
+=head1 INSTALLATION
-Alternatively, you can put the method directly into the specific model
-class for the table:
+Create a driver module like the one above.
+
+Put the following in your Apache config:
+
+ <Location /beer>
+ SetHandler perl-script
+ PerlHandler BeerDB
+ </Location>
+
+Copy the templates found in F<templates/factory> into the
+F<beer/factory> directory off the web root. When the designers get
+back to you with custom templates, they are to go in
+F<beer/custom>. If you need to do override templates on a
+database-table-by-table basis, put the new template in
+F<beer/I<table>>.
+
+This will automatically give you C<add>, C<edit>, C<list>, C<view> and
+C<delete> commands; for instance, a list of breweries, go to
- sub ProductDatabase::Product::supersearch :Exported { ... }
+ http://your.site/beer/brewery/list
-By default, the view class uses Template Toolkit as the template
-processor, and the model class uses C<Class::DBI>; it may help you to be
-familiar with these modules before going much further with this,
-although I expect there to be other subclasses for other templating
-systems and database abstraction layers as time goes on. The article at
-C<http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2003/07/15/nocode.html> is a great
-introduction to the process we're trying to automate.
+For more information about how the system works and how to extend it,
+see L<Maypole>.
=head1 AUTHOR
Simon Cozens, C<simon@cpan.org>
+Marcus Ramberg, C<marcus@thefeed.no>
+Screwed up by Sebastian Riedel, C<sri@oook.de>
=head1 LICENSE