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Operating Systems Linux Looking for a very leightweight Live-CD Distro Post 302524284 by PoopNoodle on Monday 23rd of May 2011 12:30:39 AM
Old 05-23-2011
Gotta throw DSL in as well.
 

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Plack::Builder(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Plack::Builder(3pm)

NAME
Plack::Builder - OO and DSL to enable Plack Middlewares SYNOPSIS
# in .psgi use Plack::Builder; my $app = sub { ... }; builder { enable "Deflater"; enable "Session", store => "File"; enable "Debug", panels => [ qw(DBITrace Memory Timer) ]; enable "+My::Plack::Middleware"; $app; }; # use URLMap builder { mount "/foo" => builder { enable "Foo"; $app; }; mount "/bar" => $app2; mount "http://example.com/" => builder { $app3 }; }; # using OO interface my $builder = Plack::Builder->new(); $builder->add_middleware('Foo', opt => 1); $app = $builder->mount('/app' => $app); $app = $builder->to_app($app); DESCRIPTION
Plack::Builder gives you a quick domain specific language (DSL) to wrap your application with Plack::Middleware subclasses. The middleware you're trying to use should use Plack::Middleware as a base class to use this DSL, inspired by Rack::Builder. Whenever you call "enable" on any middleware, the middleware app is pushed to the stack inside the builder, and then reversed when it actually creates a wrapped application handler. "Plack::Middleware::" is added as a prefix by default. So: builder { enable "Foo"; enable "Bar", opt => "val"; $app; }; is syntactically equal to: $app = Plack::Middleware::Bar->wrap($app, opt => "val"); $app = Plack::Middleware::Foo->wrap($app); In other words, you're supposed to "enable" middleware from outer to inner. INLINE MIDDLEWARE
Plack::Builder allows you to code middleware inline using a nested code reference. If the first argument to "enable" is a code reference, it will be passed an $app and is supposed to return another code reference which is PSGI application that consumes $env in runtime. So: builder { enable sub { my $app = shift; sub { my $env = shift; # do preprocessing my $res = $app->($env); # do postprocessing return $res; }; }; $app; }; is equal to: my $mw = sub { my $app = shift; sub { my $env = shift; $app->($env) }; }; $app = $mw->($app); URLMap support Plack::Builder has a native support for Plack::App::URLMap with "mount" method. use Plack::Builder; my $app = builder { mount "/foo" => $app1; mount "/bar" => builder { enable "Foo"; $app2; }; }; See Plack::App::URLMap's "map" method to see what they mean. With builder you can't use "map" as a DSL, for the obvious reason :) NOTE: Once you use "mount" in your builder code, you have to use "mount" for all the paths, including the root path ("/"). You can't have the default app in the last line of "builder" like: my $app = sub { my $env = shift; ... }; builder { mount "/foo" => sub { ... }; $app; # THIS DOESN'T WORK }; You'll get warnings saying that your mount configuration will be ignored. Instead you should use "mount "/" => ..." in the last line to set the default fallback app. builder { mount "/foo" => sub { ... }; mount "/" => $app; } Note that the "builder" DSL returns a whole new PSGI application, which means o "builder { ... }" should normally the last statement of a ".psgi" file, because the return value of "builder" is the application that actually is executed. o You can nest your "builder" block, mixed with "mount" (see URLMap support above): builder { mount "/foo" => builder { mount "/bar" => $app; } } will locate the $app under "/foo/bar" since the inner "builder" block puts it under "/bar" and it results a new PSGI application which is located under "/foo" because of the outer "builder" block. CONDITIONAL MIDDLEWARE SUPPORT
You can use "enable_if" to conditionally enable middleware based on the runtime environment. See Plack::Middleware::Conditional for details. SEE ALSO
Plack::Middleware Plack::App::URLMap Plack::Middleware::Conditional perl v5.14.2 2012-05-17 Plack::Builder(3pm)
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