Ariadne 2.6.1 (Default branch)


 
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Old 12-19-2008
Ariadne 2.6.1 (Default branch)

ImageAriadne is a Web Application Framework and Content Management System built with PHP. Itallows you to build complex Web applications and sites with ease. It takes care ofthe mundane stuff like internationalization, security, user management, templating, dataretrieval and storage, caching, and site management. It stores content in a structuredobject store that can be accessed through an extensive filesystem-like API.License: GNU General Public License (GPL)Changes:
This is the first PHP 5 version. It also has optional password expiry and SMB authentication. There is a new HTML editor that works with IE7 and 8 under Vista. Finally, there is a new style store interface (mod_ar).Image

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Web::Dispatch::HTTPMethods(3pm) 			User Contributed Perl Documentation			   Web::Dispatch::HTTPMethods(3pm)

NAME
Web::Dispatch::HTTPMethods - Helpers to make RESTFul Dispatchers Easier SYNOPSIS
package MyApp:WithHTTPMethods; use Web::Simple; use Web::Dispatch::HTTPMethods; sub as_text { [200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain'], [$_[0]->{REQUEST_METHOD}, $_[0]->{REQUEST_URI}] ] } sub dispatch_request { sub (/get) { GET { as_text(pop) } }, sub (/get-head) { GET { as_text(pop) } HEAD { [204,[],[]] }, }, sub (/get-post-put) { GET { as_text(pop) } ## NOTE: no commas separating http methods POST { as_text(pop) } PUT { as_text(pop) } }, } DESCRIPTION
Exports the most commonly used HTTP methods as subroutine helps into your Web::Simple based application. Additionally adds an automatic HTTP code 405 "Method Not Allow" if none of the HTTP methods match for a given dispatch and also adds a dispatch rule for "HEAD" if no "HEAD" exists but a "GET" does (in which case the "HEAD" returns the "GET" dispatch with an empty body.) We also add at the end of the chain support for the OPTIONS method (if you do not add one yourself. This defaults to http 200 ok + Allows http headers. Also we try to set correct HTTP headers such as "Allows" as makes sense based on your dispatch chain. The following dispatch chains are basically the same: sub dispatch_request { sub (/get-http-methods) { GET { [200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain'], ['Hello World']] } }, sub(/get-classic) { sub (GET) { [200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain'], ['Hello World']] }, sub (HEAD) { [200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain'], []] }, sub (OPTIONS) { [200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain', Allows=>'GET,HEAD,OPTIONS'], []]; }, sub () { [405, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain', Allows=>'GET,HEAD,OPTIONS'], ['Method Not Allowed']] }, } } The idea here is less boilerplate to distract the reader from the main point of the code and also to encapsulate some best practices. NOTE You currently cannot mix http method style and prototype sub style in the same scope, as in the following example: sub dispatch_request { sub (/get-head) { GET { ... } sub (HEAD) { ... } }, } If you try this our code will notice and issue a "die". If you have a good use case please bring it to the authors. EXPORTS This automatically exports the following subroutines: GET PUT POST HEAD DELETE OPTIONS AUTHOR
See Web::Simple for AUTHOR CONTRIBUTORS
See Web::Simple for CONTRIBUTORS COPYRIGHT
See Web::Simple for COPYRIGHT LICENSE
See Web::Simple for LICENSE perl v5.14.2 2012-05-07 Web::Dispatch::HTTPMethods(3pm)