GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
Jifty::Manual::Cookbook(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Jifty::Manual::Cookbook(3)

Jifty::Manual::Cookbook - Recipes for common tasks in Jifty

This document aims to provide solutions to common questions of "How do I do x with Jifty?" While the solutions here certainly aren't the only way to do things, they're generally the solutions the developers of Jifty use, and ones that work pretty well.

To get action result in your dispatcher:

    on '/=/your_action_name/'  => run {

        my $result = Jifty->web->response->result( 'action-moniker' );


    };

In your MyApp::Dispatcher:

    on POST '/=/catch' => run {
        my $data = get('data');

    };

In your action schema:

    use Jifty::Action schema {

        param image =>
            type is 'upload'
            label is _('Upload a file');

    };

to catch the file , in your "take_action" method:

    sub take_action {
        my $self = shift;

        my $fh = $self->argument_value('image');
        local $/;
        my $file_content = <$fh>
        close $fh;

    }

You need to modify your etc/config.yml file.

  Database:
    AutoUpgrade: 1
    CheckSchema: 1
    Database: twetter
    Driver: SQLite

Please change Driver "SQLite" to "Pg", and make sure that you've installed DBD::Pg.

You need an action in your application. Then run

  jifty action --name LdapSearch

in "lib/myApp/Action/LdapSearch.pm" add the "search" field

  use Jifty::Action schema {
    param search =>
        autocompleter is \&ldap_search;
  }

we need Net::LDAP and an accessor to our LDAP value.

  use Net::LDAP;

  __PACKAGE__->mk_accessors(qw(LDAP));

and we can write our "ldap_search" function. Search need at least 3 characters and return an array of "DisplayName (login)"

  sub ldap_search {
    my $self = shift;
    my $search = shift;
    my @res;
    if (length $search > 2) {
         if (! $self->LDAP() ) {
            $self->LDAP( Net::LDAP->new('ldap.myorg.org');
            $self->LDAP()->bind( );
        }

        $self->LDAP()->search(
          base    => 'ou=people,dc=myorg,dc=org',
          filter => '(cn='.$filter.')',
          attrs   =>  ['uid','cn','givenname','displayname'],
          sizelimit => 10
          );

        foreach my $entr ( $result->sorted('cn') ) {
            push @res, $entr->get_value('displayname').' ('.$entr->get_value('uid').')';
        }
    }
    return @res;
  }

You could generate atom/rss feeds for virtually any model in your application. For instance, suppose there's a "Post" model (like a blog entry), you could use XML::Feed to do this:

    # In '/feed' template
    <%args>
    $type
    </%args>
    <%init>
    use XML::Feed;
    my $posts = MyApp::Model::PostCollection->new();
    $posts->unlimit();

    my $feed = XML::Feed->new( $type );
    $feed->title( Jifty->config->framework('ApplicationName') . " Feed" );
    $feed->link( Jifty->web->url );
    $feed->description( $feed->title );

    while( my $post = $posts->next ) {
        my $feed_entry = XML::Feed::Entry->new($type);
        $feed_entry->title($post->title);
        $feed_entry->author($post->author->username);
        $feed_entry->link( Jifty->web->url . "/posts/" . $post->id );
        $feed_entry->issued( $post->created_on );
        $feed_entry->summary( $post->body );
        $feed->add_entry( $feed_entry );
    }
    </%init>
    <% $feed->as_xml |n %>

And add this in MyApp/Dispatcher.pm to make URI look prettier:

    # note the case of the feed types
    on qr{^/feed/(Atom|RSS)}, run {
        set type => $1;
        show('/feed');
    };

And of course, you need to put these in your HTML header template (conventionally that's "/_elements/header"):

    <link rel="alternate" type="application/atom+xml" title="Atom" href="/feed/atom" />
    <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="/feed/rss" />

On your columns, specify either

    filters are 'Jifty::DBI::Filter::DateTime'

for a timestamp (date and time), or

    filters are 'Jifty::DBI::Filter::Date'

for just a date. Jifty will then automatically translate to and from DateTime objects for you when you access the column on your model. Additionally, if you add:

    filters are qw(Jifty::Filter::DateTime Jifty::DBI::Filter::Date)

Jifty will inspect the model's current_user for a "time_zone" method, and, if it exists, set the retrieved DateTime object's time zone appropriately. All dates are stored in UTC in the database, to ensure consistency.

In Rails, if you have a field named 'created_on', it's automatically set to the creation time of the record. How can I emulate this behaviour in Jifty ?

The trick here is to use Scalar::Defer. And declare your column like this:

    column created_on =>
        type is 'timestamp',
        label is 'Created On',
        default is defer { DateTime->now },
        filters are 'Jifty::DBI::Filter::DateTime';

This approach is not really accurate, if you render this field in a form, then the defer value is evaluated by the time of rendering, which might be way earlier then the creation of record. However, it is the easiest one.

If you're using the newly recommended "JIfty::DBI::Record schema {}" to declare your schema, you might find this trick not working at the moment. Please override model's "before_create" method instead:

    sub before_create {
        my ($self, $attr) = @_;
        $attr->{'created_on'} = DateTime->now;
    };

If a lot of column could change, you can override "_set" method:

    sub _set {
        my $self = shift;
        my ($val, $msg) = $self->SUPER::_set(@_);

        $self->SUPER::_set(column => 'changed_on', value => defer {DateTime->now});
        $self->SUPER::_set(column => 'from', 
            value => Jifty->web->request->remote_host. " / ". Jifty->web->current_user->user_object->name );

        return ($val, $msg);
    }

The best place to do this is probably in your application's Dispatcher. If, for example, you wanted to limit access to "/secret" to logged-in users, you could write:

    before qr'^/secret' => run {
        unless(Jifty->web->current_user->id) {
            Jifty->web->tangent(url => '/login');
        }
    };

Then, in your login form component, you would write something like:

    <% Jifty->web->return(to => '/', submit => $login_action) $>

The combination of the "tangent" and "return" will cause the user to be returned to wherever they came from. See Jifty::Continuation for more information.

If you want model-level access control, Jifty provides a ready-built ACL system for its models; See Jifty::Manual::AccessControl for details.

Finally, you can also allow or deny specific actions in the dispatcher, to limit who is able to perform what actions -- see Jifty::API.

Jifty provides a really simple way to run the application as a FastCGI server. The complete instructions and examples are in "jifty help FastCGI" for both Apache servers and Lighttpd servers. (Please "cd" to your app directory before running this command.)

You'll have to install "CGI::Fast" and "FCGI" module for this.

You can add actions to the request based on data in URLs, or anything else, using Jifty::Request::add_action. For example, suppose you wanted to make the path "/logout" log the user out, and redirect them to the home page. You could write:

    before '/logout' => {
        Jifty->web->request->add_action( class => 'Logout' );
        Jifty->web->request->add_action( class     => 'Redirect',
                                         arguments => { url => '/' });
    };

Sometimes you don't want to take an action based on input from HTML forms, but just want to change how the page is displayed, or do something similarly transient.

"Jifty::Action" is great, but it doesn't have to be the answer to everything. For cases like this, it's fine to use typical HTML "<input>s". Their values will be accessible as request arguments, so you can fetch them with "get" in the dispatcher, and they will be passed as arguments to top-level Mason components that list them in "<%args>". And don't worry about namespace conflicts with Jifty's auto-generated argument fields -- Jifty prefixes all its "name"s with "J:" so there won't be a problem.

Edit etc/config.yml and change Database->Version to a proper value (say, 0.0.2). Then run

    jifty schema --setup

Jifty would inspect the current database and perform proper actions. You could give a "--print" option to see the actual SQL statements:

    jifty schema --setup --print

In YourApp::Record, define a "_guess_table_name" sub that doesn't pluralise or pluralises differently.

Asking user to input something in a form is really common in a web app. For some certain form fields you want them to have a certain normalized/canonicalized form in the database, and you could do an ajax canonicalization in Jifty very easily. Let's say your User model needs a canonicalized "username" field to make sure those names are in lowercase. All you have to do is to define a method named "canonicalize_username" in your Model class, like this:

    package MyApp::Model::User;
    use base qw(MyApp::Record);

    sub canonicalize_username {
        my $class = shift;
        my $value = shift;
        return lc($value);
    }

If the form is generated by a "Jifty::Action::Record"-based action (all those autogenerated CRUD actions), then this is all you need to do. And that is probably 90% of cases. "Jifty::Action::Record" would check if there is a method named like "canonicalize_fieldname" when it is rendering form fields. If found, related javascript code is generated. You do not have to modify any code in your view. Jifty does it for you.

The ajax canonicalization happens when the input focus leaves that field. You would see the effect a bit later than the value in the field is changed.

Of course, you can apply the same trick to your own Action classes.

You can use the canonicalization to change data in other fields. For example you might want to update the postcode field when the suburb field is changed.

        $self->argument_value( other_field => "new value" )

Jifty has included iepngfix.htc by Angus Turnbull. The HTC file will automatically add PNG support to IMG elements and also supports any element with a "background-image" CSS property.

If you want to use this fix, please include this one line in your CSS file, with tag names to which you want the script applied:

    img, div { behavior: url(/static/js/iepngfix.htc) }

Alternatively, you can specify that this will apply to all tags like so:

    * { behavior: url(/static/js/iepngfix.htc) }

Check details from Angus himself. ( http://www.twinhelix.com/ )

See Jifty::Record for "brief_description" method.

Sometimes you need to render a column which is using "refers_to" to other model. but you want not to display unique id of the entries , but meaningful display name instead.

    use Jifty::DBI::Schema;
    use MyApp::Record schema {
            column colors => 
                refers_to MyApp::Model::Color;
    };

you can implement a "name" method in ModelColor:

    package MyApp::Model::Color;
    use Jifty::DBI::Schema;

    use MyApp::Record schema {

    column color_name =>
        type is 'varchar';

    };

    sub name {
        my $self = shift;
        return $self->color_name;
    }

so that, when you render an field which refers to MyApp::Model::Color , it will render a select widget with the mapping color names instead the unique id for you.

Sometimes you need two tables that both depend upon each other. That is, you have model A that needs to have a column pointing to Model B and a column in Model B pointing back to model A. The solution is very straight forward, just make sure you setup the base class before you load dependent model and this will just work. For example:

  package ModelA;
  use base qw/ MyApp::Record /;

  # Note that "use base..." comes first
  use ModelB;

  use Jifty::DBI::Schema;
  use MyApp::Record schema {
    column b_record => refers_to ModelB;
  };

  package ModelB;
  use base qw/ MyApp::Record /;

  # Note that "use base..." comes first
  use ModelA;

  use Jifty::DBI::Schema;
  use MyApp::Record schema {
    column a_record => refers_to ModelA;
  };

Everything should work as expected.

    use lib '/path/to/MyApp/lib';

    use Jifty;
    BEGIN { Jifty->new(no_request => 1); }

    use MyApp::Model::Foo;
    use MyApp::Action::FrobFoo;

From there you can use the model and action to access your data and run your actions like you normally would.

If you've actually installed your app into @INC, you can skip the "use lib" line.

In a "Template::Declare" view, do something like this:

    template 'image' => sub {
        # ...
        # create dynamic $image, for example using Chart::Clicker

        Jifty->web->response->content_type('image/png');
        Jifty->web->out($image);
    };

You need to create two one-to-many relationships with a linking table as you normally would in pure SQL. First, create your linking table by running:

  bin/jifty model --name LinkTable

Modify the newly created "MyApp::Model::LinkTable" class to add new columns linking back to either side of the table:

  use MyApp::Record schema {
      column left_table =>
          refers_to MyApp::Model::LeftTable;
      column right_table =>
          refers_to MyApp::Model::RightTable;
  };

Then create links to the linking table in "MyApp::Model::LeftTable":

  use MyApp::Record schema {
      # other columns...
      
      column right_things =>
          refers_to MyApp::Model::LinkTableCollection by 'left_table';
  };

Then create links to the linking table in "MyApp::Model::RightTable":

  use MyApp::Record schema {
      # other columns...
      
      column left_things =>
          refers_to MyApp::Model::LinkTableCollection by 'right_table';
  };

Now, add your records. To create a relationship between a row the two tables:

  my $left = MyApp::Model::LeftTable->new;
  $left->load(1);

  my $right = MyApp::Model::RightTable->new;
  $right->load(1);

  my $link = MyApp::Model::LinkTable->new;
  $link->create(
      left_table  => $left,
      right_table => $right,
  );

And to get all the "right things" from the left table, you need to make the extra hop in your loop:

  my $links = $left->right_things;
  while (my $link = $links->next) {
      my $right = $link->right_table;
  
      # Do stuff with $right
  }

In your application's dispatcher add the following:

    before '*' => run {
        # do nothing if user is logged in
        return if Jifty->web->current_user->id;

        # check all actions the request has. if at least one require login
        # then save them in a continuation and redirect to the login page
        tangent '/login' if
            grep $_->can('require_login') && $_->require_login,
            map $_->class, Jifty->web->request->actions;
    };

All you have to do now is to add "sub require_login { return 1 }" into actions which need this functionality.

Note that you can implement complex logic in the require_login method, but it's called as class method what set a lot of limitations. That would be really cool to have access to all data of the action in this method, so you are welcome to post a better solution.

In the Administration Interface, you can create new items. You enter the information and then the newly created item is appended to the end of the list immediately without reloading the page. You can use this recipe to do something like this, or to modify the page however you need based upon the result of any server-side action.

Render your action fields as you normally would. The key to the process is in the submit button. Here's how the Jifty::View::Declare::CRUD does this, as of this writing:

  Jifty->web->form->submit(
      label   => 'Create',
      onclick => [
          { submit       => $create },
          { refresh_self => 1 },
          {   element =>
                  Jifty->web->current_region->parent->get_element(
                  'div.list'),
              append => $self->fragment_for('view'),
              args   => {
                  object_type => $object_type,
                  id => { result_of => $create, name => 'id' },
              },
          },
      ]
  );

This could is embedded in a call to "outs()" for use with Template::Declare templating, but you could just as easily wrap the line above in "<% %>" for use with Mason templates. The keys is each item in the list past to "onclick":

  { submit => $create },

This tells Jifty submit the form elements related to the action referenced by $create only. Any other actions in the same form will be ignored.

  { refresh_self => 1 },

This tells the browser to refresh the current region (which will be the one containing the current submit button), so that the form can be reused. You could also modify this behavior to delete the region, if you wrote:

  { delete => Jifty->web->current_region },

The most complicated part is the most important:

  {   element =>
          Jifty->web->current_region->parent->get_element(
          'div.list'),
      append => $self->fragment_for('view'),
      args   => {
          object_type => $object_type,
          id => { result_of => $create, name => 'id' },
      },
  },
element
The "element" parameter tells the browser where to insert the new item. By using "Jifty->web->current_region->parent->get_element('div.list')", the new code will be appended to the first "div" tag found with a "list" class within the parent region. This assumes that you have added such an element to the parent region.

You could look up an arbitrary region using "Jifty->web->get_region('fully-qualified-region-name')" if you don't want to use the parent of the current region.

append
The "append" argument gives the path to the URL of the item to insert. By using "append", you are telling Jifty to add your new code to the end of the element given in "element". If you want to add it to the beginning, you can use "prepend" instead.
args
Last, but not least, you need to send arguments to the URL related to the action being performed. These can be anything you need for the your template to render the required code. In this example, two arguments are passed: "object_type" and "id". In the case of "object_type" a known value is passed. In the case of "id", the result of the action is passed, which is the key to the whole deal:

  id => { result_of => $create, name => 'id' },
    

This line tells Jifty that you want to set the "id" parameter sent to the URL given in "append", to the "id" set when $create is executed. That is, after running the action, Jifty will contact the URL and effectively perform:

  set id => $create->result->content('id');
    

It's a lot more complicated than that in actuality, but Jifty takes care of all the nasty details.

If you want to use a custom action other than the built-in create and want to pass something back other than the "id", you just need to set the result into the appropriate key on the "content" method of the Jifty::Result.

For more details on how you can customize this further, see Jifty::Manual::PageRegions, Jifty::Web::Form::Element, Jifty::Result, Jifty::Action, Jifty::Web::PageRegion, Jifty::Web, and Jifty::Request::Mapper.

2013-01-29 perl v5.32.1

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.