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Maypole::Manual::Workflow(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Maypole::Manual::Workflow(3)

Maypole::Manual::Workflow - Maypole's Request Workflow

This chapter describes the progress of a request through Maypole.

An application based on "Maypole" provides an Apache or CGI handler, and eventually delivers a page. This document explains how that happens, and how to influence it. We'll use the "BeerDB" project as our example. Here's a diagram that gives an overview:

                              config $h
                                  |
                            Maypole $r
    Apache::Request               |
         +---- $r->get_request ---+
        $ar                       |
                                  |
                          $r->parse_location
                                  |
                          $r->is_applicable
                                  |
    BeerDB::Beer        $r->call_authenticate
       ->authenticate ------------+------------ $r->authenticate
                                  |
                         $r->additional_data
                                  |
                    $r->model_class->process($r)
                                  |
                     $r->view_object->process($r)

When the first request comes in, the application class will call its own "init" method, inherited from Maypole. This creates a new view object.

Once we have initialized, the handler obtains the configuration for your class, and puts it into a new object. We'll call this a request object for the purposes of this document; it will be a new "BeerDB" object.

Next, the handler calls "get_request" on the new object to have it store a copy of the "Apache::Request". Of course, if you're not using Apache, you might want to subclass this method to return something that looks like an "Apache::Request" object, and possibly also subclass the next stage too to get more control over what methods are called on your "A::R"-lookalike. "get_request" is expected to put the object in the "ar" slot of the request object.

Typically, the details of the request will be passed in the URL. This is done with the "parse_location" method, which is expected to populate several slots of the request object. First, "table" and "action" should be populated with the name of the table and the action parts of the URL. Any other arguments should be placed in a listref in the "args" slot, and GET and POST parameters should be arranged into a hash and placed in the "query" and "params" slots, respectively.

Some people may not like the idea of passing everything around in the URL; this is the method to override for you. Of course, you'll also need to provide your own default templates to construct links using your preferred format.

Next, the "is_applicable" method works out if this is actually something that "Maypole" should care about - whether the class exists in the application, whether it supports the given action, and so on. The action is "supported" if it exists in the model class (or its ancestors) and is marked with the ":Exported" attribute; this stops web users from firing off random subroutines in your code.

This should return an Apache status code; "OK" if the request should proceed, "DECLINED" if it should be passed on to the default handlers, or whatever other codes for permissions problems.

We then look for an appropriate "authenticate" method to call; first it will try calling the "authenticate" method of the model class, or, if that does not exist, the "authenticate" method on itself. By default, this allows access to everyone for everything. Your "authenticate" methods must return an Apache status code: "OK" or "DECLINED". These codes are defined by the Maypole::Constants module, which is automatically used by your application.

You can write an "additional_data" method to do any additional fiddling with the request object before it is despatched. Specifically, it allows you to add to the "template_args" slot, which is a hash of arguments to be added to the template, like this:

    sub additional_data {
        my $self = shift;
        $self->{template_args}{answer} = 42;
    }

which adds a new template variable "answer" with the value 42.

Asking the model class to "process" the current request allows it to do any work it needs for the given command, and populate the "objects" and "template" slots of the request.

The model's "process" method is usually a thin wrapper around the action that we have selected. It sets the template name to the name of the action, fills "objects" with an object of that class whose ID comes from the URL arguments if there is one. For instance, "/beer/foo/12" will do the moral equivalent of

    $r->objects([ BeerDB::Beer->retrieve(12) ]);

Then it calls the right method: in this case, the "foo" method with the request object. This method will usually do any actions which are required, including modifying the list of objects to be passed to the template, or the name of the template to be called.

Now the view class has its "process" method called. It finds the appropriate templates and calls the Template Toolkit processor.

The template processor is handed the objects, the template name, and various other bits and pieces, and tries to find the right template. It does this by looking first for "/beer/foo": that is, a specific template appropriate to the class. Next, it looks at "/custom/foo", a local modification, before looking for "/factory/foo", one of the default templates that came with "Maypole".

The view puts the template's output in the "$r->{output}" slot. The application's "handler" method calls the "send_output" method to push it to the web server.

If you're looking for the list of variables that are passed to the Template Toolkit template by default, you'll find it in the View chapter.
Contents, Next The Beer Database Revisited, Previous Standard Templates and Actions
2005-11-23 perl v5.32.1

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