Dancer2::Core::App - encapsulation of Dancer2 packages
version 1.1.1
Everything a package that uses Dancer2 does is encapsulated into a Dancer2::Core::App
instance. This class defines all that can be done in such objects.
Mainly, it will contain all the route handlers, the configuration settings and the hooks that are defined in the calling package.
Note that with Dancer2, everything that is done within a package is scoped to that package, thanks to that encapsulation.
Used to cache the coderef that will return from back to the dispatcher, across an arbitrary number of stack frames.
We cache a destroyed session here; once this is set we must not attempt to retrieve the session from the cookie in the request. If no new session is created, this is set (with expiration) as a cookie to force the browser to expire the cookie.
Returns true if session engine has been defined and if either a session object has been instantiated or if a session cookie was found and not subsequently invalidated.
Changes the session ID used by the current session. This should be used on any change of privilege level, for example on login. Returns the new session ID.
Destroys the current session and ensures any subsequent session is created from scratch and not from the request session cookie
Creates instances of the given plugins and tie them to the app. The plugin classes are automatically loaded. Returns the newly created plugins.
The plugin names are expected to be without the leading Dancer2::Plugin
. I.e., use Foo
to mean Dancer2::Plugin::Foo
.
If a given plugin is already tied to the app, the already-existing instance will be used and returned by with_plugins
(think of it as using a role).
my @plugins = $app->with_plugins( 'Foo', 'Bar' );
# now $app uses the plugins Dancer2::Plugin::Foo
# and Dancer2::Plugin::Bar
Just like with_plugin
, but for a single plugin.
my $plugin = $app->with_plugin('Foo');
Register a new route handler.
$app->add_route(
method => 'get',
regexp => '/somewhere',
code => sub { ... },
options => $conditions,
);
Returns a new Dancer2::Core::Route object created with the passed arguments.
Returns a true value if a route already exists, otherwise false.
my $route = Dancer2::Core::Route->new(...);
if ($app->route_exists($route)) {
...
}
Sugar for getting the ordered list of all registered route regexps by method.
my $regexps = $app->routes_regexps_for( 'get' );
Returns an ArrayRef with the results.
Sets a redirect in the response object. If $destination is not an absolute URI, then it will be made into an absolute URI, relative to the URI in the request.
Flag the response object as 'halted'.
If called during request dispatch, immediately returns the response to the dispatcher and after hooks will not be run.
Flag the response object as 'passed'.
If called during request dispatch, immediately returns the response to the dispatcher.
Create a new request which is a clone of the current one, apart from the path location, which points instead to the new location. This is used internally to chain requests using the forward keyword.
This method takes 3 parameters: the url to forward to, followed by an optional hashref of parameters added to the current request parameters, followed by a hashref of options regarding the redirect, such as method
to change the request method.
For example:
forward '/login', { login_failed => 1 }, { method => 'GET' });
Returns itself. This is simply available as a shim to help transition from a previous version in which hooks were sent a context object (originally Dancer2::Core::Context
) which has since been removed.
# before
hook before => sub {
my $ctx = shift;
my $app = $ctx->app;
};
# after
hook before => sub {
my $app = shift;
};
This meant that $app->app
would fail, so this method has been provided to make it work.
# now
hook before => sub {
my $WannaBeCtx = shift;
my $app = $WannaBeContext->app; # works
};
Allow for setting a lexical prefix
$app->lexical_prefix('/blog', sub {
...
});
All the route defined within the callback will have a prefix appended to the current one.
$SIG{__DIE__}
Compatibility via $Dancer2::Core::App::EVAL_SHIM
If an installation wishes to use $SIG{__DIE__}
hooks to enhance their error handling then it may be required to ensure that certain bookkeeping code is executed within every eval BLOCK
that Dancer2 performs. This can be accomplished by overriding the global variable $Dancer2::Core::App::EVAL_SHIM
with a subroutine which does whatever logic is required.
This routine must perform the equivalent of the following subroutine:
our $EVAL_SHIM = sub {
my $code = shift;
return $code->(@_);
};
An example of overriding this sub might be as follows:
$Dancer2::Core::App::EVAL_SHIM = sub {
my $code = shift;
local $IGNORE_EVAL_COUNTER = $IGNORE_EVAL_COUNTER + 1;
return $code->(@_);
};
Note: that this is a GLOBAL setting, which must be set up before any form of dispatch or use of Dancer2.
Dancer Core Developers
This software is copyright (c) 2024 by Alexis Sukrieh.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.