NAME

Feersum::Connection - HTTP connection encapsulation

SYNOPSIS

For a streaming response:

Feersum->endjinn->request_handler(sub {
    my $req = shift; # this is a Feersum::Connection object
    my $env = $req->env();
    my $w = $req->start_streaming(200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain']);
    # then immediately or after some time:
    $w->write("Ergrates ");
    $w->write(\"FTW.");
    $w->close();
});

For a response with a Content-Length header:

Feersum->endjinn->request_handler(sub {
    my $req = shift; # this is a Feersum::Connection object
    my $env = $req->env();
    $req->start_whole_response(200, ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain']);
    $req->write_whole_body(\"Ergrates FTW.");
});

DESCRIPTION

Encapsulates an HTTP connection to Feersum. It's roughly analogous to an Apache::Request or Apache2::Connection object, but differs significantly in functionality.

Until Keep-Alive functionality is supported (if ever) this means that a connection is also a request.

See Feersum for more examples on usage.

METHODS

my $env = $req->env()

Obtain an environment hash. This hash contains the same entries as for a PSGI handler environment hash. See Feersum for details on the contents.

This is a method instead of a parameter so that future versions of Feersum can request a slice of the hash for speed.

my $w = $req->start_streaming($code, \@headers)

A full HTTP header section is sent with "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" (or "Connection: close" for HTTP/1.0 clients).

Returns a Feersum::Connection::Writer handle which should be used to complete the response. See Feersum::Connection::Handle for methods.

$req->send_response($code, \@headers, $body)
$req->send_response($code, \@headers, \@body)

Respond with a full HTTP header (including Content-Length) and body.

Returns the number of bytes calculated for the body.

$req->force_http10
$req->force_http11

Force the response to use HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1, respectively.

Normally, if the request was made with 1.1 then Feersum uses HTTP/1.1 for the response, otherwise HTTP/1.0 is used (this includes requests made with the HTTP "0.9" non-declaration).

For streaming under HTTP/1.1 Transfer-Encoding: chunked is used, otherwise a Connection: close stream-style is used (with the usual non-guarantees about delivery). You may know about certain user-agents that support/don't-support T-E:chunked, so this is how you can override that.

Supposedly clients and a lot of proxies support the Connection: close stream-style, see support in Varnish at http://www.varnish-cache.org/trac/ticket/400

$req->fileno

The socket file-descriptor number for this connection.

$req->response_guard($guard)

Register a guard to be triggered when the response is completely sent and the socket is closed. A "guard" in this context is some object that will do something interesting in its DESTROY/DEMOLISH method. For example, Guard.

my $env = $req->method

req method (GET/POST..) (psgi REQUEST_METHOD)

my $env = $req->uri

full request uri (psgi REQUEST_URI)

my $env = $req->protocol

protocol (psgi SERVER_PROTOCOL)

my $env = $req->path

percent decoded request path (psgi PATH_INFO)

my $env = $req->query

request query (psgi QUERY_STRING)

my $env = $req->content_length

body content lenght (psgi CONTENT_LENGTH)

my $env = $req->input

input body handler (psgi.input), it is advised to close it after read is done

my $env = $req->headers([normalization_style])

an array of headers if form of [name, value, name, value, ...]

normalization_style is one of:

0 - skip normalization (default) HEADER_NORM_LOCASE - "content-type" HEADER_NORM_UPCASE - "CONTENT-TYPE" HEADER_NORM_LOCASE_DASH - "content_type" HEADER_NORM_UPCASE_DASH - "CONTENT_TYPE" (like PSGI, but without "HTTP_" prefix)

One can export these constants via c<<use Feersum 'HEADER_NORM_LOCASE'>>

my $value = $req->header(name)

simple lookup for header value, name should be in lowercase, eg. 'content-type'

my $env = $req->remote_address

remote address (psgi REMOTE_ADDR)

my $env = $req->remote_port

remote port (psgi REMOTE_PORT)

AUTHOR

Jeremy Stashewsky, stash@cpan.org

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2010 by Jeremy Stashewsky & Socialtext Inc.

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.7 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.