The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

SweetPea::Documentation::HowItWorks

DESCRIPTION

This documentation explains how SweetPea processes requests from the browser, how and why the application file system structure and hierarchy works, and some configuration options.

SYNOPSIS

This documentation assumes that you are, have or intend to use the SweetPea application generator via SweetPea::Cli to produce your web application. The following documentation uses the generated files and structure in its examples.

FILES AND HIERARCHY

    /extras                 ## project files, makefiles, etc
    /static                 ## static content (html, css, js)
    /sweet                  ## application files are stored here
        /application        ## MVC files are stored here
            /Controller     ## controllers are stored here
                Root.pm     ## index controller (should always exist)
                Sweet.pm    ## new application welcome page controller
            /Model          ## models are stored here
                Schema.pm   ## new application boiler-plate model 
            /View           ## views are stored here
                Main.pm     ## new application boiler-plate view
        /sessions           ## local session files are stored here
        /templates          ## templates and layouts are stored here
        App.pm              ## plugins (other modules, etc) loaded here
    /.htaccess              ## pretty-urls and security on apache
    /.pl                    ## dispatcher (controller/action router)
    /.server                ## development http server
    /routes.pl              ## user-defined routes

HOW IT WORKS

SweetPea uses a simple MVC ideology for processing and responding to requests. Here is an example request and response outlining how SweetPea behaves when a request is recieved.

    ## Step-By-Step
    
    1. The user requests the url http://localhost/admin/auth/
    
        #  Note! this works on sub-directories (where the web root is not the
        #  current working directory) as well as root
    
    2. .pl (the dispatcher) extracts the request path and matches it against
    the routes table.
    
        #  admin/auth either matches as a Controller or Controller/Action.
        #  e.g. Controller::Admin::auth() or Controller::Admin::Auth::_index()
    
    3. sweet->run(); loads all plugins and executes the application
    
        #  .pl (dispatcher/router) invokes sweet->run,
        #  the run method executes the global or local _begin method,
        #  then executes the action or global or local _index method, and
        #  finally executes the global or local _end method.
        #  the start and finish methods are then called to create, render
        #  and finalize the response and output.
        

FILES AND HIERARCHY

sweet/application/Controller/Root.pm

Controller::Root

    The Root.pm controller is the default controller similar in function to
    a directory index (e.g. index.html). When a request is received that can
    not be matched in the routing table, the root/index
    (or Controller::Root::_index) method is invoked. This makes the _index
    method of Controller::Root, a kind of global fail-safe or fall back
    method.
    
    The _begin method is executed before the requested action, if no action
    is specified in the request the _index method is used, The _end method
    is invoked after the requested action or _index method has been
    executed.
    
    The _begin, _index, and _end methods can exist in any controller and
    serves the same purposes described here. During application request
    processing, these special routines are checked for in the namespace of
    the current requested action's Controller, if they are not found then
    the (global) alternative found in the Controller::Root namespace will
    be used.

    The _startup method is a special global method that cannot be overridden
    and is executed first with each request. The _shutdown is executed last
    and cannot be overridden either.

    # in Controller/Root.pm
    package Controller::Root;
    sub _startup { my ( $self, $s ) = @_; }
    sub _begin { my ( $self, $s ) = @_; }
    sub _index { my ( $self, $s ) = @_; }
    sub _end { my ( $self, $s ) = @_; }
    sub _shutdown { my ( $self, $s ) = @_; }
    1;

sweet/application/Controller/Sweet.pm

Controller::Sweet

    # Sweet.pm
    * A welcome page for the newly created application. (Safe to delete)

sweet/application/Model/Schema.pm

Model::Schema

    # Model/Schema.pm
    The Model::Schema boiler-plate model package is were your data
    connection, accessors, etc can be placed. SweetPea does not impose
    a specific configuration style, please feel free to connect to your
    data in the best possible fashion. Here is an example of how one
    might use this empty package with DBIx::Class.
    
    # in Model/Schema.pm
    package Model::Schema;
    use base qw/DBIx::Class::Schema::Loader/;
    __PACKAGE__->loader_options(debug=>1);
    1;
    
    # in App.pm
    use Model::Schema;
    sub plugins {
        ...
        $s->plug('data', sub { shift; return Model::Schema->new(@_) });
    }
    
    # example usage in Controller/Root.pm
    sub _index {
        my ($self, $s) = @_;
        ...
        $s->data->connect($dbi_dsn, $user, $pass, \%dbi_params);
        ...
    }

sweet/application/View/Main.pm

View::Main

    # View/Main.pm
    The View::Main boiler-plate view package is were your layout/template
    accessors and producers might be stored. Each view is in fact a package
    that determines how data should be rendered back to the user in
    response to the request. Examples of different views are as follows:
    
    View::Main - Main view module that renders layouts and templates
    based on the main application's user interface design.
    
    View::Email::HTML - A view module which renders templates to
    be emailed as HTML.
    
    View::Email::TEXT - A view module which renders templates to be
    emailed as plain text.
    
    Here is an example of how one might use this empty
    package with Template (template toolkit).
    
    # in View/Main.pm
    package View::Main;
    use base Template;
    sub new {
        return __PACKAGE__->new({
        INCLUDE_PATH => 'sweet/templates/',
        EVAL_PERL    => 1,
        });
    }
    1;
    
    # in App.pm
    use View::Main;
    sub plugins {
        ...
        $s->plug('view', sub{ shift; return View::Main->new(@_) });
    }
    
    # example usage in Controller/Root.pm
    sub _index {
        my ($self, $s) = @_;
        $s->view->process($template, { s => $s });
    }    
    

sweet/application/App.pm

App

    # App.pm
    The App application package is the developers access point to
    configure and extend the application before request processing. This
    is typically done using the plugins method. This package contains
    the special and required plugins method. Inside the plugins method is
    were other Modules are loaded and Module accessors are created using
    the core "plug" method. The following is an example of App.pm usage.
    
    package App;
    use warnings;
    use strict;
    use HTML::FormFu;
    use HTML::GridFu;
    use Model::Schema;
    use View::Main;
    
    sub plugins {
        my ( $class, $s ) = @_;
        my $self = bless {}, $class;
        $s->plug( 'form', sub { shift; return HTML::FormFu->new(@_) } );
        $s->plug( 'data', sub { shift; return Model::Schema->new(@_) } );
        $s->plug( 'view', sub { shift; return View::Main->new(@_) } );
        $s->plug( 'grid', sub { shift; return HTML::GridFu->new(@_) } );
        return $s;
    }
    1;    # End of App

.htaccess

htaccess

    # .htaccess
    The .htaccess file allows apache-type web servers that support
    mod-rewrite to automatically configure your application environment.
    Using mod-rewrite your application can make use of pretty-urls. The
    requirements for using .htaccess files with your SweetPea application
    are as follows:
    
    mod-rewrite support
    .htaccess support with Allow, Deny (in most cases)
    
    # in .htaccess
    DirectoryIndex .pl
    AddHandler cgi-script .pl .pm .cgi
    Options +ExecCGI +FollowSymLinks -Indexes
    
    RewriteEngine On
    RewriteCond %{SCRIPT_FILENAME} !-d
    RewriteCond %{SCRIPT_FILENAME} !-f
    RewriteRule (.*) .pl/$1 [L]

.pl

pl

    # .pl
    The .pl file is the main application router/dispatcher. It is
    responsible for executing all pre and post processing routines as well
    as directing requests to the appropriate controllers and actions.
    
    #!/usr/bin/env perl
    
    use SweetPea;
    sweet->run;

.server

server

    # .server
    The .server script is a development http server which can be used to
    quickly, test, build and deploy your SweetPea web application.
    
    perl .server
    # or, auto-reload code files per request
    perl .server 80 update

routes.pl

routes

    # routes.pl
    The routes.pl file is where one might place custom url -to- code
    (or controllers and actions) mappings.
    
    my $r = {
        '/path' => sub {
            my $s = shift;
            # $s->forward('SomeController/and_action'); or
            # SomeController->new->and_action(); or
            # simply add your action here!
        }
    }
    

SPECIAL CONTROLLER ROUTINES

_startup

    # _startup
    sub _startup {...}
    The _startup method is a special global method that cannot be overridden
    and is executed before any other methods automatically with each request.

_begin

    # _begin
    sub _begin {...}
    
    The begin method can exist both globally and locally, and will be
    automatically invoked per request. When a request is processed,
    SweetPea checks whether the _begin method exists in the namespace
    of the Controller being requested, if not it checks whether the
    _begin method exists in the Controller::Root namespace and
    executes that method. If you opt to keep and use the default
    controller Controller::Root, then its _begin method will be
    defined as the global _begin method and will be executed
    automatically with each request. The automatic execution of
    _begin in Controller::Root can be overridden by adding a _begin
    method to the namespace of the controller to be requested.
    
    This special method is useful for checking user permissions, etc.

_index

    # _index
    sub _index {...}
    
    The index method can exist both globally and locally, and will
    be automatically invoked *only* if an action is not specified.
    When a request is processed, SweetPea scans the controllers
    folder building a table of controllers and actions for
    dispatching. The dispatching routine executes attempts to
    execute the action, if no action is specified, it
    default to executing the global or local _index method
    looking locally first, then globally ofcourse. The automatic
    execution of _index in Controller::Root can be overridden by
    adding a _index method to the namespace of the controller to
    be requested.
    
    This special method acts as a directory index or index.html
    file in that it is executed when no other file (action) is
    specified.
    

_end

    # _end
    sub _end {...}
    
    The end method can exist both globally and locally, and will be
    automatically invoked per request. When a request is processed,
    SweetPea checks whether the _end method exists in the namespace
    of the Controller being requested, if not it checks whether the
    _end method exists in the Controller::Root namespace and
    executes that method. If you opt to keep and use the default
    controller Controller::Root, then its _end method will be
    defined as the global _end method and will be executed
    automatically with each request. The automatic execution of
    _end in Controller::Root can be overridden by adding a _end
    method to the namespace of the controller to be requested.
    
    This special method is useful for performing cleanup
    functions at the end of a request.

_shutdown

    # _shutdown
    sub _shutdown {...}
    The _shutdown method is a special global method that cannot be overridden
    and is executed after all other methods automatically with each request.

CONTROLLER RULES AND SYNTAX

The anatomy of a controller method

    Controllers are used by SweetPea in an OO (object-oriented)
    fashion and thus, all controller methods should follow the
    same design as they are passed the same parameters.
    
    package Controller::Foo;
    
    sub bar {
        my ($self, $s) = @_;
        ...
    }
    
    1;
    
    The foo method above (as well as al other controller methods)
    are passed at least two objects, an instance of the current
    controller usually referred to as $self, and an instance of
    the SweetPea application object usually referred to as $s.
    
    Note! Actions prefixed with an underscore can not be
    displatched to using URLs.
    

How to use plugins (other modules)

    Plugins are a great way to extend the functionality of a
    SweetPea application. Plugins are defined in the application
    package App.pm inside of the special plugins method as
    follows:
    
    # inside of App.pm
    package App;
    ...
    use CPAN::Module;
    
    sub plugins {
        ...
        $s->plug( 'cpan', sub { shift; return CPAN::Module->new(@_) } );
        return $s;
    }
    ...
    
    # notice below how an accessor is created for the ficticious
    CPAN::Module in the SweetPea namespace
    
    # inside sweet/Controller/MyController.pm
    sub _index {
        my ($self, $s) = @_;
        $s->cpan->some_method(...);
    }
    
    # when $s->cpan is called, it creates (unless the object reference
    exists) and returns a reference to that module object. To create
    or initialize another object, simply call the unplu method on the
    object's name.
    
    # inside sweet/Controller/MyController.pm
    sub _index {
        my ($self, $s) = @_;
        my $foo = $s->cpan;
        my $bar = $s->cpan;
        my $baz = $s->unplug('cpan')->cpan;
    }
    
    # in the example above, $foo and $bar hold the same reference, but
    $baz is holding a new refernce as if it called CPAN::Module->new;

INSTANTIATION

new

    The new method initializes a new SweetPea object.
    
    # in your .pl or other index/router file
    my $s = SweetPea->new;

run

    The run method discovers
    controllers and actions and executes internal pre and post request processing
    routines.

    # in your .pl or other index/router file
    my $s = SweetPea->new->run; # start processing the request
    
    NOTE! CGI, CGI::Cookie, and CGI::Session are plugged in automatically
    by the run method.
    
    # accessible via $s->cgi, $s->cookie, and $s->session

ROUTING/DISPATCHING

    The routes method like most popular routing mechanisms allows you to map
    urls to routines. SweetPea by default uses an auto-discovery mechanism on
    the controllers folder to create routes automatically, however there are
    times when additional flexibility is required.
    
    There are two types of routes defined when your application is executed,
    auto-routing and manual routing. As stated before, auto-routing
    automatically builds routes base on the Controllers in your applications
    controllers folder (which is created automatically when you "make" an app
    using the sweetpea cli). Manual routing is usually established in the
    dispatcher file as follows:
    
    sweet->routes({
        
        '/' => sub {
            shift->html('Index page much!');
        }
        
    })->new;
    
    SweetPea routing has support for inline URL parameters and wildcard
    operators. See examples below:
    
    sweet->routes({
        
        '/:goto' => sub {
            my $s = shift;
            $s->html('Your trying to get to ' . $s->param('goto') );
            ...
        },
        '/download/*' => sub {
            my $s = shift;
            $s->redirect($s->param('*')) if $s->param('*');
            ...
        },
        '/dl/:file/:from' => sub {
            my $s = shift;
            if ($s->param('file')) {
                my $contents = $s->file('<',
                    $s->param('from') . '/' . $s->param('file');
                );
            }
            ...
        }
        
    })->run;

CONTROLLERS AND ACTIONS

    Controllers are always created in the sweet/controller folder and defined
    under the Controller namespace, e.g. Controller::MyController. In keeping
    with simplicity, controllers and actions are actually packages and
    routines ( controller/action = package controller; sub action {...} ).
    
    NOTE! Actions prefixed with an underscore e.g. _foo can not be dispatched to
    using URLs but are listed in the dispatch table and are available to
    the forward, detach and many other methods that might invoke an
    action/method.

OTHER DOCUMENTATION

PROJECT

SweetPea - A web framework that doesn't get in the way, or suck.

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

SweetPea is a modern web application framework that is fast, scalable, and light-weight. SweetPea has a short learning curve and a common sense object-oriented API. See SweetPea::Cli::Documentation for a QuickStart Guide.

PROJECT POD URL

http://app.alnewkirk.com/pod/projects/sweetpea/

AUTHOR

Al Newkirk, <al.newkirk at awnstudio.com>

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-SweetPea at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=SweetPea. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

SUPPORT

You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

    perldoc SweetPea

You can also look for information at:

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Al Newkirk <al.newkirk@awnstudio.com>

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright 2009 Al Newkirk, all rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.