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NAME

Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::AdvancedCRUD - Catalyst Tutorial - Part 8: Advanced CRUD

OVERVIEW

This is Part 8 of 9 for the Catalyst tutorial.

Tutorial Overview

  1. Introduction

  2. Catalyst Basics

  3. Basic CRUD

  4. Authentication

  5. Authorization

  6. Debugging

  7. Testing

  8. AdvancedCRUD

  9. Appendices

DESCRIPTION

This part of the tutorial explores more advanced functionality for Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) than we saw in Part 3. In particular, it looks at a number of techniques that can be useful for the Update portion of CRUD, such as automated form generation, validation of user-entered data, and automated transfer of data between forms and model objects.

In keeping with the Catalyst (and Perl) spirit of flexibility, there are many different ways approach advanced CRUD operations in a Catalyst environment. One alternative is to use Catalyst::Helper::Controller::Scaffold to instantly construct a set of Controller methods and templates for basic CRUD operations. Although a popular subject in Quicktime movies that serve as promotional material for various frameworks, more real-world applications require more control. Other options include Data::FormValidator and HTML::FillInForm.

Here, we will make use of the HTML::Widget to not only ease form creation, but to also provide validation of the submitted data. The approached used by the part of the tutorial is to slowly incorporate additional HTML::Widget functionality in a step-wise fashion (we start with fairly simple form creation and then move on to more complex and "magical" features such as validation and auto-population/auto-saving).

Note: Part 8 of the tutorial is optional. Users who do not wish to use HTML::Widget may skip this section.

TIP: Note that all of the code for this part of the tutorial can be pulled from the Catalyst Subversion repository in one step with the following command:

    svn checkout http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/trunk/examples/Tutorial@###
    IMPORTANT: Does not work yet.  Will be completed for final version.

HTML::WIDGET FORM CREATION

This section looks at how HTML::Widget can be used to add additional functionality to the manually created form from Part 3.

Add the HTML::Widget Plugin

Open lib/MyApp.pm in your editor and add the following to the list of plugins (be sure to leave the existing plugins enabled):

    HTML::Widget

Add a Form Creation Helper Method

Open lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm in your editor and add the following method:

    =head2 make_book_widget
    
    Build an HTML::Widget form for book creation and updates
    
    =cut
    
    sub make_book_widget {
        my ($self, $c) = @_;

        # Create an HTML::Widget to build the form
        my $w = $c->widget('book_form')->method('post');
    
        # Get authors
        my @authorObjs = $c->model("MyAppDB::Author")->all();
        my @authors = map {$_->id => $_->last_name }
                           sort {$a->last_name cmp $b->last_name} @authorObjs;
    
        # Create the form feilds
        $w->element('Textfield', 'title'  )->label('Title')->size(60);
        $w->element('Textfield', 'rating' )->label('Rating')->size(1);
        $w->element('Select',    'authors')->label('Authors')
            ->options(@authors);
        $w->element('Submit',    'submit' )->value('submit');

        # Return the widget    
        return $w;
    }

This method provides a central location (so it can be called by multiple actions, such as create and edit) that builds an HTML::Widget-based form with the appropriate fields. The "Get Authors" code uses DBIC to retrieve a list of model objects and then uses map to create a hash where the hash keys are the database primary keys from the authors table and the associated values are the last names of the authors.

Add Actions to Display and Save the Form

Open lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm in your editor and add the following methods:

    =head2 hw_create
    
    Build an HTML::Widget form for book creation and updates
    
    =cut
    
    sub hw_create : Local {
        my ($self, $c) = @_;
    
        # Create the widget and set the action for the form
        my $w = $self->make_book_widget($c);
        $w->action($c->uri_for('hw_create_do'));
    
        # Write form to stash variable for use in template
        $c->stash->{widget_result} = $w->result;
    
        # Set the template
        $c->stash->{template} = 'books/hw_form.tt2';
    }
    
    
    =head2 hw_create_do
    
    Build an HTML::Widget form for book creation and updates
    
    =cut
    
    sub hw_create_do : Local {
        my ($self, $c) = @_;
    
        # Retrieve the data from the form
        my $title   = $c->request->params->{title};
        my $rating  = $c->request->params->{rating};
        my $authors = $c->request->params->{authors};
    
        # Call create() on the book model object. Pass the table 
        # columns/field values we want to set as hash values
        my $book = $c->model('MyAppDB::Book')->create({
                title   => $title,
                rating  => $rating
            });
        
        # Add a record to the join table for this book, mapping to 
        # appropriate author
        $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $authors});
        
        # Set a status message for the user
        $c->stash->{status_msg} = 'Book created';
    
        # Use 'hw_create' to redisplay the form
        $c->detach('hw_create');
    
    }

Note how we use make_book_widget to build the core parts of the form in one location, but we set the action (the URL the form is sent to when the user clicks the 'Submit' button) separately in hw_create. Doing so allows us to have the same form submit the data to different actions (e.g., hw_create_do for a create operation but hw_update_do to update an existing book object).

Update the CSS

Edit root/src/ttsite.css and add the following lines to the bottom of the file:

    label {
        display: block;
        width: 10em;
        position: relative;
        margin: .5em 0em;
    }
    label input {
        position: absolute;
        left: 100%;
    }
    label select {
        position: absolute;
        left: 100%;
    }
    .submit {
        margin-top: 2em;;
    }
    .error_messages {
        color: [% site.col.error %];
    }

These changes will display form elements vertically and also show error messages in red. Note that we are pulling the color scheme settings from the root/lib/config/col file that was created by the TTSite helper. This allows us to change the color used by various error styles in the CSS from a single location.

Create a Template Page To Display The Form

root/src/books/hw_form.tt2 [% META title = 'Create/Update Book' %]

    [% widget_result.as_xml %]
    
    <p><a href="[% Catalyst.uri_for('list') %]">Return to book list</a></p>

Open root/src/books/list.tt2 in your editor and add the following to the bottom of the existing file:

    <p>
      HTML::Widget:
      <a href="[% Catalyst.uri_for('hw_create') %]">Create</a>
      <a href="[% Catalyst.uri_for('hw_update') %]">Update</a>
    </p>

Test The <HTML::Widget> Create Form

Press Ctrl-C to kill the previous server instance (if it's still running) and restart it:

    $ script/myapp_server.pl

Login as test01. Once at the Book List page, click the HTML::Widget "Create" link to display for form produced by make_book_widget. Fill out the form with the following values: Title = "Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol. II", Rating = "4", and Author = "Comer". Click Submit, and you will be returned to the Create/Update Book page with a "Book created" status message displayed. Click "Return to book list" to view the newly created book on the main list.

Also note that this implementation allows you to can create books with bogus information. Although we have constrained the authors with the drop-down list, there are no restrictions on items such as the length of the title (for example, you can create a one-letter title) and value for the rating (you can use any number you want, and even non-numeric values with SQLite). The next section will address this concern.

Note: Depending on the database you are using and how you established the columns in your tables, the database could obviously provide various levels of "type enforcement" on your data. The key point being made in the previous paragraph is that the web application itself is not performing any validation.

HTML::WIDGET VALIDATION AND FILTERING

Although the use of HTML::Widget in the previous section did provide an automated mechanism to build the form, the real power of this module stems from functionality that can automatically validate and filter the user input. Validation uses constraints to be sure that users input appropriate data (for example, that the email field of a form contains a valid email address). Filtering can be used to remove extraneous whitespace from fields or to escape meta-characters in user input.

Add Constraints and Filters to the Widget Creation Method

Open lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm in your editor and update the make_book_widget method to match the following (new sections have been marked with a *** NEW: comment):

    sub make_book_widget {
        my ($self, $c) = @_;

        # Create an HTML::Widget to build the form
        my $w = $c->widget('book_form')->method('post');
            
        # Get authors
        my @authorObjs = $c->model("MyAppDB::Author")->all();
        my @authors = map {$_->id => $_->last_name }
                           sort {$a->last_name cmp $b->last_name} @authorObjs;
   
        # Create the form feilds
        $w->element('Textfield', 'title'  )->label('Title')->size(60);
        $w->element('Textfield', 'rating' )->label('Rating')->size(1);
        # ***NEW: Convert to multi-select list
        $w->element('Select',    'authors')->label('Authors')
            ->options(@authors)->multiple(1)->size(3);
        $w->element('Submit',    'submit' )->value('submit');
    
        # ***NEW: Set constraints
        $w->constraint(All     => qw/title rating authors/)
            ->message('Required. ');
        $w->constraint(Integer => qw/rating/)
            ->message('Must be an integer. ');
        $w->constraint(Range   => qw/rating/)->min(1)->max(5)
            ->message('Must be a number between 1 and 5. ');
        $w->constraint(Length  => qw/title/)->min(5)->max(50)
            ->message('Must be between 5 and 50 characters. ');
    
        # ***NEW: Set filters
        for my $column (qw/title rating authors/) {
            $w->filter( HTMLEscape => $column );
            $w->filter( TrimEdges  => $column );
        }
    
        # Return the widget    
        return $w;
    }

The main changes are:

  • The Select element for authors is changed from a single-select drop-down to a multi-select list by adding calls to multiple (set to true) and size (set to the number of rows to display).

  • Four sets of constraints are added to provide validation of the user input.

  • Two filters are run on every field to remove and escape unwanted input.

Rebuild the Form Submission Method to Include Validation

Edit lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and change hw_create_do to match the following code (enough of the code is different that you probably want to cut and paste this over code the existing method):

    sub hw_create_do : Local {
        my ($self, $c) = @_;
    
        # Retrieve the data from the form
        my $title   = $c->request->params->{title};
        my $rating  = $c->request->params->{rating};
        my $authors = $c->request->params->{authors};
        
        # Create the widget and set the action for the form
        my $w = $self->make_book_widget($c);
        $w->action($c->uri_for('hw_create_do'));
    
        # Validate the form parameters
        my $result = $w->process($c->req);
    
        # Write form (including validation error messages) to
        # stash variable for use in template
        $c->stash->{widget_result} = $result;
    
        # Were their validation errors?
        if ($result->has_errors) {
            # Warn the user at the top of the form that there were errors.
            # Note that there will also be per-field feedback on
            # validation errors because of '$w->process($c->req)' above.
            $c->stash->{error_msg} = 'Validation errors!';
        } else {
            # Everything validated OK, so do the create
            # Call create() on the book model object. Pass the table
            # columns/field values we want to set as hash values
            my $book = $c->model('MyAppDB::Book')->create({
                    title   => $title,
                    rating  => $rating
                });
    
            # Add a record to the join table for this book, mapping to
            # appropriate author.  Note that $authors will be 1 author as
            # a scalar or ref to list of authors depending on how many the
            # user selected; the 'ref $authors ?...' handles both cases
            foreach my $author (ref $authors ? @$authors : $authors) {
                $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $author});
            }    
            # Set a status message for the user
            $c->stash->{status_msg} = 'Book created';
        }
    
        # Set the template
        $c->stash->{template} = 'books/hw_form.tt2';
    }

The key changes to hw_create_do are:

  • hw_create_do no longer does a detach to hw_create to redisplay the form. Now that hw_create_do has to process the form in order to perform the validation, we go ahead and build a complete set of form presentation logic into hw_create_do (for example, hw_create_do now has a $c->stash->{template} line). Note that if we process the form in hw_create_do and forward/detach back to <hw_create>, we would end up with make_book_widget being called twice, resulting in a duplicate set of elements being added to the form.

  • $w->process($c->req) is called to run the validation logic. Not only does this set the has_errors flag if validation errors are encountered, it returns a string containing any field-specific warning messages.

  • An if statement checks if any validation errors were encountered. If so, $c->stash->{error_msg} is set and the input form is redisplayed. If no errors were found, the object is created in a manner similar to the prior version of the hw_create_do method.

Try Out the Form

Press Ctrl-C to kill the previous server instance (if it's still running) and restart it:

    $ script/myapp_server.pl

Now try adding a book with various errors: title less than 5 characters, non-numeric rating, a rating of 0 or 6, etc. Also try selecting one, two, and zero authors. When you click Submit, the HTML::Widget constraint items will validate the logic and insert feedback as appropriate.

Enable DBIx::Class::HTMLWidget Support

In this section we will take advantage of some of the "auto-population" features of DBIx::Class::HTMLWidget. Enabling DBIx::Class::HTMLWidget provides two additional methods to your DBIC model classes:

  • fill_widget()

    Takes data from the database and transfers it to your form widget.

  • populate_from_widget()

    Takes data from a form widget and uses it to update the corresponding records in the database.

In other words, the two methods are a mirror image of each other: one reads from the database while the other writes to the database.

Add DBIx::Class::HTMLWidget to DBIC Model

In order to use DBIx::Class::HTMLWidget, we need to add HTMLWidget to the load_components line of DBIC result source files that need to use the fill_widget and populate_from_widget methods. In this case, open lib/MyAppDB/Book.pm and update the load_components line to match:

        __PACKAGE__->load_components(qw/PK::Auto Core HTMLWidget/);

Use populate_from_widget in hw_create_do

Edit lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm and update hw_create_do to match the following code:

    =head2 hw_create_do
    
    Build an HTML::Widget form for book creation and updates
    
    =cut
    
    sub hw_create_do : Local {
        my ($self, $c) = @_;
    
        # Create the widget and set the action for the form
        my $w = $self->make_book_widget($c);
        $w->action($c->uri_for('hw_create_do'));
    
        # Validate the form parameters
        my $result = $w->process($c->req);
    
        # Write form (including validation error messages) to
        # stash variable for use in template
        $c->stash->{widget_result} = $result;
    
        # Were their validation errors?
        if ($result->has_errors) {
            # Warn the user at the top of the form that there were errors.
            # Note that there will also be per-field feedback on
            # validation errors because of '$w->process($c->req)' above.
            $c->stash->{error_msg} = 'Validation errors!';
        } else {
            my $book = $c->model('MyAppDB::Book')->new({});
            $book->populate_from_widget($result);
    
            # Add a record to the join table for this book, mapping to
            # appropriate author.  Note that $authors will be 1 author as
            # a scalar or ref to list of authors depending on how many the
            # user selected; the 'ref $authors ?...' handles both cases
            my $authors = $c->request->params->{authors};
            foreach my $author (ref $authors ? @$authors : $authors) {
                $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $author});
            }
    
            # Set a status message for the user
            $c->stash->{status_msg} = 'Book created';
        }
    
        # Set the template
        $c->stash->{template} = 'books/hw_form.tt2';
    }

In this version of hw_create_do we removed the logic that manually pulled the form variables and used them to call $c->model('MyAppDB::Book')->create and replaced it with a single call to $book->populate_from_widget. Note that we still have to call $book->add_to_book_authors once per author because populate_from_widget does not currently handle the relationships between tables.

AUTHOR

Kennedy Clark, hkclark@gmail.com

Please report any errors, issues or suggestions to the author.

Copyright 2006, Kennedy Clark, under Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/).