NAME

Mojolicious::Guides::Rendering - Rendering

OVERVIEW

This document explains content generation with the Mojolicious renderer.

CONCEPTS

Essentials every Mojolicious developer should know.

Renderer

The renderer is a tiny black box turning stash data into actual responses utilizing multiple template systems and data encoding modules.

  {text => 'Hello.'}                 -> 200 OK, text/html, 'Hello.'
  {json => {x => 3}}                 -> 200 OK, application/json, '{"x":3}'
  {text => 'Oops.', status => '410'} -> 410 Gone, text/html, 'Oops.'

Templates can be automatically detected if enough information is provided by the developer or routes. Template names are expected to follow the name.format.handler scheme, with name defaulting to controller/action or the route name, format defaulting to html and handler to ep.

  {controller => 'users', action => 'list'} -> 'users/list.html.ep'
  {name => 'foo', format => 'txt'}          -> 'foo.txt.ep'
  {name => 'foo', handler => 'epl'}         -> 'foo.html.epl'

All templates should be in the templates directories of the application or the DATA section of the class main.

  __DATA__

  @@ time.html.ep
  % use Time::Piece;
  % my $now = localtime;
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><title>Time</title></head>
    <body>The time is <%= $now->hms %>.</body>
  </html>

  @@ hello.txt.ep
  ...

The renderer can be easily extended to support additional template systems with plugins, but more about that later.

Embedded Perl

Mojolicious includes a minimalistic but very powerful template system out of the box called Embedded Perl or ep for short. It allows the embedding of Perl code right into actual content using a small set of special tags and line start characters.

  <% Perl code %>
  <%= Perl expression, replaced with XML escaped result %>
  <%== Perl expression, replaced with result %>
  <%# Comment, useful for debugging %>
  <%% Replaced with "<%", useful for generating templates %>
  % Perl code line, treated as "<% line =%>"
  %= Perl expression line, treated as "<%= line %>"
  %== Perl expression line, treated as "<%== line %>"
  %# Comment line, treated as "<%# line =%>"
  %% Replaced with "%", useful for generating templates

Tags and lines work pretty much the same, but depending on context one will usually look a bit better. Semicolons get automatically appended to all expressions.

  <% my $i = 10; %>
  <ul>
    <% for my $j (1 .. $i) { %>
      <li>
        <%= $j %>
      </li>
    <% } %>
  </ul>

  % my $i = 10;
  <ul>
    % for my $j (1 .. $i) {
      <li>
        %= $j
      </li>
    % }
  </ul>

Aside from differences in whitespace handling, both examples generate similar Perl code, a naive translation could look like this.

  my $output = '';
  my $i = 10;
  $output .= '<ul>';
  for my $j (1 .. $i) {
    $output .= '<li>';
    $output .= xml_escape scalar $j;
    $output .= '</li>';
  }
  $output .= '</ul>';
  return $output;

An additional equal sign can be used to disable escaping of the characters <, >, &, ' and " in results from Perl expressions, which is the default to prevent XSS attacks against your application.

  <%= 'lalala' %>
  <%== '<p>test</p>' %>

Only Mojo::ByteStream objects are excluded from automatic escaping.

  <%= Mojo::ByteStream->new('<p>test</p>') %>

Newline characters can be escaped with a backslash.

  This is <%= 1 + 1 %> a\
  single line

And a backslash in front of a newline character can be escaped with another backslash.

  This will <%= 1 + 1 %> result\\
  in multiple\\
  lines

You can also add an additional equal sign to the end of a tag to have it automatically remove all surrounding whitespace, this allows free indenting without ruining the result.

  <% for (1 .. 3) { %>
    <%= $foo =%>
  <% } %>

Stash values that don't have invalid characters in their name get automatically initialized as normal variables in the template, and the controller object as $self.

  $self->stash(name => 'tester');

  Hello <%= $name %> from <%= $self->tx->remote_address %>.

There are also many helper functions available, but more about that later.

  <%= dumper {foo => 'bar'} %>

BASICS

Most commonly used features every Mojolicious developer should know about.

Automatic rendering

The renderer can be manually started by calling the method "render" in Mojolicious::Controller, but that's usually not necessary, because it will get automatically called if nothing has been rendered after the router finished its work. This also means you can have routes pointing only to templates without actual actions.

  $self->render;

There is one big difference though, by calling it manually you can make sure that templates use the current controller object, and not the default controller specified with the attribute "controller_class" in Mojolicious.

Rendering templates

The renderer will always try to detect the right template but you can also use the template stash value to render a specific one.

  $self->render(template => 'foo/bar');

Choosing a specific format and handler is just as easy.

  $self->render(template => 'foo/bar', format => 'txt', handler => 'epl');

Because rendering a specific template is the most common task it also has a shortcut.

  $self->render('foo/bar');

Rendering inline templates

Some renderers such as ep allow templates to be passed inline.

  $self->render(inline => 'The result is <%= 1 + 1%>.');

Since auto detection depends on a path you might have to supply a handler too.

  $self->render(inline => "<%= shift->param('foo') %>", handler => 'epl');

Rendering text

Perl characters can be rendered with the text stash value, the given content will be automatically encoded to bytes.

  $self->render(text => 'Hello Wörld!');

Rendering data

Raw bytes can be rendered with the data stash value, no encoding will be performed.

  $self->render(data => $octets);

Rendering JSON

The json stash value allows you to pass Perl data structures to the renderer which get directly encoded to JSON.

  $self->render(json => {foo => [1, 'test', 3]});

Partial rendering

Sometimes you might want to access the rendered result, for example to generate emails, this can be done using the partial stash value.

  my $html = $self->render('mail', partial => 1);

Status code

Response status codes can be changed with the status stash value.

  $self->render(text => 'Oops.', status => 500);

Content type

The Content-Type header of the response is actually based on the MIME type mapping of the format stash value.

  $self->render(text => 'Hello.', format => 'txt');

These mappings can be easily extended or changed with "types" in Mojolicious.

  # Application
  package MyApp;
  use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

  sub startup {
    my $self = shift;

    # Add new MIME type
    $self->types->type(txt => 'text/plain; charset=utf-8');
  }

  1;

Stash data

Any of the native Perl data types can be passed to templates through the "stash" in Mojolicious::Controller.

  $self->stash(author     => 'Sebastian');
  $self->stash(frameworks => [qw(Catalyst Mojolicious)]);
  $self->stash(examples   => {tweetylicious => 'a microblogging app'});

  %= $author
  %= $frameworks->[1]
  %= $examples->{tweetylicious}

Since everything is just Perl normal control structures just work.

  % for my $framework (@$frameworks) {
    <%= $framework %> was written by <%= $author %>.
  % }

  % while (my ($app, $description) = each %$examples) {
    <%= $app %> is a <%= $description %>.
  % }

Content negotiation

For resources with different representations and that require truly RESTful content negotiation you can also use "respond_to" in Mojolicious::Controller instead of "render" in Mojolicious::Controller.

  # /hello (Accept: application/json) -> "json"
  # /hello (Accept: application/xml)  -> "xml"
  # /hello.json                       -> "json"
  # /hello.xml                        -> "xml"
  # /hello?format=json                -> "json"
  # /hello?format=xml                 -> "xml"
  $self->respond_to(
    json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
    xml  => {text => '<hello>world</hello>'}
  );

The best possible representation will be automatically selected from the Accept request header, format stash value or format GET/POST parameter.

  $self->respond_to(
    json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
    html => sub {
      $self->content_for(head => '<meta name="author" content="sri" />');
      $self->render(template => 'hello', message => 'world')
    }
  );

Callbacks can be used for representations that are too complex to fit into a single render call.

  # /hello (Accept: application/json) -> "json"
  # /hello (Accept: text/html)        -> "html"
  # /hello (Accept: image/png)        -> "any"
  # /hello.json                       -> "json"
  # /hello.html                       -> "html"
  # /hello.png                        -> "any"
  # /hello?format=json                -> "json"
  # /hello?format=html                -> "html"
  # /hello?format=png                 -> "any"
  $self->respond_to(
    json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
    html => {template => 'hello', message => 'world'},
    any  => {text => '', status => 204}
  );

And if no viable representation could be found, the any fallback will be used or an empty 204 response rendered automatically.

Rendering exception and not_found pages

By now you've probably already encountered the built-in 404 (Not Found) and 500 (Server Error) pages, that get rendered automatically when you make a mistake. Especially during development they can be a great help, the methods "render_exception" in Mojolicious::Controller and "render_not_found" in Mojolicious::Controller can be used to render them manually.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;
  use Scalar::Util 'looks_like_number';

  get '/divide/:dividend/by/:divisor' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    my ($dividend, $divisor) = $self->param(['dividend', 'divisor']);

    # 404
    return $self->render_not_found
      unless looks_like_number $dividend && looks_like_number $divisor;

    # 500
    return $self->render_exception('Division by zero!') if $divisor == 0;

    # 200
    $self->render_text($dividend / $divisor);
  };

  app->start;

You can also change the templates of those pages, since you most likely want to show your users something more closely related to your application in production. The renderer will always try to find exception.$mode.$format.* or not_found.$mode.$format.* before falling back to the built-in default templates.

  @@ exception.production.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><title>Server error</title></head>
    <body><%= $exception %></body>
  </html>

Helpers

Helpers are little functions you can use in templates and controller code.

  %= dumper [1, 2, 3]

  my $serialized = $self->dumper([1, 2, 3]);

The helper "dumper" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers for example will use Data::Dumper to serialize whatever data structure you pass it, this can be very useful for debugging. We differentiate between default helpers which are more general purpose like dumper and tag helpers, which are template specific and mostly used to generate HTML tags.

  %= javascript '/script.js'

  %= javascript begin
    var a = 'b';
  % end

A list of all built-in helpers can be found in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers.

Layouts

Most of the time when using ep templates you will want to wrap your generated content in a HTML skeleton, thanks to layouts that's absolutely trivial.

  @@ foo/bar.html.ep
  % layout 'mylayout';
  Hello World!

  @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><title>MyApp</title></head>
    <body><%= content %></body>
  </html>

You just select the right layout template with the helper "layout" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and place the result of the current template with the helper "content" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers. You can also pass along normal stash values to the layout helper.

  @@ foo/bar.html.ep
  % layout 'mylayout', title => 'Hi there';
  Hello World!

  @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><title><%= $title %></title></head>
    <body><%= content %></body>
  </html>

Instead of the layout helper you could also just use the layout stash value, or call "render" in Mojolicious::Controller with the layout argument.

  $self->render(template => 'mytemplate', layout => 'mylayout');

To set a layout stash value application wide you can use "defaults" in Mojolicious.

  # Application
  package MyApp;
  use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

  sub startup {
    my $self = shift;

    # Default layout
    $self->defaults(layout => 'mylayout');
  }

  1;

Including partial templates

Like most helpers "include" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers is just a shortcut to make your life a little easier.

  @@ foo/bar.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    %= include 'header'
    <body>Bar</body>
  </html>

  @@ header.html.ep
  <head><title>Howdy</title></head>

Instead of include you could also just call "render" in Mojolicious::Controller with the partial argument.

  @@ foo/bar.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    %= $self->render('header', partial => 1)
    <body>Bar</body>
  </html>

  @@ header.html.ep
  <head><title>Howdy</title></head>

But there is one small difference between the two, if you pass stash values to include, they will get localized automatically and are only available in the partial template.

  @@ foo/bar.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    %= include 'header', title => 'Hello'
    <body>Bar</body>
  </html>

  @@ header.html.ep
  <head><title><%= $title %></title></head>

Reusable template blocks

It's never fun to repeat yourself, that's why you can build reusable template blocks in ep that work very similar normal Perl functions.

  @@ welcome.html.ep
  <% my $block = begin %>
    <% my $name = shift; %>
    Hello <%= $name %>.
  <% end %>
  <%= $block->('Sebastian') %>
  <%= $block->('Sara') %>

Blocks are always delimited by the begin and end keywords.

  @@ welcome.html.ep
  % my $block = begin
    % my $name = shift;
    Hello <%= $name %>.
  % end
  % for (1 .. 10) {
    %== $block->('Sebastian')
  % }

A naive translation to Perl code could look like this.

  @@ welcome.html.pl
  my $output = '';
  my $block  = sub {
    my $name   = shift;
    my $output = '';
    $output .= 'Hello ';
    $output .= xml_escape scalar $name;
    $output .= '.';
    return Mojo::ByteStream->new($output);
  }
  for (1 .. 10) {
    $output .= scalar $block->('Sebastian');
  }
  return $output;

Content blocks

Blocks and the helper "content_for" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers can also be used to pass whole sections of the template to the layout.

  @@ foo/bar.html.ep
  % layout 'mylayout';
  % content_for header => begin
    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html">
  % end
  <div>Hello World!</div>
  % content_for header => begin
    <meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache">
  % end

  @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><%= content_for 'header' %></head>
    <body><%= content %></body>
  </html>

Template inheritance

Inheritance takes the layout concept above one step further, the helpers "content" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and "extends" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers allow you to build a skeleton template with named blocks that child templates can override.

  @@ first.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><title>Hello</title></head>
    <body>
      %= content header => begin
        Default header
      % end
      <div>Hello World!</div>
      %= content footer => begin
        Default footer
      % end
    </body>
  </html>

  @@ second.html.ep
  % extends 'first';
  % content header => begin
    New header
  % end

This chain could go on and on to allow a very high level of template reuse.

Memorizing template blocks

Compiled templates are always cached in memory, but with the helper "memorize" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers you can go one step further and prevent template blocks from getting executed more than once.

  @@ cached.html.ep
  % use Time::Piece;
  %= memorize begin
    This template was compiled at <%= localtime->hms %>.
  % end

Adding helpers

Adding and redefining helpers is very easy, you can use them to do pretty much everything.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;

  helper debug => sub {
    my ($self, $string) = @_;
    $self->app->log->debug($string);
  };

  get '/' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->debug('action');
  } => 'index';

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ index.html.ep
  % debug 'template';

Helpers can also accept template blocks as last argument, this for example allows very pleasant to use tag helpers and filters.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;
  use Mojo::ByteStream;

  helper trim_newline => sub {
    my ($self, $block) = @_;
    my $result = $block->();
    $result =~ s/\n//g;
    return Mojo::ByteStream->new($result);
  };

  get '/' => 'index';

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ index.html.ep
  %= trim_newline begin
    Some text.
    %= 1 + 1
    More text.
  % end

Wrapping the helper result into a Mojo::ByteStream object can prevent accidental double escaping.

Helper plugins

Some helpers might be useful enough for you to share them between multiple applications, plugins make that very simple.

  package Mojolicious::Plugin::DebugHelper;
  use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';

  sub register {
    my ($self, $app) = @_;
    $app->helper(debug => sub {
      my ($self, $string) = @_;
      $self->app->log->debug($string);
    });
  }

  1;

The register method will be called when you load the plugin.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;

  plugin 'DebugHelper';

  get '/' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->debug('It works.');
    $self->render_text('Hello.');
  };

  app->start;

A skeleton for a full CPAN compatible plugin distribution can be automatically generated.

  $ mojo generate plugin DebugHelper

And if you have a PAUSE account (which can be requested at http://pause.perl.org), you are only a few commands away from relasing it to CPAN.

  $ perl Makefile.PL
  $ make test
  $ make manifest
  $ make dist
  $ mojo cpanify -u USER -p PASS Mojolicious-Plugin-DebugHelper-0.01.tar.gz

Bundling assets with plugins

Assets such as templates and static files can be easily bundled with your plugins, even if you plan to release them to CPAN.

  $ mojo generate plugin AlertAssets
  $ mkdir AlertAssets/lib/Mojolicious/Plugin/AlertAssets
  $ cd AlertAssets/lib/Mojolicious/Plugin/AlertAssets
  $ mkdir public
  $ echo 'alert("Hello World!");' > public/alertassets.js
  $ mkdir templates
  $ echo '%= javascript "/alertassets.js"' > templates/alertassets.html.ep

Just append their respective directories to the list of search paths when register is called.

  package Mojolicious::Plugin::AlertAssets;
  use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';

  use File::Basename 'dirname';
  use File::Spec::Functions 'catdir';

  sub register {
    my ($self, $app) = @_;

    # Append "templates" and "public" directories
    my $base = catdir(dirname(__FILE__), 'AlertAssets');
    push @{$app->renderer->paths}, catdir($base, 'templates');
    push @{$app->static->paths},   catdir($base, 'public');
  }

  1;

Both will work just like normal templates and public directories once you've installed and loaded the plugin, with slightly lower precedence.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;

  plugin 'AlertAssets';

  get '/alert_me';

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ alert_me.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head>
      <title>Alert me!</title>
      %= include 'alertassets'
    </head>
    <body>You've been alerted.</body>
  </html>

And it works just the same for assets bundled in the DATA section of your plugin.

  package Mojolicious::Plugin::AlertAssets;
  use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';

  sub register {
    my ($self, $app) = @_;

    # Append class
    push @{$app->renderer->classes}, __PACKAGE__;
    push @{$app->static->classes},   __PACKAGE__;
  }

  1;
  __DATA__

  @@ alertassets.js
  alert("Hello World!");

  @@ alertassets.html.ep
  %= javascript "/alertassets.js"

ADVANCED

Less commonly used and more powerful features.

Rendering static files

If automatic rendering of static files is not enough, you can also render them manually from your DATA sections and public directories with "render_static" in Mojolicious::Controller.

  $self->res->headers->content_disposition('attachment; filename=bar.png;');
  $self->render_static('foo/bar.png');

Custom responses

For entirely custom responses to, for example, stream content directly from files, you can use "rendered" in Mojolicious::Controller to tell the renderer that a response has been generated.

  $self->res->headers->content_type('text/plain');
  $self->res->content->asset(Mojo::Asset::File->new(path => '/etc/passwd'));
  $self->rendered(200);

Chunked transfer encoding

For very dynamic content you might not know the response Content-Length in advance, that's where the chunked Transfer-Encoding comes in handy. A common use would be to send the head section of an HTML document to the browser in advance and speed up preloading of referenced images and stylesheets.

  $self->write_chunk('<html><head><title>Example</title></head>' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->finish('<body>Example</body></html>');
  });

The optional drain callback ensures that all previous chunks have been written before processing continues. An empty chunk or call to "finish" in Mojolicious::Controller marks the end of the stream.

  29
  <html><head><title>Example</title></head>
  1b
  <body>Example</body></html>
  0

Especially in combination with long inactivity timeouts this can be very useful for Comet (long polling). Due to limitations in some web servers this might not work perfectly in all deployment environments.

Encoding

Templates stored in files are expected to be UTF-8 by default, but that can be easily changed.

  # Application
  package MyApp;
  use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

  sub startup {
    my $self = shift;

    # Different encoding
    $self->renderer->encoding('koi8-r');
  }

  1;

All templates from the DATA section are bound to the encoding of the Perl script, so don't forget to use the utf8 pragma if necessary.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;
  use utf8;

  get '/heart';

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ heart.html.ep
  I ♥ Mojolicious!

Base64 encoded DATA files

Base64 encoded static files such as images can be easily stored in the DATA section of your application, similar to templates.

  @@ favicon.ico (base64)
  ...base64 encoded image...

Inflating DATA templates

Templates stored in files get preferred over files from the DATA section, this allows you to include a default set of templates in your application that the user can later customize. The inflate command will write all templates and static files from the DATA section into actual files in the templates and public directories.

  $ ./myapp.pl inflate

Customizing the template syntax

You can easily change the whole template syntax by loading Mojolicious::Plugin::EPRenderer with a custom configuration.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;

  plugin EPRenderer => {
    name     => 'mustache',
    template => {
      tag_start => '{{',
      tag_end   => '}}'
    }
  };

  get '/:name' => {name => 'Anonymous'} => 'index';

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ index.html.mustache
  Hello {{= $name }}.

Mojo::Template contains the whole list of available options.

Adding your favorite template system

Maybe you would prefer a different template system than ep, all you have to do is add a new handler.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;

  app->renderer->add_handler(
    mine => sub {
      my ($renderer, $c, $output, $options) = @_;

      # Check for one time use inline template
      my $inline = $options->{inline};

      # Check for absolute template path
      my $path = $r->template_path($options);

      # Check for appropriate template in DATA section
      my $data = $r->get_data_template($options);

      # This part is up to you and your template system :)
      ...

      # Just die if an error occurs
      die 'Something went wrong';

      # Or pass the rendered result back to the renderer
      $$output = 'Hello World!';

      # And return true if something has been rendered or false otherwise
      return 1;
    }
  );

  get '/' => 'index';

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ index.html.mine
  ...

Since most template systems don't support templates in the DATA section, the renderer provides methods to help you with that.

Post-processing content

While post-processing tasks are generally very easy with the after_dispatch hook, especially for content generated by the renderer, there are a few things you need to watch out for, such as multipart content, dynamically generated content, content that is streamed directly from files and content with range constraints.

  use Mojolicious::Lite;
  use IO::Compress::Gzip 'gzip';

  hook after_dispatch => sub {
    my $self = shift;

    # Check if "gzip => 1" has been set in the stash
    return unless $self->stash->{gzip};

    # Check if user agent accepts GZip compression
    return unless ($self->req->headers->accept_encoding // '') =~ /gzip/i;

    # Check for multipart content or if content will be dynamically generated
    return if $self->res->is_multipart || $self->res->is_dynamic;

    # Check if content is streamed from a file or has a range constraint
    my $asset = $self->res->content->asset;
    return if $asset->is_file || $asset->is_range;

    # Compress content
    gzip \(my $dummy = $asset->slurp), \my $compressed;
    $self->res->body($compressed)->headers->content_encoding('gzip');
  };

  get '/' => {template => 'hello', title => 'Hello', gzip => 1};

  app->start;
  __DATA__

  @@ hello.html.ep
  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <html>
    <head><title><%= title %></title></head>
    <body>Compressed content.</body>
  </html>

MORE

You can continue with Mojolicious::Guides now or take a look at the Mojolicious wiki, which contains a lot more documentation and examples by many different authors.