NAME
APR::Request - wrapper for libapreq2's module/handle API.
SYNOPSIS
use APR::Request;
$req = APR::Request::Custom->handle($pool,
"foo=arg1&bar=arg2",
"apache=quux",
$parser, 1e6, $bb);
$param = $req->param("foo");
$cookie = $req->jar("apache");
DESCRIPTION
The APR::Request
module provides the base methods for interfacing with libapreq2's module API. It also provides a few utility functions and constants.
This manpage documents version 2.16 of the APR::Request, APR::Request::Custom, APR::Request::Cookie::Table, and APR::Request::Param::Table packages.
METHODS
APR::Request::Custom - derived from APR::Request.
handle
APR::Request::Custom->handle($pool,
$query_string,
$cookie_header,
$parser,
$read_limit,
$brigade)
Creates a new APR::Request::Custom object. The $query_string and $cookie_headers are immediately parsed into the args
and jar
tables. The $parser is an APR::Request::Parser object which is invoked when fetching body
entries from the $brigade. The $read_limit represents the maximum number of bytes this handle may feed into the parser.
METHODS
APR::Request
pool
$req->pool()
Returns the APR::Pool object associated to this handle.
bucket_alloc
$req->bucket_alloc()
Returns the APR::BucketAlloc object associated to this handle.
jar_status
$req->jar_status()
Returns the final status code of the handle's cookie header parser.
args_status
$req->args_status()
Returns the final status code of the handle's query-string parser.
body_status
$req->body_status()
Returns the final status code of the handle's body parser.
param_status
$req->param_status()
Returns ($req->args_status, $req->body_status)
in list context; otherwise returns $req->args_status || $req->body_status
.
parse
$req->parse()
Parses the jar, args, and body tables. Returns $req->jar_status, $req->args_status, $req->body_status
.
@status = $req->parse;
ok @status == 3;
ok $status[0] == $req->jar_status;
ok $status[1] == $req->args_status;
ok $status[2] == $req->body_status;
jar
$req->jar()
$req->jar($key)
With no arguments, this method returns a tied APR::Request::Cookie::Table object (or undef if the "Cookie" header is absent) in scalar context, or the names (in order, with repetitions) of all the parsed cookies.
With the $key
argument, in scalar context this method fetches the first matching cookie. In list context it returns all matching cookies. The returned cookies are the values as they appeared in the incoming Cookie header.
jar() will throw an APR::Request::Error object whenever jar_status() is non-zero and the return value is potentially invalid (eg scalar $req->jar($key)
will not die if the desired cookie was successfully parsed).
$jar = $req->jar;
@cookie_names = $req->jar;
ok $jar->isa("APR::Request::Cookie::Table");
ok shift @cookie_names eq $_ for keys %$jar;
$cookie = $req->jar("apache");
@cookies = $req->jar("apache");
args
$req->args()
$req->args($key)
With no arguments, this method returns a tied APR::Request::Param::Table object (or undef if the query string is absent) in scalar context, or the names (in order, with repetitions) of all the parsed query-string arguments.
With the $key
argument, in scalar context this method fetches the first matching query-string arg. In list context it returns all matching args.
args() will throw an APR::Request::Error object whenever args_status() is non-zero and the return value is potentially invalid (eg scalar $req->args($key)
will not die if the desired query argument was successfully parsed).
$args = $req->args;
@arg_names = $req->args;
ok $args->isa("APR::Request::Param::Table");
ok shift @arg_names eq $_ for keys %$args;
$foo = $req->args("foo");
@bar = $req->args("bar");
body
$req->body()
$req->body($key)
With no arguments, this method returns a tied APR::Request::Param::Table object (or undef if the request body is absent) in scalar context, or the names (in order, with repetitions) of all the parsed cookies.
With the $key
argument, in scalar context this method fetches the first matching body param. In list context it returns all matching body params.
body() will throw an APR::Request::Error object whenever body_status() is non-zero and the return value is potentially invalid (eg scalar $req->body($key)
will not die if the desired body param was successfully parsed).
$body = $req->body;
@body_names = $req->body;
ok $body->isa("APR::Request::Param::Table");
ok shift @body_names eq $_ for keys %$body;
$alpha = $req->body("alpha");
@beta = $req->body("beta");
param
$req->param()
$req->param($key)
With no arguments, this method returns a tied APR::Request::Param::Table object (or undef, if the query string and request body are absent) in scalar context, or the names (in order, with repetitions) of all the incoming (args + body) params.
With the $key
argument, in scalar context this method fetches the first matching param. In list context it returns all matching params.
param() will throw an APR::Request::Error object whenever param_status() is non-zero and the return value is potentially invalid (eg scalar $req->param($key)
will not die if the desired param was successfully parsed).
$param = $req->param;
@param_names = $req->param;
ok $param->isa("APR::Request::Param::Table");
ok shift @param_names eq $_ for keys %$param;
$foo = $req->param("foo");
@foo = $req->param("foo");
upload
$req->upload()
$req->upload($key)
With no arguments, this method returns a tied APR::Request::Param::Table object (or undef if the request body is absent) in scalar context (whose entries are APR::Request::Param objects), or the names (in order, with repetitions) of all the incoming uploads.
With the $key
argument, in scalar context this method fetches the first matching upload. In list context it returns all matching uploads. The return values are APR::Request::Param objects.
upload() will throw an APR::Request::Error object whenever body_status() is non-zero.
$uploads = $req->upload;
@upload_names = $req->upload;
ok $uploads->isa("APR::Request::Param::Table");
ok shift @upload_names eq $_ for keys %$uploads;
ok $_->upload for values %$uploads;
$up = $req->upload("beta");
@ups = $req->upload("beta");
ok $_->isa("APR::Request::Param") for $up, @ups;
ok $_->upload for $up, @ups;
read_limit
$req->read_limit()
$req->read_limit($set)
Get/set the read limit, which controls the total amount of bytes that can be fed to the current parser.
brigade_limit
$req->brigade_limit()
$req->brigade_limit($set)
Get/set the brigade_limit for the current parser. This limit determines how many bytes of a file upload that the parser may spool into main memory. Uploads exceeding this limit are written directly to disk.
temp_dir
$req->temp_dir()
$req->temp_dir($set)
Get/set the spool directory for uploads which exceed the configured brigade_limit.
disable_uploads
$req->disable_uploads()
Engage the disable_uploads hook for this request.
upload_hook
$req->upload_hook($callback)
Add an upload hook callback for this request. The arguments to the $callback sub are ($upload, $new_data).
import
Exports a list of subs into the caller's package.
SUBROUTINES
APR::Request
encode
encode($string)
Exportable sub which returns the url-encoded form of $string
.
decode
decode($string)
Exportable sub which returns the url-decoded form of $string
.
SUBCLASSING
APR::Request
If the instances of your subclass are hash references then you can actually inherit from APR::Request as long as the APR::Request object is stored in an attribute called "r" or "_r". (The APR::Request class effectively does the delegation for you automagically, as long as it knows where to find the APR::Request object to delegate to.) For example:
package MySubClass;
use APR::Request::Custom;
our @ISA = qw(APR::Request);
sub new {
my($class, @args) = @_;
return bless { r => APR::Request::Custom->handle(@args) }, $class;
}
METHODS
APR::Request::Cookie::Table - read-only version of APR::Table.
Tables in this class normally arise from calls to APR::Request::jar()
.
cookie_class
$table->cookie_class()
$table->cookie_class($set)
Get/set the class each table element is blessed into during a get or FETCH call. If defined, the class must be derived from APR::Request::Cookie. When called with $set, it returns the $table. Otherwise it returns the name of the current class, or undef if no cookie class is defined.
get
$table->get($key)
Same as FETCH.
FETCH
$table->FETCH($key)
In scalar context, this returns the first value matching $key (note: see NEXTKEY for additional notes). The match is always case-insensitive. In list context, this returns all matching values. Note: the type of the return values depends on the table's current cookie_class.
EXISTS
Synonym for defined
; these tables are not allowed to contain undefined values. Since these are constant tables, they don't autovivify either.
FIRSTKEY
$table->FIRSTKEY()
Returns the first key in the table.
NEXTKEY
$table->NEXTKEY()
Returns the next key in the table. For perl 5.8+, if the key is multivalued, a subsequent FETCH on this key will return the corresponding value, until either NEXTKEY or FIRSTKEY is invoked again. For perl 5.6, FETCH always returns the first value.
do
$table->do($callback, @keys)
Same as APR::Table::do; iterates over the table calling $callback->($key, $value) for each matching @keys. If @keys is empty, this iterates over the entire table.
Note: The type of $value inserted into the callback depends on the table's current cookie_class.
METHODS
APR::Request::Param::Table
param_class
$table->param_class()
$table->param_class($set)
Get/set the class each table element is blessed into during a get
or FETCH
call. If defined, the class must be derived from APR::Request::Param. When called with $set, it returns the $table. Otherwise it returns the name of the current class, or undef if no param class is defined.
get
$table->get($key)
Same as FETCH.
FETCH
$table->FETCH($key)
In scalar context, this returns the first value matching $key (see NEXTKEY for additional notes on this). The match is always case-insensitive. In list context, this returns all matching values. Note: the type of the return values depends on the table's current param_class.
EXISTS
Synonym for defined
; these tables are not allowed to contain undefined values. Since these are constant tables, they don't autovivify either.
NEXTKEY
$table->NEXTKEY()
Returns the next key in the table. For perl 5.8+, if the key is multivalued, a subsequent FETCH on this key will return the corresponding value, until either NEXTKEY or FIRSTKEY is invoked again. For perl 5.6, FETCH always returns the first value.
FIRSTKEY
$table->FIRSTKEY()
Returns the first key in the table.
do
$table->do($callback, @keys)
Same as APR::Table::do; iterates over the table calling $callback->($key, $value) for each matching @keys. If @keys is empty, this iterates over the entire table.
Note: The type of $value inserted into the callback depends on the table's current value_class.
SEE ALSO
APR::Request::Error, APR::Request::Param, APR::Request::Cookie, APR::Request::Parser
COPYRIGHT
Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
(the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.