NAME
Blosxom::Include - a perl source filter to allow external configuration settings to be included within blosxom plugins with minimal code
SYNOPSIS
# In a random blosxom plugin ...
# Add as the first code statement in your plugin (before the package stmt)
use Blosxom::Include qw(my_plugin_name);
# Add a commented-out include directive after last plugin config item:
# IncludeConfig();
# Then create your external configuration file in your $blosxom::config_dir
# directory with the name you used in the 'use' statement above - typically
# the name of your plugin. Usually you can just copy the entire
# configuration section, which is typically the bits between the:
# --- Configuration variables -----
# ---------------------------------
# sections.
DESCRIPTION
Blosxom::Include is a perl source filter to allow external configuration settings to be included within blosxom plugins with a minimum of fuss.
It works by injecting an external configuration file directly into the plugin at the point of the IncludeConfig() directive, which is typically immediately after the configuration section. This allows you to override and redefine any configuration item you choose, including lexical variables (my $foo = 'bar'), which you can't modify externally any other way.
To use, you add the following to the very top of your plugin (before the package statement):
use Blosxom::Include qw(my_plugin_name);
e.g. for atomfeed, you would use:
use Blosxom::Include qw(atomfeed);
Then immediately after the configuration section, add an include marker in a comment:
# IncludeConfig();
This gets replaced by the external config when the source filter runs, before the script is passed to the interpreter.
If you are distributing your plugin, I suggest you also comment out the use directive, since not everyone will have this module installed. It's reasonably straightforward to uncomment it for an installed set of plugins after installation e.g.
perl -i -pe 's/^# *(use Blosxom::Include)/$1/' file1 file2 ...
ALTERNATIVES
I tried initially to do this within blosxom.cgi itself by just doing a simple require on the external config file after the initial plugin itself had been loaded (into the same package namespace, of course). This works great for package-scoped (global) configuration variables, but doesn't work with lexical variables (my $config_item), which are inherently file-scoped.
AUTHOR
Gavin Carr <gavin@openfusion.com.au>
LICENCE
Copyright 2007 Gavin Carr.
This program is free software; you can redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as perl itself.