NAME

CGI::Application::Plugin::DBIProfile::Graph::HTML - VERY basic pure html vertical bar graphing for CAP:DBIProfile.

SYNOPSIS

# in httpd.conf
SetVar CAP_DBIPROFILE_GRAPHMODULE CGI::Application::Plugin::DBIProfile::Graph::HTML
PerlSetVar CAP_DBIPROFILE_GRAPHMODULE CGI::Application::Plugin::DBIProfile::Graph::HTML

DESCRIPTION

This module is provided as a basic implementation of graphing for CAP:DBIProfile. It can be used as an example to develop other, more sophisticated, graphing solutions.

GRAPH PLUGIN DEVELOPMENT

The graphing plugin must have a method called "build_graph", which must accept options as a hash.

It should return a scalar or scalar ref holding the HTML output needed to generate your graph.

The following options will be passed to the "build_graph" method:

self

The cgiapp object.

mode_param

$self->mode_param - the runmode variable used to determine runmode (usefull for creating links back to ourselves).

title

A textual title for your graph. You don't have to use this, but is there if you want it.

ylabel

Label for values we're graphing. Either "Count" or "Seconds".

data

An array of the datapoints to graph.

tags

Labels for each datapoint which match the labels that will be used on the sql statement list (1 to however many items there are).

The easiest graphs to implement are fully inline - ie. it doesn't need to make any external calls (no <image> or <embed> tags and such). CGI::Application::Plugin::DBIProfile::Graph::HTML is an example of this. Other possible candidates are Plotr and Open Flash Chart (using js interface to populate data).

In order to generate a graph that isn't pure html/javascript, you'll need to pass the data to be graphed with your call to the external object. For example, if you want to use GDGraph, you could create a separate cgi script that returns graphs based on params passed to it, and return an approapriate image tag to from your graphing module. For example:

<img src="/cgi-bin/graph.pl?data=20,14,42&tags=1,2,3">

Another way, would be to add a runmode in a CGI::Application "init" hook, and pass that runmode in a link back to the same script, and include your graph module in our script with a use statement. For example:

sub import {
    my $c = scalar caller;
    $c->add_callback( 'init' => \&_add_runmode );
}

sub _add_runmode {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->run_modes( my_dbiprof_graph => \&graph );
}
sub build_graph {
    my $class = shift;
    my %opts = @_;
    return "<img src="?$opts{mode_param}=my_dbiprof_graph&data=20,14,42&tags=1,2,3">\n";
}
sub graph {
    ... build your graph image and return it in CGI::Application style...
}

REQUIREMENTS

L<HTML::Template>

SEE ALSO

L<CGI::Application::Plugin::DBIProfile>

AUTHOR

Joshua I Miller, L<unrtst@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright 2007 Joshua Miller, all rights reserved.

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