Apache2::Request man page on Fedora

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   31170 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
Fedora logo
[printable version]

Apache2::Request(3)   User Contributed Perl Documentation  Apache2::Request(3)

NAME
       Apache2::Request - Methods for dealing with client request data

SYNOPSIS
	   use Apache2::Request;
	   $req = Apache2::Request->new($r);
	   @foo = $req->param("foo");
	   $bar = $req->args("bar");

DESCRIPTION
       The Apache2::Request module provides methods for parsing GET and POST
       parameters encoded with either application/x-www-form-urlencoded or
       multipart/form-data.  Although Apache2::Request provides a few new APIs
       for accessing the parsed data, it remains largely backwards-compatible
       with the original 1.X API.  See the "PORTING from 1.X" section below
       for a list of known issues.

       This manpage documents the Apache2::Request package.

Apache2::Request
       The interface is designed to mimic the CGI.pm routines for parsing
       query parameters. The main differences are

       ·   "Apache2::Request::new" takes an environment-specific
		   object $r as (second) argument.  Newer versions of CGI.pm
	   also accept
		   this syntax within modperl.

       ·   The query parameters are stored in APR::Table derived objects, and
		   are therefore retrieved from the table by using case-
	   insensitive keys.

       ·   The query string is always parsed immediately, even for POST
	   requests.

   new
	   Apache2::Request->new($r, %args)

       Creates a new Apache2::Request object.

	   my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r, POST_MAX => "1M");

       With mod_perl2, the environment object $r must be an
       Apache2::RequestRec object.  In that case, all methods from
       Apache2::RequestRec are inherited.  In the (default) CGI environment,
       $r must be an APR::Pool object.

       The following args are optional:

       ·   "POST_MAX", "MAX_BODY"

	   Limit the size of POST data (in bytes).

       ·   "DISABLE_UPLOADS"

	   Disable file uploads.

       ·   "TEMP_DIR"

	   Sets the directory where upload files are spooled.  On a *nix-like
	   that supports link(2), the TEMP_DIR should be located on the same
	   file system as the final destination file:

	    use Apache2::Upload;
	    my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r, TEMP_DIR => "/home/httpd/tmp");
	    my $upload = $req->upload('file');
	    $upload->link("/home/user/myfile");

	   For more details on "link", see Apache2::Upload.

       ·   "HOOK_DATA"

	   Extra configuration info passed as the fourth argument to an upload
	   hook.  See the description for the next item, "UPLOAD_HOOK".

       ·   "UPLOAD_HOOK"

	   Sets up a callback to run whenever file upload data is read. This
	   can be used to provide an upload progress meter during file
	   uploads.  Apache will automatically continue writing the original
	   data to $upload->fh after the hook exits.

	     my $transparent_hook = sub {
	       my ($upload, $data, $data_len, $hook_data) = @_;
	       warn "$hook_data: got $data_len bytes for " . $upload->name;
	     };

	     my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r,
					     HOOK_DATA => "Note",
					     UPLOAD_HOOK => $transparent_hook,
					    );

   instance
	   Apache2::Request->instance($r)

       The default (and only) behavior of Apache2::Request is to intelligently
       cache POST data for the duration of the request.	 Thus there is no
       longer the need for a separate "instance()" method as existed in
       Apache2::Request for Apache 1.3 - all POST data is always available
       from each and every Apache2::Request object created during the
       request's lifetime.

       However an "instance()" method is aliased to "new()" in this release to
       ease the pain of porting from 1.X to 2.X.

   param
	   $req->param()
	   $req->param($name)

       Get the request parameters (using case-insensitive keys) by mimicing
       the OO interface of "CGI::param".

	   # similar to CGI.pm

	   my $foo_value   = $req->param('foo');
	   my @foo_values  = $req->param('foo');
	   my @param_names = $req->param;

	   # the following differ slightly from CGI.pm

	   # returns ref to APR::Request::Param::Table object representing
	   # all (args + body) params
	   my $table = $req->param;
	   @table_keys = keys %$table;

       In list context, or when invoked with no arguments as "$req->param()",
       "param" induces libapreq2 to read and parse all remaining data in the
       request body.  However, "scalar $req->param("foo")" is lazy: libapreq2
       will only read and parse more data if

	   1) no "foo" param appears in the query string arguments, AND
	   2) no "foo" param appears in the previously parsed POST data.

       In this circumstance libapreq2 will read and parse additional blocks of
       the incoming request body until either

	   1) it has found the the "foo" param, or
	   2) parsing is completed.

       Observe that "scalar $req->param("foo")" will not raise an exception if
       it can locate "foo" in the existing body or args tables, even if the
       query-string parser or the body parser has failed.  In all other
       circumstances "param" will throw an Apache2::Request::Error object into
       $@ should either parser fail.

	   $req->args_status(1); # set error state for query-string parser
	   ok $req->param_status == 1;

	   $foo = $req->param("foo");
	   ok $foo == 1;
	   eval { @foo = $req->param("foo") };
	   ok $@->isa("Apache2::Request::Error");
	   undef $@;
	   eval { my $not_found = $req->param("non-existent-param") };
	   ok $@->isa("Apache2::Request::Error");

	   $req->args_status(0); # reset query-string parser state to "success"

       Note: modifications to the "scalar $req->param()" table only affect the
       returned table object (the underlying C apr_table_t is generated from
       the parse data by apreq_params()).  Modifications do not affect the
       actual request data, and will not be seen by other libapreq2
       applications.

   parms, params
       The functionality of these functions is assumed by "param", so they are
       no longer necessary.  Aliases to "param" are provided in this release
       for backwards compatibility, however they are deprecated and may be
       removed from a future release.

   body
	   $req->body()
	   $req->body($name)

       Returns an APR::Request::Param::Table object containing the POST data
       parameters of the Apache2::Request object.

	   my $body = $req->body;

       An optional name parameter can be passed to return the POST data
       parameter associated with the given name:

	   my $foo_body = $req->body("foo");

       More generally, "body()" follows the same pattern as "param()" with
       respect to its return values and argument list.	The main difference is
       that modifications to the "scalar $req->body()" table affect the
       underlying apr_table_t attribute in apreq_request_t, so their impact
       will be noticed by all libapreq2 applications during this request.

   upload
	   $req->upload()
	   $req->upload($name)

       Requires "Apache2::Upload".  With no arguments, this method returns an
       APR::Request::Param::Table object in scalar context, or the names of
       all Apache2::Upload objects in list context.

       An optional name parameter can be passed to return the Apache2::Upload
       object associated with the given name:

	   my $upload = $req->upload($name);

       More generally, "upload()" follows the same pattern as "param()" with
       respect to its return values and argument list.	The main difference is
       that its returned values are Apache2::Upload object refs, not simple
       scalars.

       Note: modifications to the "scalar $req->upload()" table only affect
       the returned table object (the underlying C apr_table_t is generated by
       apreq_uploads()).  They do not affect the actual request data, and will
       not be seen by other libapreq2 applications.

   args_status
	   $req->args_status()

       Get the APR status code of the query-string parser.  APR_SUCCESS on
       success, error otherwise.

   body_status
	   $req->body_status()

       Get the current APR status code of the parsed POST data.	 APR_SUCCESS
       when parser has completed, APR_INCOMPLETE if parser has more data to
       parse, APR_EINIT if no post data has been parsed, error otherwise.

   param_status
	   $req->param_status()

       In scalar context, this returns "args_status" if there was an error
       during the query-string parse, otherwise this returns "body_status", ie

	   $req->args_status || $req->body_status

       In list context "param_status" returns the list "(args_status,
       body_status)".

   parse
	   $req->parse()

       Forces the request to be parsed immediately.  In void context, this
       will throw an APR::Request::Error should the either the query-string or
       body parser fail. In all other contexts it will return the two parsers'
       combined APR status code

	   $req->body_status || $req->args_status

       However "parse" should be avoided in most normal situations.  For
       example, in a mod_perl content handler it is more efficient to write

	   sub handler {
	       my $r = shift;
	       my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r);
	       $r->discard_request_body;   # efficiently parses the request body
	       my $parser_status = $req->body_status;

	       #...
	   }

       Calling "$r->discard_request_body" outside the content handler is
       generally a mistake, so use "$req->parse" there, but only as a last
       resort.	The Apache2::Request API is designed around a lazy-parsing
       scheme, so calling "parse" should not affect the behavior of any other
       methods.

SUBCLASSING Apache2::Request
       If the instances of your subclass are hash references then you can
       actually inherit from Apache2::Request as long as the Apache2::Request
       object is stored in an attribute called "r" or "_r". (The
       Apache2::Request class effectively does the delegation for you
       automagically, as long as it knows where to find the Apache2::Request
       object to delegate to.)	For example:

	       package MySubClass;
	       use Apache2::Request;
	       our @ISA = qw(Apache2::Request);
	       sub new {
		       my($class, @args) = @_;
		       return bless { r => Apache2::Request->new(@args) }, $class;
	       }

PORTING from 1.X
       This is the complete list of changes to existing methods from
       Apache2::Request 1.X.  These issues need to be addressed when porting
       1.X apps to the new 2.X API.

       ·   Apache2::Upload is now a separate module.  Applications
		   requiring the upload API must "use Apache2::Upload" in 2.X.
		   This is easily addressed by preloading the modules during
		   server startup.

       ·   You can no longer add (or set or delete) parameters in the
		   "scalar $req->param", "scalar $req->args" or
		   "scalar $req->body" tables.	Nor can you add (or set or
	   delete)
		   cookies in the "scalar $req->jar" table.

       ·   "instance()" is now identical to "new()", and is now deprecated.
	   It
		   may be removed from a future 2.X release.

       ·   "param" includes the functionality of "parms()" and "params()", so
		   they are now deprecated and may be removed from a future
	   2.X release.

       ·   "param" called in a list context no longer returns a unique list of
		   paramaters.	The returned list contains multiple instances
	   of the
		   parameter name for multivalued fields.

SEE ALSO
       APR::Request::Param, APR::Request::Error, Apache2::Upload,
       Apache2::Cookie, APR::Table(3).

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.

perl v5.14.2			  2010-11-25		   Apache2::Request(3)
[top]

List of man pages available for Fedora

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net