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NAME

Web::Reactor perl-based web application machinery.

SYNOPSIS

Startup CGI script example:

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use lib '/opt/perl/reactor/lib'; # if Reactor is custom location installed
use Web::Reactor;

my %cfg = (
          'APP_NAME'     => 'demo',
          'APP_ROOT'     => '/opt/reactor/demo/',
          'LIB_DIRS'     => [ '/opt/reactor/demo/lib/'  ],
          'ACTIONS_SETS' => [ 'demo', 'Base', 'Core' ],
          'HTML_DIRS'    => [ '/opt/reactor/demo/html/' ],
          'SESS_VAR_DIR' => '/opt/reactor/demo/var/sess/',
          'DEBUG'        => 4,
          );

eval { new Web::Reactor( %cfg )->run(); };
if( $@ )
  {
  print STDERR "REACTOR CGI EXCEPTION: $@";
  print "content-type: text/html\n\nsystem is temporary unavailable";
  }

INTRODUCTION

Web::Reactor is a perl module which automates as much as possible of the all routine tasks when implementing web applications, interactive sites, etc. Main task is to handle all the repetative work and adding more comfortable functionality like:

* setting and recognising web browser cookies (for sessions or other data)
* handling user and page sessions (storage, cookie management, etc.)
* hiding html link data and forms data to rise page-to-page transfer safety.
* preprocessing of text/html, including hiding data, calling actions etc.
* on-demand loading of 'actions', perl code modules to handle dynamic pages.

Web::Reactor can be extended, though it was not supposed to. There are 4 main parts of it which can be extended. See section EXTENDING below for details.

EXAMPLES

HTML page file example:

<#html_header>

<$app_name>

<#menu>

testing page html file

action test: <&test>

<#html_footer>

Action module example:

package Reactor::Actions::demo::test;
use strict;
use Data::Dumper;
use Web::Reactor::HTML::FormEngine;

sub main
{
  my $reo = shift; # Web::Reactor object. Provides all API and context.

  my $text; # result html text

  if( $reo->get_input_button() eq 'FORM_CANCEL' )
    {
    # if clicked form button is cancel,
    # return back to the calling/previous page/view with optional data
    return $reo->forward_back( ACTION_RETURN => 'IS_CANCEL' );
    }

  # add some html content
  $text .= "<p>Reactor::Actions::demo::test here!<p>";

  # create link and hide its data. only accessible from inside web app.
  my $grid_href = $reo->args_new( _PN => 'grid', TABLE => 'testtable', );
  $text .= "<a href=?_=$grid_href>go to grid</a><p>";

  # access page session. it will be auto-loaded on demand
  my $page_session_hr = $reo->get_page_session();
  my $fortune = $page_session_hr->{ 'FORTUNE' } ||= `/usr/games/fortune`;

  # access input (form) data. $i and $e are hashrefs
  my $i = $reo->get_user_input(); # get plain user input (hashref)
  my $e = $reo->get_safe_input(); # get safe data (never reach user browser)

  $text .= "<p><hr><p>$fortune<hr>";

  my $bc = $reo->args_here(); # session keeper, this is manual use

  $text .= "<form method=post>";
  $text .= "<input type=hidden name=_ value=$bc>";
  $text .= "input <input name=inp>";
  $text .= "<input type=submit name=button:form_ok>";
  $text .= "<input type=submit name=button:form_cancel>";
  $text .= "</form>";

  my $form = $reo->new_form();

  $text .= "<p><hr><p>";

  return $text;
}

1;

PAGE NAMES, HTML FILE TEMPLATES, PAGE INSTANCES

Web::Reactor has a notion of a "page" which represents visible output to the end user browser. It has (i.e. uses) the following attributes:

* html file template (page name)
* page session data
* actions code (i.e. callbacks) used inside html text

All of those represent "page instance" and produce end user html visible page.

"Page names" are strictly limited to be alphanumeric and are mapped to file (or other storage) html content:

                 page name: example
html file template will be: page_example.html

HTML content may include other files (also limited to be alphanumeric):

        include text: <#other_file>
       file included: other_file.html
directories searched: 'HTML_DIRS' from Web::Reactor parameters.

Page names may be requested from the end user side, but include html files may be used only from the pages already requested.

ACTIONS/MODULES/CALLBACKS

Actions are loaded and executed by package names. In the HTML source files they can be called this way:

<&test_action arg1=val1 arg2=val2 flag1 flag2...>
<&test_action>

This will instruct Reactor action handler to look for this package name inside standard or user-added library directories:

Web/Reactor/Actions/*/test_action.pm

Asterisk will be replaced with the name of the used "action sets" give in config hash:

   'ACTIONS_SETS' => [ 'demo', 'Base', 'Core' ],

So the result list in this example will be:

Web/Reactor/Actions/demo/test_action.pm
Web/Reactor/Actions/Base/test_action.pm
Web/Reactor/Actions/Core/test_action.pm

This is used to allow overriding of standard modules or modules you dont have write access to.

Another way to call a module is directly from another module code with:

$reo->action_call( 'test_action', @args );

The package file will look like this:

package Web/Reactor/Actions/demo/test_action;
use strict;

sub main
{
  my $reo  = shift; # Web::Reactor object/instance
  my %args = @_; # all args passed to the action

  my $html_args = $args{ 'HTML_ARGS' }; # all
  ...
  return $result_data; # usually html text
}

$html_args is hashref with all args give inside the html code if this action is called from a html text. If you look the example above:

<&test_action arg1=val1 arg2=val2 flag1 flag2...>

The $html_args will look like this:

$html_args = {
             'arg1'  => 'val1',
             'arg2'  => 'val2',
             'flag1' => 1,
             'flag2' => 1,
             };

HTTP PARAMETERS NAMES

Web::Reactor uses underscore and one or two letters for its system http/html parameters. Some of the system params are:

_PN  -- html page name (points to file template, restricted to alphanumeric)
_AN  -- action name (points to action package name, restricted to alphanumeric)
_P   -- page session
_R   -- referer (caller) page session

Usually those names should not be directly used or visible inside actions code. More details about how those params are used can be found below.

USER SESSIONS

WR creates unique session for each connected user. The session is kept by a cookie. Usually WR needs justthis cookie to handle all user/server interaction. Inside WR action code, user session is represented as a hash reference. It may hold arbitrary data. "System" or WR-specific data inside user session has colon as prefix:

# $reo is Web::Reactor object (i.e. context) passed to the action/module code
my $user_session = $reo->get_user_session();
print STDERR $user_session->{ ':CTIME_STR' };
# prints in http log the create time in human friendly form

All data saved inside user session is automatically saved. When needed it can be explicitly with:

$reo->save();
# saves all modified context to disk or other storage

PAGE SESSIONS

Each page presented to the user has own session. It is very similar to the user session (it is hash reference, may hold any data, can be saved with $reo->save()). It is expected that page sessions hold all context data needed for any page to display properly. To preserve page session it is needed that it is included in any link to this page instance or in any html form used.

When called for the first time, each page request needs page name (_PN). Afterwards a unique page session is created and page name is saved inside. At this moment this page instance can be accessed (i.e. given control to) only with a page session id (_P):

$page_sid = ...; # taken from somewhere
# to pass control to the page instance:
$reo->forward( _P => $page_sid );
# the page instance will pull data from its page session and display in
# its last known state

Not always page session are needed. For example, when forward to the caller is needed, you just need to:

$reo->forward_back();
# this is equivalent to
my $ref_page_sid = $reo->get_ref_page_session_id();
$reo->forward( _P => $ref_page_sid );

Each page instance knows the caller page session and can give control back to. However it may pass more data when returning back to the caller:

$reo->forward_back( MORE_DATA => 'is here', OPTIONS_LIST => \@list );

When new page instance has to be called (created):

$reo->forward_new( _PN => 'some_page_name' );

CONFIG ENTRIES

Upon creation, Web:Reactor instance gets hash with config entries/keys:

* APP_NAME      -- alphanumeric application name (plus underscore)
* APP_ROOT      -- application root dir, used for app components search
* LIB_DIRS      -- directories from which actions and other libs are loaded
* ACTIONS_SETS  -- list of action "sets", appended to ACTIONS_DIRS
* HTML_DIRS     -- html file inlude directories
* SESS_VAR_DIR  -- used by filesystem session handling to store sess data
* DEBUG         -- positive number, enables debugging with verbosity level

Some entries may be omitted and default values are:

* LIB_DIRS      -- [ "$APP_ROOT/lib"  ]
* ACTIONS_SETS  -- [ $APP_NAME, 'Base', 'Core' ]
* HTML_DIRS     -- [ "$APP_ROOT/html" ]
* SESS_VAR_DIR  -- [ "$APP_ROOT/var"  ]
* DEBUG         -- 0

API FUNCTIONS

# TODO: input
# TODO: sessions
# TODO: arguments, constructing links
# TODO: forwarding
# TODO: html, forms, session keeping

DEPLOYMENT, DIRECTORIES, FILESYSTEM STRUCTURE

# TODO: install, cpan, manual, github, custom locations
# TODO: sessions dir, custom storage/session handling

EXTENDING

Web::Reactor is designed to allow extending or replacing the 4 main parts:

* Session storage (data store on filesystem, database, remote or vmem)

  base module:    Web::Reactor::Sessions
  current in use: Web::Reactor::Sessions::Filesystem

* HTML creation/expansion/preprocessing

  base module:    Web::Reactor::Preprocessor
  current in use: Web::Reactor::Preprocessor::Native

* Actions/modules execution (can be skipped if custom HTML prep used)

  base module:    Web::Reactor::Actions
  current in use: Web::Reactor::Actions::Native

* Main Web::Reactor modules, which controlls all the functionality.

  base module:    Web::Reactor
  current in use: Web::Reactor

Except main module (Web::Reactor) is is expected that base modules are subclassed for extension. Inside each of them there are notes on what must be extended and usage hints.

Current implementations of the modules, shipped with Web::Reactor, can also be extended and/or modified. However it is suggested checking base modules first.

Main module (Web::Reactor) handles all of the logic. It is not expected to be modified since it is designed to handle tightly all the parts. However, there are few things which can be modified but it is recommended to contact authors for an advice first. On the other hand, the main module instance is always passed as argument to all other modules/actions so it is good idea to add specific functionality which will be readily available everywhere.

PROJECT STATUS

Web::Reactor is stable and it is used in many production sites including banks, insurance, travel and other smaller companies.

API is frozen but it could be extended

If you are interested in the project or have some notes etc, contact me at:

Vladi Belperchinov-Shabanski "Cade"
<[email protected]>
<[email protected]>
<[email protected]>

further contact info, mailing list and github repository is listed below.

FIXME: TODO:

* config examples
* pages example
* actions example
* API description (input data, safe data, sessions, forwarding, actions, html)
* ...

REQUIRED ADDITIONAL MODULES

Reactor uses mostly perl core modules but it needs few others:

* CGI
* Scalar::Util
* Hash::Util
* Data::Dumper (for debugging)
* Exception::Sink
* Data::Tools

All modules are available with the perl package or from CPAN.

Additionally, several are available and from github:

* Exception::Sink
https://github.com/cade-vs/perl-exception-sink

* Data::Tools
https://github.com/cade-vs/perl-data-tools

DEMO APPLICATION

Documentation will be improved. Meanwhile you can check 'demo' directory inside distribution tarball or inside the github repository. This is fully functional (however stupid :)) application. It shows how data is processed, calling pages/views, inspecting page (calling views) stack, html forms automation, forwarding.

Additionally you may check DECOR information systems infrastructure, which uses Web::Reactor for its main web interface:

https://github.com/cade-vs/perl-decor

NOTES

To dump the content of the session files (.wrs files for USER, PAGE, LINK, HOLD):

perl -MStorable -MData::Dumper -e 'print Dumper( Storable::lock_retrieve(shift));' /path/to/file.wrs

MAILING LIST

GITHUB REPOSITORY

https://github.com/cade-vs/perl-web-reactor

git clone git://github.com/cade-vs/perl-web-reactor.git

AUTHOR

Vladi Belperchinov-Shabanski "Cade"
      <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
http://cade.noxrun.com
http://github.com/cade-vs

EOF

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Web::Reactor is perl-based web application machinery.

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