man Apache::Request () - Methods for dealing with client request data

NAME

Apache::Request - Methods for dealing with client request data

SYNOPSIS

    use Apache::Request ();
    my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r);

DESCRIPTION

Apache::Request is a subclass of the Apache class, which adds methods for parsing GET requests and POST requests where Content-type is one of application/x-www-form-urlencoded or multipart/form-data. See the libapreq(3) manpage for more details.

Apache::Request METHODS

The interface is designed to mimic CGI.pm 's routines for parsing query parameters. The main differences are

* The query parameters are stored as Apache::Table objects, and are therefore parsed using case-insensitive keys.
* The query string is always parsed, even for POST requests.

new

Create a new Apache::Request object with an Apache request_rec object:

    my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r);

All methods from the Apache class are inherited.

The following attributes are optional:

POST_MAX
Limit the size of POST data (in bytes). Apache::Request::parse will return an error code if the size is exceeded:
 my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r, POST_MAX => 1024);
 my $status = $apr->parse;
 if ($status) {
     my $errmsg = $apr->notes("error-notes");
     ...
     return $status;
 }
DISABLE_UPLOADS
Disable file uploads. Apache::Request::parse will return an error code if a file upload is attempted:
 my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r, DISABLE_UPLOADS => 1);
 my $status = $apr->parse;
 if ($status) {
     my $errmsg = $apr->notes("error-notes");
     ...
     return $status;
 }
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:
 my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r, TEMP_DIR => "/home/httpd/tmp");
 my $upload = $apr->upload('file');
 $upload->link("/home/user/myfile") || warn "link failed: $!";
Note: The standard C library function CWtempnam() is used to define the file to be used, and it may well prefer to look for some other temporary directory, specified by an environment variable in the environment of the user that Apache is running as, in preference to the one passed to it. For example, Microsoft's CWtempnam() implementation will look for a TMP environment variable first; glibc's version looks for TMPDIR first. The TEMP_DIR specified here is generally only used if the relevant environment variable is not set, or the directory specified by it does not exist. Refer to your system's C library documentation for the full details on your platform.
HOOK_DATA
Extra configuration info passed to an upload hook. See the description for the next item, UPLOAD_HOOK.
UPLOAD_HOOK
Sets up a callback to run whenever file upload data is read. This can be used to provide an upload progress meter during file uploads. Apache will automatically continue writing the original data to CW$upload->fh after the hook exits.
 my $transparent_hook = sub {
   my ($upload, $buf, $len, $hook_data) = @_;
   warn "$hook_data: got $len bytes for " . $upload->name;
 };
 my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r, 
                                HOOK_DATA => "Note",
                                UPLOAD_HOOK => $transparent_hook,
                               );
 $apr->parse;

instance

The instance() class method allows Apache::Request to be a singleton. This means that whenever you call Apache::Request->instance() within a single request you always get the same Apache::Request object back. This solves the problem with creating the Apache::Request object twice within the same request - the symptoms being that the second Apache::Request object will not contain the form parameters because they have already been read and parsed.

  my $apr = Apache::Request->instance($r, DISABLE_UPLOADS => 1);

Note that CWinstance() call will take the same parameters as the above call to CWnew(), however the parameters will only have an effect the first time CWinstance() is called within a single request. Extra parameters will be ignored on subsequent calls to CWinstance() within the same request.

Subrequests receive a new Apache::Request object when they call instance() - the parent request's Apache::Request object is not copied into the subrequest.

Also note that it is unwise to use the CWparse() method when using CWinstance() because you may end up trying to call it twice, and detecting errors where there are none.

parse

The parse method does the actual work of parsing the request. It is called for you by the accessor methods, so it is not required but can be useful to provide a more user-friendly message should an error occur:

    my $r = shift;
    my $apr = Apache::Request->new($r);

    my $status = $apr->parse; 
    unless ($status == OK) { 
        $apr->custom_response($status, $apr->notes("error-notes")); 
        return $status; 
    }

param

Get or set request parameters (using case-insensitive keys) by mimicing the OO interface of CWCGI::param. Unlike the CGI.pm version, Apache::Request's param method is very fast- it's now quicker than even mod_perl's native Apache->args method. However, CGI.pm's CW-attr => $val type arguments are not supported.

    # similar to CGI.pm

    my $value = $apr->param('foo');
    my @values = $apr->param('foo');
    my @params = $apr->param;

    # the following differ slightly from CGI.pm

    # assigns multiple values to 'foo'
    $apr->param('foo' => [qw(one two three)]);

    # returns ref to underlying apache table object
    my $table = $apr->param; # identical to $apr->parms - see below

parms

Get or set the underlying apache parameter table of the Apache::Request object. When invoked without arguments, CWparms returns a reference to an Apache::Table object that is tied to the Apache::Request object's parameter table. If called with an Apache::Table reference as as argument, the Apache::Request object's parameter table is replaced by the argument's table.

   # $apache_table references an Apache::Table object
   $apr->parms($apache_table); # sets $apr's parameter table

   # returns ref to Apache::Table object provided by $apache_table
   my $table = $apr->parms;

upload

Returns a single Apache::Upload object in a scalar context or all Apache::Upload objects in a list context:

    my $upload = $apr->upload;
    my $fh = $upload->fh;
    my $lines = 0; 
    while(<$fh>) { 
        ++$lines; 
        ...
    }

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

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

SUBCLASSING Apache::Request

The Apache::Request class cannot be subclassed directly because its constructor method does not bless new objects into the invocant class. Instead, it always blesses them into the Apache::Request class itself.

However, there are two main ways around this.

One way is to have a constructor method in your subclass that invokes the superclass constructor method and then re-blesses the new object into itself before returning it:

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

The other way is to aggregate and delegate: store an Apache::Request object in each instance of your subclass, and delegate any Apache::Request methods that you are not overriding to it:

        package MySubClass;
        use Apache::Request;
        sub new {
                my($class, @args) = @_;
                return bless { r => Apache::Request->new(@args) }, $class;
        }
        sub AUTOLOAD {
                my $proto = shift;
                return unless ref $proto;
                our $AUTOLOAD;
                my $name = $AUTOLOAD;
                $name =~ s/^.*:://;
                return $proto->{r}->$name(@_);
        }

A fancier AUTOLOAD() subroutine could be written to handle class methods too if required, but we leave that as an exercise for the reader because in fact the Apache::Request class provides some magic that makes the aggregate/delegate solution much easier.

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

Thus, the second example above can be simplified as:

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

Apache::Upload METHODS

name

The name of the filefield parameter:

    my $name = $upload->name;

filename

The filename of the uploaded file:

    my $filename = $upload->filename;

fh

The filehandle pointing to the uploaded file:

    my $fh = $upload->fh;
    while (<$fh>) {
        ...
    }

size

The size of the file in bytes:

    my $size = $upload->size;

info

The additional header information for the uploaded file. Returns a hash reference tied to the Apache::Table class. An optional key argument can be passed to return the value of a given header rather than a hash reference. Examples:

    my $info = $upload->info;
    while (my($key, $val) = each %$info) {
        ...
    }

    my $val = $upload->info("Content-type");

type

Returns the Content-Type for the given Apache::Upload object:

    my $type = $upload->type;
    #same as
    my $type = $upload->info("Content-Type");

next

Upload objects are implemented as a linked list by libapreq; the next method provides an alternative to using the Apache::Request upload method in a list context:

    for (my $upload = $apr->upload; $upload; $upload = $upload->next) {
        ...
    }

    #functionally the same as:

    for my $upload ($apr->upload) {
        ...
    }

tempname

Provides the name of the spool file. This method is reserved for debugging purposes, and is possibly subject to change in a future version of Apache::Request.

link

To avoid recopying the spool file on a *nix-like system, link will create a hard link to it:

  my $upload = $apr->upload('file');
  $upload->link("/path/to/newfile") or
      die sprintf "link from '%s' failed: $!", $upload->tempname;

Typically the new name must lie on the same file system as the spool file. Check your system's link(2) manpage for details.

SEE ALSO

CREDITS

This interface is based on the original pure Perl version by Lincoln Stein.

LICENSE

   Copyright 2000-2004  The Apache Software Foundation

   Licensed 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.