
Cooking Recipes

As the chapter's title implies, here you will find ready-to-go mod_perl 2.0 recipes.
If you know a useful recipe, not yet listed here, please post it to the mod_perl mailing list and we will add it here.

use CGI::Cookie (); use Apache2::RequestRec (); use APR::Table (); use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(REDIRECT); my $location = "http://example.com/final_destination/"; sub handler { my $r = shift; my $cookie = CGI::Cookie->new(-name => 'mod_perl', -value => 'awesome'); $r->err_headers_out->add('Set-Cookie' => $cookie); $r->headers_out->set(Location => $location); $r->status(Apache2::Const::REDIRECT); return Apache2::Const::REDIRECT; } 1;

use CGI::Cookie (); use Apache2::RequestRec (); use APR::Table (); use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(REDIRECT); my $location = "http://example.com/final_destination/"; sub handler { my $r = shift; my $cookie = CGI::Cookie->new(-name => 'mod_perl', -value => 'awesome'); $r->err_headers_out->add('Set-Cookie' => $cookie); $r->headers_out->set(Location => $location); return Apache2::Const::REDIRECT; } 1;
note that this example differs from the Registry example only in that it does not attempt to fiddle with $r->status() - ModPerl::Registry uses $r->status() as a hack, but handlers should never manipulate the status field in the request record.

use Apache2::Request ();
use Apache2::RequestRec ();
use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(OK);
use APR::Table ();
use APR::Request::Cookie ();
sub handler {
my $r = shift;
my $req = $r->pool();
my $cookie = APR::Request::Cookie->new($req, name => "foo", value => time(), path => '/cookie');
$r->err_headers_out->add('Set-Cookie' => $cookie->as_string);
$r->content_type("text/plain");
$r->print("Testing....");
return Apache2::Const::OK;
}

Maintainer is the person(s) you should contact with updates, corrections and patches.

Only the major authors are listed above. For contributors see the Changes file.