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NAME

HTML::Mason::Interp - Mason Component Interpreter

SYNOPSIS

    my $i = new HTML::Mason::Interp (data_dir=>'/usr/local/mason',
                                     comp_root=>'/usr/local/www/htdocs/',
                                     ...other params...);

DESCRIPTION

Interp is the Mason workhorse, executing components and routing their output and errors to all the right places. In a mod_perl environment, Interp objects are handed off immediately to an ApacheHandler object which internally calls the Interp implementation methods. In that case the only user method is the new() constructor.

If you want to call components outside of mod_perl (e.g. from CGI or a stand-alone Perl script), see the STANDALONE MODE section below.

PARAMETERS FOR new() CONSTRUCTOR

allow_recursive_autohandlers

True or undef, default is undef. If true, autohandlers apply both to their own directories and all subdirectories; if undef, only to their own directories. See the Devel/autohandlers section of the Component Developer's Guide for a discussion of the pros and cons.

autohandler_name

File name used for autohandlers. Default is "autohandler". If undef, Mason will not look for autohandlers.

code_cache_max_size

Specifies the maximum size, in bytes, of the in-memory code cache where components are stored. e.g.

    code_cache_max_size => 20*1024*1024
    code_cache_max_size => 20_000_000

Default is 10 MB. See the Admin/Code Cache section of the Admin Guide for further details.

comp_root

The required Mason component root. All components live under the comp_root.

You may also specify multiple component roots to be searched in the spirit of Perl's @INC. To do so you must specify a list of lists:

    comp_root => [[key1, root1], [key2, root2], ...]

Each pair consists of a key and root. The key is a string that identifies the root mnemonically to a component developer. Data cache and object directories are split up by these keys to make sure different components sharing the same path have different cache and object files. The key is also included whenever Mason prints the component title, as in an error message.

For example:

    comp_root => [['private', '/usr/home/joe/comps'], ['main', '/usr/local/www/htdocs']]

This specifies two component roots, a main component tree and a private tree which overrides certain components. The order is respected ala @INC, so 'private' is searched first and 'main' second.

current_time

Overrides the time returned by $m->time with a fixed Perl time() value (seconds since the epoch). On time-sensitive sites, this can be used to set up port-based time/date simulations, e.g. a port that looks one day into the future.

With no current_time parameter (the default), $m->time reports the true time.

data_dir

The required Mason data directory. Mason's various data directories (obj, cache, debug, etc), live within the data_dir.

data_cache_dir

Specifies an absolute directory for data cache files. By default, it lives under data_dir/cache.

dhandler_name

File name used for dhandlers. Default is "dhandler". If undef, Mason will not look for dhandlers.

max_recurse

The maximum component stack depth the interpreter is allowed to descend before signalling an error. Default is 16.

out_method

Indicates where to send output. If out_method is a reference to a scalar, output is appended to the scalar. If out_method is a reference to a subroutine, the subroutine is called with each output string. For example, to send output to a file called "mason.out":

    my $fh = new IO::File ">mason.out";
    ...
    out_method => sub { $fh->print($_[0]) }

By default, out_method prints to standard output. (In a mod_perl environment this is automatically redirected to the HTTP client.)

out_mode

Specifies one of two ways to send output, 'batch' or 'stream'. In batch mode Mason computes the entire page in a memory buffer and then transmits it all at once. In stream mode Mason outputs data as soon as it is computed. (This does not take into account buffering done by Apache or the O/S.) The default mode is batch. See the Admin/staging vs production section of the Admin Guide for a discussion of the trade-offs.

parser

Parser object for compiling components on the fly. If omitted, creates a parser with default parameters.

preloads

A set of component paths and/or component directories to load when the interpreter initializes. This should only be used for components that are frequently viewed and rarely updated. See the Admin/preloading section of the Admin Guide for further details.

static_file_root

Absolute path to prepend to relative filenames passed to $m-file()>. Does not require a trailing slash. For example, if the file root is '/foo/bar', then $m-file('baz/bap')> will read the file '/foo/bar/baz/bap'. Undefined by default; if left undefined, relative path names to $m-file()> are prepended with the current component directory.

system_log_file

Absolute path of system log. Default is data_dir/etc/system.log.

system_log_separator

Separator to use between fields on a line in the system log. Default is ctrl-A ("\cA").

system_log_events

A string value indicating one or more events to record in the system log, separated by "|". Default is to log nothing.

use_data_cache

True or undef, default is true. Specifies whether the $m->cache and related commands are operational. You may need to disable data caching temporarily for debugging purposes, but normally this should be left alone.

use_object_files

True or undef, default is true. Specifies whether Mason creates object files to save the results of component parsing. You may want to turn off object files for disk space reasons, but otherwise this should be left alone.

use_reload_file

True or undef, default is undef. If true, disables Mason's automatic timestamp checking on component source files, relying instead on an explicitly updated Admin/reload file.

verbose_compile_error

True or undef, default is undef. If true, component compile errors are followed with the full component source, annotated with line numbers, to better interpret the error message. Does not affect runtime errors.

ACCESSOR METHODS

All of the above properties have standard accessor methods of the same name. In general, no arguments retrieves the value, and one argument sets and returns the value. For example:

    my $interp = new HTML::Mason::Interp (...);
    my $p = $interp->parser;
    my $comproot = $interp->comp_root;
    $interp->out_method(\$buf);

The following properties can be queried but not modified: comp_root, data_dir, system_log_file, system_log_separator, preloads.

OTHER METHODS

STANDALONE MODE

Although Mason is most commonly used in conjunction with mod_perl, there is also a functional API that allows you to use Mason from CGI programs or from stand-alone Perl scripts. In the latter case Mason can be used as a glorified Text::Template, producing a set of files from components, or used to generate a flat version of a componentized site.

When using Mason outside of mod_perl, just create a Parser and Interp object; you do not need the ApacheHandler object. Once you've created an interpreter, the main thing you'll want to do with it is call a component and do something with the output. To call a component, use Interp's exec() method:

    $interp->exec(<comp> [,<..list of component params..>]);

where comp is a component path or component object.

Component parameters are given as a series of name/value pairs, just as they are with $m-comp>. exec returns the return value of the component. Component output is sent to standard output by default, but you can change this by specifying out_method.

Here is a skeleton script that calls a component and places the output in a file:

    my $outbuf;
    my $parser = new HTML::Mason::Parser;
    my $interp = new HTML::Mason::Interp (parser=>$parser,
                                          comp_root=>'<component root>',
                                          data_dir=>'<data directory>',
                                          out_method=>\$outbuf);
    my $retval = $interp->exec('<component path>',<args>...);
    open(F,"mason.out");
    print F $outbuf;
    close(F);
    print "return value of component was: $retval\n";

AUTHOR

Jonathan Swartz, swartz@transbay.net

SEE ALSO

HTML::Mason, HTML::Mason::Parser, HTML::Mason::ApacheHandler, HTML::Mason::Admin

1 POD Error

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 205:

You can't have =items (as at line 209) unless the first thing after the =over is an =item