
mod_perl
Developer's Cookbook
Geoffrey Young, Paul Lindner, Randy Kobes
Résumé
Mod_perl is a unique piece of software that wholly integrates the power of Perl with the flexibility and stability of the Apache Web server. With mod_perl, developers can harness the power of the full Apache API and develop Web applications quickly and without sacrificing performance.
The mod_perl Developer's Cookbook teaches programming with the mod_perl API by example. The book takes developers from the basics of mod_perl to the development advanced Web applications. Developers will learn tricks, solutions, and mod_perl idioms gleaned from the authors' experience as developers and expert users of mod_perl.
Contents
Introduction
I. INSTALLATION AND CONFIGURATION.
1. Installing mod_perl.
Unix Binary Installation. Windows Binary Installation. Mac
OS X Binary Installation. Building mod_perl on Unix.
Building mod_perl on Windows. Building mod_perl on Mac OS
X. Building mod_perl as a Shared Library. Testing Your
Installation. Changing Apache Installation Directories.
Adding mod_perl to an Existing Apache Server. Reusing
Configuration Directives. Re-Creating a mod_perl
Installation. Distributing mod_perl to Many Machines.
Inspecting an Existing Server. Installing Apache Modules
from CPAN. Following mod_perl Development. Beyond Simple
CVS. Building mod_perl with Different perls.
2. Configuring mod_perl.
Migrating Legacy CGI Scripts. Using Apache::Registry. The
startup.pl Script. Sharing Script Namespace Under
Apache::Registry. Pre-Caching Apache::Registry Scripts.
Populating CGI Environment Variables. Setting Other
Environment Variables. Using Perl Switches. BEGIN and END
Blocks in startup.pl. Maintaining Your Own Libraries.
Persistent Database Connections. Pre-Spawning Database
Connections. Nonpersistent Database Connections in a
Persistent Environment. Setting mod_perl-Only Variables.
Setting Complex mod_perl Variables. Configuring Apache with
<Perl> Sections. Preserving Order in <Perl>
Sections. Using Command-Line Switches. Running Dual
Servers. Using mod_proxy to Direct Requests to a mod_perl
Server. Using mod_proxy_add_forward.
II. THE MOD_PERL API.
3. The Apache Request Object.
The Apache Request Object. The HTTP Request Message. The
Client Request. Accessing Client Request Headers. Accessing
HTML Form Fields. Reading POSTed Data Manually.
Manipulating Cookies. Handling File Uploads. Setting Server
Response Headers. Controlling Caching Behavior. Sending
Server Response Headers. Setting the Response Status.
Setting Error Headers. Manipulating Headers with Multiple
Like Fields. Using Subrequests. Setting Headers for
Subrequests. Short-Circuiting Subrequests. Getting or
Setting the Request Method. Accessing the Request Object
from XS.
4. Communicating with the Apache
Server.
Accessing the Apache::Server Object. Simulating IfModule
and IfDefine Directives. Accessing ServerRoot and
DocumentRoot. Writing to the Apache Error Log. Accessing
the Apache ErrorLog Directive. Controlling the LogLevel.
Accessing the Apache::Connection Object. Remote IP
Addresses and Hosts. Detecting a Broken Connection.
Terminating an Apache Child Process.
5. URI Manipulation.
Capturing the Request URI. Determining the URI
<Location>. Altering the Request URI. Constructing a
New URI. Escaping Special Characters Within a URI. Using
the URI to Force a MIME Type. Capturing Content from a
Subrequest. Using Apache::Util Outside mod_perl.
6. File Handling.
Creating Filehandles. Creating Temporary Files. Sending an
Entire File. Reading Files into Variables. Getting
Information About the Requested File. Working with
Conditional Headers. Byteserving and Range Requests.
Manipulating Date-Based Headers Directly. Flushing the
Print Buffers. Redirecting Output Filehandles.
7. Creating Handlers.
Creating a mod_perl Handler. Basic Handler Configuration.
Adding Handlers On-the-Fly. Preparing a Module for Release.
Creating a Release Tarball. Creating a Binary PPM
Distribution. Writing a Live Server Test Suite. Adding
Custom Configuration Directives. Expanding Custom Directive
Prototypes. Merging Custom Configuration Directives.
Overriding Core Directives. Adding Unique Server Tokens.
Releasing a Module to CPAN.
8. Interacting with Handlers.
Recognizing Handler Changes. Sharing Data Within a Child
Process. Creating a Shared Memory Cache. Maintaining State.
Using Internal Redirects. Writing Custom ErrorDocuments.
Resetting Default ErrorDocuments. Manipulating Stacked Perl
Handlers. Manipulating Stacked C Handlers. Accessing the
Environment. Sharing Data Between Different Phases.
Determining the Current Request Phase. Reading a Perl
Module's Configuration Data. Reading a C Module's
Configuration Data.
9. Tuning Apache and mod_perl.
Gathering Basic Server Information. Gathering Systemwide
Memory Usage Data. Gathering Basic Server Memory Data.
Gathering Detailed Server Memory Data. Gathering Memory
Data for Perl Modules. Reducing Module Overhead. Reducing
Overall Memory Consumption. Increasing Shared Memory.
Coarse Process Tuning Using Apache Directives. Limiting
Process Growth. Stopping Runaway Processes. Profiling
Handlers. Finding Performance Bottlenecks. Server
Performance Tuning. Using Apache as a Reverse Proxy Server.
Using the Perl Debugger with mod_perl. Debugging
Apache::Registry Scripts. Reducing Debug Overhead.
Debugging Segmentation Faults.
10. Object-Oriented mod_perl.
Class and Object Creation. Method Inheritance. Creating
Method Handlers. Using Method Handlers. Subclassing the
Apache Class. Subclassing the Apache Class Using XS.
Subclassing Apache::Registry. Subclassing
Apache::Request.
III. PROGRAMMING THE APACHE LIFECYCLE.
11. The PerlInitHandler.
Processing Every Request. Processing Every Request to a
<Location>. Timing the Request. Interrupting the
Request Cycle.
12. The PerlTransHandler.
Redirecting Requests to favicon.ico. Protecting Name-Based
Virtual Hosts. Storing Sessions in URLs. Sharing a Common
DocumentRoot. Controlling Apache's Built-In Proxy. Reducing
stat() Calls.
13. The PerlAccessHandler, PerlAuthenHandler, and
PerlAuthzHandler.
Simple Access Control. Restricting Access to Greedy
Clients. Basic Authentication. Setting User Credentials.
Conditional Authentication. User Authorization. Writing
Your Own Authentication Mechanism. Using Digest
Authentication.
14. The PerlTypeHandler and
PerlFixupHandler.
Resetting the Default Apache Handler. Selecting
PerlHandlers Based on File Extensions. Customizing Request
MIME Type and Content Handler. Overriding Default MIME
Types. Using Apache as a Caching Engine.
15. The PerlHandler.
A Basic PerlHandler. Managing Multiple PerlHandlers.
Sending Mail. Filtered Content Generation. Preventing
Cross-Site Scripting Attacks. Using Text::Template. Using
HTML::Template. Using Apache::ASP. Using Template Toolkit.
Using HTML::Embperl. Using HTML::Mason. Generating XML
Documents. Generating Generic XML Content. Using XML and
XSLT Stylesheets. Using AxKit. Creating a SOAP
Server.
16. The PerlLogHandler and
PerlCleanupHandler.
Logging to a Database. Logging to a Flat File. Altering
the Request-Line. Logging Nonstandard Data. Conditional
Logging. Intercepting Errors.
17. The PerlChildInitHandler,
PerlChildExitHandler, PerlRestartHandler, and
PerlDispatchHandler.
Passing Configurations to Code Outside of a Request.
Running Code When Apache Restarts. Preloading Configuration
Data. Reloading Registry Scripts in the Parent Process.
Identifying Apache Children. Preconnecting to Data Sources.
Tracking Perl Module Usage. Overriding Handlers Using a
PerlDispatchHandler.
Appendix A. Available mod_perl Hooks and Build
Flags.
mod_perl Hooks. mod_perl Build Options.
Appendix B. Available Constants.
Handler Return Codes. HTTP Return Codes. Directive Handler
Constants. Logging Constants. Server Constants.
Appendix C. mod_perl Resources.
Online Resources. Books.
Index.
L'auteur - Geoffrey Young
Geoffrey Young is a frequent contributor to the mod_perl
community and has written scores of mod_perl handlers, the
most useful of which can be found on CPAN.
L'auteur - Paul Lindner
Paul Lindner manages, designs, and implements mod_perl
applications at Critical Path. He is a long-time Internet
and open-source developer, and was one of the founders of
the Internet Gopher at the University of Minnesota.
L'auteur - Randy Kobes
Randy Kobes is a professor of physics at the University
of Winnipeg who conducts research on chaos and fractals. He
used mod_perl to establish a search engine for CPAN.
Caractéristiques techniques
PAPIER | |
Éditeur(s) | Sams |
Auteur(s) | Geoffrey Young, Paul Lindner, Randy Kobes |
Parution | 13/12/2001 |
Nb. de pages | 650 |
Format | 18,5 x 23 |
Couverture | Broché |
Poids | 1089g |
Intérieur | Noir et Blanc |
EAN13 | 9780672322402 |
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