Provided by: libmojolicious-perl_9.35+dfsg-1_all 

NAME
Mojolicious::Guides::FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions
OVERVIEW
This document contains answers for the most frequently asked questions about Mojolicious.
QUESTIONS
We hope these answers are to your satisfaction.
How does Mojolicious compare to other Perl web frameworks?
The short answer is "it doesn't", because we interpret the term "web framework" much more literally than
others. With the emergence of the real-time web and new technologies such as WebSockets, we are facing
new challenges that go way beyond what commonly used modules like LWP were designed for. Because of this,
Mojolicious contains a whole new HTTP client/server stack called Mojo, which was heavily inspired by the
original LWPng effort and carefully designed with these new requirements in mind. So while some of the
higher abstraction layers might look similar to other web frameworks, it is more of a web toolkit and can
even be used as the foundation for more advanced web frameworks.
Why doesn't Mojolicious have any dependencies?
We are optimizing Mojolicious for user-friendliness and development speed, without compromises. While
there are no rules in Mojolicious::Guides::Contributing that forbid dependencies, we do currently
discourage adding non-optional ones in favor of a faster and more painless installation process. And we
do in fact already use several optional CPAN modules such as Cpanel::JSON::XS, EV, IO::Socket::Socks,
IO::Socket::SSL, Net::DNS::Native, Plack and Role::Tiny to provide advanced functionality if possible.
Why reinvent wheels?
Because we can make them rounder. Components specifically designed for user-friendliness and development
speed are not easy to come by. We are strong believers of the Perl mantra "There is more than one way to
do it", and our quest is to develop the best possible solutions for these two criteria.
What about backwards compatibility?
In conformance with Mojolicious::Guides::Contributing, we will always deprecate a feature for 3 months,
before removing or changing it in incompatible ways between major releases. New features can however be
marked as experimental to explicitly exclude them from these rules. This gives us the necessary freedom
to ensure a healthy future for Mojolicious. So, as long as you are not using anything marked
experimental, untested or undocumented, you can always count on backwards compatibility, everything else
would be considered a bug. However, to completely avoid any risk of accidental breakage, we do recommend
following current best practices for version pinning with Carton for production setups.
Why not split up Mojolicious into many smaller distributions?
Because there are no advantages, it drastically increases maintenance costs and installation times
without giving us anything in return. It would only make sense if we wanted to pass ownership of a module
to a new maintainer, which we already have done in the past.
Where can I discuss my patches for Mojolicious?
We'd love to discuss your contributions to Mojolicious on Matrix <https://matrix.to/#/#mojo:matrix.org>
or IRC <https://web.libera.chat/#mojo>.
Which versions of Perl are supported by Mojolicious?
First of all, you need to be aware that according to the perlpolicy, only the two most recent stable
release series of Perl are supported by the community and receive bug fixes, which are currently 5.32.x
and 5.30.x. Mojolicious follows this model and fully supports these two release series. In addition we
will also keep the distribution installable (and that means passing all tests) up to a certain legacy
version that the core team deems worthy of supporting, but not specifically optimize for it, this is
currently 5.16.0.
How well is Windows supported by Mojolicious?
Windows is not officially supported by Mojolicious, even though we try to keep the distribution
installable. There may be serious security and/or reliability issues. Some of the more advanced features,
such as subprocesses and the Hypnotoad web server, will also require the use of the Windows Subsystem for
Linux <https://msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/wsl/>.
Is Perl's taint mode supported by Mojolicious?
No. There is no benefit at all to using taint mode. Modern Perl applications are much too complex to
benefit from such a naive mechanism in any meaningful way. At best it would give you a false sense of
security.
Do I need to clean my environment before testing Mojolicious?
Mojolicious uses many environment variables both internally and externally, notably (but not exclusively)
those starting with the prefix "MOJO_*" and "PLACK_ENV". The test suite expects a clean environment;
testing with a non-standard environment is unsupported and is unlikely to succeed. Therefore when
installing or upgrading Mojolicious and when running its tests, we highly recommend using an environment
which does not set these variables.
Where did my file extension go?
Standard route placeholders will not match the "." character, however Mojolicious routes automatically
take file extensions like ".html", remove the leading ".", and store the result in the "format" stash
value. This can be useful for URL-based content negotiation, such as automatically rendering different
templates based on the file extension. See "Formats" in Mojolicious::Guides::Routing for information on
customizing format detection, or consider using relaxed placeholders to allow matching of the "."
character.
Can I configure Hypnotoad from the command line?
No, you can't, Hypnotoad is a bit special in this regard. Because when you initiate a zero downtime
software upgrade (hot deployment), you are only really sending a "USR2" signal to the already running
server, and no other information can be passed along. What you can do instead, is to use a
Mojolicious::Plugin::Config, Mojolicious::Plugin::JSONConfig or Mojolicious::Plugin::NotYAMLConfig
configuration file.
# myapp.conf
{
hypnotoad => {
listen => ['http://*:8080'],
workers => 10
}
};
Or if you don't actually need zero downtime software upgrades, just use Mojolicious::Command::prefork
instead, which is otherwise almost identical to Hypnotoad.
$ ./myapp.pl prefork -m production -l http://*:8080 -w 10
What does the error "...certificate verify failed" mean?
There are many variations of this error, but most of them mean that TLS certificate verification in
Mojo::UserAgent failed. This usually happens for two reasons. The most common one is that the peer
certificate is simply invalid. If that's the case and you are certain that no MITM attack is being
attempted, you can use the attribute "insecure" in Mojo::UserAgent or "MOJO_INSECURE" environment
variable to disable certificate verification. And if that's not the case you might be missing the
Mozilla::CA module, which is often required by IO::Socket::SSL to be able to verify certificates.
What does the error "Maximum message size exceeded" mean?
To protect your applications from excessively large requests and responses, our HTTP parser has a cap
after which it will automatically stop accepting new data, and in most cases force the connection to be
closed. The limit is 16MiB for requests, and 2GiB for responses by default. You can use the attributes
"max_request_size" in Mojolicious and "max_response_size" in Mojo::UserAgent to change these values.
What does the error "Maximum start-line size exceeded" mean?
This is a very similar protection mechanism to the one described in the previous answer, but a little
more specific. It limits the maximum length of the start-line for HTTP requests and responses. The limit
is 8KiB by default, you can use the attribute "max_line_size" in Mojo::Message or "MOJO_MAX_LINE_SIZE"
environment variable to change this value.
What does the error "Maximum header size exceeded" mean?
Almost the same as the previous answer, but this protection mechanism limits the number and maximum
length of HTTP request and response headers. The limits are 100 headers with 8KiB each by default, you
can use the attributes "max_lines" in Mojo::Headers and "max_line_size" in Mojo::Headers or the
"MOJO_MAX_LINES" and "MOJO_MAX_LINE_SIZE" environment variables to change these values.
What does the error "Maximum buffer size exceeded" mean?
This protection mechanism limits how much content the HTTP parser is allowed to buffer when parsing
chunked, compressed and multipart messages. The limit is around 256KiB by default, you can use the
attribute "max_buffer_size" in Mojo::Content or "MOJO_MAX_BUFFER_SIZE" environment variable to change
this value.
What does "Your secret passphrase needs to be changed" mean?
Mojolicious uses secret passphrases for security features such as signed cookies. It defaults to using
"moniker" in Mojolicious, which is not very secure, so we added this log message as a reminder. You can
change the passphrase with the attribute "secrets" in Mojolicious. Since some plugins also depend on it,
you should try changing it as early as possible in your application.
$app->secrets(['My very secret passphrase.']);
What does "Nothing has been rendered, expecting delayed response" mean?
Mojolicious has been designed from the ground up for non-blocking I/O and event loops. So when a new
request comes in and no response is generated right away, it will assume that this was intentional and
return control to the web server, which can then handle other requests while waiting for events such as
timers to finally generate a response.
What does "Inactivity timeout" mean?
To protect your applications from denial-of-service attacks, all connections have an inactivity timeout
which limits how long a connection may be inactive before being closed automatically. It defaults to 40
seconds for the user agent and 30 seconds for all built-in web servers, and can be changed with the
attributes "inactivity_timeout" in Mojo::UserAgent and "inactivity_timeout" in Mojo::Server::Daemon or
the "MOJO_INACTIVITY_TIMEOUT" environment variable. In Mojolicious applications you can also use the
helper "inactivity_timeout" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers to change it on demand for each
connection individually. This timeout always applies, so you might have to tweak it for applications
that take a long time to process a request.
What does "Premature connection close" mean?
This error message is often related to the one above, and means that the web server closed the connection
before the user agent could receive the whole response or that the user agent got destroyed, which forces
all connections to be closed immediately.
# The variable $ua goes out of scope and gets destroyed too early
Mojo::IOLoop->timer(5 => sub {
my $ua = Mojo::UserAgent->new;
$ua->get('https://mojolicious.org' => sub ($ua, $tx) {
say $tx->result->dom->at('title')->text;
});
});
What does "Worker 31842 has no heartbeat (50 seconds), restarting" mean?
As long as they are accepting new connections, worker processes of all built-in pre-forking web servers
send heartbeat messages to the manager process at regular intervals, to signal that they are still
responsive. A blocking operation such as an infinite loop in your application can prevent this, and will
force the affected worker to be restarted after a timeout. This timeout defaults to 50 seconds and can be
extended with the attribute "heartbeat_timeout" in Mojo::Server::Prefork if your application requires it.
What does "Transaction already destroyed" mean?
This error message usually appears after waiting for the results of a non-blocking operation for longer
periods of time, because the underlying connection has been closed in the meantime and the value of the
attribute "tx" in Mojolicious::Controller is no longer available. While there might not be a way to
prevent the connection from getting closed, you can try to avoid this error message by keeping a
reference to the transaction object that is not weakened.
# Keep a strong reference to the transaction object
my $tx = $c->render_later->tx;
$c->ua->get_p('https://mojolicious.org')->then(sub {
$c->render(text => 'Visited mojolicious.org');
})->catch(sub ($err) {
$tx;
$c->reply->exception($err);
});
What does "Illegal character in prototype" mean?
Mojolicious assumes subroutine signatures are enabled in documentation examples. If the signatures
feature has not been enabled in that scope, they are interpreted as prototypes, an unrelated parser
feature. Mojolicious does not require signatures; if you don't want to or cannot use signatures (which
require Perl 5.20+), you can translate most signatures into a standard subroutine parameter assignment.
# With signatures feature
get '/title' => sub ($c) {
$c->ua->get('mojolicious.org' => sub ($ua, $tx) {
$c->render(data => $tx->result->dom->at('title')->text);
});
};
# Without signatures feature
get '/title' => sub {
my ($c) = @_;
$c->ua->get('mojolicious.org' => sub {
my ($ua, $tx) = @_;
$c->render(data => $tx->result->dom->at('title')->text);
});
};
MORE
You can continue with Mojolicious::Guides now or take a look at the Mojolicious wiki
<https://github.com/mojolicious/mojo/wiki>, which contains a lot more documentation and examples by many
different authors.
SUPPORT
If you have any questions the documentation might not yet answer, don't hesitate to ask in the Forum
<https://forum.mojolicious.org>, on Matrix <https://matrix.to/#/#mojo:matrix.org>, or IRC
<https://web.libera.chat/#mojo>.
perl v5.36.0 2023-10-28 Mojolicious::Guides::FAQ(3pm)